Tag: From Russia With Love

“From Russia With Love”: Aktuelt’s film review (1963)

Film review, 21 December 1963

 
Several Danish film critics expressed their dislike of the James Bond 007 films during their original release in the early 1960's. The highly regarded Bjørn Rasmussen, M.A., who reviewed films for the Danish daily Aktuelt and hosted the film programme "Filmorientering" on national Danish television during the 60's, dismissed the Bond films as "sensationalist entertainment marked by poor taste" in his reference book "Filmens Hvem-Hvad-Hvor" (1967). He did however note that "From Russia with Love" (1963) was "the best in the series".

When EON Productions' "From Russia with Love"  was released into Danish theatres in December 1963, Bjørn Rasmussen was markedly less kind in his scathing review for Aktuelt:

”Agent 007” returns

Christmas programming at Nørreport Cinema is brutal entertainment

With the pulp thriller ”From Russia with Love” (1963), Nørreport [Cinema] picks up from ”Dr. No”. This is a coarsely brutal, sensational serial based on Ian Fleming's vulgar novels, issued in Denmark by [Sven] Hazel's publishing house (of all!). The films, as well as the novels, are brimming with straightforward suspense, devoid of probability and based on the spectator not having time to detect the obvious gaffes.

This time, a so-called ”Lektor” is to be smuggled out and change hands from Russian to English ownership. We are not dealing with a lecturer [”lektor” in Danish, ed.] but a decoding machine. Fights, murders, sex, and speed is mobilized as well as all kinds of spies for all kinds of nations. They are secretly spying on each other nonstop. The most repulsive of them all would be Lotte Lenja [sic], the widow of Kurt Weill, evil incarnate and an efficient member of the international crime organization ”Spectre” who are also out to get the Lektor.

In the middle of all this nonsense, a glimmer of something truly cinematic shines through as is often the case with rudimentary pulp thrillers such as this. But [the film] is dreadfully simple and unpleasant to watch.

Written by Bjørn Rasmussen
Translation by Bond•O•Rama.dk

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James Bond Agent 007 no. 5: “From Russia with Love” (1966)

COMIC BOOK

 
James Bond Agent 007 nr. 5 (1966)

Author: Henry Gammidge (uncredited) after Ian Fleming's novel "From Russia With Love" (1957)
Artist: John McLusky (uncredited)
Published: A/S Interpresse
Editor: K. Jespersen
Cover artist: (uncredited)
Format: 52 pages
Publishing date: 1966
First published in the UK: Daily Express 03.02.-21.05.1960
Danish reprint: James Bond 007 no. 59 (1981)

Contents:
"Agent 007 jages"/"From Russia with Love" (30 pages - newspaper stripts reformatted to 17x26 cm magazine format)
"Roy Allen: Den forgiftede kat" [Roy Allen: The Poisoned Cat] (8 pages)
"Tilbage i tiden" [Back in Time] (6 pages)
James Bonds fjender: Red Grant [James Bond's enemies] (1 page text excerpt from Ian Fleming's "From Russia with Love")
Back cover: color photo of Sean Connery and Claudine Auger in "Thunderball" (1 page)

NB: The cover art was reused for the Danish James Bond Agent 007 no. 42 (1977).

Front page scan courtesy of Tom Andersen

“From Russia With Love”: Danish first edition (1964)

BOOKS

 
FRWL (Grafisk forlag 1964)

Agent 007 jages (1964)

Jan Fleming

Danish first edition
Original:
From Russia With Love (Jonathan Cape 1957)
Publisher: Grafisk forlag
Translator: Grete Juel Jørgensen
Cover art: 
William (Petersen)

Ian Fleming's fifth James Bond novel was the eighth to be released in Danish.

As before, the author's byline on the cover has been danicized into "Jan Fleming".

Later editions:
● Agent 007 jages (Grafisk forlag 1965)
● Agent 007 jages ("G-bog" no. 57, Grafisk forlag 1967)
● Med russisk kærlighed (Aschehoug 1984)
● Kærlig hilsen fra Kreml (Rosenkilde & Bahnhof 2014)

“From Russia With Love”: Danish ad sheets (1963)

These are United Artists' original Danish ad sheets for "From Russia With Love" (EON Productions 1963). The duplex-printed A4 sheets were distributed to Danish cinema owners prior to the film's release in December 1963.

Note that the Danish Censor Board altered the rating from "gul" (yellow = 16 years and up) to "grøn" (green = 12 years and up).