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Goldfinger (Special Edition)

4.7 out of 5 stars 1,123 customer reviews

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Editorial Reviews

1999 - MGM / UA - Goldfinger - Stars: Sean Connery / Gert Frobe / Honor Blackman - Director: Guy Hamilton - Special Edition - Screen Format: Widescreen - Run Time: 110 Minutes - Original 1964 Release - Special Features - Never Played - Like New - Collectible James Bond Film


Special Features

  • Original Radio Interviews With Sean Connery
  • Documentaries: The Making of Goldfinger & The Goldfinger Phenomenon
  • Original publicity featurette
  • Behind-the scenes still gallery featuring hundreds of images
  • Collectible "Making Of" booklet

Product Details

  • Actors: Sean Connery, Gert Fröbe, Honor Blackman, Shirley Eaton, Tania Mallet
  • Directors: Guy Hamilton
  • Writers: Ian Fleming, Paul Dehn, Richard Maibaum
  • Producers: Albert R. Broccoli, Harry Saltzman, Stanley Sopel
  • Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Widescreen, Dolby, NTSC
  • Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
  • Subtitles: English, French
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rated:
    PG
    Parental Guidance Suggested
  • Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
  • DVD Release Date: October 22, 2002
  • Run Time: 110 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1,123 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00000K0E6
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #56,718 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
  • Learn more about "Goldfinger (Special Edition)" on IMDb


Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Amazon Video Verified Purchase
I have very much enjoyed that Amazon has put most of the James Bond series online. The series defined a generation of spy thrillers and suspense storytelling that has influenced much modern filmography. Dr. No is certainly a classic, but Goldfinger refined and perfected that James Bond has become, and Sean Connery defined 007. Gert Frobe played an Auric Goldfinger, providing an almost believable villain in a way that was not over the top as some more recent villains. He didn't overact. One of my favorite exchanges:

Bond: Do you expect me to talk?
Goldfinger: No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die.

One of the fatal flaws in evil overlords is the tendency to monologue while the hero gets ready to escape. Goldfinger didn't do that, preferring to get rid of his potential competition, whether a shady Mafia character or a British Secret Agent. I still enjoy the professionalism of Bond in this movie. While there's some humanity in him, there is not the angst over people dying. It's part of the business, and we don't need to see what comes after the movie is over when Bond goes off to hibernate for several days after a harrowing adventure.

If one were to view only three movies in the Bond franchise, it would be to watch Dr. No, Goldfinger, and Thunderball, probably in that order. These movies provide great classic entertainment.
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I give Goldfinger 4 Stars. It probably would've been a 5 star in it's time, but movies from that era just don't compare to today's movies, with their lack 'excitement', what with all the action and Special FX we've grown used to. But it was still a good movie, and certainly a classic. And it had a plot! Actually, no FX or CG was kind of refreshing... almost made it MORE realistic. It wasn't slow or even predictable (except that you know going into it that the good guy wins). The movie was also interesting from another aspect... it showed how respectful people were of each other back then (gee how the world has changed!). Sean Connery's performance shows what a great Actor he was even then... simply timeless... that's greatness! Most older movies lose their edge as time goes on... camera angles, scripts, and carrying out the 'dramatic scenes' making the actors seem more rigid or not as talented as they once seemed to be when compared to modern performances. Not Mr. Connery. He's spot on! This movie was not 'action packed', but still very much enjoyable. (And I'm not an old movie, nor a '007' fan!)
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This is the first Bond film with a pre-title sequence that has no direct relation to the ensuing action, with the implication that our hero has all kinds of adventures between the ones we actually see from beginning to end. He's in South America somewhere, with the intent of blowing up some bad guy's lair. But before he does, he unzips the drysuit he's been wearing to reveal a white dinner tuxedo. This causes us Bond fans to grin from ear to ear. By the time the credit sequence starts, with the credits super-imposed on a girl dipped in gold, and with the smutty-sounding, braying trumpets of the title song, culminating with Shirley Bassey belting out, "Gold-FEEN-gahhh!", Bond fans' toes are curling in ecstasy.

My personal favorite was the preceding adventure, "From Russia with Love", but I can't blame those, inside or outside the 007 fan club, who give "Goldfinger" pride of place as the best Bond film. It's certainly the quintessential one, the one that added the finishing touches to the blueprint already drawn in the inaugural film of the franchise, "Dr. No". The (almost) real-world intrigue of "From Russia with Love" is cheerfully thrown overboard for mind-blowing gadgets and comedy. If the first two films were a finishing school of sorts for Sean Connery, he graduates here with flying colors. His performance is now complete: unflappable, no wasted motion, always ready to deliver a wisecrack. Held captive aboard Goldfinger's Lear jet, he awakes after having been drugged, focuses on Honor Blackman in front of him, who says, "My name is Pussy Galore." Connery, bemused, looks down and mutters to himself, "I must be dreaming." This was the moment when James Bond became a global cultural icon for all time.
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We're in process of watching all the old Bond Movies...this one is #3. Of course they are all "vintage" and have old school ideas (at least in my eyes) regarding roles for men and women, what's sexy, what is not. And there is the amazing technology of the 1960s. Goldfinger just fell short on the fun factor even though we enjoyed the first two (Dr. No and From Russia With Love. I watched Goldfinger all the way through -- My husband fell asleep (and truth be told, he's the one who wants to watch them). So there's that. But it's all for 'nostalgia and film research' so we will forge on until we've gotten through all 25. Thank you Chicago winter for giving us this amazing opportunity.
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The third James Bond film and Sean Connery's third. I saw it when it was released originally in 1964, when it created a minor sensation among some immature souls that the blonde's name was Pussy Galore. Connery is his usual perfect self for the part, and it is difficult to decide who has been the best of the 20th century Bonds, Roger Moore or Connery. Oddjob, played by Olympic weightlifter Harold Sakata, remains a memorable villain to all of us who have seen Goldfinger. Lasers were very new then and were the object of much interest; it had been only two or three years previously that I had tested a somewhat less powerful laser in my own laboratory.

For the millennials, you should see this one as a matter of film history. It was also the first Bond film in which gadgetry began to play an important role.
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