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Octopussy is the thirteenth James Bond film made by EON Productions, and the sixth to star Roger Moore as the British Secret Service agent, Commander James Bond. The film was produced by Albert R. Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson and released in 1983. It is loosely based upon the Ian Fleming short stories "Octopussy" and "Property of a Lady", both of which were published in the collection Octopussy and The Living Daylights.
Film plot summary
When a British agent stumbles into the British Embassy in West Berlin, fatally wounded, with a fake Fabergé egg, MI6 immediately suspect Soviet involvement, especially since the real valuable egg has turned up at auction in London. James Bond is sent to find out who the seller is and subsequently why 009 was murdered because of the fake egg. When an exiled Afghan prince, Kamal Khan, clearly has to buy the egg at any price during the auction, Bond follows him back to his palace in India to find out why. Kamal Khan is working for renegade Soviet General Orlov, who is supplying Khan with real priceless Soviet treasures, replacing them in state depositories with replicas. Kamal Khan is in turn smuggling them into the west with help from the mysterious Octopussy, a fabulously wealthy woman who lives in a floating palace in India, surrounded by women who are members of her "Octopus" cult, each recognized by a tattooed blue-ringed octopus on their bottom. Octopussy is more than a smuggler, however, and has many legitimate businesses, including shipping, hotels, carnivals and circuses - the latter being used as an ideal front for smuggling jewellery. As a result, many of her female companions and guards are highly trained gymnasts. Bond is led to Octopussy and confronts her, only to find out that she feels indebted to him for letting her father, a British Major, commit suicide rather than face the shame of a court martial when Bond was sent after him for smuggling and murder some years before. With Octopussy now an ally, Kamal Khan manages to separate the pair long enough to pursue his real plan - to replace the jewellery canister being smuggled by Octopussy's circus with a nuclear bomb. The warhead is primed to go off during a performance at a US Air Force base in West Germany. As the explosion will look like an accident, Europe would insist on nuclear disarmament and thus leave western Europe defenceless against an attack from Orlov's Soviet forces. Cast & characters
Crew
SoundtrackMissing image 007Octopussysoundtrack.jpg Original Octopussy soundtrack cover The soundtrack was composed by veteran John Barry. The opening theme, "All Time High" was sung by Rita Coolidge and is one of only two Bond themes that does not reference the movie's title. The other is the theme to On Her Majesty's Secret Service. Track listing
Vehicles & gadgets
See alsoLocationsFilm locations
Shooting locationsTrivia
Comic book adaptationA magazine format comic book adaptation of Octopussy was produced in 1983 by Marvel Comics. The adaptation was written by Steve Moore and illustrated by Paul Neary. External links
Octopussy is also the name of a non-alcoholic cocktail.
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