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Live and Let Die Poster

Live and Let Die

Bond is back. Back in action. Back with excitement.
1973 | 121m | English

(120994 votes)

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Popularity: 6 (history)

Details

James Bond must investigate a mysterious murder case of a British agent in New Orleans. Soon he finds himself up against a gangster boss named Mr. Big.
Release Date: Jun 27, 1973
Director: Guy Hamilton
Writer: Ian Fleming, Tom Mankiewicz
Genres: Adventure, Action, Thriller
Keywords dual identity, england, secret intelligence service, voodoo, crocodile, london, england, drug smuggling, spy, jamaica, heroin, aftercreditsstinger, new york city, sheriff, based on novel or book, bomb, secret mission, boat, tarot cards, drug trafficking, tombstone, secret identity, speedboat 
Production Companies United Artists, EON Productions
Box Office Revenue: $126,400,000
Budget: $7,000,000
Updates Updated: Sep 20, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Roger Moore James Bond
Yaphet Kotto Kananga/Mr. Big
Jane Seymour Solitaire
Clifton James Sheriff J.W. Pepper
Julius Harris Tee Hee
Geoffrey Holder Baron Samedi
David Hedison Felix Leiter
Gloria Hendry Rosie Carver
Bernard Lee M
Lois Maxwell Miss Moneypenny
Tommy Lane Adam
Earl Jolly Brown Whisper
Lon Satton Strutter
Madeline Smith Miss Caruso
Roy Stewart Quarrel
Arnold Williams Cab Driver 1
Robert Dix Hamilton
James Drake Dawes (uncredited)
Dennis Edwards Baines
Brenda Arnau Singer
Kubi Chaza Sales Girl
Michael Ebbin Dambala
Joie Chitwood Charlie
Ruth Kempf Mrs. Bell
Stephen Hendrickson M. Bleeker
Louis Saint-Juste Chef des voudous
Don Topping Animateur
Lance Gordon Eddie
Alvin Alcorn Assassin
Roy Hollis Shérif
James Langston Drake Dawes
Tony Amelchi Danseur
Della McCrae Danseuse
Keith Forte Garde
Sylvia Kuumba Williams Femme qui pleure
Irvin Allen Garçon
Dan Jackson Garçon
Gabor Vernon Délégué hongrois
Vic Armstrong Policier
Jack Cooper Policier
Peter Brayham Homme de main
Paul Weston Homme à l'aéroport
Nikki Van der Zyl Solitaire (voice) (uncredited)
Name Job
Guy Hamilton Director
Ian Fleming Novel
Tom Mankiewicz Screenplay
George Martin Original Music Composer
Peter Lamont Art Direction
Julie Harris Costume Design
Paul McCartney Theme Song Performance
Derek Cracknell Assistant Director
Bob Minor Stunts
Vic Armstrong Stunt Double
Jophery C. Brown Stunts
Geoffrey Holder Choreographer
Henry Kingi Stunts
Eddie Powell Stunts
Raymond Poulton Editor
Weston Drury Jr. Casting
John Shirley Editor
Robert W. Laing Art Direction
Bert Bates Editor
Stephen Hendrickson Art Direction
David Wynn-Jones First Assistant Camera
Laurel Staffell Wardrobe Supervisor
Colin Jamison Hairstylist
Paul Rabiger Makeup Artist
Claude Hudson Production Supervisor
Bob Kindred Camera Operator
Elaine Schreyeck Continuity
Ken Barker Sound Recordist
Syd Cain Supervising Art Director
Leon Davis Construction Manager
Bernard Hanson Location Manager
John W. Mitchell Sound Recordist
Ron Quelch Production Assistant
Ted Moore Director of Photography
Derek Meddings Special Effects
Maurice Binder Title Designer
Bob Simmons Stunts
Name Title
Albert R. Broccoli Producer
Harry Saltzman Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 46 69 34
2024 5 72 89 59
2024 6 55 84 24
2024 7 46 78 20
2024 8 30 40 18
2024 9 28 41 19
2024 10 34 70 22
2024 11 30 57 20
2024 12 31 40 24
2025 1 30 45 24
2025 2 21 44 4
2025 3 9 25 1
2025 4 4 5 3
2025 5 4 5 3
2025 6 4 7 3
2025 7 4 6 3
2025 8 4 4 3
2025 9 4 6 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 150 673
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 618 798
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 454 695
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 539 825
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 482 808
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 448 827
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 539 819
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 268 730
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 201 657
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 420 714
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 508 776
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 876 957
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 989 989
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 616 878

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Reviews

Wuchak
7.0

Roger Moore’s fun and colorful debut as 007 Agent 007 (Roger Moore) travels from Harlem to the Caribbean to Louisiana to stop a black heroin mogul (Yaphet Kotto) fortified with a multifarious organization and a lovely tarot card reader (Jane Seymour). This was Moore’s dynamic debut as Bond. H ... e did 7 films for the franchise in 13 years from 1973-1985. The tone of “Live and Let Die” is similar to Sean Connery’s final canon Bond flick, “Diamonds Are Forever” (1971). Moore’s stint is my favorite run in the series with all seven films being kinetic, amusing, scenic and just all-around entertaining. There’s not one stinker in the bunch and they were all profitable at the box office. Aside from the picturesque globetrotting, “Live and Let Die” features several colorful characters beyond those already noted: The metal-armed Tee Hee (Julius Harris), the chortling voodoo minion Baron Samedi (Geoffrey Holder) and redneck Sheriff JW Pepper (Clifton James). On the female front, Seymour is young & cute while Gloria Hendry is impressively fit as Rosie. The head-turning Madeline Smith has a small role. In addition, there are several memorable thrilling parts, like the amusing airport sequence, Bond using crocogators as stepping stones, the great bayou boat chase and the closing train cab brouhaha. As far as the movie being “racist,” as SJW’s whine, the character Agent Quarrel Jr. (Roy Stewart) blows that whole eye-rolling idiot-theory. The film runs 2 hours, 1 minute and was shot in Manhattan, Jamaica and Louisiana (New Orleans & the bayous) with additional work done in England. GRADE: B+

Jun 23, 2021
GenerationofSwine
10.0

By my clock, this era started with Diamonds are Forever... the era of the Silly Bond. But Diamonds are Forever was a Connery Bond and it kind of sucked because of it. So... Live and Let Die is the first of the GOOD silly Bond movies. Now don't get me wrong, I'm on team Connery. Team Connery ... all the way... but Live and Let Die is still a GREAT 007 film despite the total change in mood and persona. It moved away from the heartless assassin to pick up a more comedic and Fx driven fair that worked better for Moore. And because it is a new 007, the fish out of water setting works to drive it home. It's not the first time 007 set foot in the United States, but it is Harlem in 1973 and it is The Big Easy, and these are places that a white British man with an Oxford education would be a HORRIBLE person to act as a spy in. He's going to stick out like a sore thumb, and he does... ... and that is probably why they choose it as a setting to usher in Moore's era Bond. Because Moore was going to be different. He was the fish out of water in the franchise, and the setting helps drive it home. But, who cares, it was silly Bond, but it was FUN Bond. It was just fun in a different way than Connery was. But it was still fun, and fun is still entertaining.

Jan 11, 2023
drystyx
7.0

This 007 film aged very well. 007 follows in the footsteps of three prior agents who were assassinated. There's a lot of "jive" in this one, since this is the one where the villain is black, and he uses mostly black helpers, so the white James Bond really sticks out. And thus we get a lot more co ... medy here. There's a bit of a condescending attitude towards Harlem here, and too much respect for the few who are the criminals of Harlem, but this is a "comedy" 007 adventure. The beautiful Solitaire is the love interest, and there's a lot of belief in the supernatural here. That's part of the "condescending" part. This movie was very bad in 1973, but it aged well, because in 1973 the "red neck sheriff" was such a trite cliche that one had to groan in 1973. But today, after all the movies that have tamed down the image of the red neck lawman, it's a fresh bit of comedy, and that's why this movie has aged well. It comes close to breaking into the top ten 007 films of all time due to its lack of negativity that has been the Hollywood formula since about 1965.

Apr 03, 2023
Geronimo1967
7.0

When I first watched this opening outing for Roger Moore in the "007" role, I wasn't very impressed. Now, when I watch it though, I appreciate more the sophisticated and subtle approach that the star brought to the role. Gone is much of the chauvinism of the Connery days, replaced by a more subtle, ... humorous, playful style whilst still delivering a good adventure film. This time, following the deaths of three other agents, "Bond" finds himself investigating a dodgy Caribbean ruler "Katanga" (Yaphet Kotto) who is using the prophetic skills of his tarot reader "Solitaire" (a rather beautiful but simpering, charmless, Jane Seymour) and a great deal of heroin to dominate the global narcotics market. It's got it's fair share of gadgets and one of the most memorable opening (funeral) scenes of any movie I've ever seen. Geoffrey Holder is crackingly menacing as "Baron Samedi" - the master of voodoo; and Julius Harris as the almost indestructible "Tee Tee" - complete with a basic, but dangerous artificial hand. It's dark, gritty and sinister and well worth watching. Can't say I'm the biggest fan of the Wings theme tune, though - I prefer the knock 'em dead power ballads...

May 27, 2023
2_Fast-22
9.0

Live and Let Die is a brilliant use of a new Bond (Roger Moore) and an iconic title song for one of the best Bonds there is. ...

Nov 23, 2024