11 Things You Learn Rewatching Thunderball

So. Much. Water.

By Jack Pooley /

MGM

Our weekly series of revisiting every single James Bond movie continues, following up last week's deep-dive into Goldfinger with Bond's fourth outing, the 1965 spy romp Thunderball.

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The final Bond film directed by Terence Young - who helmed Dr. No and From Russia with Love but chose to sit-out Goldfinger - Thunderball is certainly not up to the iconic standard of its predecessors, but it more-or-less delivers the goods that fans expect.

Not all of the film's choices work - though it has plenty of unapologetic defenders - it at least isn't resting on the series' laurels, attempting to take the action to daring new heights and basically amping up the franchise's stylistic aplomb with a colossal $9 million budget (triple that of any prior Bond film).

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There are uncomfortable, frustrating and unintentionally funny scenes, for sure, but Connery's charm remains very much in tact, and at the end of the day it's still a totally rock solid Bond movie (especially considering some of the dreck that followed)...