Goldfinger

1964 "Everything he touches turns into excitement!"
7.7| 1h50m| PG| en| More Info
Released: 21 December 1964 Released
Producted By: EON Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: https://www.mgm.com/movies/goldfinger
Synopsis

Special agent 007 comes face to face with one of the most notorious villains of all time, and now he must outwit and outgun the powerful tycoon to prevent him from cashing in on a devious scheme to raid Fort Knox -- and obliterate the world's economy.

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Reviews

Scanialara You won't be disappointed!
VividSimon Simply Perfect
Afouotos Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.
Cooktopi The acting in this movie is really good.
mark.waltz This grabs you right away even before Dame Shirley Bassey starts singing the title song over the credits, probably the most beloved Bond theme ever. "Shocking!", Sean Connery says after dispatching one villain in the most sizzling death scenes, and that's within the first few minutes. He'll have his hands full as he takes on the most notorious of all Bond villains, a vile man obsessed with Gold and able to turn a woman into gold, literally suffocating her to death. Connery finds himself at the mercy of that character, played with delicious malevolence by Gert Frobe. At one point, the use of gold gets a little to hot as it nears a very precarious place on Connery's body.Then there's the character of Pussy Galore (Honor Blackman) who works as Frobe's pilot and could literally be out to un- Bond 007. Another villain is a silent Asian strongman, who like the much later Jaws (Richard Kiel) opposite Roger Moore seemed unbeatable. The battle of the will and strength between the two is often both chilling and funny. Even as bizarre and far fetched as these can be, that often makes them even better. And we all know nobody does it better!
Coventry Every individual James Bond film has some good assets and at least two or three special qualities that make it fantastically entertaining. "Goldfinger", however, exclusively has great assets and special qualities! I think this third entry in the series is almost unanimously – and righteously – labeled as THE best Bond movie of all. It's definitely also the most quintessential title to watch in order to get fully acquainted with the lead character's personality and working methods, as well as with the type of assignments he receives from his employer, his opponents and the hi- tech attributes he gets to help him. You'd expect all this to become clear already in the first film, "Dr. No", but the character created by Ian Fleming was still fairly unknown back then and hence the production values were a lot lower. Barely two years and only one sequel later, James Bond had already become a phenomenon and "Goldfinger" delivered the incredibly high expectations of the fans. It truly also is a terrific film, with an utmost solid script, a top three legendary villain and various highly memorable action & suspense sequences. Personally, I have the bizarre habit of ranking my favorite Bond movies based on the evil- factor and charisma of the villains, and thus "Goldfinger" is quite high up there thanks to the sublime roles of Gert Fröbe as the titular character and Harold Sakata as Oddjob, his silent but deadly henchman who pulverizes golf balls with his bare hands and throws around his killer-hat of steel. The gold-obsessed magnate has thought up an ingenious plan to rob the entire American gold supply from Fort Knox and naturally it's 007's job to prevent this from happening. Therefore Bond infiltrates into Goldfinger's private affairs twice; messing up his game cheating routines and seducing his female accomplices. Auric Goldfinger is undoubtedly one of the most vicious Bond-villains, but arguably also one of the dumbest! Never before or after did 007's opponents receive so many open and easy chances to eliminate him, but Goldfinger decides not to take the risk and kill his disloyal female assistants instead! Many, many sequences in this third Bond film are pure vintage, including the white tuxedo underneath the diving suit, Shirley Eaton's golden corpse, an uncomfortable laser beam moment and – of course – every scene with that awesome Aston Martin!
slightlymad22 Goldfinger (1964)Plot In A Paragraph: James Bond (Connery) uncovers a plot to contaminate the Fort Knox gold reserve. GOOOOLLLLDDDDFINGEEERRRRRRRR.... He's the man. The man with the Midas touch!! Almost everybody's favourite Connery Bond movie. From the pre credits scene, where Bond uses a woman as a human shield before electrocuting an assassain, through Shirley Basseys glorious title track to the finale, the pace of Goldfinger never lets up. Goldfinger was easily the best bond movie to date, far superior to From Russia with Love and more professional than Dr. No. The action was more exciting, the pace faster and the script was funnier too. It also included two classic Bond moments, a shot of murdered Shirley Eaton, covered in heavy gold paint and secondly Connery himself spread eagled on a metal bench, a laser beam cutting between his legs, advancing slowly on his private parts.The bad guy Goldfinger (Gert Forb) and his hench man Odd Job (Harold Sakata) were the best to date, and so was the car!! The bulletproof Aston Martin, which included a reader, machine gun headlamps collar tire slashing knives, smokescreens, flamethrowers, oil slicks and the famous ejector seat. Honour Blackman is a joy as the delightfully named Pussy Galore ("I must be dreaming") The best Bond to date also have Connery his highest grossing movie, and best performing one too!! As Goldfinger grossed $51 million at the domestic Box Office to end the year the 2nd highest grossing movie of 1964. Only My Fair Lady starring Audrey Hepburn outgrossed it.
zkonedog The James Bond movie franchise is often characterized by wild shifts in tone. For example, the seriousness of the Connery years quickly turned into the goofiness of the Moore era. The best films are the ones that combine the "best of both worlds". "Goldfinger" walks that fine line and turns in one of the better installments of the series.For a basic plot summary, "Goldfinger" sees James Bond (Sean Connery) come up against Auric Goldfinger (Gert Frobe), a business tycoon obsessed with gold with designs on completely destroying the world's economy for his own personal gain.This movie works so well because it does all the intangible things perfectly. For example, the "Bond...James Bond" line is used to perfection, the opening title music is some of the best ever, and the soundtrack throughout punctuates the action perfectly. Also helping matters is the fact that the plot isn't too over-the-top, but still crazy enough to produce some romping adventure. The girls and gadgets are omni-present.About the only reason I can't give "Goldfinger" a full five stars is a personal one, because technologically it has easily been surpassed by later efforts. The Bond movies have always lent themselves to being easily improved by better movie technology, so the earlier efforts like this one sometimes feel a bit "slow" compared to nowadays.Overall, though, "Goldfinger" is a fun Bond effort that holds up better than most of the older Bond efforts. It does all the "little Bond stuff" right, and even throws in a decent plot and endearing characters.