Come Back Tomorrow the Warehouse Is Closed for the Day but Come by Tomorrow to Spin Again

2002 James Bond moving-picture show directed by Lee Tamahori

Die Some other Day
Die another Day - UK cinema poster.jpg

Theatrical release affiche

Directed by Lee Tamahori
Written by
  • Neal Purvis
    Robert Wade
Based on James Bond
by Ian Fleming
Produced by
  • Michael G. Wilson
  • Barbara Broccoli
Starring
  • Pierce Brosnan
  • Halle Berry
  • Toby Stephens
  • Rosamund Pike
  • Rick Yune
  • John Cleese
  • Judi Dench
Cinematography David Tattersall
Edited past Christian Wagner
Music past David Arnold

Production
companies

Eon Productions
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Distributed by MGM Distribution Co. (Us)
20th Century Pull a fast one on (International)

Release dates

  • twenty November 2002 (2002-11-20) (United kingdom)
  • 22 November 2002 (2002-11-22) (United States)

Running fourth dimension

133 minutes
Countries United Kingdom[1]
United States[ane]
Language English
Budget $142 million[2]
Box office $431.9 million[2]

Die Another Mean solar day is a 2002 spy picture and the twentieth film in the James Bond series produced past Eon Productions. It was produced by Michael Thou. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, and directed by Lee Tamahori. It is the fourth and terminal motion picture to star Pierce Brosnan as MI6 agent James Bail; it was besides the only moving picture to accept John Cleese equally Q, and the last with Samantha Bond as Miss Moneypenny. Halle Berry co-stars as NSA agent Giacinta "Jinx" Johnson, the Bond girl. The plot follows Bond as he attempts to locate a mole in British intelligence who betrayed him and a British billionaire who is afterward revealed to be connected to a North Korean operative that he seemingly killed. It is an original story, although it takes influence from Ian Fleming's novels Moonraker (1955) and The Man with the Gold Gun (1965).[3]

Die Some other Mean solar day marked the James Bond franchise's 40th anniversary; consequently, the motion-picture show includes references to each of the preceding films.[4] The film received mixed reviews; some critics praised Tamahori'due south direction, but many disliked its over-reliance on CGI, production placement and its unoriginal plot, as well every bit the villain. Nevertheless, Dice Another Day was the highest-grossing James Bond moving-picture show up to that time unadjusted for inflation.

Plot [edit]

MI6 agent James Bond infiltrates a Due north Korean military base where Colonel Tan-Sun Moon is illegally trading weapons for African conflict diamonds. Afterwards Moon'due south right-hand man Zao is contacted by an unknown source who reveals Bail's truthful identity, Moon attempts to impale Bond and a hovercraft chase ensues, ending with Colonel Moon accidentally driving his craft off a cliff. Bond survives but is captured by North Korean soldiers and imprisoned past the Colonel'south begetter, General Moon.

Afterwards fourteen months of captivity and torture at the hands of the Korean People'south Army, Bond is traded for Zao in a prisoner exchange, beyond the Bridge of No Return. He is sedated and taken to meet M, who informs him that his status as a 00 Amanuensis has been suspended under suspicion of having leaked information under duress to the North Koreans. Bond is convinced that he has been prepare by a double agent in the British regime. After escaping MI6 custody, he discovers that he is in Hong Kong, where he learns from Chang, a Hong Kong Chinese agent and sometime colleague, that Zao is in Cuba.

In Havana, Bond meets NSA agent Giacinta "Jinx" Johnson and the 2 accept sex activity that dark. Bond later follows her to a gene therapy clinic, where patients can have their appearances altered through Deoxyribonucleic acid restructuring. Bond locates Zao inside the clinic and attempts to kill him, but Zao escapes afterwards a scuffle, leaving behind a pendant which leads Bond to a cache of diamonds, identified as disharmonize diamonds, but begetting the crest of the visitor owned past British billionaire businessman Gustav Graves. Bail learns that Graves only appeared a yr prior, apparently discovering a vein of diamonds in Iceland leading to his electric current wealth, celebrity, and philanthropy from its assets.

At Blades Club in London, Bail meets Graves forth with his assistant Miranda Frost, who is too an undercover MI6 agent. After a fencing battle, Bail is invited by Graves to Iceland for a scientific sit-in. Before long afterward, M tells Bond of MI6'due south doubts well-nigh Graves, restores Bail's Double-0 condition and offers assistance in the investigation just tin only offer him limited assistance considering "the world has changed" during his absence.

At his water ice palace adjacent to the diamond mine site in Iceland, Graves unveils a new orbital mirror satellite, "Icarus", which is able to focus solar free energy on a small expanse and provide year-round sunshine for ingather evolution. Bond seduces Frost and Jinx infiltrates Graves' command centre, but is captured by Graves and Zao. Bail rescues her and discovers that Graves is in fact Colonel Moon, who has used the gene therapy technology to alter his appearance and amassed his fortune from sale of the conflict diamonds every bit a cover for his true plans.

Bond confronts Graves, only Frost arrives to reveal herself equally the traitor who betrayed Bond in North Korea, forcing Bond to escape from Graves' facility. Bond returns in his Aston Martin V12 Vanquish to rescue Jinx, who has been recaptured in the palace. As Graves uses Icarus to melt the water ice palace, Zao pursues Bond into the palace using his Jaguar XKR. Bail kills Zao by causing a behemothic water ice chandelier to fall onto him, and revives Jinx after she has almost drowned.

Bond and Jinx pursue Graves and Frost to the Korean peninsula and stow abroad on Graves' cargo plane. Graves reveals his identity to his father, and the true purpose of the Icarus satellite: to cut a path through the Korean Demilitarized Zone with concentrated sunlight, allowing North Korean troops to invade Republic of korea, defeat the United Nations Command forces of both U.Due south. and South Korea, and unite the peninsula under the flag of the DPRK. Horrified that information technology would potentially trigger World War 3 with the United States, General Moon tries to stop the plan, but Graves murders him.

Bond attempts to shoot Graves, but he is prevented by a soldier. In their struggle, a gunshot pierces the fuselage, causing the plane to descend quickly. Bond and Graves appoint in a fist fight, and Jinx attempts to regain control of the plane. Frost attacks Jinx, forcing her to defend herself in a sword duel. After the plane passes through the Icarus beam and is further damaged, Jinx kills Frost. Graves attempts to escape by parachute, but Bond opens the parachute, pulling Graves out of the aeroplane and into one of its engines, killing him and disabling the Icarus axle. Bail and Jinx escape from the disintegrating plane in a helicopter from the cargo concord, carrying away Graves' stash of diamonds.

Cast [edit]

  • Pierce Brosnan as James Bond, an MI6 amanuensis.
  • Halle Berry every bit Jinx Johnson, an NSA agent.[v] [6] Before Berry'south casting Salma Hayek, Saffron Burrows, and Sophie Ellis-Bextor were also considered for the role.[three]
  • Toby Stephens as Gustav Graves, a British entrepreneur, alter ego of Colonel Moon. Graves was modeled after Hugo Drax in Ian Fleming'south original Moonraker, a Nazi war criminal who switched places with a British soldier at the finish of World War II, became a well-respected and wealthy philanthropist, and used this cover to program a nuclear missile strike on London. He was besides modelled afterward Uday Hussein and Richard Branson.[3]
  • Rosamund Pike as Miranda Frost, undercover MI6 agent and double agent.
  • Rick Yune as Tang Ling Zao, a North Korean terrorist working for Moon and living every bit an exile in North Korea.
  • Judi Dench as M, the head of MI6.
  • John Cleese equally Q, MI6's quartermaster and armourer.
  • Madonna equally Verity, Graves and Frost's fencing instructor.
  • Michael Madsen as Damian Falco, Jinx's superior in the NSA.
  • Samantha Bond as Miss Moneypenny, M'south secretarial assistant.
  • Colin Salmon every bit Charles Robinson, K'south Deputy Chief of Staff.
  • Will Yun Lee as Colonel Tan-Sun Moon, a Due north Korean army colonel, who later uses an alter ego.
  • Kenneth Tsang as General Moon, Colonel Moon's father. He assists in Bail'southward release back to the West. The North Korean general wishes for a peaceful reunification of Korea, whereas his son is bent on war.
  • Michael Gorevoy as Vladimir Popov, Gustav Graves' personal scientist
  • Lawrence Makoare as Mr. Kil, one of Gustav Graves' henchmen.
  • Ho Yi as The Hotel Manager and Chinese special agent Mr. Chang. In early drafts of the script, information technology was Wai Lin (Michelle Yeoh) who aided Bond in Hong Kong, but the idea fell through and Chang was created to replace her.[7]
  • Rachel Grant as Peaceful Fountains of Want, a Chinese agent working for Mr. Chang, hugger-mugger every bit a masseuse.
  • Emilio Echevarría as Raoul, the managing director of a Havana cigar factory, and a British sleeper agent.
  • Vincent Wong as General Li
  • Joaquin Martinez every bit Elderly Cigar Factory Worker
  • Simón Andreu equally Dr. Álvarez
  • Deborah Moore (the daughter of quondam Bond actor Roger Moore) as Airline Hostess
  • Mark Dymond equally Mr. Van Bierk
  • Oliver Skeete as Concierge At The Fencing Club

Product [edit]

Subsequently the success of The Earth is Non Enough, producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson asked the director Michael Apted to render to direct. Although Apted accustomed, they rescinded the offer in social club to ask Tony Scott and John Woo, who both declined. Scott claims to take suggested Quentin Tarantino as director, although Wilson denies that whatever formal negotiations were held with him. Pierce Brosnan suggested John McTiernan, Ang Lee, and Martin Scorsese as potential choices, and informally discussed the thought of directing a Bond film with Scorsese on a flying. Brett Ratner, Stephen Hopkins, and Stuart Baird were later in negotiations to direct before Lee Tamahori was hired.[iii]

Filming [edit]

Main photography of Die Some other Mean solar day began on eleven January 2002 at Pinewood Studios.[8] The film was shot primarily in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland, Iceland, and Cádiz, Spain. Other locations included Pinewood Studios' 007 Stage and Maui, Hawaii, in Dec 2001. Laird Hamilton, Dave Kalama, and Darrick Doerner performed the pre-title surfing scene at the surf break known as "Jaws" in Peʻahi, Maui,[nine] while the shore shots were taken well-nigh Cádiz and Newquay, Cornwall. Scenes inside Graves' diamond mine were too filmed in Cornwall, at the Eden Project. The scenes involving the Cuban locations of Havana and the fictional Isla de Los Organos were filmed at La Caleta, Spain.[10]

The scenes featuring Berry in a bikini were shot in Cádiz. The location was reportedly cold and windy, and footage has been released of Berry wrapped in thick towels between takes to avert catching a chill.[11] Berry was injured during filming when debris from a smoke grenade flew into her center. The debris was removed in a 30-minute operation.[12] Brosnan too sustained a articulatio genus injury during the shooting of an activeness scene in Cornwall.[13]

Gadgets and other props from every previous Bond film and stored in Eon Productions' archives appear in Q's warehouse in the London Underground. Examples include the jetpack in Thunderball and Rosa Klebb's poison-tipped shoe in From Russia with Dearest. Q mentions that the spotter he issues Bond is "your 20th, I believe", a reference to Die Another Day being the 20th Eon-produced Bail motion-picture show. In London, the Reform Society was used to shoot several places in the motion-picture show, including the lobby and gallery at the Blades Club, MI6 Headquarters, Buckingham Palace, Light-green Park, and Westminster. Jökulsárlón, Iceland was used for the car chase on the ice. Four Aston Martins and four Jaguars, all converted to four-bicycle drive, were used (and wrecked) filming the sequence. A temporary dam was constructed at the mouth of the narrow inlet to keep the salty body of water water out and thus allow the lagoon to freeze.[xvi] Additional chase footage was filmed at Svalbard, Kingdom of norway, Jostedalsbreen National Park, Norway, and RAF Fiddling Rissington, Gloucestershire.[x] Manston Airport in Kent was used for the scenes involving the Antonov cargo airplane scenes.[17] The scene in which Bond surfs the moving ridge created by Icarus when Graves was attempting to kill Bond was shot on the bluish screen. The waves, along with all the glaciers in the scene are figurer-generated.[18]

The hangar interior of the "Us Air Base in Southward Korea", shown crowded with Chinook helicopters, was filmed at RAF Odiham in Hampshire, Great britain, every bit were the helicopter interior shots during the Switchblade sequence. These latter scenes, though portrayed in the air, were actually filmed entirely on the ground with the sky background being added in mail service-production using bluish screen techniques. Although the base is portrayed in the film equally a United states of america base of operations, all the aircraft and personnel in the scene are British in real life. In the film, Switchblades (1-person gliders resembling fighter jets in shape) are flown by Bond and Jinx to stealthily enter Democratic people's republic of korea. The Switchblade was based on a workable model chosen "PHASST" (Programmable High Distance Single Soldier Transport). Kinetic Aerospace Inc.'s lead designer, Jack McCornack was impressed by director Lee Tamahori'south fashion of conducting the Switchblade scene and commented, "Information technology's brief, but realistic. The expert guys become in unobserved, thank you to a fast cruise, good glide performance, and minimal radar signature. It's a wonderful promotion for the PHASST."[19]

The satellite attack at the end of the film was at first written to have place in Manhattan, just after the September eleven, 2001 terrorist attacks it was moved to the Korean Demilitarized Zone.[three]

Music [edit]

The soundtrack was composed by David Arnold and released on Warner Bros. Records.[20] He once again made use of electronic rhythm elements in his score, and included 2 of the new themes created for The Globe Is Not Plenty. The beginning, originally used equally Renard's theme, is heard during the mammoth "Antonov" cue on the recording, and is written for piano. The second new theme, used in the "Christmas in Turkey" rails of The Globe Is Not Enough, is reused in the "Going Downwards Together" runway.[21]

The title song for Dice Another Day was co-written and co-produced by Mirwais Ahmadzai and performed by Madonna, who also had a cameo in the flick as Verity, a fencing teacher. The concept of the title sequence is to represent Bond trying to survive 14 months of torture at the hands of the North Koreans. Critics' opinions of the song were sharply divided—it was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Original Song and the 2004 Grammy Honour for Best Dance Recording,[22] but likewise for a Gold Raspberry Award for Worst Original Song of 2002 (while Madonna herself won the Gilded Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Extra for her cameo). In a MORI poll for the Aqueduct 4 programme "James Bond's Greatest Hits", the vocal was voted 9th out of 22, and too came in every bit an "overwhelming number one" favourite among those under the age of 24.[23]

Marketing [edit]

Reportedly 20 companies, paying The states$70 one thousand thousand, had their products featured in the film, a record at the time,[24] although USA Today reported that number to be as loftier as United states of america$100 1000000.[25]

The eleventh-generation Ford Thunderbird was featured in the film as Jinx's car, with a coral colour paying homage to a paint option for the original model, and matching her bikini. Ford produced a limited-edition 007-branded 2003 Thunderbird as a tie-in for the film, featuring a similar paint job.[26]

Revlon produced "007 Colour Collection" makeup inspired past Jinx.[27] "Bond Barbie" dolls inspired past the franchise were besides produced, featuring a cherry shawl and an evening apparel designed by Lindy Hemming, and sold in a gift set with Ken posing as Bond in a tuxedo designed past the Italian fashion firm Brioni.[28]

Release [edit]

Die Some other Day had its globe premiere on 18 November 2002 at the Purple Albert Hall in London. Queen Elizabeth 2 and Prince Philip were guests of accolade.[ citation needed ] The Royal Albert Hall had a makeover for the screening and had been transformed into an ice palace. Proceeds from the premiere, nigh £500,000, were donated to the Cinema and Boob tube Benevolent Fund of which the Queen is patron.[29]

Die Another Day was controversial in the Korean Peninsula. The North Korean government disliked the portrayal of their land as vicious and state of war-hungry. The South Koreans boycotted 145 theatres where information technology was released on 31 December 2002, as they were offended past the scene in which an American officer issues orders to the S Korean army in the defence of their homeland, and by a lovemaking scene virtually a statue of the Buddha. The Jogye Buddhist Order issued a statement that the picture show was "disrespectful to our religion and does not reflect our values and ideals". The Washington Post reported growing resentment in the nation towards the United states of america. An official of the South Korean Ministry of Civilisation and Tourism said that Dice Another Day was "the incorrect movie at the incorrect time."[xxx]

Reception [edit]

Box part [edit]

On the kickoff day of release, ticket sales reached £1.ii meg.[31] Die Another Twenty-four hour period grossed $47 million on its opening weekend and was ranked number #1 at the box office.[32] The film would compete against Harry Potter and the Sleeping accommodation of Secrets and The Santa Clause 2 during the Thanksgiving weekend. Moreover, all 3 films were able to defeat the underperforming animated motion-picture show Treasure Planet. Afterwards on, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and Dice Some other Day would simultaneously reclaim the number #1 spot at the box function.[33] For six months, they were both the latest films to return to the top spot at the box office until Finding Nemo joined the grouping in June 2003.[34] The film earned $160.nine one thousand thousand domestically and $431.9 million worldwide, becoming the sixth highest-grossing movie of 2002. Dice Another Solar day was the highest-grossing James Bond film until the release of Casino Royale.[35]

Critical response [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film received an approval rating of 56% based on 220 reviews, with an boilerplate rating of 6.1/10. The site'southward disquisitional consensus reads, "Its action may be a bit too over-the-top for some, simply Die Some other Day is lavishly crafted and succeeds in evoking classic Bond themes from the franchise'south earlier installments."[36] On Metacritic, the flick has a weighted boilerplate score of 56 out of 100 based on 43 critics, indicating "mixed and average reviews".[37] Audiences surveyed past CinemaScore gave the flick a grade "A-" on scale of A to F.[38]

Michael Dequina of Film Threat praised the film as the best of the series to star Pierce Brosnan and "the almost satisfying installment of the franchise in recent memory."[37] Larry Carroll of CountingDown.com praised Lee Tamahori for having "magnificently counterbalanced the film then that information technology keeps true to the Bond legend, makes reference to the classic films that preceded it, but also injects a new zest to it all."[39] Entertainment Weekly magazine also gave a positive reaction, proverb that Tamahori, "a true filmmaker", has re-established the serial' pop sensuality.[xl] A.O. Scott of The New York Times called the movie the best of the James Bond series since The Spy Who Loved Me. [37] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times, who gave the moving picture 3 stars out of four, stated "This movie has the usual impossible stunts ... But it has simply as many scenes that are lean and tough enough to fit in any mod action picture".[41] Kyle Bell of Movie Freaks 365 stated in his review that the "first half of Die Another Day is classic Bond", but that "Things start to go downhill when the water ice palace gets introduced."[42] The first 20 minutes of Dice Some other Day was regarded as "much further from the grimmer post-9/11 Bond played past Daniel Craig" [Pierce Brosnan's successor equally the actor portraying James Bond] and not able to "go toe-to-toe with the darkest moments in franchise history" as Pierce Brosnan only suits in the role of a romantic hero.[43]

Several reviewers felt the picture relied too heavily on gadgets and special effects, with the plot existence neglected. James Berardinelli of Reelviews.cyberspace said, "This is a railroad train wreck of an action moving-picture show – a stupefying attempt by the filmmakers to force-feed James Bail into the mindless mold and throw xl years of cinematic history down the toilet in favor of bright flashes and loud bangs." Of the action sequences, he said, "Die Another Day is an do in loud explosions and excruciatingly bad special effects. The CGI work in this movie is an order of magnitude worse than anything I have seen in a major motility picture. Coupled with lousy production blueprint, Die Some other Day looks like it was washed on the cheap."[44] Gary Brownish of the Houston Community Newspapers besides described the weak point of the picture as "the seemingly non-cease action sequences and loud explosions that announced to take middle stage while the Bond character is nigh relegated to 2nd string."[45] Roger Moore, who played Bond in earlier films, said: "I idea it but went likewise far – and that'south from me, the first Bond in space! Invisible cars and dodgy CGI footage? Delight!"[46]

The amount of product placement in Die Some other Twenty-four hour period had been a contemporaneous point of criticism, with the BBC, Fourth dimension and Reuters referring mockingly to the film using the championship "Buy Another 24-hour interval".[24] [25] The producers subsequently chose to limit the number of companies involved in production placement to 8 for the next Bond film, Casino Royale, in 2006.[25]

Retrospective [edit]

Despite the generally positive reviews that Die Another 24-hour interval received when released, and despite favour from fans who prefer Bond's more "military camp" films, a comment piece in 2020 stated that it is "considered past many to exist the worst entry in James Bond's canon" and compares to the other previous Bond films have been which "ushered in a new era of tearing, gritty action-espionage movies" and gave rise to the "stripped-down, no-nonsense" Bond of Daniel Craig starting with Casino Royale.[47] It ofttimes occupies a low rank on Bail-related lists. In a 2021 Yahoo survey consisting of 2200 experts and superfans, Dice Another Day was ranked every bit the tertiary-worst installment after Quantum of Solace and Spectre. The authors of the study did nonetheless specify that "every Bail film...is always someone'due south favourite."[48]

Media [edit]

Die Another Day was novelised by the then-official James Bond writer, Raymond Benson, based on the screenplay by Neal Purvis and Robert Wade. An endeavour is made to depict some of the flick'southward more than outlandish elements with more than believability, in the way of Fleming's original novels' employ of cut-edge technology. And then for example, the non-bodywork elements of the Aston Martin with its 'cloaking' function – the drinking glass windows and prophylactic tyres – are described as having retractable covers to achieve the invisibility effect. Fan reaction to it was above average.[49] Subsequently its publication Benson retired equally the official James Bail novelist and a new series featuring the secret agent'southward adventures as a teenager, by Charlie Higson, was launched in 2005. As the novelisation was published subsequently Benson'due south terminal original 007 novel, The Man with the Cherry Tattoo, it was the last literary work featuring Bond equally originally conceived past Ian Fleming until the publication of Devil May Care by Sebastian Faulks in 2008 to marker the 100th ceremony of Fleming'south nativity.[50]

007 Legends, released in 2012, features Daniel Craig's James Bond in a Die Another Day level.[51]

Cancelled spin-off [edit]

Speculation arose in 2003 of a spin-off film concentrating on Jinx, which was scheduled for a November/December 2004 release. It was originally reported that MGM was keen to set a movie series that would be a "wintertime olympics" alternative to the main serial. In the tardily 1990s, MGM had originally considered developing a spin-off film based on Michelle Yeoh'south character, Wai Lin, in 1997's Tomorrow Never Dies. The spinoff Jinx was appear in December 2002. Lee Tamahori initially wanted to direct, but Stephen Frears was ultimately hired. Berry and Michael Madsen were originally going to reprise their roles equally Jinx and Falco, while Jinx's lover was going to exist played by Javier Bardem. Bardem would afterward play villain Raoul Silva in Skyfall (2012). The film would accept revolved around Jinx'due south entry into the NSA, revealing that she had been adopted past Falco after being orphaned in a bombing and being hired by him from the RAND Corporation to do a chore at the NSA every bit a favor.[3] [52] [53] Wade described the picture show as "a very atmospheric, Euro thriller, a Bourne-type moving-picture show."[3] However, despite much speculation of an imminent movie, on 26 October 2003, Variety reported that MGM had cancelled the project.[54] MGM instead decided to reboot the James Bail franchise with the next flick, Casino Royale, with Daniel Craig portraying the office of the titular character.[55] In 2020 Berry revealed that the film was cancelled over its $80 one thousand thousand budget, saying "Nobody was ready to sink that kind of money into a blackness female action star."[56] [57] Purvis and Wade said that this decision was influenced by the failure of several action films with female person stars, including Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle and Lara Croft: Tomb Raider – The Cradle of Life, in 2003.[58]

See as well [edit]

  • Invisibility in fiction
  • Outline of James Bond

References [edit]

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  54. ^ "Halle Berry reveals why her Bond character's spin-off film was axed". The Contained. xv September 2020. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  55. ^ Sharf, Zack (16 January 2020). "Halle Berry'south Bond Spinoff Was Killed Over Upkeep Fears, Enraging 007 Producer". IndieWire . Retrieved fourteen September 2021.
  56. ^ "Die Another Day's Jinx, and the lost James Bond spin-off franchise". Motion-picture show Stories. 27 August 2020. Retrieved 14 September 2021.

External links [edit]

  • Die Another Twenty-four hours at IMDb
  • Die Some other Day at AllMovie
  • Dice Some other Solar day at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Die Another Day at Box Function Mojo

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Die_Another_Day

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