Up there with Bedazzled and Beyond The Valley of the Dolls I'd avoided this movie for years assuming it was one of those bloated '60s comedies that aimed for madcap parody but ballsed it up completely (too many of those to mention). I'd seen a bit of the ending with Woody Allen larking about and that seemed to fit my assumption. I couldn't have been more wrong. This may have used a hodgepodge of writers and directors but somehow the end result is a spot-on satire attacking how far a gadget- heavy sex-crazed Bond had strayed from Fleming's ideal. It's of the messy but intelligent school of satire, akin Peter Cook and Dudley Moore's Bedazzled and Russ Meyer and Roger Ebert's Beyond the Valley of the Dolls. Someone else here rightly mentions the 1966 Batman movie.
However what sets it apart from all of these is the quality of art direction, design, acting and music. Members of the cast who are in fleetingly still seem to fit right in, accents are hilarious and some performances are absolutely superb - namely Deborah Kerr as Agent Mimi, putting on her Scottish brogue to pass as M's wife Lady Fiona McTarry. The music is terrific, including a cheeky quote of Born Free and snippets of Dusty's Look of Love ( an aquarium sequence quoted by Baz Luhrmann in Romeo & Juliet). Finally, the cast is one of the most extraordinary to be gathered in one feature - it includes:
Peter Sellers, Ursula Andress, David Niven, Orson Welles, Deborah Kerr, William Holden, Charles Boyer, John Huston, Woody Allen, Derek Nimmo, Ronnie Corbett, Bernard Cribbins, George Raft, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jacqueline Bisset, Stirling Moss, John Wells, Burt Kwouk, Geraldine Chaplin, John Le Mesurier, Peter O'Toole.
They are all fantastic. I'm sure there are a few more I've not mentioned.