Bruce Feirstein


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Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) -- (Movie Clip) Queen And Country, James The admiral (Geoffrey Palmer) and the defence minister (Julian Fellowes, best known now as the creator of Downton Abbey) tangle with M (Judi Dench, supported by her chief of staff, Colin Salmon) about the sinking of a British warship, blamed on China but actually staged by the evil media baron Carver, when Bond (Pierce Brosnan) arrives with still-worse (also contrived) news, and Moneypenny (Samantha Bond) attends as the mission is arranged, in Tomorrow Never Dies, 1997.
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) -- (Movie Clip) There's No News Like Bad News Götz Otto as as Stamper reports, through Ricky Jay as techno-terrorist Gupta, to the just-introduced German-based English media impresario Carver, on the successful sinking of a British warship, blaming the Chinese, and slaughtering the survivors, staged for the launch of his worldwide news network, in the 19th James Bond feature, Tomorrow Never Dies, 1997, starring Pierce Brosnan.
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) -- (Movie Clip) I Didn't Realize You Knew Each Other Now in Hamburg, posing as a banker but actually there to investigate global terror instigated by Carver (Jonathan Pryce) for the launch of his global news network, Bond (Pierce Brosnan) makes contact with Carver’s wife Paris (Teri Hatcher), his ex-lover, leading to smoldering conflict, Michelle Yeoh as mysterious Wai-Lin, in Tomorrow Never Dies, 1997.
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) -- (Movie Clip) They'll Print Anything These Days Having penetrated the Hamburg headquarters of an evil media empire, wielding a souped-up Ericsson phone provided by “Q,” Bond (Pierce Brosnan) gets into the safe of the chief “techno-terrorist,” detects trouble, and encounters Michelle Yeoh, who’s been posing as a Chinese journalist, in his vigorous escape, in Tomorrow Never Dies, 1997.
Goldeneye (1995) -- (Movie Clip) Call It Professional Courtesy In St. Petersburg we meet Robbie Coltrane as Russian KGB man-turned-gangster Zukovsky, pursued by Bond (Pierce Brosnan) looking into the Janus crime syndicate, wrapped around Minnie Driver’s kooky cameo as a girlfriend and country singer, performing the Tammy Wynette standard, in Goldeneye, 1995.
Goldeneye (1995) -- (Movie Clip) I Made It Easy This Time Neatly arrayed (presumably) enemies, at the ex-Soviet weapon center, we meet Izabella Scorupco as Natalya, and Alan Cumming as Boris, computer-espionage nerds, with provocative chat, their relation to James Bond’s activities unclear until Xenia (Famke Janssen) arrives with Ourumov (Gottfried John), in Goldeneye, 1995.
Goldeneye (1995) -- (Movie Clip) Open, For England Just the beginning of the over ten-minute action prologue, boffo bungee jump (shot at Verzasca Dam, Switzerland) and Pierce Brosnan’s first appearance as Ian Fleming’s James Bond, 007, joined by Sean Bean as Alec Trevelyan, 006, in Goldeneye, 1995.
Goldeneye (1995) -- (Movie Clip) No Problem With Female Authority In his signature Aston Martin, on French mountain roads near Monaco, Pierce Brosnan as James Bond, six years after the death of a colleague in an anti-Soviet operation, is being evaluated by psychiatrist Caroline (Serena Gordon), then overtaken by Famke Janssen in a Ferrari, early in Goldeneye, 1995.
Goldeneye (1995) -- (Movie Clip) The Evil Queen Of Numbers First events in London, Bond (Pierce Brosnan, in his first feature as 007), jousts with Moneypenny (first appearance in the role for Samantha Bond), gets his suspicions confirmed by Tanner (Michael Kitchen, later the celebrated title character in TV’s Foyle’s War) then we meet Judi Dench, in her landmark introduction as the new “M,” in Goldeneye, 1995.

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