Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Hope himself cameos in one scene. Other cameos include directors Terry Gilliam, Sam Raimi, Costa-Gavras, Martin Brest, Frank Oz, and Joel Coen, musician B. B. King and visual effects pioneer Ray Harryhausen. Although contemporary reviews of the film were largely negative, Spies Like Us was a financial success, grossing $77 million.
Allows linking to a Discord guild Template parameters [Edit template data] This template prefers inline formatting of parameters. Parameter Description Type Status Guild ID 1 The ID of the guild (obtainable by right-clicking on the server header and selecting "Copy ID" in developer mode) Number required Guild Name 2 The title (name) of the guild String required Join code joincode The code to ...
"Spies Like Us" is the title song to the 1985 Warner Bros. motion picture of the same name, starring Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, and Donna Dixon. It was written and performed by Paul McCartney , and reached number 7 on the Billboard singles chart in early 1986, making it McCartney's last US top ten hit until 2015's " FourFiveSeconds ". [ 1 ]
In the "Video Pirates" segment of Amazon Women on the Moon (1987), pirates find a treasure chest filled with golden video cassettes; among the numerous in-jokes visible on the tapes, one of the cassette cases is labeled "See You Next Wednesday" (while Landis directed several segments of the film, the "Video Pirates" segment was directed by frequent Landis collaborator Robert K. Weiss).
James Bond is the most famous of film spies, but there were also more serious, probing works like le Carré's The Spy Who Came in from the Cold that also emerged from the Cold War. As the Cold War ended, the newest villain became terrorism and more often involved the Middle East. [3]
Spies Like Us may also refer to: "Spies Like Us" (song), the film's title song, written and performed by Paul McCartney "Spies Like Us", a track by hip hop group Styles of Beyond, from their 1998 album 2000 Fold; Spies Like Us, a 1995 memoir by Hugh Lunn, later adapted into a radio serial by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
The final scene at Globex contains references to several James Bond films. The episode title and many references are from You Only Live Twice, with A View to a Kill also being referenced. [32] A character modeled after Sean Connery's Bond is tackled by Homer and killed after a parody of the laser scene from Goldfinger. [33] Mrs.
In January 2015, Pilgrim explained the process for adapting films into tie-in comics, noting that scripts and other behind-the-scenes material are referenced in addition to the actual films. Because of this, the adaptations sometimes have new scenes, which Marvel "felt strongly enough" to include as canon, even though they were never filmed.