I am curious about a cut scene from Live and Let Die. It appears on the poster that there is a very large gun being fired.
Is there any mention of this or other cut scenes being filmed in Roger Moore's James Bond Diary?
Well, the poster images comes from a series of publicity shots Roger Moore did with said gun. It is referenced in Roger Moore's James Bond Diary. Those shots were incorporated in the publicity material but do not reference anything actually filmed for the movie. Certainly, no sequence is mentioned on the DVD, the script and in any book or material on the film uncovered to date.
Is this a reference to Navy LST mentioned in the Live and Let Die radio ad?
Also I saw this cut scene referenced on IMDB.com alternate versions..
I do not see any such reference. Sorry, scaramunga, but can you tell me where is the cut scene referenced in ?
http://www.imdb.com/...ternateversionsI believe the advert references the LST that Bond steers Adam into at the climax of the boat chase. The explosion formed the background to a publicity shot of Roger coolly sipping wine while all hell breaks loose behind him.
Why was Live and Let Die at a different aspect ratio than Diamonds and Spy? cost savings?
The first Bond film to be filmed 'flat' (i.e. with spherical lenses rather than using the Panavision anamorphic widescreen process) since Goldfinger (1964).
Yes. UA had been acquired by Transamerica Corporation in the late 1960's and in the early 1970's, for a range of economic reasons, budgets were pulled in. Also, there was a feeling of limiting the risk with the new Bond.
The one deleted scene I have heard of from the film is a sequence involving Bond meeting a contact in an exotic garden. Said contact gives Bond information in a microdot concealed in his contact lens. Bond then ushers the man out of the garden through a gate and we pull back to reveal that the garden is on a rooftop and the contact was a double agent. He falls to his death in a neat, bizarre Bond reversal. This sequence was meant to be in Italy, I believe and is the job referenced by M in the body of the film at Bond's flat. It also explains why and who Miss Caruso is. I believe the scene was prepared for but never filmed. Some of this information is contained in Yes, Mr Bronson by Michael Sheard, the late UK character actor who would have played the contact in the scene and by anecdotal conversations.