IMDb on iPhone and iPod touch Learn more Learn more Download from the App Store
IMDb > "Climax!" Casino Royale (1954)

"Climax!" Casino Royale (1954)



Overview

User Rating:
6.2/10   244 votes
Writers:
Contact:
View company contact information for Casino Royale on IMDbPro.
TV Series:
Original Air Date:
21 October 1954 (Season 1, Episode 3)
Genre:
Plot:
American spy James Bond must outsmart card wiz and crime boss LeChiffre while monitoring his actions. full summary | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
User Reviews:
forgiveness and discovery more (11 total)

Cast

 (Episode Cast) (in credits order)
Barry Nelson ... James Bond

Peter Lorre ... Le Chiffre
Linda Christian ... Valerie Mathis
Michael Pate ... Clarence Leiter
Eugene Borden ... Chef de Partie
Jean Del Val ... Croupier (as Jean DeVal)
Gene Roth ... Basil
Kurt Katch ... Zoltan
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
William Lundigan ... Host
Create a character page for: ?

Episode Crew
Directed by
William H. Brown Jr. 
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Charles Bennett  writer
Anthony Ellis  writer (as Antony Ellis)
Ian Fleming  novel

Produced by
Elliott Lewis .... associate producer
Bretaigne Windust .... producer
 
Original Music by
Jerry Goldsmith 
 
Art Direction by
James Del Val  (as James DeVal)
Robert Tyler Lee 
 
Music Department
Jerry Goldsmith .... conductor
Leith Stevens .... composer: theme music
 

Series Crew
These people are regular crew members. Were they in this episode?
Directed by
Tony Barr  (as Anthony Barr)
John Frankenheimer (episode "Flame-Out on T-6") (episode "Pale Horse aka Pale Horse, Pale Rider") (episode "Scheme to Defraud")
Don Medford (episode "Trial of Captain Wirz, The")
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Eliot Asinof  writer (episode "Throw Away the Cane")
Marc Brandell  writer (episode "Scheme to Defraud")
Anne Morrison Chapin  writer (episode "Child of the Wind")
Whitfield Cook  writer (episode "Louella Parsons Story The")
Margaret Cousins  novel (episode "Leaf Out of the Book A")
Morton S. Fine  adaptation (episode "Leaf Out of the Book The")
Robert M. Fresco  writer
David Friedkin  adaptation (episode "Leaf Out of the Book The")
Frank Glicksman  writer (episode "Child of the Wind")
George Lowther  writer (episode "Flame-Out on T-6")
Jerry McNeely  writer (episode "Two Tests on Tuesday")
Katherine Anne Porter  story (episode "Pale Horse aka Pale Horse, Pale Rider")
Sheldon Stark  writer (episode "King of the Mountain")
Ben Starr  writer (episode "Foolproof")
Victor Wolfson  writer (episode "Night of the Rebel")

Original Music by
Bernard Herrmann 
 
Special Effects by
Jim Fox .... special effects technician
 
Production CompaniesDistributorsOther Companies
Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

Runtime:
48 min | USA:58 min | USA:50 min | USA:60 min
Country:
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.33 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Australia:PG (video rating) | USA:Not Rated (VHS) | USA:Unrated (DVD) | USA:Not Rated (video) | UK:U (VHS)

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
The hotel had eight floors and two elevators. more
Goofs:
Miscellaneous: In the end credits, Clarence Leiter is misspelled as "Clarence Letter" more
Quotes:
Man on telephone: ...but the fact is still indisputable, if you win, she will lose her life. Pardon me for interrupting your game, I only wished to pass on the warning. Goodbye. more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Inside 'Dr. No' (2000) (V) more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful.
forgiveness and discovery, 13 December 2008
Author: (winner55) from United States

A lot has to be forgiven here. First, this is a recording of a live performance - when something went wrong, they were stuck with it; and since this is cheaply made, they had little rehearsal time, so a quite a number of things go wrong. Secondly, the surviving recording is incomplete and not very good. Third, the producers of the show were trying to make the British Ian Fleming's break-out novel accessible to American audiences only familiar with American espionage B-movies, a '50s genre that has not gotten preserved, so most people now will not be familiar with the drab back-alley feel of this show drawn from that genre. And that the producers felt the need to go this route shows that they themselves really had little understanding of where Fleming was coming from - which was really Somerset Maugham's "Ashenden, or the British Agent," filmed in the early '30s by Alfred Hitchcock. And really, prime Hitchcock is the director Fleming would have had in mind while writing this book. But despite his popularity, Hitchcock himself remained an anomaly in Hollywood throughout the '50s. His ability to shock audiences was well known, but his capacity for sophisticated wit and subtle irony were not easy for most Americans to grasp at the time.

So too Fleming's subversive sense of what at last became known as the "anti-hero" - a man as ruthless as his enemies, able to seduce and destroy women with a glance, then quietly order breakfast in a luxury hotel as if nothing happened. For Fleming, this was a means of preserving the "hard-boiled" detective tradition while at the same time raising uncomfortable questions about what it meant to live comfortably middle-class in cold-war England. Never pointed enough to threaten middle-class readers, but enough to raise their anxiety level to the point of continued interest in the James Bond series.

There's none of that here - the romance is played straight, and the only sophistication comes in the gambling scene. The rest bulls through or stumbles along as one might expect from an American genre thriller of the time.

The major plus factors here are the performances. Most of the cast is miscast, but performs energetically despite that; Peter Lorre performs very weakly, but he happens to be perfectly cast - he is the definitive Le Chiffre! That surprising discovery is reason enough to find this show and give it a view, at least for Bond aficionados.

Was the above review useful to you?
more (11 total)

Message Boards

Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for "Climax!" (1954)

Related Links

Main series Episode guide Full cast and crew
Company credits External reviews News articles
IMDb TV section IMDb Drama section IMDb USA section
Add this title to MyMovies

You may report errors and omissions on this page to the IMDb database managers. They will be examined and if approved will be included in a future update. Clicking the 'Update' button will take you through a step-by-step process.