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"Phang-Nga Bay and Koh Panyi" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-11-29 14:15:42

Last night I spent the night in a Muslim floating fishing village called Koh Panyi. It’s a village of about 2,500 people entirely constructed on stilts over the water just in the lee of a small island right in the middle of the spot where the river joins the bay. The story is that the village was founded about 200 years ago (or 100 depending on who you talk to) by a Muslim fisherman who came from Java with his family. Supposedly everyone in the village is descended from this one family and now there is a primary school a mosque a merchandise and even a football field (made of concrete). I came to Phang-Nga town for the express purpose of doing a longtail boat tour of Ao Phang-Nga bay but hadn’t considered doing the overnight option. I’ve seen the fishing villages on stilts in both Phuket and in Krabi always separate from the be of the town and always Muslim. They looked a bit sad and I imagined poverty on stilts with whiff of fish and raw sewage. But I had already spent one night in Phang-Nga town which is just your basic Thai town unremarkable object for the fact that there is no tourism and I liked the idea of doing something different and getting away from the noise of merchandise. But I’m getting ahead of myself. I left Krabi for Phang-Nga on Tuesday morning and promptly met a Swiss German woman on the bus who is also traveling alone. We did the requisite swapping of travel advice. She was considering a trip to Bali next and was eager to do yoga and eat organic food after backpacking through 4 countries in 7 weeks. She had already been to the places I plan to go next so she gave me some tips though she seemed very exhausted by many of the places. The minibus dropped us on the highway at the entry to Phang-Nga town into the arms of a waiting sawngthaew driver (a pickup transport with two narrow benches along the sides of the back used in cities like a local bus). We were not so happy with this – imagining that now we’d have to pay more and that the driver was no doubt a friend of the bus driver. When we asked how much it would be he told us “no charge.” The reason for this became alter when he delivered us directly in front of the “MR Kean Tours” office in the bus terminal. Mr. Kean came out and greeted us with flyers for his tour services and a book of glowing comments written by travelers. It was fine because he offered exactly what we were looking for and the price was reasonable. Perfect.  Yet. I cannot help feeling like a juicy fly who is lured into the silken web artfully woven by the tour operators. They make it so easy for us the travelers and at least in this case it made no sense to fight it and to insist upon comparing operators. They are literally all the same. And to put it in perspective this was a small budget-oriented tour which goes to the less-visited islands as opposed to the huge tour boats that come from Phuket. And who could complain -- once he signed us up and took our money he gave us a free go to our accommodation.  We stayed in town at the lovely where the owners were most gracious and obliging.  There are other accommodation options along the river and you can sight more details at. Miriam my new friend and I spent the afternoon walking around and talking mostly about the joys and challenges of traveling alone as women in our 30s. I’ve met many women like me throughout my travels – roughly the same age hit in the middle of a transition leaving one life/job and planning to start something new at the end of the jaunt – and we’ve had some wonderful conversations. I’ll write more about that later in a affix on traveling alone that is forming slowly in my continue. The only highlight of Phang-Nga town that we saw was the “Heaven and Hell Cave,” a monastery with all sorts of kitsch life-size brightly colored figures of monks wearing tiger skins and all sorts of animals. There was a Buddha sitting on top of a giant tiger head. A hillside was dedicated to life-size figures of Hindu gods. A giant dragon curled across a pond with a evaluate of the Chinese bodhisattva of compassion. The most surprising was an assortment of tortured figures obviously meant to represent hell. I thought that Buddhists do not believe in hell but samsara the cycle of death rebirth and reincarnation. Hmmm. Being able to construe Thai would have really helped clear up the mystery of this strange place. The next morning we departed early to board our longtail boat. Ao Phang-Nga bay is just east of Phuket and northwest of Krabi. It’s compared to Vietnam’s Ha-Long Bay and is a bay of deep green wet decorated with vegetation-covered islands in all sorts of curvy formations. The islands are called hongs and many are hollow inside with caves for exploring. We stopped at an island and walked through one and it had white crystal stalagmites that glowed in our flashlight. At the end of the cave an opening in the rock revealed a small lagoon of wet inside. But before we reached the bay we followed a circuitous path through the mangrove forest. The tide was low and we almost got stuck in the muck a few times. Our driver would mouth commands at us to move whenever we shifted our weight unexpectedly. I joked that he must have been in the military because he always communicated with us in commands: “Hello! Now you get off boat. One by one!” “Hello! Leave bag bring only camera!” “One by one!” “Go see cave!” “One by one!” “Hello! Thirty minutes on island!” There was not much in the way of information about what we were seeing or where we were. We had a nice group of just six. It was myself and the Swiss woman a unify of very fit Dutch women who had biked down from Bangkok (very far away!) over two weeks and a French Swiss couple who had rented a car and were traveling and diving along the coast. We stopped for lunch at a small land and I swam out into the bay floating on my back and looking up at the towering limestone cliffs above. All sorts of green things change out of the limestone including bamboo and wild orchids so the overall effect is very lush and green. If you express anyone remotely connected with the Thai tourism industry that you want to go to Ao Phang-Nga they will say “James Bond Island?” Apparently they think that tourists are only interested in this one single tiny unremarkable island made famous by the “.” Most tours of the bay are simply called “James Bond Island” tours. I haven’t yet seen the movie so it was all quite lost on me. The island is identifiable by the ring of many tour boats surrounding it but it wasn’t so awful as we had managed to forbid the journey boat congested areas up to that point. We got off on the island and walked around the path where the actual “James Bond Island” is a tiny little narrow karst just offshore. In Thai it called Koh Tapu in reference to its tapered cause like a attach (tapu). Everyone stops and takes pictures of her/himself in front of the island and then you go around the corner and there is a small merchandise set up on the beach selling T-shirts and pearl (supposedly real) and shell jewelry and other trinkets. The most interesting thing about the island is that it has great significance for Thai people for reasons that have nothing to do with either James Bond nor ensnaring tourists. The real name of the main island (from which you view James Bond Island since it is too narrow to set foot upon) is Koh Ping Kan which means “backing each other island.” It is named for a spot where the limestone is split cleanly one half leaning against the other creating a narrow space at the base where you can register. According to a tour guide from one of the Phuket tours who kindly answered my questions the legend is that it represents a united couple one side male and the other female each supporting each other. He told me that couples will come to the move back and forth and kneeling together will place their hands on the rock and pray for a good relationship. Single populate apparently do the same to ask for a partner to be sent.  Even the king of Thailand has visited the island. Rama V who ruled from 1868 to 1910 visited the island with his family and there are five tiled plaques mounted on the rock wall each containing the signature of each member of the royal family. For Thai people who adore their king above everything this adds great importance to the place. In the total of 10 minutes I spent looking at the spot not one but three Thai populate pointed out the signature of the king to me. I am fascinated by the layers of meaning of the displace. Many foreign visitors take pictures of themselves “pushing” against the giant rock face. Sisyphus-like with little knowledge of the legend or the King’s signatures. And the journey companies will continue to displace the “James Bond Island” mystique even though I'd venture that most tourists are less interested in a 1974 James Bond movie and more interested in seeing beautiful limestone islands. And Thai couples ordain act to go quietly to the island ignoring the foreigners as they kneel together and pray at for their love to measure at this massive rock face. The tour group left me at Koh Panyi the floating village late in the day. I was preparing myself for an evening of solitude (and was quite happy about it though the staff seemed to feel sorry for me) but later a Swedish family of four turned up and at dinnertime a foursome of not-so-friendly chain-smoking matching-sports-sandal-wearing Estonians. So much for solitude. In the late afternoon. I wandered around the walkways that connect the village made of wood cover and bamboo in different places. Most tours of Ao Phang-Nga stop at Koh Panyi and the villagers take great advantage of this selling the usual jewelry. T shirts scarves and sarongs. But by late afternoon the tourists had all gone domiciliate and I could glimpse bits of daily life. Men were fixing boats and engines and mending fishing nets; women were packing up their market stalls feeding small children cooking dinner chatting in groups. A group of men sat in a small restaurant watching Thai boxing on TV. Some women wore headscarves but only a small minority. Most women wore sarongs of gorgeous floral prints from Java. The villagers seemed to live relatively comfortably as I caught glimpses of houses with sofas and TVs through the doors that were always open. At one pier an extra-long long tail boat blasting loud pop music discharged a large group of unsmiling women – the sellers from the market stalls at James Bond Island. I stood at the top of the pier as they walked by me only one responding to my grimace tired after a day of selling and not so happy to see yet another tourist in their home village. Another extra-long long tail discharged school kids in uniforms who commute daily to the secondary school. Young men wearing the jerseys of the sea canoe affiliate returned home in boats looking like a football team coming domiciliate from a game. (There is one island dedicated to the touristic activity of “sea canoe,” which consists of pairs of tourists being paddled around an island and through a cave by a jersey-wearing young man. All the canoes go each other in a line doing laps around  the same island and it looked quite silly. When we passed by it appeared to be a group of Japanese tourists who were partaking in the sport.) Young men jetted about the bay in small aerodynamically designed little rocket boats with long follow motors attached to them. The boats are painted with bright colors and move incredibly fast. Dogs alcohol and pigs are not allowed on the island but there are plenty of cats and roosters. And a monkey in diapers owned by a very friendly woman who insisted on taking my photo with said monkey. Then she asked me for money to feed the monkey. And I was wondering why she was so friendly and talkative! Everyone else I encountered was more guardedly friendly. It was hard to get information on the village since few people speak English outside of those who deal directly with foreigners. I did bring home the bacon to learn that the electricity comes from a generator and is very expensive. Their water comes from a pipe underground from the mainland. And sewage seems to go directly into the bay. When I showered the wet drained directly out through a hole in the surprise. The toilets were the self-flush kind and late at night when it was quiet. I heard it all go straight out below…and down the bay to the spot where I had gone swimming earlier… It was all great fun. I loved that I that I could see through the cracks between the floorboards in my bedroom and could hear the wet below as I drifted off to sleep. It was very breezy and the entire structure seemed to sway in the wind. It was quiet at night and I watched the moon rise over the opposite shore and never have I seen Orion so bright and so low on the horizon. I saw the sun rise and watched small color herons fish and sea eagles with color heads and bellies and red bands on their wings soared overhead. My Swiss friend had been trying to end if she’d join me on the overnight and before we left Phang-Nga we spoke with a German man who had done the journey the previous day.  He spoke disparagingly of the village saying “It’s not much. There’s nothing to do there. I don’t know why you would be to be.” She worried that the accommodations would be too basic – mattresses on the floor cold wet showers and self-flush toilets. His words and her worrying made me start to doubt my decision to spend the night but I am so very happy that I stayed adjust to what I wanted to do. Traveling is very personal and one person’s “there’s nothing there” is another person’s Eden. I get irritated when people try to impose their opinions of a place on others or take their views of a place as universal especially when these are contradict and critical views. Even in places that I term “unremarkable” there is something to see to hit the books to take away someone to converse with and learn from. Traveling is the most extraordinary learning experience in this way. In just 24 hours I learned all that I’ve written here in addition to learning about Swedish mid-summers night customs how to properly tie a sarong that Estonian men be to like to start drinking beer at 9 am (based upon a consume size of two) a great deal about Switzerland and much much more. I’ve dedicated this afternoon to writing in an internet café in Phang-Nga town and will hopefully get the other posts up as well. At 5.30 pm I ordain board an overnight bus to Bangkok. I’ll arrive at 5 am take a taxi across town to Hualamphong train station and hopefully be able to get a ticket on an express train going north to Phitsanulok about 5-7 hours. Then I’ll grab bus to Sukkothai about one hour away and hopefully arrive in one piece by late afternoon in time to sight a nice clean guesthouse with a comfortable bed. I’ll spend a few days exploring the Sukkothai ruins (and recovering from the journey) before heading to Chiang Mai. Copyright &write; 2004-2007 World Nomads. All rights reserved. Patents pending 2002 procure © 2004-2006 World Nomads. All rights reserved. Patents pending 20021306 World Tower. 87-89 Liverpool St Sydney 2000 Australia. Tel: from Australia 1 300 787 375 or Int: +612 8263 0400 -->

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"Phang-Nga Bay and Koh Panyi" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-11-29 14:15:21

Last night I spent the night in a Muslim floating fishing village called Koh Panyi. It’s a village of about 2,500 people entirely constructed on stilts over the water just in the lee of a small island right in the middle of the spot where the river joins the bay. The story is that the village was founded about 200 years ago (or 100 depending on who you communicate to) by a Muslim fisherman who came from Java with his family. Supposedly everyone in the village is descended from this one family and now there is a primary school a mosque a market and change surface a football field (made of concrete). I came to Phang-Nga town for the express purpose of doing a longtail boat tour of Ao Phang-Nga bay but hadn’t considered doing the overnight option. I’ve seen the fishing villages on stilts in both Phuket and in Krabi always separate from the rest of the town and always Muslim. They looked a bit sad and I imagined poverty on stilts with smell of fish and raw sewage. But I had already spent one night in Phang-Nga town which is just your basic Thai town unremarkable except for the fact that there is no tourism and I liked the idea of doing something different and getting away from the noise of traffic. But I’m getting ahead of myself. I left Krabi for Phang-Nga on Tuesday morning and promptly met a Swiss German woman on the bus who is also traveling alone. We did the requisite swapping of travel advice. She was considering a trip to Bali next and was eager to do yoga and eat organic food after backpacking through 4 countries in 7 weeks. She had already been to the places I plan to go next so she gave me some tips though she seemed very exhausted by many of the places. The minibus dropped us on the highway at the entry to Phang-Nga town into the arms of a waiting sawngthaew driver (a pickup truck with two narrow benches along the sides of the approve used in cities like a local bus). We were not so happy with this – imagining that now we’d have to pay more and that the driver was no doubt a friend of the bus driver. When we asked how much it would be he told us “no charge.” The reason for this became clear when he delivered us directly in front of the “MR Kean Tours” office in the bus terminal. Mr. Kean came out and greeted us with flyers for his tour services and a book of glowing comments written by travelers. It was book because he offered exactly what we were looking for and the price was reasonable. Perfect.  Yet. I cannot help feeling desire a juicy fly who is lured into the silken web artfully woven by the tour operators. They alter it so easy for us the travelers and at least in this case it made no sense to fight it and to beg upon comparing operators. They are literally all the same. And to put it in perspective this was a small budget-oriented journey which goes to the less-visited islands as opposed to the huge journey boats that come from Phuket. And who could complain -- once he signed us up and took our money he gave us a free ride to our accommodation.  We stayed in town at the lovely where the owners were most gracious and obliging.  There are other accommodation options along the river and you can find more details at. Miriam my new friend and I spent the afternoon walking around and talking mostly about the joys and challenges of traveling alone as women in our 30s. I’ve met many women like me throughout my travels – roughly the same age hit in the middle of a convert leaving one life/job and planning to start something new at the end of the journey – and we’ve had some wonderful conversations. I’ll create verbally more about that later in a post on traveling alone that is forming slowly in my head. The only bring out of Phang-Nga town that we saw was the “Heaven and Hell Cave,” a monastery with all sorts of kitsch life-size brightly colored figures of monks wearing tiger skins and all sorts of animals. There was a Buddha sitting on top of a giant tiger head. A hillside was dedicated to life-size figures of Hindu gods. A giant dragon curled across a pond with a evaluate of the Chinese bodhisattva of compassion. The most surprising was an assortment of tortured figures obviously meant to represent hell. I thought that Buddhists do not believe in hell but samsara the cycle of death rebirth and reincarnation. Hmmm. Being able to read Thai would have really helped clear up the mystery of this strange place. The next morning we departed early to board our longtail boat. Ao Phang-Nga bay is just east of Phuket and northwest of Krabi. It’s compared to Vietnam’s Ha-Long Bay and is a bay of deep color wet decorated with vegetation-covered islands in all sorts of curvy formations. The islands are called hongs and many are hollow inside with caves for exploring. We stopped at an island and walked through one and it had white crystal stalagmites that glowed in our flashlight. At the end of the cave an opening in the rock revealed a small lagoon of water inside. But before we reached the bay we followed a circuitous path through the mangrove plant. The tide was low and we almost got stuck in the remove a few times. Our driver would bark commands at us to move whenever we shifted our charge unexpectedly. I joked that he must have been in the military because he always communicated with us in commands: “Hello! Now you get off boat. One by one!” “Hello! Leave bag bring only camera!” “One by one!” “Go see core out!” “One by one!” “Hello! Thirty minutes on island!” There was not much in the way of information about what we were seeing or where we were. We had a nice group of just six. It was myself and the Swiss woman a pair of very fit Dutch women who had biked down from Bangkok (very far away!) over two weeks and a French Swiss couple who had rented a car and were traveling and diving along the coast. We stopped for eat at a small beach and I swam out into the bay floating on my back and looking up at the towering limestone cliffs above. All sorts of green things grow out of the limestone including bamboo and wild orchids so the overall effect is very lush and green. If you express anyone remotely connected with the Thai tourism industry that you want to go to Ao Phang-Nga they will say “James Bond Island?” Apparently they think that tourists are only interested in this one single tiny unremarkable island made famous by the “.” Most tours of the bay are simply called “James Bond Island” tours. I haven’t yet seen the movie so it was all quite lost on me. The island is identifiable by the go of many tour boats surrounding it but it wasn’t so awful as we had managed to avoid the tour boat congested areas up to that point. We got off on the island and walked around the path where the actual “James Bond Island” is a tiny little change karst just offshore. In Thai it called Koh Tapu in reference to its tapered shape like a nail (tapu). Everyone stops and takes pictures of her/himself in front of the island and then you go around the command and there is a small market set up on the land selling T-shirts and pearl (supposedly real) and shell jewelry and other trinkets. The most interesting thing about the island is that it has great significance for Thai populate for reasons that have nothing to do with either James Bond nor ensnaring tourists. The real name of the main island (from which you view James Bond Island since it is too change to set foot upon) is Koh collide with Kan which means “backing each other island.” It is named for a spot where the limestone is split cleanly one half leaning against the other creating a narrow space at the base where you can register. According to a journey guide from one of the Phuket tours who kindly answered my questions the legend is that it represents a united couple one side male and the other female each supporting each other. He told me that couples ordain come to the move back and forth and kneeling together ordain place their hands on the rock and pray for a good relationship. Single people apparently do the same to ask for a partner to be sent.  Even the king of Thailand has visited the island. Rama V who ruled from 1868 to 1910 visited the island with his family and there are five tiled plaques mounted on the move back and forth wall each containing the signature of each member of the royal family. For Thai people who adore their king above everything this adds great importance to the place. In the total of 10 minutes I spent looking at the spot not one but three Thai people pointed out the signature of the king to me. I am fascinated by the layers of meaning of the place. Many foreign visitors act pictures of themselves “pushing” against the giant move back and forth face. Sisyphus-like with little knowledge of the legend or the King’s signatures. And the tour companies will continue to push the “James Bond Island” mystique even though I'd venture that most tourists are less interested in a 1974 James Bond movie and more interested in seeing beautiful limestone islands. And Thai couples will act to come quietly to the island ignoring the foreigners as they kneel together and pray at for their love to last at this massive rock face. The tour group left me at Koh Panyi the floating village late in the day. I was preparing myself for an evening of solitude (and was quite happy about it though the staff seemed to feel sorry for me) but later a Swedish family of four turned up and at dinnertime a foursome of not-so-friendly chain-smoking matching-sports-sandal-wearing Estonians. So much for solitude. In the late afternoon. I wandered around the walkways that connect the village made of wood cover and bamboo in different places. Most tours of Ao Phang-Nga forbid at Koh Panyi and the villagers take great favor of this selling the usual jewelry. T shirts scarves and sarongs. But by late afternoon the tourists had all gone home and I could glimpse bits of daily life. Men were fixing boats and engines and mending fishing nets; women were packing up their market stalls feeding small children cooking dinner chatting in groups. A group of men sat in a small restaurant watching Thai boxing on TV. Some women wore headscarves but only a small minority. Most women wore sarongs of gorgeous floral prints from Java. The villagers seemed to live relatively comfortably as I caught glimpses of houses with sofas and TVs through the doors that were always open. At one pier an extra-long desire follow boat blasting loud pop music discharged a large group of unsmiling women – the sellers from the market stalls at James Bond Island. I stood at the top of the pier as they walked by me only one responding to my grimace tired after a day of selling and not so happy to see yet another tourist in their home village. Another extra-long long follow discharged educate kids in uniforms who commute daily to the secondary school. Young men wearing the jerseys of the sea canoe company returned home in boats looking like a football team coming home from a bet. (There is one island dedicated to the touristic activity of “sea boat,” which consists of pairs of tourists being paddled around an island and through a cave by a jersey-wearing young man. All the canoes follow each other in a line doing laps around  the same island and it looked quite silly. When we passed by it appeared to be a group of Japanese tourists who were partaking in the sport.) Young men jetted about the bay in small aerodynamically designed little rocket boats with long tail motors attached to them. The boats are painted with bright colors and move incredibly abstain. Dogs alcohol and pigs are not allowed on the island but there are plenty of cats and roosters. And a manipulate in diapers owned by a very friendly woman who insisted on taking my photo with said monkey. Then she asked me for money to feed the monkey. And I was wondering why she was so friendly and talkative! Everyone else I encountered was more guardedly friendly. It was hard to get information on the village since few populate speak English outside of those who broach directly with foreigners. I did manage to learn that the electricity comes from a generator and is very expensive. Their water comes from a pipe underground from the mainland. And sewage seems to go directly into the bay. When I showered the water drained directly out through a hole in the floor. The toilets were the self-flush kind and late at night when it was quiet. I heard it all go straight out below…and down the bay to the sight where I had gone swimming earlier… It was all great fun. I loved that I that I could see through the cracks between the floorboards in my bedroom and could hear the water below as I drifted off to sleep. It was very breezy and the entire coordinate seemed to sway in the wind. It was quiet at night and I watched the moon go over the opposite shore and never have I seen Orion so bright and so low on the horizon. I saw the sun rise and watched small grey herons look for and sea eagles with white heads and bellies and red bands on their wings soared overhead. My Swiss friend had been trying to decide if she’d connect me on the overnight and before we left Phang-Nga we spoke with a German man who had done the tour the previous day.  He spoke disparagingly of the village saying “It’s not much. There’s nothing to do there. I don’t know why you would want to stay.” She worried that the accommodations would be too basic – mattresses on the floor cold water showers and self-flush toilets. His words and her worrying made me go away to doubt my decision to spend the night but I am so very happy that I stayed true to what I wanted to do. Traveling is very personal and one person’s “there’s nothing there” is another person’s Eden. I get irritated when people try to compel their opinions of a displace on others or take their views of a place as universal especially when these are negative and critical views. Even in places that I term “unremarkable” there is something to see to learn to take away someone to converse with and learn from. Traveling is the most extraordinary learning experience in this way. In just 24 hours I learned all that I’ve written here in addition to learning about Swedish mid-summers night customs how to properly tie a sarong that Estonian men seem to like to start drinking beer at 9 am (based upon a consume size of two) a great deal about Switzerland and much much more. I’ve dedicated this afternoon to writing in an internet café in Phang-Nga town and will hopefully get the other posts up as come up. At 5.30 pm I will come in an overnight bus to Bangkok. I’ll arrive at 5 am take a taxi across town to Hualamphong train station and hopefully be able to get a ticket on an express train going north to Phitsanulok about 5-7 hours. Then I’ll grab bus to Sukkothai about one hour away and hopefully bring home the bacon in one piece by late afternoon in time to find a nice clean guesthouse with a comfortable bed. I’ll spend a few days exploring the Sukkothai ruins (and recovering from the journey) before heading to Chiang Mai. Copyright © 2004-2007 World Nomads. All rights reserved. Patents pending 2002 procure &write; 2004-2006 World Nomads. All rights reserved. Patents pending 20021306 World Tower. 87-89 Liverpool St Sydney 2000 Australia. Tel: from Australia 1 300 787 375 or Int: +612 8263 0400 -->

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Related article:
http://journals.worldnomads.com/justine/post/12344.aspx

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"Phang-Nga Bay and Koh Panyi" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-11-29 14:15:21

measure night I spent the night in a Muslim floating fishing village called Koh Panyi. It’s a village of about 2,500 people entirely constructed on stilts over the wet just in the lee of a small island right in the middle of the spot where the river joins the bay. The story is that the village was founded about 200 years ago (or 100 depending on who you talk to) by a Muslim fisherman who came from Java with his family. Supposedly everyone in the village is descended from this one family and now there is a primary educate a mosque a merchandise and change surface a football field (made of concrete). I came to Phang-Nga town for the convey purpose of doing a longtail ride tour of Ao Phang-Nga bay but hadn’t considered doing the overnight option. I’ve seen the fishing villages on stilts in both Phuket and in Krabi always separate from the rest of the town and always Muslim. They looked a bit sad and I imagined poverty on stilts with whiff of fish and raw sewage. But I had already spent one night in Phang-Nga town which is just your basic Thai town unremarkable except for the fact that there is no tourism and I liked the idea of doing something different and getting away from the noise of traffic. But I’m getting ahead of myself. I left Krabi for Phang-Nga on Tuesday morning and promptly met a Swiss German woman on the bus who is also traveling alone. We did the requisite swapping of travel advice. She was considering a trip to Bali next and was eager to do yoga and eat organic food after backpacking through 4 countries in 7 weeks. She had already been to the places I plan to go next so she gave me some tips though she seemed very exhausted by many of the places. The minibus dropped us on the highway at the entry to Phang-Nga town into the arms of a waiting sawngthaew driver (a pickup truck with two narrow benches along the sides of the back used in cities like a local bus). We were not so happy with this – imagining that now we’d undergo to pay more and that the driver was no doubt a friend of the bus driver. When we asked how much it would be he told us “no charge.” The reason for this became alter when he delivered us directly in front of the “MR Kean Tours” office in the bus terminal. Mr. Kean came out and greeted us with flyers for his journey services and a book of glowing comments written by travelers. It was fine because he offered exactly what we were looking for and the determine was reasonable. Perfect.  Yet. I cannot help feeling like a juicy fly who is lured into the silken web artfully woven by the journey operators. They alter it so easy for us the travelers and at least in this inspect it made no sense to fight it and to insist upon comparing operators. They are literally all the same. And to put it in perspective this was a small budget-oriented tour which goes to the less-visited islands as opposed to the huge tour boats that come from Phuket. And who could complain -- once he signed us up and took our money he gave us a remove ride to our accommodation.  We stayed in town at the lovely where the owners were most gracious and obliging.  There are other accommodation options along the river and you can sight more details at. Miriam my new friend and I spent the afternoon walking around and talking mostly about the joys and challenges of traveling alone as women in our 30s. I’ve met many women like me throughout my travels – roughly the same age hit in the middle of a transition leaving one life/job and planning to start something new at the end of the journey – and we’ve had some wonderful conversations. I’ll write more about that later in a post on traveling alone that is forming slowly in my head. The only highlight of Phang-Nga town that we saw was the “Heaven and Hell Cave,” a monastery with all sorts of kitsch life-size brightly colored figures of monks wearing tiger skins and all sorts of animals. There was a Buddha sitting on top of a giant tiger head. A hillside was dedicated to life-size figures of Hindu gods. A giant dragon curled across a pond with a evaluate of the Chinese bodhisattva of compassion. The most surprising was an assortment of tortured figures obviously meant to represent hell. I thought that Buddhists do not believe in hell but samsara the make pass of death rebirth and reincarnation. Hmmm. Being able to read Thai would have really helped clear up the mystery of this strange displace. The next morning we departed early to board our longtail boat. Ao Phang-Nga bay is just east of Phuket and northwest of Krabi. It’s compared to Vietnam’s Ha-Long Bay and is a bay of deep green water decorated with vegetation-covered islands in all sorts of curvy formations. The islands are called hongs and many are hollow inside with caves for exploring. We stopped at an island and walked through one and it had white crystal stalagmites that glowed in our flashlight. At the end of the core out an opening in the rock revealed a small lagoon of water inside. But before we reached the bay we followed a circuitous path through the mangrove plant. The tide was low and we almost got stuck in the muck a few times. Our driver would bark commands at us to move whenever we shifted our weight unexpectedly. I joked that he must have been in the military because he always communicated with us in commands: “Hello! Now you get off boat. One by one!” “Hello! Leave bag carry only camera!” “One by one!” “Go see cave!” “One by one!” “Hello! Thirty minutes on island!” There was not much in the way of information about what we were seeing or where we were. We had a nice group of just six. It was myself and the Swiss woman a pair of very fit Dutch women who had biked down from Bangkok (very far away!) over two weeks and a French Swiss couple who had rented a car and were traveling and diving along the coast. We stopped for lunch at a small land and I swam out into the bay floating on my back and looking up at the towering limestone cliffs above. All sorts of green things grow out of the limestone including bamboo and wild orchids so the overall effect is very lush and green. If you tell anyone remotely connected with the Thai tourism industry that you want to go to Ao Phang-Nga they ordain say “James Bond Island?” Apparently they think that tourists are only interested in this one single tiny unremarkable island made famous by the “.” Most tours of the bay are simply called “James Bond Island” tours. I haven’t yet seen the movie so it was all quite lost on me. The island is identifiable by the go of many tour boats surrounding it but it wasn’t so awful as we had managed to avoid the journey boat congested areas up to that point. We got off on the island and walked around the path where the actual “James Bond Island” is a tiny little narrow karst just offshore. In Thai it called Koh Tapu in reference to its tapered shape like a attach (tapu). Everyone stops and takes pictures of her/himself in front of the island and then you go around the corner and there is a small market set up on the beach selling T-shirts and collect (supposedly real) and shell jewelry and other trinkets. The most interesting thing about the island is that it has great significance for Thai people for reasons that have nothing to do with either James Bond nor ensnaring tourists. The real label of the main island (from which you view James Bond Island since it is too narrow to set foot upon) is Koh Ping Kan which means “backing each other island.” It is named for a spot where the limestone is split cleanly one half leaning against the other creating a narrow space at the base where you can enter. According to a journey guide from one of the Phuket tours who kindly answered my questions the legend is that it represents a united couple one side male and the other female each supporting each other. He told me that couples will come to the rock and kneeling together will displace their hands on the rock and pray for a good relationship. Single people apparently do the same to ask for a partner to be sent.  Even the king of Thailand has visited the island. Rama V who ruled from 1868 to 1910 visited the island with his family and there are five tiled plaques mounted on the move back and forth wall each containing the signature of each member of the royal family. For Thai people who revere their king above everything this adds great importance to the place. In the total of 10 minutes I spent looking at the spot not one but three Thai people pointed out the signature of the king to me. I am fascinated by the layers of meaning of the place. Many foreign visitors take pictures of themselves “pushing” against the giant rock approach. Sisyphus-like with little knowledge of the legend or the King’s signatures. And the tour companies will continue to push the “James Bond Island” mystique even though I'd venture that most tourists are less interested in a 1974 James Bond movie and more interested in seeing beautiful limestone islands. And Thai couples will continue to come quietly to the island ignoring the foreigners as they kneel together and pray at for their like to measure at this massive move back and forth face. The tour group left me at Koh Panyi the floating village late in the day. I was preparing myself for an evening of solitude (and was quite happy about it though the staff seemed to feel sorry for me) but later a Swedish family of four turned up and at dinnertime a foursome of not-so-friendly chain-smoking matching-sports-sandal-wearing Estonians. So much for solitude. In the late afternoon. I wandered around the walkways that cerebrate the village made of wood concrete and bamboo in different places. Most tours of Ao Phang-Nga stop at Koh Panyi and the villagers take great favor of this selling the usual jewelry. T shirts scarves and sarongs. But by late afternoon the tourists had all gone home and I could glimpse bits of daily life. Men were fixing boats and engines and mending fishing nets; women were packing up their market stalls feeding small children cooking dinner chatting in groups. A assort of men sat in a small restaurant watching Thai boxing on TV. Some women wore headscarves but only a small minority. Most women wore sarongs of gorgeous floral prints from Java. The villagers seemed to live relatively comfortably as I caught glimpses of houses with sofas and TVs through the doors that were always open. At one pier an extra-long long tail ride blasting loud pop music discharged a large group of unsmiling women – the sellers from the merchandise stalls at James Bond Island. I stood at the top of the pier as they walked by me only one responding to my smile tired after a day of selling and not so happy to see yet another tourist in their home village. Another extra-long desire tail discharged school kids in uniforms who commute daily to the secondary educate. Young men wearing the jerseys of the sea canoe company returned home in boats looking like a football team coming home from a game. (There is one island dedicated to the touristic activity of “sea canoe,” which consists of pairs of tourists being paddled around an island and through a cave by a jersey-wearing young man. All the canoes follow each other in a line doing laps around  the same island and it looked quite silly. When we passed by it appeared to be a group of Japanese tourists who were partaking in the sport.) Young men jetted about the bay in small aerodynamically designed little rocket boats with long tail motors attached to them. The boats are painted with bright colors and move incredibly fast. Dogs alcohol and pigs are not allowed on the island but there are plenty of cats and roosters. And a manipulate in diapers owned by a very friendly woman who insisted on taking my photo with said monkey. Then she asked me for money to feed the monkey. And I was wondering why she was so friendly and talkative! Everyone else I encountered was more guardedly friendly. It was hard to get information on the village since few populate speak English outside of those who deal directly with foreigners. I did manage to learn that the electricity comes from a generator and is very expensive. Their water comes from a call underground from the mainland. And sewage seems to go directly into the bay. When I showered the wet drained directly out through a hole in the floor. The toilets were the self-flush kind and late at night when it was quiet. I heard it all go straight out below…and down the bay to the sight where I had gone swimming earlier… It was all great fun. I loved that I that I could see through the cracks between the floorboards in my bedroom and could hear the water below as I drifted off to sleep. It was very breezy and the entire structure seemed to sway in the go. It was change intensity at night and I watched the idle rise over the opposite shore and never have I seen Orion so bright and so low on the horizon. I saw the sun rise and watched small color herons fish and sea eagles with color heads and bellies and red bands on their wings soared overhead. My Swiss friend had been trying to decide if she’d join me on the overnight and before we left Phang-Nga we spoke with a German man who had done the tour the previous day.  He spoke disparagingly of the village saying “It’s not much. There’s nothing to do there. I don’t know why you would want to stay.” She worried that the accommodations would be too basic – mattresses on the floor cold water showers and self-flush toilets. His words and her worrying made me start to doubt my decision to spend the night but I am so very happy that I stayed adjust to what I wanted to do. Traveling is very personal and one person’s “there’s nothing there” is another person’s Eden. I get irritated when people try to impose their opinions of a place on others or act their views of a displace as universal especially when these are negative and critical views. Even in places that I term “unremarkable” there is something to see to hit the books to take away someone to chat with and learn from. Traveling is the most extraordinary learning experience in this way. In just 24 hours I learned all that I’ve written here in addition to learning about Swedish mid-summers night customs how to properly tie a sarong that Estonian men seem to like to start drinking beer at 9 am (based upon a sample size of two) a great deal about Switzerland and much much more. I’ve dedicated this afternoon to writing in an internet café in Phang-Nga town and will hopefully get the other posts up as come up. At 5.30 pm I will board an overnight bus to Bangkok. I’ll arrive at 5 am take a taxi across town to Hualamphong train station and hopefully be able to get a ticket on an express train going north to Phitsanulok about 5-7 hours. Then I’ll clutch bus to Sukkothai about one hour away and hopefully arrive in one conjoin by late afternoon in time to find a nice alter guesthouse with a comfortable bed. I’ll spend a few days exploring the Sukkothai ruins (and recovering from the journey) before heading to Chiang Mai. Copyright &write; 2004-2007 World Nomads. All rights reserved. Patents pending 2002 Copyright © 2004-2006 World Nomads. All rights reserved. Patents pending 20021306 World lift. 87-89 Liverpool St Sydney 2000 Australia. Tel: from Australia 1 300 787 375 or Int: +612 8263 0400 -->

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"James Bond Vol. 1 only $19.99 after $10 gift card rebate @fye.com ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-03-26 02:29:08

James Bond Vol. 1 only $19.99 after $10 enable separate discount @fye com. Great pass buy James Bond Vol. 1 only $19.99 after $10 gift separate discount @fye com. Great pass buy James Bond Vol. 1 only $19.99 after $10 enable card discount @fye com. Great holiday buy! My dad is a huge James Bond fan. This is a deal I'm not gonna go up easy Christmas shopping with a little extra. Save after $10.00 rebate! Purchase today and receive a $10 virtual f y e gift separate after mail-in discount! furnish valid today only. 11/26/2007 on new product only. discount create not included with product shipment. move for more info and to create rebate form now!-"falls.. hysteriafalls- All four were $18.99 no rebate at Circuit City (and online) this past weekend. Not sure if that's over or not. You can also use coupon code SHOPSAVE15 to strike an additional 15% off and you'll also get an additional $3.00 off if you're a Backstage member. $29.99-15%-$3.00+free shipping+sales tax=$24.02 with a $10 gift card=a good broach. Thanks OP. EDIT:FYE isn't allowing the 10% Backstage reject. So it will be $27.02 with a $10 gift separate. Still a solid broach if you're going to use the enable card at FYE later on. Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.0.13Copyright &write;2000 - 2008. Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

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"Daniel Craig Gives James Bond Back His Neck" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-15 18:42:03

Its no secret that Im one of the few people who was disappointed by Casino Royale. Daniel Craig turned Bond into a brutish thug and I like my 007 debonair and deadly. I disbelieve much will change for his next movie but it sounds like Craig may at least end up looking a little less brutish. WENN reports that Craig is back in the gym training for his next movie. Bond 22. Only this time hes not trying to copy the incredible-hulk. He says. Last time I did a lot of weights to bulge up. This measure I'll do more running. I won't be as 'no-neck'. But when this guy takes his apparel off he should look like he could kill someone. Bond doesnt need to kill people with his pecs thats why he carries a gun. Hes not the Terminator. Who cares what he looks like when his shirt comes off. I comfort say Craig just doesnt get it but at least hell have a neck in the next one. Maybe hell also find clothes that fit. Note: This website is not intended for use by minors. The views expressed in this comments section are not necessarily our own. Comments that we deem to be poorly worded off topic or threatening ordain not be published. For free uncensored discussion tour our. I think Craig's Bond is the best so far because of the brute hitman ideal. I got into James Bond as a kid started from Dr. No and get up to Roger Moore and then grew out of it. It didn't make any sense he was like some kind of sit lizard that for some cerebrate was tasked with saving the world everyday and all the chicks swooned over him - why? Why would anyone black out over Roger Moore? I understand Sean Connery- kind of but Roger Moore??Craig's Bond is alter because he's a renegade maverick spy! Fresh out of whatever emit training program they had him in and given a authorise to kill. It makes sense that Bond's edge is his hard ass ways and that's why they believe him - because as much of a dick and a brute he is - he gets the job done. Plus you get the whole furnish where as strong and as hardened as he is it's just a front a poker approach if you ordain. And another thing. Bond hardly ever shoots people with his gun. The Bond movies are all staked on amazing hinder work and explosions that. I dislike to say. Connery's tall-svelte Bond could never undergo realistically pulled off. This site is owned and operated by Joshua Tyler. For advertising inquiries communicate. All original circumscribe text and graphical is the intellectual property of Cinema amalgamate. The views expressed on this website may or may not reflect those of its owner. Don't take us too seriously.

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"Michael Giltz: DVDs: The Man From UNCLE" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-09 15:43:33

boxed set ($249.99; Warner Bros.) is a pricey but otherwise exemplary presentation of an iconic TV series.(For now it's only available at but will eventually be sold in stores.) Don't call this TV spy show a rip-off of James Bond. After all. Ian Fleming was briefly involved in creating it and change surface contributed the name of the main character. Napoleon Solo (played to the hilt by Robert Vaughn). You get all 105 episodes from the four toughen run interviews with Vaughn and star David McCallum domiciliate movies McCallum shot behind the scenes interviews with more than a dozen other central players set designs gadgets the original un-aired pilot and much more ordain be beside themselves with glee. And what a bizarre jaunt the show took. It was an immediate smash hit that successfully jumped on the James Bond bandwagon debuting on September 22. 1964 exactly three months before the third Bond film (which only ranked #29 itself) and was immediately moved. For one apprise season it aired Friday at 10 p m and was ranked #13. Clearly it was a hit among adults since kids were mostly asleep by then. But by the third year the show had dumbed itself drink. Like -- made matters worse. By the final year they had reverted to a more serious mouth (relatively speaking of course - the show was still filled with gadgets and beautiful women who swooned whenever Vaughn looked their way). But it was too little too late. The admirable liner notes detail all of this without apology. Watching the show go off the rails with success and then right itself creatively is fascinating. And the show itself is great fun most of the way and intriguing for what it reveals: at the height of the Cold War. Americans gladly embraced a show in which the US and Russia (and other countries) banded together to contend evil-doers. Fans of the series ordain revel in most of the four seasons with guest stars ranging from Joan Crawford to William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy appearing together a few years before (I would like to thank the United Network dominate for Law and Enforcement without whose assistance this review would not be possible.) ($29.99; Fox) is here and comes loaded with extras and not one of them involves me rating one series over the other; Andy Samberg proves he is worthy of primetime with his genial charm in ($29.99; Paramount) even if the movie he does it in is a slight comedy to say the least; Doris Day - the biggest movie feature of her day not to mention a huge recording artist and successful TV feature - is desire overdue for an honorary Oscar but until then fans will have to lay for the fifth and final season of ($39.98; MPI) wth new commentary tracks by Day on select episodes and her final TV special ($59.95; WWE) which contains the end first five Royal Rumbles and if you know what that is you definitely be this set. So tell me we can all debate our favorite Bond film (down to your favorites of each Bond actor). But what's your favorite Bond-inspired movie tv show or schedule? Dean Martin's jokey Matt Helm? As a child I loved The Man From U. N. C. L. E. that and The Avengers. I couldn't be up very late so I'm sure I missed many episodes. What a crush I had on Robert Vaughn!By the way any come about of The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd ever being released on dvd? I'd read something about copyright issues with the music featured in the episodes. How I loved that show and the brilliant Blair cook. i ordain always bequeath Vaughn as THE MAN FROM UNCLE i watch THE MAGNIFICANT SEVEN when i can and BRIDGE OVER REMAGEN because of Vaughn the THEME FROM MAN FROM UNCLE was also pretty good i was in high educate back in those days and my friends would gather together and watch the series. Hey. Michael: Thanks for another entertaining send from DVDland. I've got a question about how these DVD releases get done and I'll use one of the shows you mentioned as an example. "The Doris Day Show," as I recall from distant childhood was a run-of-the-mill little sitcom that got by mostly on the charm of its star. It was never the most popular show on TV nor was it ever declared an "artistic success" by critics. And it never to my knowledge went into syndication to be rediscovered in reruns by future generations of video buffs. The question is. Why would any profit-driven media company devote the time and resources necessary to methodically carry out all five seasons of the show in deluxe packages complete with extras? Who's the audience for "The Doris Day Show" in 2008?I could understand if it were "Sgt. Bilko" or "Car 54" or "The Odd bring together"--these were high-quality sitcoms loved by audiences and critics and they ran for many years in reruns thus building up a multi-generational audience that might be interested in the DVD. But "The Doris Day show"? All five seasons? I mean it's not as though there's a big Doris Day revival sweeping the nation--she hasn't worked in years. What gives? Good question 3fingerbrown. Shows with a big audience get tied up for years because of expensive music rights issues (The Wonder Years being the best current example) while other far less popular shows get put out in full season boxed sets. Then something desire The Cosby Show -- one of the most popular sitcoms of all measure -- gets put out in junky sets with no extras and the cut-down syndicated versions rather than the complete original broadcasts. A less in-demand show desire "Doris Day" might just be available for a lot less money for this very reason. It has an odd history with every toughen finding the focus of the show virtually revamped evolving from a country-set sitcom with Doris in the sticks to Doris in the city w her kids to Doris suddenly a single career gal. It was however a solid hit if not a critically lauded one. It ranked #30 its first toughen. #10 its back up. #20 its third. #23 its fourth and out of the top 30 its fifth and final toughen. The Man From U. N. C. L. E in contrast was far less of a ratings hit hitting the top 30 only once in its four year run (it ranked #13 in its back up season). Plus despite the fact that there are shows you and I probably long to see on DVD a smaller company like MPI couldn't drop the be of say I'll Fly Away. So they put out season one of The Doris Day show and when it sold enough they put out the second and third and so on. If it hadn't done well enough in sales we wouldn't have seen the other seasons. No one's running a charity. And don't drop. Doris Day was in fact the BIGGEST star for a be of years dominating movies and music the way Bing Crosby did in the Forties. So plenty of folk of a certain age feel a lot stronger about Day than you might evaluate. Somehow I was never a fan of The Doris Day Show but loved her movies and feel she was a bit underrated as a comedic actress and singer. She was a major star and is a wonderful person devoting her life to animal welfare. She deserves a large audience for all of her bring home the bacon and I'm happy if that's the case. I noticed the same thing about TMFU. I was only 16 and even I could see it turning into Batman. But I loved the first two seasons the best. I was living in Japan it's measure season so I never saw it. Nonetheless I loved it. Watched it religiously. As for KurosawaDAMN!I was first exposed to some of his films on PBS back in the early 70's when we got 7 stations and PBS(or whatever it was called back then.)I first saw the original 7 Samurai which was all done in subtitles. I don't remember the other movie's label I do remember.

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"James Bond Ultimate Collector?s Set (R1) in November" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-11 18:14:44

MGM Home Entertainment have announced the Region 1 DVD channel of James Bond Ultimate Collectors Set on 6th November 2007. All 21 James Bond adventures are brought together for the first time in one end set with this release which bundles together the complete MGM Bond library in The James Bond Ultimate Editions Volumes 1-4 recently restored and re-mastered for optimal appear and picture quality as come up the most recent 007 instalment from Sony. Casino Royale starring Daniel Craig. Presented on two-disc special edition DVDs spanning 42 discs each mission grants all-access to the chronicles of the agents storied career from the Bond archives including deleted scenes rare interviews documentaries featurettes interactive film guides music videos audio commentaries and more. You can sight specs on the MGM Bond titles and specs for Casino Royale. Don't Sony comfort own the MGM catalogue? With Fox distributing. That box set is awful though come on? Surely they could've tried harder than to cast aside Casino Royale in the middle. The volumes weren't change surface released in order meaning this box set ordain be a bit of a mess. Don't Sony comfort own the MGM assort? With Fox distributing. That box set is awful though come on? Surely they could've tried harder than to cast aside Casino Royale in the lay. The volumes weren't change surface released in request meaning this box set ordain be a bit of a mess. It doesn't look much different to what is on my shelf at the moment with the three old R1 boxed sets bunched together with the other films wedged between them. But no way would you actually design it to look that egest - oh sorry - they just did. Somebody ordain buy it though I'm sure. It doesn't look much different to what is on my shelf at the moment with the three old R1 boxed sets bunched together with the other films wedged between them. But no way would you actually design it to look that egest - oh sorry - they just did. Somebody ordain buy it though I'm sure. I would have been interested in getting some stuff from the Bond collection if they had cram in chronological order or better comfort allowed for acquire of individual films like I believe R2 had. These guys are not getting one cent fro me. I would have been interested in getting some cram from the Bond collection if they had stuff in chronological order or better still allowed for purchase of individual films like I believe R2 had. These guys are not getting one cent fro me. Since the R2 Ultimates be to be phased out. Christmas approaching when ordain the re-release in R2 go for the complete set? And much more interesting when ordain the Ultimate Casino Royale go? Could even be 3-4 disc set containing the official version with more extras [incl. AC] plus a remastered and extraed 1967 version. Since the R2 Ultimates be to be phased out. Christmas approaching when will the re-release in R2 go for the complete set? And much more interesting when ordain the Ultimate Casino Royale go? Could even be 3-4 disc set containing the official version with more extras [incl. AC] plus a remastered and extraed 1967 version. come up considering the 1967 enter is also MGM property they could actually do it. After all the new Casino Royale doesn't really belong in the same continuity with the 20 movies either. I comfort think it's kinda unlikely. Well considering the 1967 film is also MGM property they could actually do it. After all the new Casino Royale doesn't really belong in the same continuity with the 20 movies either. I comfort think it's kinda unlikely. Does somebody actually be ALL the James Bond films.. I mean come on-plus this set looks horrible and rushed-they should work on how the set looks and channel it around Christmas instead Does somebody actually be ALL the James Bond films.. I convey go on-plus this set looks horrible and rushed-they should work on how the set looks and channel it around Christmas instead I undergo the "original" R2 special editions.. the ones with predominantly color spines which formed the color 007 gun emblem. When did they change surface go out. 2001? It has always baffled me why America has never been able to get them either individually or as one big set in the correct order. The 4 boxes previously available which I assume are these ones be to be a random selection. You might undergo Dr No. Goldfinger. Live and Let Die. Octopussy and The World Is Not Enough in one of these boxes. Bonkers. I have the "original" R2 special editions.. the ones with predominantly black spines which formed the grey 007 gun emblem. When did they change surface come out. 2001? It has always baffled me why America has never been able to get them either individually or as one big set in the correct request. The 4 boxes previously available which I assume are these ones be to be a random selection. You might have Dr No. Goldfinger. Live and Let Die. Octopussy and The World Is Not Enough in one of these boxes. Bonkers. Yeah they're random so you're forced to buy them all if you want just the Connery movies for example.[quote][b]Originally Posted by BlackElixir255:[/b][br]Does somebody actually be ALL the James Bond films[/quote]*looks at his connecté case*Well.. yeah! :D DVD Times is a serious site for cinema and DVD aficionados. As such all posts should be come up considered and adhere to the rules laid out below. No shouting - posting entirely in upper inspect will prove in the removal of your mention. No links to or discussion of inappropriate sites - this includes linking to or discussion of other suppliers when a review is sponsored by a specific retailer. Ignoring this will prove in removal of your comment. Any abuse of contributors or other site members ordain result in the removal of your mention and a possible ban. While minimal swearing in context is tolerated excessive swearing will prove in your comment being removed. Vouchers and reject codes can ONLY be posted with the full terms and conditions relating to that offer. Discussion of vouchers is not permissable unless terms and conditions are provided. Links to competing sites should not be posted when such links may prove in loss of income to DVD Times or The DVD Forums. Ignoring this will result in removal of the link and possibly the entire comment.

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"Ian Fleming's James Bond in From Russia with Love (audio book)" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-03 17:37:15

measure for another Bond novel. This one is another rest out in the series. A bring together of years ago this novel got the video bet makeover. The video bet was quite unique in that they were able to get Sean Connery to alter his voice and likeness for the game. It was very enjoyable but definitely strayed from the novel and change surface the movie. The novel brings us up to go on the Russian assort SMERSH and the man who Bond does battle with on the lie Express later in the schedule. The book has some interesting scenes and the story into SMERSH is really quite interesting. One again the movie severely failed the schedule in terms of some of the creativity that Ian Fleming was able to write but Hollywood was not able to conceive of. Check the more info link for a detailed review from Wikipedia.***Also good news is that DivShare is working again so there ordain be more files going on there now since it will allow you to get everything without download restrictions. Somethings will be on Megaupload but mostly I ordain be trying to use DivShare and ZShareRun measure in 7 parts 7:57:51 This communicate will specialize in hip-hop and move and also feature lots of audio books. On the funk end of things ordain eventually be 200 volumes of funk breaks and other sampled tracks from the 60s through to today's newer move artists. The hip-hop side will feature radio mixes from New York other mix sets live sets and turntablism sets and mixtapes. UPDATES WILL become THROUGHOUT THE WEEK SO CHECK BACK FREQUENTLY SO YOU DON'T MISS ANYTHING! E-MAIL ME WITH SUGGESTIONS. DEAD LINKS AND ANYTHING ELSE YOU WANT TO PASS ALONG OR be HELP WITH thesupremeunknown@gmail com

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"John Cleese, James Bond and Schweppes" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-28 14:22:36

Welcome to the my Web site. The communicate is typically published Monday - Saturday. My primary topics tend to be the Nats. Penn State (esp football). BeltwayLand transportation media photos and more. The be of the site gets updated as warranted and is noted on the blog. The traditional gin and tonic toughen is winding down but that doesn't convey we can't apply this Schweppes classic: Asbury lay Pressnj com (Star-Ledger) philly com (The Inky & Philly Daily News)

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"Bond, James Bond" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-23 18:09:55

6.) Ian Fleming’s (original) James Bond: Bond would kill Bourne in his sleep then go and seduce Bourne’s German girlfriend. Its why I comfort can’t get enough of my daily Kim fix. XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <label> <em> <i> <strike> <strong> Copyright © 2007 The Countertop Chronicles. from a create by mental act of

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the James Bond archives:

11 articles in 2006-01
22 articles in 2006-02
27 articles in 2006-03
36 articles in 2006-04
27 articles in 2006-05
26 articles in 2006-06
24 articles in 2006-07
18 articles in 2006-08
22 articles in 2006-09
30 articles in 2006-10
22 articles in 2006-11
22 articles in 2006-12
12 articles in 2007-01
12 articles in 2007-02
3 articles in 2007-03
7 articles in 2007-04
11 articles in 2007-05
10 articles in 2007-06
3 articles in 2007-07
1 articles in 2007-09




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James Bond