Bond recruits a new agent, Coop (Terence Cooper), and instigates an anti-sex training programme, thus allowing the movie to have its cake and eat it through sequences of Coop being sexually tempted but boldly resisting. The ‘first’ plot features David Niven as a retired, now celibate, British agent named James Bond, who is returned to service when all other agents are being killed off due to their fondness for sex. In plot terms, Casino Royale is two almost entirely separate films, tenuously linked by a handful of scenes. I can’t adequately discuss this film without revealing plot details, so consider yourselves warned. It certainly has spoof elements, but it’s best seen as an example of the surreal absurdist comedy which has emerged as an entirely new subgenre in this decade.
However, having recently watched the picture courtesy of my local cinema (The Regal in Staines) I’d argue that this was a miscategorisation. Feldman of What’s New, Pussycat? fame, and he, together with Jerry Bresler, produced and released the movie this year.Ĭasino Royale is advertised as a “spoof” of the Bond franchise. Following Ratoff’s death in 1960, his widow sold the rights on to Charles K. Broccoli acquired the rights to the James Bond novels, the one exception was for Casino Royale, because in 1955, producer Gregory Ratoff had bought that particular story from Ian Fleming.