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Images - Cleopatra Jones: 007
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"by Chris Norton -- page 4 of 5
Live and Let Die: Bring on the Black Guys
L ive and Let Die (1973) was the eighth James Bond film and the first to star Roger Moore in the title role. The film finds Bond traveling to the United States to investigate missing agents who were involved in the surveyance of Dr. Kananga (Yaphet Kotto 4 ), the prime minister of the mythical Caribbean island of San Monique.
Bond is quickly targeted by black thugs who are tipped off by his arrival from Solitaire, Kananga's white tarot card reading slave played by Jane Seymour. Bond quickly becomes entangled with Mr. Big, a Harlem drug lord who turns out to be Kananga in disguise. Bond travels to San Monique, then to New Orleans, where he uncovers Kananga's heroin operation. After a series of chases, Bond kills Kananga and ends his plans to consolidate all heroin distribution in the United States.
The film departs from most Bond plots by placing its emphasis on drugs (a blaxploitation staple), and not a plan to disrupt world power structures. The film is drawn along racial lines that place blackness as the primary agent of evil and whiteness as responsible for putting things back in order. This is an obvious reversal of the black/white dichotomy of blaxploitation. Live and Let Die was released during the height of the blaxploitation boom and the influence of those films is quite evident. Articles written in popular periodicals around the rel"
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