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Director

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Terence Young

Stewart Terence Herbert Young (20 June 1915 – 7 September 1994) was a British film director best known for directing three films in the James Bond series, Dr. No (1962), From Russia with Love (1963), and Thunderball (1965).

Born in Shanghai, China, he was public-school educated. Like the fictional James Bond, he read oriental history at St Catharine’s College in the University of Cambridge. As a tank commander during World War II, Young participated in Operation Market Garden in Arnhem, Netherlands.

Young began his film career as a screenwriter in British films of the 1940s, working, for example, on Dangerous Moonlight (1941). In 1946, he was a co-director with Brian Desmond Hurst of Theirs is the Glory, which recaptured the fighting around Arnhem bridge. Arnhem, coincidentally, was home to the adolescent Audrey Hepburn. During the filming of Young’s film, Wait Until Dark, Hepburn and Young would joke that he was shelling his favorite star without even knowing it. Young’s… read more

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Jaspar Lamar Crabb

17Nov11

Certainly one of the oddest westerns and one of Young's few really good (non-Bond) films. Bronson, I believe, even smiles at one point. With a fur-clad Ursula Andress on hand to call Bronson a bastard about 100 times and Alain Delon & Toshiro Mifune & Capucine...strange strange strange...

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Scout

21Sep11

If only they'd had a better director and this could have been as legendary as the combined star power suggests.

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filmcapsule

1Jun11

What?! Bronson, Mifune and Delon? Pretty sweet cast.

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some kind of a man

3Mar11

Several great tastes that taste only okay together.

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