According to IMDB trivia this title changed from Tomorrow Never Lies because of a typo. The producers adjusted their monocles and said 'I say, this plucky typo has the right idea!'. I think that's emblematic of how little care the Bond franchise takes with its titles. If they don't care, why should I?
I watched this with a friend who was really confident they knew what happens at the end but who was surprised! So I got a nice surprise-by-proxy.
This blog post has the movie clip plus a live version of the song that's easier to follow. It's called "Everybody Gets to Go to the Moon", it was written by Jimmy Webb (of "MacArthur Park" fame) and originally sung in 1969 by Thelma Houston in a version that starts out pretty nice but turns way-too-clever in a way that's distracting. Maybe that's why it wasn't a big hit. But the Three Degrees rehabilitate it, speed it up and put a lot of energy and joy into it.
I think this song appears in The French Connection solely to set up a dramatic contrast between space-age optimism and the moral rot of the "real world". But this song is the best thing about the movie! It's almost fifty years later and we've been making gritty cop movies nonstop, some of them are pretty good, but we haven't done much that goes on the same shelf as "Everybody Gets to Go to the Moon".
(1) Mon May 06 2019 07:54 April Film Roundup:
It's been an action-packed April, as I watched the biggest blockbusters of 22, 28, and 48 years ago!
- Comments:
Posted by Brendan at Mon May 06 2019 20:33
I have a weirdly persistent fondness for Tomorrow Never Dies--I saw all the Pierce Brosnan Bond movies for no clear reason, and I remember preferring it to GoldenEye, which I think is mostly considered superior. Michelle Yeoh and Jonathan Pryce move a lot of water in Brendantown. I guess Brendantown is underwater, here.