Diamonds are Forever (1971) Queer Film (C)

DIRECTOR: Guy Hamilton

MR. WINT and MR. KIDD

Wint and Kidd carry out this mandate with a mixture of sadism and vaudeville timing. They share a morbid, almost courtly sense of humor, finishing each other’s sentences as if performing a private parlor game. Their puns are deliberately labored, their delight in them unmistakable. Attempting to cremate James Bond alive becomes “a glowing tribute” and “heart‑warming.” After blowing a helicopter out of the sky, Mr. Kidd begins, “If God had wanted man to fly…,” only for Mr. Wint to complete the proverb with a smirk: “…He would have given him wings, Mr. Kidd.” Even failure becomes an opportunity for wordplay: “If at first you don’t succeed, Mr. Kidd”—“Try, try again, Mr. Wint.”
The pair’s blend of menace, deadpan wit, and eerie intimacy makes them one of the most distinctive duos in the Bond canon—professional killers who behave like a long‑married couple sharing a private joke. They could be Fante and Mingo, from Joseph Lewis’ The Big Combo, transported to a different time.
They are, in truth, the chief pleasure to be savored in Diamonds Are Forever, a film that otherwise ranks among the most disposable entries in the Bond canon. Sean Connery returned for a seventh and final outing as 007, having declined to reprise the role in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969), and his presence here feels less like a triumphant homecoming than a contractual encore—professional, wry, but unmistakably detached.

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