CommanderBond.net
  1. Trailer May Debut Online Today

    By daniel on 2002-10-02

    With the full Die Another Day trailer set to premier on tonights edition of Access Hollywood, film news site Dark Horizons is indicating that the trailer will then debut on the Internet not long after.

    Thankfully, the debut will be in Quicktime format at the Apple Movie Trailers site. It currently features only the first and second teaser trailers.

    CommanderBond.net recommends that visitors also keep an eye on Yahoo! Movies as with the past two teaser trailers Fox International have presented their version of the trailers on the site. While the Windows Media Format features less quality than the Quicktime version, the second International Teaser Trailer did feature slightly different footage from the US Teaser Trailer.

  2. Water, Shaken Not Stirred

    By daniel on 2002-10-02

    It seems that Bolinger and Finlanda Vodka won’t be the only drinks to grace the silver in Die Another Day this November, water will be too. And it won’t just come in the form of a melting Ice Palace.

    Welsh mineral water company Ty Nant will have their ‘blue bottled’ water featured in Die Another Day scenes set in Gustav Graves’ Ice Palace. A Ty Nant spokesman revealed that “The producers [of Die Another Day] thought our new bottle would be perfect for the scene because it looks like it’s made from ice.”

    While PR is pushing that Bond will be passing on his trademark Vodka Martini and ordering Ty Nant instead, the recently revealed product placement with Finlanda Vodka indicates otherwise.

    If you’d like to discuss the companies product placement please visit this thread of the Die Another Day Forums.

    Thanks to ‘MBE’ for alerting us to the news!

  3. Rosamund Pike's New Film Role

    By daniel on 2002-10-01

    Die Another Day is yet to premier in cinemas and Rosamund Pike is already making moves to move beyond the ‘Bond Girl’ image. Pike, who plays Miranda Frost in Die Another Day, has landed a lead role in Castle of Lies..

    Empire Online has reported on the films plotline;

    Set in New Zealand, the movie will apparently be an ‘erotic and devastating’ love story based on the life of William Lanarch, a politician who built New Zealand’s first castle before he decided to off himself in a particularly public manner by shooting himself in the country’s Parliament in 1898. Financial ruin and the small detail of discovering his ex-wife’s affair with his son might have had something to do with it.

    Pike will play the ‘ex-wife’ with actor James Caan also signed up for the film.

    Filming begins later this month.

    Thanks to Dave for the tip-off.

  4. Pieces of Full Trailer online

    By Tim Roth on 2002-10-01

    English TV station ITN showed some pieces from the full trailer today. The following is an eye-witness account of forum user ‘eddy’ who saw the report. As it contains spoiler, you’ll have to highlight it to read.

    Spoiler (Highlight To Read)

    I have recently viewed the new trailer for the James Bond Movie, ITN Englands premier news station has just showed the trailer all be it in a very fragmented form. The trailer makes a big thing about bond being trapped and then abandoned with M, played by Judi Dench quoting

    ‘your freedom had simply too high a price’

    The rest of the trailer features many sequences which we had only heard about, such as the dragster ice boat and bond gadget laden surf board. One thing that has stuck in my mind was a small sequence featuring Gustav Graves, on a very hi-tech operating table with a cable mask unveiling his face which gives some fuel the face chaning rumours we’ve all heard.

    Another stand out moment for me was when Miranda Frost warns Bond to be carefull, is she a traitor or not?

    The Website of ITV features the report as Real Media Streaming as well, it can be found here. Dark Horizons report that the full trailer will be shown on “Access Hollywood” tomorrow.

    Be sure to discuss the trailer in this thread in our Die Another Day Forums! And thanks to ‘eddy’ and ‘RE007HQ1’ for the tip-off!

  5. Danger is Death, Sex is Life

    By Luke Freeman on 2002-10-01

    It is quite often said that the third James Bond film Goldfinger, was the first to have all the Bond elements and essentials firmly set in place, Goldfinger is after all “the Bond film that has it all”. Personally I don’t think this is true, Bond films had it all right from the beginning, from the very first film, Doctor No. Sure, Doctor No may lack the gadgets and the special effects, but they are merely window dressing when it comes down to it. It is danger, sex, and humour that are the key elements of Bond, and this is made clear from the very beginning. Doctor No wasn’t for James Bond to find his feet, it was for James Bond to establish himself, and Doctor No gets it right first time. The danger, sex, and humour of the Bond world, and indeed Bond himself, is evident as much in this film as in any other.

    Danger

    Danger is the prospect of death, and death in Doctor No comes in many different shapes and forms. Perhaps the most dangerous form is the one that doesn’t suggest a threatening presence, the one that fades into the surroundings, the one that is forgotten after a quick glance. In Doctor No this would have to be the Three Blind Killers, unlikely assassins, but ruthless professionals. Chinese Negroes, disguised as blind beggars, The first beggar holding a stick in front to feel his way, the second beggar holding his stick to the first, and the third to the second. They don’t suggest a deadly presence; they are introduced to us with a silly, catchy song. They don’t hide in the shadows of a dark alley or dress in black; they shuffle along the dusty roads under the hot sun of Jamaica, wearing baseball caps and light clothes. But within two minutes they have causes complete and utter chaos, killing Stranways and his secretary, and stealing the files on “Crab Key” and “Doctor No” without any trace or clue to reveal they were ever there.

    But in Doctor No, danger also appears in its more conventional assortments, like the spider that Professor Dent sneaks into Bonds hotel room. It’s all been fun and games up until this point, the chauffeur at the airport and the photographer never posed any threat to Bond, but since then Bond has been snooping around, and he’s getting a little too close for comfort to Doctor No. We know the spider is deadly without being told. Yeah, most spiders are, but Dent’s reluctance to pick it up, even though it is caged further enforces the point. All Dr No has to say is “Tonight”, nothing more. Now things are serious, and the closer that Bond gets to Doctor No the more large and apparent the signs of danger and death become. Look at the last form that danger takes before Bond meets Doctor No, that of a dragon. And we know that this dragon is a force to be reckoned with by the way Quarrel speaks of it. Infact the dragon kills Quarrel, making danger and death real rather than just a prospect, an illusion.

    But the most dangerous obstacle in Bonds path is Doctor No himself, portrayed exceptionally well by Joseph Wiseman. Without looking to deeply, some may consider the Doctor to be a bland and uninspiring character; this is far from the case. One gets good insight into the type of man that Doctor No is, a man with talents who considers himself unappreciated, an intellectual who feels that he is surrounded by fools. He needs appreciation; he needs glory: to sustain his ego, his arrogance, if nothing else. He doesn’t care where he gets it from; he offered his services to both the West and the East, who are, for rejecting him, merely “fools” and “points on a compass”. Dr No is a superior brain, and thus a criminal brain because “Criminal brains are superior, they have to be”.

    He is at first interested in Bond, intrigued by him, after all Bond a dangerous and clever man in his own right, we witness his execution of Professor Dent in clod blood, and see him step up is room so any trespassing can be detected. Look at the treatment Bond initially gets from the Doctor; nice room, new clothes, and treated to a first class dinner. Doctor No thinks that maybe he has found another like him. But he is to be disappointed, because Bond turns out not to his standards. “I prefer the 53 myself” Bond comments, a classic display of wit in the audiences’ minds, but not in Doctor No’s, he concludes that Bond is little more than “a stupid policeman whose luck has run out”.

    Had Doctor No not been the first villain in the series he may very well be considered the best, the most sinister, the most diabolical. Unfortunately he stands behind Gert Frobe’s Goldfinger and a few others in those stakes, but when it comes to the title ‘Most dangerous’, Doctor No wins. Notice how Doctor No has no real henchman, no strong man to stand behind, to be protected by. Instead of an unbeatable strong man with an abnormality like the metal teeth of Jaws in he Spy who Loved Me, or the hook of Tee Hee in Live and Let Die, Doctor No himself is the one with the abnormality, his metal hands. And it’s worth noting that Doctor No and Bond fight one on one, man to man, how many over major Bond villains have done the same. Certainly Stromberg, Drax, or even Goldfinger couldn’t take Bond on single-handed. Doctor No loses, ofcourse, but he fights, to the death, and is a menacing and dangerous presence all the way. The danger of the Bond films was an element they got right first time.

    Sex

    If danger is death, then sex is life, since its result is the creation of. Look at the first four scenes of the film, the first scene with the Three Blind Killers involves danger, the second scene with Bond and Sylvia Trench is the promise of sex, the third scene with M is the promise of more danger, and the third scene at Bonds apartment with Sylvia involves sex. Danger and Sex are the two fundamental elements. Why? Because Bond is fantasy and it is fantasy to kill the villain (danger/death) and win the heart of the damsel in distress (sex/life).

    Sex comes in three main forms in Doctor No, that of Sylvia Trench, Miss Taro, and Honey Rider. These three women are the formula of women that is evident in most of the 007 films. Sylvia Trench is the easy sex, the sex at the beginning that establishes the element of sex that will exist throughout the film. She implies that sex is a hobby, not unlike baccarat or golf, two hobbies of which Bond is also quite capable; we are given the impression that she has sex with quite a few men, and I don’t mean that in a demeaning way, rather in the way that Bond has sex with quite a few women. They merely crossed paths here. Many times this would be used again in Bond films. Ling in You Only Live Twice, Kimberley Jones in A View to a Kill, the Danish teacher in Tomorrow Never Dies and Dr Molly Warmflash in The World is Not Enough being prime examples.

    Miss Taro is the evil sex, and although Bond is aware of the score, he is a willing participant. But although Bond is walking into a trap, he will never allow us to think that he is completely being fool. Bond always makes comments, drops hints, that he knows what’s really going on. “You did invite me ?” Bond askes Miss Taro when she is suprised to see him. Bond likes to watch the woman squirm and justify her actions, weave the web of lies. A similar attitude is also present in Diamonds Are Forever with Tiffany Case, “It’s lucky for me I ran into you” Bond says, but he doesn’t mean it. Bond will not let the woman feel that she has completed fooled him, out smarted him. Another point worth noting here is how Bond can separate this kind of sex from the other two, and in this can, makes the act of love making merely part of the job, no different than any other. Bond even glances at his watch, as if having sex with Miss Taro is merely to pass the time, as if it is no more significant than ringing for the car, or playing solitaire. If the easy sex is nothing but a hobby, then the evil sex is nothing but part of the mission, and sex that he takes little pleasure in it, and says as much in Thunderball after the scene with Fiona Volpe.

    The third form of sex is evident in Honey Ryder, the “Bond girl”, an ally, friendly sex, but with her knife she also represents dangerous sex. This girl can handle herself don’t worry about that. She draws her knife quickly when Bond approaches her, without fumble or hesitation, like she has done many times before. “I promise I wont steal your shells” Bond assures her, “I promise you wont either” Honey replies. We don’t doubt that see may try and kill him, or that she may in fact succeed. She mentions to us that she has killed before, in a rather brutal manner, putting a black widow spider, “A female, they are the worst” under her landlords mosquito net, letting him die over a week. She was justified in her actions, but as Bond says, “Not something one should make a habit of”.

    Ofcourse, we do see her vulnerable, scared and unsure also, in the scenes before and during the dinner with Doctor No, this is perhaps to fulfil her role of the “damsel in distress” in the fantasy. But she does display strength too, not wanting to leave Bond when he askes Doctor No to let her go. Honey Ryder is surely the prototype Bond girl, setting the standard for the leading ladys in the Bond films that have followed. The sex in Doctor No was an element that the producers got right first time.

    Humour

    Danger and Sex are the two natural elements; Humour is the artificial element, manufactured perhaps to make the story telling more appealing, but was so successful that it became an element in itself. Notice how the majority of the humour involves either danger/death or sex/life? “Make sure he doesn’t get away” Bond says to the guard at Government house, referring to Mr Jones, the dead chauffeur in the back seat. “I think they were on their way to a funeral” he remarks after the car that was chasing him goes up in flames. Both times enemies have died, and both times Bond himself has avoided a potentially dangerous situation. A witty comment breaks the tension, restores some normality, and perhaps softens the situation.

    As for the humour in love scenes, this is perhaps purely for fun, comments that many of us would love to say ourselves but know we wouldn’t be able to get away with. “Look, no hand” he remarks when bedding Miss Taro. “No, I’m just looking” Bond replied with no hint of anything over than assuring Honey that he is not after her shells. Far more outrageous and humorous oneliners about villains demises and sexual encountered were quipped in the films that have followed, but the humour element in Doctor No is most enjoyable in it’s own right.

    A Final Note

    Perhaps the greatest example of the three elements (Danger, Sex, and Humour) at work is with the three endearing regular characters; M, Moneypenny, and Q. M is danger, the prospect of death, because when Bond is called to see M it’s because M has a mission for him, and a dangerous one no doubt. We know that Bond will never die, but the opportunity is there. The same goes for Bond and Moneypennys flirtatious bantering. Just as we know Bond will never die from a mission given to him by M, we know that Bond and Moneypenny will never have sex, she even says so herself, “flattery will get you nowhere, but don’t stop trying”, but the prospect, the possibility, is always implied.

    The relationship between Bond and the third of the regulars, gadget master Q is also most interesting. Q is the hoity toity, old fashioned, school tie type, and Bond is the immature adolescent. Q is a genius with the revolutionary high tech gadgets he comes up with, gadgets that have saved Bond on many occasions, but Bond doesn’t care. He shows Q and his work no respect. Bond gets at Q with his humorous quips, making light Q and his gadgets, but Q holds his own, and quite often has the last word. It’s no wonder Q is loved by all. With M and Moneypenny in fine form from the beginning, it’s a pity Desmond Llewelyn wasn’t in Doctor No. But I consider him as an exceptional bonus in the other films, rather than a notable absence from Doctor No, because even without the endearing Q, Doctor No was the perfect beginning to what would soon prove to be the greatest film series of the all.

  6. International One Sheet Was Concept

    By daniel on 2002-10-01

    The International One Sheet poster for Die Another Day that yesterday appeared on the French Club James Bond website has been removed.

    The can club commented about the posters removal;

    “Eon productions has requested us to withdraw the poster presented on the site this morning, and have explained that the poster Fox International released is a model and is not to be the final one. Graphic artists are working currrently to finalise it. “

    While the poster was at least a concept, it seems that the final poster will still feature Halle Berry’s character Jinx just as much as the poster will feature James Bond.

    If you’d like to discuss the ‘concept’ poster please visit this thread of the Die Another Day Forums.

    Thanks to ‘WhiteKnight’ for sending in the news alert.

  7. Leaked Theme Song Was Different Mix

    By Tim Roth on 2002-09-30

    As CBn reported yesterday, a New York Radio Station leaked the Die Another Day Theme song written and sung by Madonna. Forum user ‘robster006’ and some Madonna Fansites can now reveal that this version of the song wasn’t the actual one. As many people who had heard the leaked version supposed, the song which will be used for the Opening Credits, will be different.

    The new version which was leaked by UK Radio Station “Radio 1” in a show hosted by Jo Whiley is tad slower and sounds more natural. Forum user ‘robster006’ wrote, “People complaining about her voice being high pitched and too effects heavy, can calm down, since her voice sounds a LOT more natural in the genuine version!”

    Be sure to discuss this subject in this thread of the Die Another Day Forums! And thank you to ‘robster006’ for the tip-off!

  8. Clearer Version Of One Sheet Online

    By daniel on 2002-09-30

    The French Club James Bond has just revealed a clearer version of the Die Another Day One Sheet poster, at this stage it is still believed to be the International One Sheet.

    While it’s still not a full version of the poster more details can be found in the poster including previously released images from the hovercraft sequence, the ‘Ice Ballet’ and the surfing sequence.

    Also present are images of Rosamund Pike, who’s photo is sadly reduced to a single corner despite her being one of the Bond Girls. Halle Berry has again got almost equal visual billing with Pierce Brosnan.

    If you’d like to view the poster visit the French Club James Bond and click on ‘exclusif : l’affiche DAD’.

    If you’d like to discuss the poster please visit this thread of the Die Another Day Forums.

    Thanks to ‘level’ for alerting us to it.

  9. 40 Years Of Bond Women

    By The CBn Team on 2002-09-30

    By Barbara K. Emanuele

    Much has been written on CBn’s forums about the prevalence of Jinx in all the print and electronic ads for Die Another Day.   Only recently have we been reminded of the name of the actor who plays Bond.  Forty years after Honey Ryder came out of that clear Caribbean ocean another actress is poised to take the attention off of 007, if only for a moment.  From Ursula Andress to Halle Berry countless women have distracted the audience and Bond from the plot at hand.  Who are these women that the untrained dismiss as mere girls?  They are independent and strong or ingénues about to get a crash course in how cruel the world can be.  They are evil henchwomen and the ladies waiting by the window for that Aston Martin to appear.  We have cheered for them, envied them, rooted for their demise, and yes, even mourned them.  They are, simply, the best sampling of the females of planet Earth that any movie franchise has been able to produce. Since Dr. No’s debut in 1962, we have come to expect that the heirs of Sylvia Trench, Honey Ryder, Miss Taro, and the lovely lady Photographer, will tease and taunt James Bond in some gorgeous location, in a heart stopping moment.   Because of these women, we have expectations of what Jinx will say, what Miranda will do, how the Scorpion Girl will try to foil Bond, and how Moneypenny will once more be going home alone.   To understand why fans have such expectations, we need only look at the first four Bond women, or Bond Girls if you rather, to see the pattern that was established and brilliantly maintained through major social upheaval and cultural revolution.

    If we lived in a cave, and had no idea who Sean Connery is, or that he made a movie called Dr. No, when we watch the Blades scene in that very first Bond movie, we would know that the man sitting at the Baccarat table is a man not to be missed.  James Bond is a man who needs no introduction really.  He walks into a room and by the strength of his will we know he is there.  And yet, we are introduced to Bond, not by another man of equal stature, but by a woman, a very attractive woman, by the name of Trench.  Sylvia Trench.

    It has been argued that the line “Bond, James Bond,” would never have been uttered had Eunice Gayson not introduced herself to the film audience by replying to Bond’s “I admire your courage Miss?”  with “Trench, Sylvia Trench.”  Already we owe Gayson a debt of gratitude for giving us the example of the ultimately cool way to say one’s name, but her contributions do not end there.  Trench sets a two fold standard for the Bond women that followed her:  the independent and sophisticated woman and the “comfort zone” woman.

    By her clothing and carriage, we know that Trench is a woman of independent means.  She can pay her own debts at the card table, (not to mention hold her own against other formidable card players), she dresses in an elegant and timeless manner, and most importantly, she knows what she wants.  Women of the sixties were expected to be demur, quiet, prim and proper.  They would certainly never go to a gentleman’s apartment when he was not there, let alone put on his nightshirt and while waiting for him!  And yet, this is precisely what Trench does, while enjoying a spirited session of practice on her chip shot.  And this is precisely why 007 delays his leaving for Jamaica.  It would not do to have a woman who does not know how to behave in society, but it does do well to have a woman who knows how to bend those rules to her advantage.

    Although Gayson’s association with the Bond series ended with Terrance Young’s, we can still feel Trench’s presence in the women that followed her.  Her pluck at the card table is echoed in Tracy’s insistence on paying her own debts in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, and in Ruby’s creative writing exercise in the same film.  Sylvia’s class, style, and most of all bottom line knowledge of what her relationship with Bond will be, is echoed in Cassandra Harris’ portrayal of Lisel in For Your Eyes Only.  The good Doctor Warmflash of The World Is Not Enough certainly learned from Miss Trench how to make the most of her time with Bond.

    Another element to Trench’s influence comes from the fact that she is the original hometown girlfriend.  From her brief appearance in From Russia With Love, (the second Bond film), we come to realize that Sylvia is part of Bond’s comfort zone at home.  Like his lunches in the canteen, his car, and his apartment, Bond can count on Trench to be there for him when he needs her to be.  Their interaction in From Russia With Love, displays a side of Bond that is later repeated in his moments with such lovely ladies as Miss Caruso in Live and Let Die and Professor Bergstrom of Tomorrow Never Dies: Bond enjoys his time in the comfort zone, but will gladly leave these women to return to what is his reality: the mission.  And once he is on the mission, Trench, Caruso and Bergstrom are out of sight and out of mind – until James comes home again, of course.

    Sylvia Trench and her successors are not the main Bond women of the films they appear in.  Trench, Caruso, and Bergstrom appear to give fans a hint of what Bond might be up to, when not saving the world or they appear within his adventure, helping to move the plot along while beautifying the scenery.  But even the main Bond women owe a heavy debt to Trench because she set the standard of what it takes to get Bond’s attention, or should I say, she set up a very reliable way to get his attention.  Another very reliable way to do so is to rise out of a ocean in a bikini, singing to yourself as you clean your shells.

    Most women can only dream of making an exit from the ocean the way Honey Ryder does in Dr. No.  Of all the great iconic images of women from the franchise (Jill Masterson’s golden touch, Melina Havelock’s look of despair, Xenia Onatopp’s creative yoga), Ursula Andress coming out of the Caribbean is the one that fans and filmmakers point to as the defining moment in the history of Bond women.  While I personally think that there have been stronger images of women and their power over Bond, and there have been (frankly) much better looking women, it is Honey’s entrance into Bond history that is being repeated in Die Another Day, a true testimony to the enduring power of that one image.  But a character is not made by an image alone, and Honey Ryder’s influence stretches far behind her walk on the beach.

    Like Sylvia Trench, Honey Ryder is independent.  Honey educated herself, supports herself, and lives by herself.  But unlike Sylvia, Honey is an innocent.  Trench has a worldliness about her that Ryder could never have gotten by reading the encyclopedia.  Nor is she as intelligent or professional as some of the later leading ladies (Holly Goodhead, Pam Bouvier, and Natayla Simonova for example).   What Honey is, is beautiful and useful to Bond.  Honey had a moment or two of hysteria, but when 007 really needed her to, she pulled herself together, and was a decent partner for him.  

    Honey Ryder is a very inviting Bond woman, not only to the men in the audience, but to the women as well.  At the time of the filming of Dr. No, Ms. Andress was a very nicely and realistically shaped woman with excellent proportions.  She was very attractive and alluring, while not being classically beautiful.  Honey Ryder herself is in many ways a very ordinary girl, with an ordinary life, until Bond shows up.  Other “ordinary women” like Stacy Sutton and Natalya Simonova have found their lives changed in the same way as Honey’s was, by the presence of James Bond.  These characters give hope to all women that someone dashing like James Bond may one day see an ordinary woman like us, in the right moment, will spend a few minutes in the sand with us too.

    Yes, Honey is responsible for giving women Bond fans hope, but she is also responsible for an unfortunate trend in the Bond franchise.  Starting with the casting of Ursula Andress and continuing through to the present day, Eon Productions has chosen to cast women who are beautiful while occasionally overlooking their flaws in their craft.  Ms. Andress has become a good actress, but in Dr. No, it is clear as to why she was cast.  That pattern of beauty over brains continued most unfortunately in such leading ladies as Stacy Sutton in A View to a Kill, and Christmas Jones in The World Is Not Enough.  While these ladies no doubt make certain members of the audience happy with their presence, other audience members might be wondering what good actress missed the casting call.

    Luckily however, the casting director always managed to find someone who was beautiful and talented to play the juicy roles of the henchwoman.  The typical Bond henchwoman is bewitchingly beautiful, devious in her demeanor, and always a pleasure to watch.  While not getting as much screen time as her successors such as Mayday in A View to a Kill and Xenia Ontaopp in Goldeneye, Miss Taro created the perfect femme fatale formula that has remained unchanged for forty years.

    For every classy Sylvia, for every ingénue Honey, Bond has bedded two bad girls.  What is there not to be attracted to?  Miss Taro is an agent for a powerful organization, albeit an evil one, so she understands in great measure what life is like in the world of James Bond.   And these women tend to be spitfires.  For example, when Miss Taro learns that she has been tricked, or when Fiona in Thunderball realizes that Bond has not really fallen for her charms, they fight back, and the banter that ensues are some of the best lines in that particular movie.  Who can forget Bond’s line, “Careful of her nails,” a more than fair turnabout on Miss Taro’s earlier protective plea for her poisoned tips, or 007’s classic dumping of Miss Volpe: “Can my friend sit her?  She’s just dead.”  No, the repartee does not usually get better than the dialogue between Bond and his bad women.  Unfortunately for all of us Miss Taro set one more standard that other Bad Bond have followed:  they are expendable to their employers and never make it to the closing credits.

    More unfortunate for us fans of Bond women are the all too brief appearances of what I call the “Plot Moving” Bond women.  The lovely Lady Photographer that harasses Bond and Quarrel at Pussfeller’s Bar was the first in a long line of ladies who, like the main henchwomen of the films, tend to be beautiful and of the evil persuasion, appear in a key scene that forward the plot along, and almost never appear in the second half of the film.  Indeed, the beautiful shutterbug barely has time to call the assembled dinner party a bunch of rats before she is whisked away.  Saida in The Man With a Golden Gun,  Felicca of The Spy Who Loved Me, and The World Is Not Enough’s Cigar Girl, all owe their place in our minds and hearts to the original “Plot Moving” woman, Miss Jamaica 1961, Margaret LeWars Gordon.

    There is one more woman that has had tremendous influence on the series.  While not a henchwoman, or a woman lacking brains, she most definitely is classy, elegant, and independent, can more than hold her own when sparring with Bond, and has even been known to appear at the end of a Bond film now and again.  I am of course referring to the only other woman to have appeared in more than one Bond film playing the same character.  She is Miss Moneypenny, and Caroline Bliss and Samantha Bond owe their success to the talent, charm and grace of Lois Maxwell.

    As clearly evidenced from her appearances in all the Bond films starting with Dr. No and ending with A View to a Kill, Moneypenny, as portrayed by Maxwell, fits perfectly into Bond’s world.  Right from that first night briefing with M, Bond and Moneypenny’s relationship is firmly established by the clever back and forth between Maxell and Sean Connery.  Moneypenny is a greater part of Bond’s comfort zone, more than his hometown girlfriend, because Bond knows he does not have to wine, dine, charm, and bed Moneypenny.  She has that sense of propriety, grace under pressure, and no nonsense attitude that got her the job as M.’s secretary in the first place, while retaining the tiniest bit of flirtation, feminity and playfulness that endears her to 007.  It is Moneypenny’s ability to blend these qualities that makes Bond feel something for Moneypenny that he rarely feels for another woman: respect.

    Though he may hint at it in From Russia With Love,  The Man With a  Golden Gun, and The World Is Not Enough, and she may long for it, as she does in Diamonds Are Forever, The Living Daylights, and Goldeneye, nothing will ever happen between those two, and that is OK, because what Bond and Moneypenny share is something he can find nowhere else: the constant affection of true friendship and admiration.  

    If one was to merely look through forty years of photographs, a casual observer might walk away thinking that Bond loves women, and his only criteria for deciding whom he beds at that moment is her looks.  But we the devoted fans know that Bond’s taste in women is far more developed than that.  Of course beauty is a factor, but there are so many other character traits – class, style, courage, strength, pluck – that inform Bond’s decisions that it is impossible to simply characterize Bond as a lover of beautiful women.  Bond is a lover of women, and the women he loves, starting from the examples set by the actresses in Dr. No, are the definition of woman, herself.

    Works Consulted:
    Greaves, Tim. The Bond Women 007 Style. United Kingdom: 1Shoot Publications, 2002.

  10. Dr. No, A Summary

    By The CBn Team on 2002-09-29

    James Bond
    Sean Connery

    Honey Ryder
    Ursula Andress

    Dr. Julius No
    Joseph Wiseman

    Felix Leiter
    Jack Lord

    ‘M’
    Bernard Lee

    Major Boothroyd
    Peter Burton

    Prof.Dent
    Anthony Dawson

    Quarrel
    John Kitzmiller

    Sylvia Trench
    Eunice Gayson

    Miss Taro
    Zena Marshall

    Miss Moneypenny
    Lois Maxwell

    Puss-Feller
    Lester Pendergast

    John Strangways
    Timothy Moxon

    Mr. Jones
    Reggie Carter

    Director
    Terence Young

    Producers
    Albert R. Brocolli
    and Harry Saltzman

    Screenplay
    Richard Maibum,
    Johanna Harwood,
    Berkley Mather

    Production Designer
    Ken Adam

    Editor
    Peter Hunt

    Director of Photography
    Ted Moore

    Music
    Monty Norman

    Release Dates:
    UK – 5th October 1962
    US – 8th May 1963

    Running Time:
    105 minutes

    Budget:
    $1m

    Total Gross:

    (inflation adjusted 2002)
    $352,666,225

    CBn’s Sean Connery Forum

    IMDB Listing for
    Dr. No

    The Gadgets of Dr. No
    at James Bond Multimedia

    When a communications breakdown occurs between MI6 and Jamaican operative John Strangways, James Bond is thrown head first into an exotic cocktail of thrills that plays out from Kingston to Crab Key in an all out attempt to hunt down a reclusive megalomaniac

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    On arrival in Jamaica it soon becomes apparent that John Strangways and his secretary have been murdered, prompted by the disappearance of classified information on Dr.No and his operations, James Bond follows the trail to the seemingly respectable Professor Dent. A brief but standoffish encounter with Bond forces the Professor to inform his eccentric employer Dr.No of Bond’s discovery of radioactive rock samples originating from Crab Key.

    After a failed attempt to kill Bond, Dent travels to Magenta Drive 239, the home of the beautiful femme fatale Miss Taro. Waiting patiently, Bond is comforted by his Walther, and a cigarette. The unwitting professor arrives, pummelling the body of pillows that lie under the covers on Miss Taro’s bed. Bond doesn’t think twice.

    The journey begins by sailboat to Crab Key accompanied by CIA operatives Quarrel and Felix Leiter, Bond and Quarrel continue their journey, Leiter doubles back to alert the authorities if Bond fails to complete his mission within the next twelve hours. The following morning Bond meets an unexpected visitor to Crab Key, the stunning Honey Ryder. Honey, whose father was killed on the island, is dragged into the ensuing escape from Dr.No’s private army who scour the island for the unwelcome guests, killing Quarrel in the process.

    After the necessity of the decontamination chamber in Dr.No’s private headquarters Dr.No extends his brief hospitality to Bond and Honey, and Bond finally meets the recluse who plans to single-handedly destroy the American space program. The discussions don’t last long however, and Bond soon finds himself avoiding death while crawling through a red-hot ventilator shaft en-route to the main control room, where a man to man confrontation ends atop the vat of heavy water in the hub that controls Dr.No’s operations.