Additional information for Goldeneye, which has a domestic theatrical release set for November 17, 1995. The film is being distributed by United Artists and has not yet been rated. Goldeneye has a total running time of 130 minutes.
13
Argentina
PG
Australia
16
Denmark
K-16
Finland
16
Germany
15
Ireland
12
Netherlands
PG
New Zealand
15
Norway
M/12
Portugal
PG13
Singapore
15
South Korea
13
Spain
15
Sweden
15
UK
PA
Canada
12
Iceland
PG-13
USA
PG-13
Philippines
12
Brazil
130min
GoldenEye
Argentina
GoldenEye
France
GoldenEye
Poland
GoldenEye
Spain
GoldenEye
Spain
007: GoldenEye
Australia
007: GoldenEye
Mexico
Zlaté oko
Czech Republic
Zlaté oko
Slovakia
Zlatno oko
Croatia
Zlatno oko
Serbia
Золотой глаз
Russia
007 Contra GoldenEye
Brazil
007 ja kultainen silmä
Finland
Altin Göz
Turkey
Aranyszem
Hungary
Auksine Akis
Lithuania
Bond 17
UK
Epiheirisi Hrysa Matia
Greece
Golden Eye
International
James Bond - Zlato oko
Slovenia
James Bond 007 - GoldenEye
Germany
L'oeil de feu
Canada
November 13, 1995
USA
November 16, 1995
Canada
November 17, 1995
USA
November 24, 1995
UK
December 07, 1995
Argentina
December 07, 1995
Netherlands
December 07, 1995
Singapore
December 08, 1995
Israel
December 08, 1995
Portugal
December 08, 1995
Sweden
December 10, 1995
Slovenia
December 14, 1995
Hungary
December 15, 1995
Finland
December 15, 1995
Iceland
December 15, 1995
Mexico
December 15, 1995
Switzerland
December 15, 1995
Turkey
December 16, 1995
Japan
December 16, 1995
South Korea
December 20, 1995
Belgium
December 20, 1995
France
December 20, 1995
Spain
December 21, 1995
Hong Kong
December 22, 1995
Luxembourg
December 22, 1995
Malaysia
December 25, 1995
Panama
December 26, 1995
Australia
December 26, 1995
New Zealand
December 26, 1995
Norway
December 26, 1995
Poland
December 28, 1995
Germany
December 29, 1995
Austria
January 04, 1996
Czech Republic
January 04, 1996
Philippines
January 04, 1996
Slovakia
January 12, 1996
Greece
January 12, 1996
Italy
January 26, 1996
Denmark
February 09, 1996
Estonia
No taglines exist for this title.
James Bond teams up with the lone survivor of a destroyed Russian research center to stop the hijacking of a nuclear space weapon by a fellow agent believed to be dead.
The story opens in 1986, in the Cold War Soviet Union. British secret agent James Bond and his fellow 00 agent, Alec Trevelayan (006), have infiltrated a secret Soviet chemical weapons production facility with the intention of destroying it. After finding their target, a large room filled with chemical canisters, James begins to plant explosive charges while Alec holds off the facility's guards. Alec is captured by a ruthless Soviet general, Ourumov, who orders Bond to surrender. Bond resets the charge timers from six minutes to three and walks out to surrender just as Ourumov executes Alec. Bond takes cover behind a cart of chemical canisters and moves toward a conveyor belt that leads outside. A foolhardy guard is killed by Ourumov himself when he shoots at Bond. Bond is able to escape on the conveyor belt and shoots out the locks holding hundreds of other canisters which temporarily bury Ourumov's men. Outside the facility, Bond, using a motorcycle, leaps after a plane that falls off a nearby cliff. He successfully regains control of the plane and flies off as the weapons plant explodes.Nine years later Bond is driving in the mountains near Monaco with a woman psychiatrist from MI:6 who is assigned to evaluate his mental state. He races down a mountain road and becomes involved in a dangerous driving game with a beautiful woman in a Ferrari. The psychiatrist, citing his reckless nature, demands that he halt the game. Bond does and seduces her.Bonds current assignment is to observe possible subversive Russian involvement in the demonstration of a French hi-tech helicopter called the Eurocopter Tiger, which is unaffected by electromagnetic pulses from nuclear weapons. He is ordered to follow the same woman he raced with earlier, Xenia Onatopp, a Russian helicopter pilot. Xenia has been the mistress of a Canadian Air Force captain whom she later murders during sex by crushing his chest between her thighs. The next morning, Bond searches the captain's yacht, finding him dead. He rushes to the site of the Tiger demonstration and sees it being stolen by Xenia, who, moments before, murdered both pilots. Bond is arrested and watches helplessly as Xenia flies away.In the wastes of Siberia, at Severnaya, a Russian satellite communications outpost, General Ourumov and Onatopp arrive in the Tiger helicopter, ostensibly for a surprise inspection of the a new satellite weapons system called "Goldeneye." Ourumov orders the commanding officer to hand over the activation keys and control disk for Goldeneye and promptly has Onatopp execute everyone working at the facility. (As she finishes killing everyone, she shows signs of sexual excitement.) Onatopp and Ourumov then activate one of the two Goldeneye satellites, one which contains a powerful nuclear warhead capable of delivering an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) over Severnaya. Unknown, however, to Onatopp and Ourumov, one of the technicians, Natalya Simonova, was out of the room when the others were murdered and had hidden from Onatopp. Ourumov and Onatopp escape in the Eurocopter, it being unaffected by the EMP. Three Russian MiGs dispatched to the scene are destroyed; two collide with each other when the electronic components within them are disrupted by the EMP. The last loses power and crashes directly into the huge satellite of the facility, causing the antenna stalk to plunge into the ground. Simonova survives the destruction of the command center and is able to climb out of the underground portion on the antenna stalk.At MI:6 headquarters, in a high-tech observation room, Bond talks with Tanner, a specialist, who tells him they found the missing Eurocopter at Severnaya by satellite imagery. They also witness the total disruption of images in the region resulting from the EMP. Bond spots a survivor crawling away, Natalya, and reports to his superior, M. Following a brief and tense conversation where she senses Bond doesn't trust her judgment and she tells him he is a "sexist, misogynist dinosaur" and a "relic of the Cold War", she orders him to St. Petersburg to investigate the connections between the Goldeneye weapons system, Ourumov and a mysterious Russian crime syndicate known only as Janus. She also warns him to complete his mission and not be guided by his desire for revenge on Ourumov for Trevelyan's murder. Bond drops by Q's lab and is given a wristwatch with a laser, a belt loaded with a cable that can support his weight and a ballpoint pen which doubles as a grenade.Ourumov meets with Russia's Defense Minister, Mishkin, and resigns his post in light of the disaster at Severnaya. Mishkin informs Ourumov that there was not only one survivor in the disaster, but two. The first, Boris Grishenko, a brilliant computer programmer, had actually escaped with Ourumov and Onatopp and was listed as missing, however, they had not counted on Natalya's surviving the blast. Boris summons her to a chapel via email and she goes there, promptly being captured by Boris and Onatopp.Bond arrives in St. Petersburg and meets his CIA contact, Jack Wade. Wade agrees to take Bond to the hideout of a Russian gangster, Valentin Zhukovsky, whom Bond had wounded and given a permanent limp years before. (Bond had also stolen Zhukovsky's woman.) Zhukovsky is the only connection Bond has to meeting the leader of Janus. Zhukovsky is still quite bitter about his wounded leg, nearly shooting Bond but agrees to aid Bond when the agent offers him a bribe of money and explosives. Zhukovsky also gives Bond a bit of history about Janus' leader; the man is allegedly the child of Lienz Cossack parents whose tribe had collaborated with the Nazis during World War II and were given refuge by the English government. However, they were betrayed by England and remanded back to USSR where they were all executed under orders from Stalin.At his hotel's pool and steam room, Bond meets Onatopp herself, his lead to Janus. The two fight, with the combat being sexually exciting to Onatopp. Bond refuses to be seduced or injured and, pointing his gun at her, orders her to take him to Janus. They arrive at a graveyard of sorts, full of statues of Soviet-era Russian leaders. Bond renders Onatopp unconscious and walks out to meet Janus, who turns out to be Alec Trevelyan himself, half of his face scarred by the explosives blast at the Soviet weapons facility nine years prior, a reference to the two-faced Roman god. Alec explains his origin to Bond; his parents escaped Stalin's execution of their people and fled to England, where Alec was born. Alec has Bond shot in the neck with a tranquilizer dart. Bond wakes up in the pilot's seat of the Eurocopter, which has been programmed to fire its rockets at itself. In the backseat is Natalya. Bond is able to hit the emergency eject button with his head and the two are propelled away from the blast. Bond frees them both and they are almost immediately arrested by Russian police and both are taken to a holding center.While waiting to be questioned, Bond tells Natalya that he knows who she is, recognizing that her watch is permanently stopped, a sign of the EMP that destroyed Severnaya. She tells him she knows little else besides Ourumov's theft of the Goldeneye control disk and that Boris is working with the general. Minister Mishkin walks in the room and threatens Bond with execution for espionage; Bond counters with accusations of treason by Ourumov. Natalya admonishes them both and answers Mishkin's question as to why Ourumov would steal Goldeneye. Natalya tells him that there is a second satellite with a nuclear weapon. Ourumov suddenly bursts into the room and protests that Mishkin is interfering with his own investigation. Ourumov seizes Bonds Walther PPK and kills a guard and Mishkin, intending to frame Bond. Bond is able to subdue Ourumov and a few guards and he and Simonova escape into the archives. Bond escapes after Natalya is captured by Ourumov. Bond steals a Russian tank and chases after them, destroying much of St. Petersburg. He finally tracks them to a train yard where Ourumov and Natalya board a large, black train that serves as Trevelyan's mobile HQ. Further down the tracks, Bond is able to derail the train with the tank and confronts Trevelyan, holding he and Onatopp at gunpoint. Alec calls Ourumov into the room with Natalya whom he holds hostage. Causing a minor distraction by telling Ourumov of Alec's Cossack heritage, he is able to shoot Ourumov but Alec escapes with Onatopp. Alec locks the train remotely, trapping Bond and Natalya inside, and tells Bond that he's planted explosives on the train with timers set for the same six minutes Bond gave him years before (in actuality, three minutes). Bond cuts through the floor while Natalya, on a computer console, finds Boris Grishenko's location in Cuba. The two escape the train before it explodes.The two travel to Cuba and meet Jack Wade, who gives Bond a plane. Bond and Natalya spend a romantic night together, Natalya remarking on how cold Bond's nature is. Bond counters saying that he must kill his old friend to stop him. The two fly over the approximate location where Natalya had traced Boris, a seemingly idyllic lake. A missile fired from under the water cripples their plane and they crash in the jungle. At the crash site, Onatopp rappels down from a chopper and attacks Bond. Bond is able to shoot the chopper down, pulling her into a tree and killing her. Bond and Natalya discover that the lake really hides a giant satellite dish embedded in the earth. Alec and Boris have activated the second satellite's nuclear bomb and have programmed it to explode over London; Alec's plan is one of revenge against England's betrayal of his Cossack heritage; the EMP will destroy every computer system causing nation-wide chaos. The blast will also erase all financial records, but not before Alec has had Boris break into the Bank of London and loot billions of pounds.Bond and Natalya make their way inside; Bond places explosive charges near fuel pipes and Natalya finds a computer terminal to block Boris' programming of the Goldeneye satellite.A brief gunfight ensues and the fuel pipes are punctured, causing the flammable fluid to begin pooling nearby Alec's and Boris' command terminal. Bond is captured, as is Natalya, and both are brought to Trevelyan, who quickly and easily disarms the bombs Bond planted. Boris discovers that Natalya has changed his access codes for the satellite and Trevelyan threatens to kill Bond if Natalya doesn't undo her work. Having picked up Bond's grenade pen, Boris begins playing with it, pressing the button and activating the charge. Bond knocks the grenade into the pool of leaking fuel where it explodes, causing a fire which threatens the entire facility. Alec orders Boris to regain control of the satellite. Trevelyan races off to find Bond and chases him to the satellite dish's large antenna while Natalya takes control of a helicopter and its pilot. On the antenna, Bond and Alec battle hand-to-hand. During the fight, Bond is able to block the gearing mechanism controlling positioning of the antenna, which prevents Boris from regaining control of the nuke in orbit. It subsequently burns up and the facility explodes. Boris appears to survive and declares himself invincible when a shower of liquid nitrogen freezes him instantly, killing him.Still fighting hand-to-hand, Bond and Alec find themselves at the bottom stalk of the antenna, hundreds of feet above the dish. The fight ends with Bond throwing Alec over the side, holding onto his former friend's boot. Alec asks if Bond intends to drop him "for England?" Bond replies "No. For me." and lets go. Alec plummets to the bottom of the dish and is still alive. Bond leaps to safety from the disintegrating antenna onto the helicopter Natalya has commandeered and flies off just as the antenna collapses, landing directly on Alec. The pilot leaves them in a nearby field where they are met by Jack Wade and a small unit of U.S. Marines.
Martin Campbell
Director(s)
Ian Fleming
Michael France
Jeffrey Caine
Bruce Feirstein
Writer(s)
Barbara Broccoli
producer
Tom Pevsner
executive producer
Anthony Waye
associate producer
Michael G. Wilson
producer
Albert R. Broccoli
consulting producer (uncredited)
Producer(s)
Eric Serra
Composer(s)
James Bond
Pierce Brosnan
Alec Trevelyan
Sean Bean
Natalya Simonova
Izabella Scorupco
Xenia Onatopp
Famke Janssen
Jack Wade
Joe Don Baker
M
Judi Dench
Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky
Robbie Coltrane
General Arkady Grigorovich Ourumov
Gottfried John
Boris Grishenko
Alan Cumming
Defense Minister Dmitri Mishkin (as Tcheky Karyo)
Tchéky Karyo
Q
Desmond Llewelyn
Miss Moneypenny
Samantha Bond
Bill Tanner
Michael Kitchen
Caroline
Serena Gordon
Severnaya Duty Officer
Simon Kunz
French Warship Captain
Pavel Douglas
French Warship Officer (as Cmdt. Olivier Lajous)
Olivier Lajous
Admiral Chuck Farrell
Billy J. Mitchell
Computer Store Manager
Constantine Gregory
Irina
Minnie Driver
Anna
Michelle Arthur
MiG Pilot
Ravil Isyanov
Croupier
Vladimir Milanovich
Train Driver
Trevor Byfield
Valentin's Bodyguard
Peter Majer
Russian Scientist (uncredited)
Paul Bannon
Cyclist (uncredited)
Martin Campbell
Lt. François Brouse - Tiger Helicopter Pilot (uncredited)
Simon Crane
Russian Security Council Member (uncredited)
Terrance Denville
Guard at Helicopter Show (uncredited)
Max Faulkner
Severnaya Operator (uncredited)
Juliet Forester
Casino Guest (uncredited)
Derek Lyons
Capt. Bernard Jaubert - Tiger Helicopter Pilot (uncredited)
Wayne Michaels
Pakistani Gun Dealer (uncredited)
Bhasker Patel
Russian Soldier - Chemical Weapons Facility (uncredited)
Paul Sacks
Russian Security Council Member (uncredited)
Michael G. Wilson
Director(s)
Michael France
Jeffrey Caine
Bruce Feirstein
Writer(s)
producer
Tom Pevsner
executive producer
Anthony Waye
associate producer
Michael G. Wilson
producer
Albert R. Broccoli
consulting producer (uncredited)
Producer(s)
Composer(s)
Other Films from United Artists
A View to a Kill, Apocalypse Now, Birdman of Alcatraz, From Russia with Love, Johnny Cool, License to Kill, Mississippi Mermaid (La sirčne du Mississipi), Moonraker, Osama, Personal Velocity: Three Portraits, Piranha, Romance & Cigarettes, Ronin, The Apartment, The Fantasticks, The Great Escape, The Hospital (1971), The Last Waltz, The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974), The Time of Your Life
Sponsors Like Trailers!
Trending Now
Are You a Trailer Addict?
Trailer Addict has setup TA, Trailers Anoymous. Feel free to contact us at with your scoops, comments or advertising inquiries at the following email address.






