Casino Royale 1967 The Look Of Love
Casino Royale: A 1967 hellzapoppin’ film based on Ian Fleming’s novel of the same name.
James Bond in a full-blown hellzapoppin’? Why yes – and such a thing could only happen in 1967.
A1: Casino Royale Theme (Main Title) Performer – Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass A2: The Look Of Love (Vocal) Vocals – Dusty Springfield A3: Money Penny Goes For Broke: A4: Le Chiffre's Torture Of The Mind. Burt Bacharach appropriately comes up with a rambunctious soundtrack for the 1967 James Bond spoof, Casino Royale. Things get underway with Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass' performance of the fast-paced main title, which features the usual Bacharach mix of pop phrasing and complex arrangements; this theme is subsequently augmented with a lush string arrangement and marching band rhythms on.
At no other time during the incomprehensible history of this planet could anyone coral Peter Sellers, Orson Welles, Ursula Andress, Deborah Kerr, David Niven, John Huston and Woody Allen into anything other than some kind of surrealistic documentary. And top it off by having six directors undertake separate segments of the film – just to make it even more lucid.
Oh sorry, let’s have the star,Peter Sellers, quit during halfway through the film (peeved at Orson Welles, abandoning a roster of key scenes) leaving the writers desperate to disguise gaping plot holes.
The film is a mess, and therein lays its strength. It’s as if it
was made by a precocious twelve-year-old. Lots of energy and color and noise. One thinks of Macbeth – ‘It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”
Casino Royale Soundtrack 1967
Almost nothing. This film introduced one of our greatest lounge songs – and the world heard it for the first time as Ursula Andress walked in slow motion past an enormous, vibrant aquarium, Peter Sellers trailing in anticipation. Burt Bacharach/Hal David’s ‘The Look of Love’ adds a prestige to the film it most certainly doesn’t deserve.
Casino Royale 1967 The Look Of Love Dvd
Or maybe it does. Composer Stephen Sondheim told us that “art, in itself, is an attempt to bring order out of chaos.” And this song does just that, settling it all down for about three minutes while Dusty Springfield purrs the ultimate, late-night paean to seduction.
Few films offer you such a psychedelic mosaic of sexism, racism, uneven wit, scattered performances and meandering plotlines as Casino Royale. If you have never been in a valley, you can’t appreciate a mountain. Let this film truly refresh your cinematic palette…baby.
Ian M. Clarke can be reached at terrylennox.rc@gmail.com