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  1. While Live and Let Die had borrowed heavily from the blaxploitation genre, The Man with the Golden Gun borrowed from the martial arts genre that was popular in the 1970s through films such as Fist of Fury (1972) and Enter the Dragon (1973).

  2. Mar 15, 2012 · As Mankiewicz s screenplay for Live And Let Die had been influenced by the Blaxploitation genre of the early seventies, The Man With The Golden Gun took inspiration from the martial arts films...

  3. The Man with the Golden Gun: Directed by Guy Hamilton. With Roger Moore, Christopher Lee, Britt Ekland, Maud Adams. James Bond is targeted by the world's most expensive assassin, while he attempts to recover sensitive solar cell technology that is being sold to the highest bidder.

  4. Jun 9, 2022 · Christopher Lee’s Francisco Scaramanga is the saving grace of 1974’s The Man With The Golden Gun, a kitschy, frazzled adventure for Roger Moore’s 007. This feature contains minor spoilers for The Man With The Golden Gun.

    • Christopher Lee took the gun with him in promotional interviews – but it was eventually seized by US customs. Given the prominence of the golden gun in the film, the weapon was also emphasised in the film’s publicity.
    • The golden gun was made from a cigarette case, a lighter and a fountain pen. A key prop in The Man with the Golden Gun is, of course, the golden gun itself.
    • Longtime Bond cinematographer Ted Moore quit midway through filming. Producers Albert Broccoli and Harry Saltzman were not the only ones clashing on The Man with the Golden Gun.
    • Top Gear unsuccessfully made two attempts to recreate the corkscrew car jump. Credit: Hannah Peters / Getty Images. The Man With the Golden Gun’s corkscrew car jump is only made more impressive by the fact that it was shot in one take.
  5. Cool government operative James Bond searches for a stolen invention that can turn the sun's heat into a destructive weapon. He soon crosses paths with the menacing Francisco Scaramanga, a hitman so skilled he has a seven-figure working fee.

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  7. James Bond (Roger Moore) receives what looks to be a death threat: a golden bullet with "007" engraved on it. It can only have come from the legendary assassin Francisco Scaramanga (Christopher Lee), who uses a golden gun and charges $1 million per job. Bond decides to go after him, even though Scaramanga is a ghost; no one knows where he is or ...

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