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SYNOPSIS:
SPECIAL FEATURES
From Russia With Love

Disc 1: Main Feature
· Audio commentary by director Terence Young and cast and crew

Disc 2: Special Features
· Ian Fleming: The CBC Interview
· Ian Fleming & Raymond Chandler
· Ian Fleming on Desert Island Discs
· Animated Storyboard Sequence
· Inside From Russia With Love
· Harry Saltzman: Showman
· Original Trailers, TV Spots, Photo Gallery & Radio Communications

For Your Eyes Only

Disc 1: Main Feature
· Newly Recorded Audio Commentary Featuring Sir Roger Moore
· Audio Commentary Featuring John Glen and Actors
· Audio Commentary Featuring Michael G Wilson and Crew

Disc 2: Special Features
· Deleted Scenes & Expanded Angles
· Bond in Greece Bond in Cortina
· Neptune's Journey
· Inside For Your Eyes Only
· Animated Storyboard Sequences
· Sheena Easton 'For Your Eyes Only' Music Video
· Original Trailers, TV Spots, Photo Gallery & Radio Communications

On Her Majesty's Secret Service

Disc 1: Main Feature
· Audio Commentary Featuring Director Peter Hunt and Members of the Cast and Crew

Disc 2: Special Features
· Casting On Her Majesty's Secret Service
· Press Day in Portugal
· George Lazenby: In His Own Words
· Shot on Ice - Original 1969 Ford Promo
· Film Swiss Movement - Original 1969 Featurette 007
· Inside On Her Majesty's Secret Service
· Inside Q's Lab
· Above It All - Original 1969 Featurette

Live and Let Die

Disc 1: Main Feature
· Newly Recorded Audio Commentary Featuring Sir Roger Moore
· Audio commentary by director Guy Hamilton and Tom Mankiewicz and cast and crew

Disc 2: Special Features
· Bond 1973: The Lost Documentary
· Roger Moore as James Bond, Circa 1964
· Live and Let Die Conceptual Art
· Inside Live and Let Die
· On Set With Roger Moore

GoldenEye

Disc 1: Main Feature
· Audio Commentary Featuring Martin Campbell and Michael G. Wilson

Disc 2: Special Features
· Deleted Scenes With Introductions by Director Martin Campbell
· Directing Bond: The Martin Chronicles
· Building a Better Bond: Pre-Production Featurette
· The Return of Bond - The Start of Production Press Event
· Driven to Bond: Remy Julienne
· Anatomy of a Stunt: Tank Versus Perrier
· Making it in Small Pictures: Derek Meddings
· On Location With Peter Lamont
· GoldenEye: The Secret Files
· Pre-Title Storyboard Sequence With Director Martin Campbell
· The World of 007 - Original 1995 Television Special Hosted by Elizabeth Hurley
· The GoldenEye Video Journal Promotional Featurette
· Tina Turner 'GoldenEye' Music Video
· Original Trailers, TV Spots, Photo Gallery & Radio Communications

From Russia With Love (1964): In the second Bond film, 007 goes up against treacherous villains, and seductive women.

In From Russia With Love, Bond has to get possession of a device called the Lektor before the evil villains of SPECTRE (Special Executor for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, Extortion) can get a hold of it and abuse the power it holds. The Lektor is capable of revealing military secrets to anyone that has it in its possession.

Once again it is up to Bond to save the world from utter destruction.
 
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969): Just as James Bond finally discovers true love, he is thrown into non-stop thrills and chills in this explosively entertaining action/adventure. George Lazenby leaps into the role of Agent 007 with supreme confidence and undeniable charisma.

When Bond's usual intelligence sources fail, he enlists the aid of crime boss Draco (Gabriele Ferzetti) to track down Ernst Blofeld (Telly Savales), head of the evil SPECTRE organization. The trail leads to the mountains of Switzerland, where Bond goes undercover in Blofeld's hi-tech headquarters. He encounters a bevy of seductive women, but none more beautiful than Draco's daughter, Tracy (Diana Rigg), who wins 007 over with her fervent independence, caustic wit and love of adventure. Bond pledges his eternal devotion to her, but there are more immediate concerns: Blofeld is poised to unleash horrific germ warfare weaponry that will endanger every living thing on earth.

Artillery-laden ski pursuits, incredible stunts and even a spectacular avalanche drive this action-packed epic to a sensational climax. And in developing the romance of Bond and Tracy, On Her Majesty's Secret Service builds to the most emotionally charged finale of any film in this
 
Live And Let Die (1973): James Bond battles the forces of black magic in this energetic, passionate adventure that hurtles from New York City streets to Louisiana bayou country. As Agent 007, Roger Moore infuses the dynamic action hero with charm, wit and deadly assurance.

When Bond investigates the murders of three fellow agents, he soon finds himself a target, evading vicious assassins as he closes in on the powerful Kananga (Yaphet Kotto). Known on the streets as "Mr. Big," Kananga is coordinating a globally threatening scheme using tons of self-produced heroin. As Bond tries to unravel the mastermind's plan, he meets Solitaire (Jane Seymour), the beautiful Tarot card reader whose magical gifts are crucial to the crime lord. Bond, of course, works his own magic on her, and the stage is set for a series of pulse-pounding action sequences involving voodoo, hungry crocodiles and turbo-charged speedboats.

Complete with such imaginative gadgets as Bond's super-magnetic wristwatch and an amazing compressed-gas pistol, Live and Let Die is a breathtaking, high-energy rollercoaster of non-stop thrills.
 
For Your Eyes Only (1981): James Bond is thrust into one of his most riveting adventures in this jam-packed free-for-all of outrageous stunts, passionate encounters and exciting confrontations. In perhaps the best performance of his career, Roger Moore portrays Agent 007 with lethal determination.

After a ship is sunk off the coast of Albania, the world's superpowers begin a feverish search for its valuable lost cargo: the powerful ATAC system, which will give the bearer unlimited control over Polaris nuclear submarines. As Bond joins the search, he suspects the suave Kristatos (Julian Glover) of seizing the device. The competition between nations grows more deadly by the moment, but Bond finds an ally in the beautiful Melina Havelock (Carole Bouquet), who blames Kristatos for the death of her parents. The non-stop action includes automobile chases, thrilling underwater battles, and even a breathtaking tour over razor-sharp coral reefs. But all this is merely a prelude to 007's cliffhanging assault on a magnificent mountaintop fortress.

With unforgettable characters, seductive locales, and go-for-the-jugular suspense, For Your Eyes Only is a mesmerizing action-thriller of the highest order.
 
GoldenEye (1995): Pierce Brosnan ignites the screen as James Bond in this explosive, thrill-packed adventure that hits the bull's-eye for nonstop excitement. When a deadly satellite weapon system falls into the wrong hands, only Agent 007 can save the world from certain disaster.

Armed with his license to kill, Bond races to Russia in search of the stolen access codes for "GoldenEye", an awesome space weapon that can fire a devastating electromagnetic pulse toward Earth. But 007 is up against an enemy who anticipates his every move: Alec Trevelyan, a.k.a. Agent 006 (Sean Bean), a mastermind motivated by years of simmering hatred. As Bond squares off against his former compatriot, he also battles Trevelyan's stunning ally, Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen), an assassin who uses pleasure as her ultimate weapon. When the horrifying extent of Trevelyan's plans is revealed, Bond must call upon his sharp wits and killer instincts in an edge-of-your-seat confrontation to the finish. From a destructive tank chase through the streets of St. Petersburg to a special effects-laden climax in the Cuban jungle, GoldenEye is a breathtaking thrill ride that ranks as one of the best and most popular action films ever made.