CommanderBond.net
  1. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang #1

    By johncox on 2005-10-24

    The James Bond International Fan Club has revealed the cover art for the first issue of its all-new club magazine, KISS KISS BANG BANG.

    Kiss Kiss Bang Bang #1

    Kiss Kiss Bang Bang #1

    The JBIFC had originally planned on running a group photo of Sean Connery, Ian Fleming, Cubby Broccoli, and Harry Saltzman on the cover of this debut issue, but with the recent announcement of Daniel Craig as James Bond in Casino Royale, it was decided to go with the first official image of the new 007.

    The back of the magazine will feature the cover art for Charlie Higson’s second Young Bond novel, Blood Fever.

    This first issue of Kiss Kiss Bang Bang will come out at the end of the month and a second issue will be released before the end of this year. After that, KKBB will be released quarterly.

    Visit www.007.info for information on how to join the The James Bond International Fan Club and how to receive this first issue of Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.

    *The JBIFC no longer distributes ‘OO7’ Magazine to its members. ‘OO7’ is now an independent publication which can be ordered via the ‘OO7’ Magazine website.
    Issue #47 is available now.

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  2. 'OO7' Magazine #47

    By johncox on 2005-10-21

    ‘OO7’ Magazine #47 will ship to subscribers and select retailers starting the week of October 31. However, Bond fans in the UK who will be attending Autographica 2005 will be able to pick up the magazine early at the booth where Ursula Andress, the orginal Bond Girl, will be making her first ever convention appearance.

    Because of this very special event, publisher Graham Rye has swapped out his planned Timothy Dalton cover for a beautiful cover image of Ms. Andress as Honey Rider in Dr. No. Ursula was also the big screen’s very first Vesper Lynd in the 1967 spoof version of Casino Royale; a pic of Ursula as Vesper is featured on the back cover.

    This new issue will also feature exclusive photos from last Friday’s press conference announcing Daniel Craig as the new 007 in Casino Royale, and yes, that’s an orginal CBn article in there as well!

    Here’s a first look at what’s inside the new issue.

    'OO7' Magazine  #47

    ‘OO7’ Magazine #47

    • SERIES: The James Bond Girls Are Forever – Which Bond Girl do you rate as the best? Could it be a Seventies Bond babe? STEVE CASSIDY does the math.
    • FEATURE: The Silver Beast – JOHN COX relates the definitive history of James Bond’s Saab 900 Turbo.
    • PICTORIAL: THE BIG SHOT – And he strikes like… Ken Adam’s magnificent set for the briefing room in Thunderball.
    • PICTORIAL: The Bond celebrities attending Autographica 2005 – the world’s largest autograph show.
    • FEATURE: The Dossier on Robert Markham – HANK REINEKE opens the dusty dossier to uncover the story behind the writing of Colonel Sun the first James Bond continuation novel.
    • OPINION: Casino Royale – the Post-Modern epic in spite of itself! – ROBERT VON DASSANOWSKY argues the case for a more serious appraisal of the multi-star vehicle that hit movie screens like a burst kaleidoscope in 1967, and which has baffled and bedazzled Bond fans ever since.
    • STOP PRESS: Daniel Craig cast as the new James Bond in Casino Royale – MGM/Columbia Press Release featuring exclusive photographs from the press conference.

    Visit the official ‘OO7’ Magazine website to purchase this latest issue of ‘OO7’ or back issues. SUBSCRIBE NOW and receive ‘OO7’ #47 as your first issue!

    *‘OO7’ Magazine is no longer affiliated with The James Bond International Fan Club. The JBIFC will release the first issue of their new publication KISS KISS BANG BANG at the end of this month.

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  3. JBIFC Unveils New Club Magazine

    By johncox on 2005-09-30

    The James Bond International Fan Club has today unveiled its all-new club magazine, KISS KISS BANG BANG.

    According to JBIFC club president, David Black, the first issue of KISS KISS BANG BANG will come out at the end of October and a second issue will be released before the end of this year. After these first two issues, KKBB will be released quarterly.

    David has also announced that membership rates for the JBIFC have been reduced. Visit the official JBIFC website, www.007.info, for all the information on the new membership packages.

    It was announced late last year that the JBIFC will no longer distribute ‘OO7’ Magazine to its members. ‘OO7’ is now an independent publication which can be ordered via the ‘OO7’ Magazine website.

    CBn has been the leading website in its coverage of James Bond magazines from ‘OO7’ to Collecting 007 to Bondage, and we hope to bring this same level of coverage to KISS KISS BANG BANG, the exciting new publication from the JBIFC!

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  4. JBIFC Magazine "Coming in Next Few Weeks"

    By johncox on 2005-07-27

    David Black, chairman of the James Bond International Fan Club, announced today via the club newsletter that the all-new JBIFC official magazine will be “coming out in the next few weeks.”

    David reports:

    I anticipate the magazine coming out in the next few weeks. Thank you for your patience – I’m sure the wait will be worth it. I also hope that after the initial delay in setting up the magazine, it will run more regularly. At this present moment in time, that’s all I can reveal but please bear with me in the next few weeks and all will become clear.

    -David Black

    It was announced late last year that the JBIFC will no longer distribute ‘OO7’ Magazine to its members. ‘OO7’ is now an independant publication. The most recent issue was released early this month.

    CBn has been a leading website in its coverage of James Bond magazines from ‘OO7’ Magazine to Collecting 007 to Bondage, and we hope to bring this same level of coverage to this all-new James Bond magazine from the JBIFC.

    Great news, David! We look forward to issue #1.

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  5. The Graham Rye CBn Interview (Part II)

    By johncox on 2005-07-14

    Sean Connery, Roger Moore, Pierce Brosnan… Graham Rye? James Bond actors may come and go, but for almost as long as there have been James Bond movies, Graham Rye, editor and publisher of OO7 Magazine, 007 archivist and preservationist, and past president of the James Bond International Fan Club, has been a consistently familiar face in front of every film; reporting news and sharing his insights for an international audience of devoted James Bond fans.

    Now the man who published interviews with such Bond luminaries as Peter Hunt, Desmond Llewelyn, and Timothy Dalton, gets the spotlight turned on him, and shares with CBn the highs and lows of a lifetime in Bondage.

    Tell us about how you came to write The James Bond Girls book?

    Well, now I think of it, it was as a direct result of my association with Raymond Benson. A then-fledgling publishing company, Boxtree, was publishing Raymond’s book The James Bond Bedside Companion in the UK for the first time in 1988. Boxtree had submitted an abysmal cover design for Raymond’s book (not unusual for them) and he was not impressed, so he suggested they contact me because of my experience in both Bond and design with a view to submitting an alternative concept for the book cover. I eventually sourced, and had made, a number of items which would create a visual impression of the James Bond character, which even included the Commander’s cap worn by Sean Connery in You Only Live Twice. Shot as a still life design, similar to the Pan Books covers of the Seventies, everyone liked the test shot I supplied first, so we ran with the idea. Boxtree liked the cover so much they later commissioned me to design and shoot a cover in the same style for Dave Rogers’ excellent book ‘The Complete Avengers’.

    In 1988 Boxtree were a young hungry company and were looking for new ideas, so I pitched a few concepts to them, one of them being The James Bond Girls. The other ideas fell by the wayside, although some of them surfaced later on written by other authors, which taught me a lesson—‘If you have some marketable ideas, keep your mouth shut until you’ve signed a contract.’ With the release of Licence To Kill coming up in 1989, Eon Productions’ licensing arm were happy for the project to go ahead, so I introduced Boxtree to Eon and they sorted out their deal together, while as the author and designer of that first edition I finalized my percentage of the royalties, no King’s ransom by any stretch of the imagination, in fact I made a larger profit on selling the book like any other retailer than I did as the author.

    The whole experience should have been a happy one but wasn’t. Boxtree pondered for months prior to the publication date regarding green-lighting the publication of The James Bond Girls. It was their first all-colour and licensed film book and was an expensive undertaking for them. They eventually gave me something in the region of eight weeks in which to write the text, believing I’d started to write the book from the date of our initial meeting, meanwhile I’d been waiting to learn whether they were going to run with it or not and was waiting to sign a contract before I typed one word! Needless to say, with the limited time left to me, the idea of interviewing the actresses who’d brought the Bond Girls to life went straight out the window, not that Boxtree had the budget or were keen to fly me anywhere anyway. I came up with a cover concept for the book, which was bounced by the publishers because it was deemed either to be ‘too sexist’ or ‘too violent’ or ‘too sexy’ or?… etc. etc. Political correctness can really get on one’s tits! I wanted the cover to carry a classy generic image, non-specific of any Bond movie, giving the book a longer shelf life. Quite naturally Eon wanted the cover to feature their latest Bond Girls. Needless to say—I was never going to win. The book was published with little or no advertising campaign. Other than Cubby Broccoli’s prestigious introduction in the book, Eon Productions did nothing to promote the book in any way. The James Bond Girls book escaped rather than was released. I suggested all kinds of publicity tie-ins; with the Licence To Kill Bond girls while they were in London for the premiere of the film at Harrods; having Harrods window displays geared to Bond etc. etc. etc.; being allowed access to the new Bond girls for interviews. All fell on deaf ears. Nobody cared enough. Never again. If I were to ever write another book I wouldn’t entertain the idea unless I self-published, because I’d undoubtedly make a lot more money, have a lot less hassle—and not be forced to deal with so many bloody idiots.

    You’ve updated your Bond Girls book several times. The last update in 1999 contained a new assortment of never-before-seen photos. Where did you find all these rare photos?

    The photos basically have come from many varied areas over the years and now form an integral part of my OO7 Magazine Archive. New photographs still come in all the time from different sources.

    Are there any more updates planned?

    I’m afraid there are no future plans for any updated versions of The James Bond Girls published by Boxtree because the title has been ‘killed’ by Eon, who no longer want my name ‘officially’ associated with their James Bond films. I imagine Boxtree had little choice in the matter, although they’ve always been a pretty spineless bunch, because they are now the ‘official’ James Bond film book publishers. It’s all rather sad considering I brought the two companies together in the first place. Still, The James Bond Girls had a pretty good run and appeared in no less than nine different printings from 1989 to 1999. It’ll be interesting to see if the Maryam d’Abo/John Cork tome Bond Girls Are Forever matches this record.

    You were directly responsible for the 1991 reprint of Kingsley Amis’s Colonel Sun, which was the first reprint of this novel in almost 20 years. How did this happen exactly?

    No big deal really. Coronet, the paperback publishers at the time originally only intended to reprint the Fleming titles. But when I waxed lyrical about how great a James Bond novel it is and sent their marketing manager an old copy of the Pan edition to read, I think this did the trick. Coronet even used an airbrushed illustration of the Pan cover shot for their own edition—naughty! By the way, the oriental actor who modeled for the original Pan cover also appeared in Goldfinger, The World Is Not Enough, and Die Another Day. Coronet’s marketing manager enjoyed the book so much that he included it in their release schedule. For me, Colonel Sun is the only Bond continuation novel that successfully captures the ‘Fleming sweep’. It’s a great book, and I would urge any Bond fan that hasn’t read it yet to seek it out immediately—they’re in for a real treat! And in this post-Brosnan/Bond age it also illustrates how the filmmakers criminally overlooked this novel, which could have easily made one of the best Bond films in the entire series—a great title too!

    You are also responsible for unearthing and restoring many old props from the Bond films. Can you tell us about some of these discoveries and where these props are today?

    Many of the props that formed that area of my OO7 Magazine Archive were either donated by people who worked on the movies, or in some instances purchased from third parties. After the first CHRISTIE’S James Bond Auction in September 1998, not surprisingly, prop donations dried up when people began to realise their potential sale value in auction. I had a bit of a result in CHRISTIE’S 1998 auction when Oddjob’s square-crown bowler hat sold for £62,000. Imagine my surprise when I later discovered it had been purchased by Eon Productions, who only a month earlier had approached me to ask if I was interested in selling them the item. I explained to their archivist Meg Simmonds over the telephone that it was available for £25,000 (the reserve price in auction) and she said she would talk to Michael (G. Wilson) about it, but I never heard from them again about the matter.

    Unfortunately due continually to having fund a struggling OO7 Magazine over the years, sadly I had to sell off all the props I’d worked hard to assemble in order to keep myself and the publication afloat. The Moon Buggy from Diamonds Are Forever and Blofeld’s Coat of Arms from On Her Majesty’s Secret Service plus a few last other small items were finally sold in CHRISTIE’S auction in December 2004. So now I’m afraid all the contents of the prop archive are now long gone, and with them my dream of personally establishing a permanent James Bond museum. The idea was to have a museum, cinema, restaurant and retail area linked to each other in the same building—‘The World of James Bond 007’ if you like. It would probably have been possible to have four separate franchise sites, one in London, two in America (on the East and West Coasts), and one in Japan. It remains a mystery to me, as it did to dear old Desmond Llewelyn, why MGM didn’t realise the financial possibilities of this project, together with the cleaning up of the film prints and re-releasing the Bond movies as double-bills. When you think how many generations of James Bond fans have never had the wonderful opportunity to see the majority of the series in the cinema, it’s criminal, and I don’t think it really makes a great deal of business sense either. When you look at what George Lucas and 20th Century Fox have achieved in new box-office takings with the various re-releases of the Star Wars saga, you’d think the penny would eventually drop with the Bond franchise holders. As great as the films can look played from DVD on a large plasma screen, until you’ve seen them in a large cinema like the Odeon Leicester Square, you’ve never seen them at all. Only a screen that size can do justice to something like Ken Adam’s volcano set in You Only Live Twice or the interior of the Liparus supertanker in The Spy Who Loved Me. I’d certainly be first in the queue to see them again at that cinema.

    Another idea I committed to paper, but in reality its scope would probably make it financially prohibitive for most organisations, was a James Bond themed ride (the central attraction of a theme park based in the USA) that literally took you on a journey through Bond’s world via the memorable sets/sequences in the films. Imagine a monorail taking you on a physical journey through all the major Bond sets rebuilt that includes a stop off inside the volcano set (rebuilt at actual size) to witness the ninja assault on Blofeld’s headquarters. Having walked on the actual set at Pinewood I know how impressive a crowd-puller this would be. Perhaps this is something Sony may like to consider when they have eventually released Casino Royale?

    Can you tease us with what other treasures might be tucked away inside the OO7 Magazine archive?

    I prefer to keep people guessing. But needless to say, every edition of OO7 Magazine will feature a fair number of surprises.

    You and The JBIFC have been involved in many major James Bond events. Can you talk about some of these events—both the successes and the failures?

    During the Nineties I usually organized an event (sometimes two) every year. Mostly at Pinewood Studios, and sometimes at Planet Hollywood. Our last event was in 1999 at the Café de Paris in London. I think all of them were a huge success as far as the attendees were concerned, and I certainly used to get a kick out of seeing everyone enjoy themselves so much. But on purely a business level the events were just too labour intensive for the financial rewards. I used to consistently exhaust myself in organising each event, and after 1999 promised myself never again—and this time I meant it! While James Page of the MI6 website criticized me on various news groups for “doing bugger all for Bond fans” around the release time of Die Another Day and the ‘007’ 40th Anniversary in 2002, at that time I was trying desperately myself to die another day in both my personal and business life, and didn’t really feel it was ‘my shout at the bar’. Anyone who wanted to step up to the challenge was more than welcome as far as I was concerned. So when I attended The Ian Fleming Foundation’s ‘James Bond Celebrity Golf Classic Gala Dinner’ at Stoke Park with my wife Christina, it came as a glorious relaxation from all the hassle and heartache associated with event organisation, which on this occasion was handled with great aplomb and diplomacy by Doug Redenius.

    In two of the more recent editions of OO7 Magazine (#43 and #44) I’ve written a detailed account about the history of the magazine and ‘The James Bond International Fan Club’, which features many great photographs of the people who made those events possible, both celebrities and organizers. So I hope many of your readers will invest in purchasing those two issues—hopefully more.

    I’m proud of what was accomplished in that decade, and I think the two-day event we staged in 1990 at Pinewood Studios where we hired a soundstage and displayed every single James Bond movie prop in storage there is still spoken about with affection by many of those who attended. We also had a great day when George Lazenby attended our Christmas lunch themed around On Her Majesty’s Secret Service in 1994. George must have signed his autograph for nearly all-200 guests.

    I’m pleased to see that other enterprising ‘young guns’ have now jumped into the vacuum created when I retired from organising events and are now holding various screenings, autograph signings and the like, and I wish them the best of luck in all their endeavors. It’s certainly good news for Bond fans.

    In 2002 The JBIFC abruptly shut down, but then reopened in early 2003. Can you tell us a little bit about what happened?

    Basically both my business and personal overheads became higher and higher while the incoming turnover couldn’t keep up. Add to this that the sales from our online collectables store almost totally dried up overnight for an extended period (the reason for which still remains a mystery to this day); I fell in love and got married for a second time, also inheriting three children. Unfortunately the marriage failed and the finance eventually just literally ran out. No one’s fault but my own. My own bad management coupled with some bad luck and the more-than-possible interference from outside forces undid all I’d achieved in the preceding 25 years. Success covers a multitude of blunders, and I made more than my share. I then had the agonising task of making my exceptionally loyal full-time staff member Alex-Pow Williams redundant; my personal assistant Jamie Beerman also left —and I also lost my 1,400 square foot offices and had to condense its contents into the extremely cramped conditions of my Dad’s 2-bedroom bungalow. I lost nearly everything. During this time I realized that like Hamlet, my experiences simply could not have happened to a plumber.

    A few months later I was approached out of the blue by David Black, a Yorkshire businessman who also happened to be an enthusiastic Bond fan, who purchased the rights to the JBIFC name, its website, and the club’s membership database. He injected limited finance into the new business and I became able to publish OO7 Magazine once more. I published the fifth issue (#45) of the publication’s rebirth in December 2004.

    Regardless of what any JBIFC member may have read in their emailed newsletter from Mr. Black, the truth of the matter is that the breakaway was entirely my decision. Unfortunately, due to David Black’s inability to live up to his initial claim of increasing the database to 10,000 club members over a two-year period—not particularly assisted by his non-promotion of The JBIFC in any marketplace whatsoever—I found it necessary to break away from the confines of my contractual agreement in order to increase the circulation of OO7 Magazine under my own initiative, thereby hopefully protecting the survival of my publication—and myself! If there’s one thing I’ve learned through this most difficult period of my life is that the golden rule is that there are no golden rules.

    How do you respond to criticisms on various newsgroups in the past that The JBIFC was run to meet its own aims rather than cater to the wishes of the fans?

    The James Bond International Fan Club Limited and OO7 Magazine & Archive Limited are separate organizations that are organized like any other commercial enterprise. If someone purchased a Ford motor car they wouldn’t expect to have any say in running the company would they?

    The new OO7 Magazine has promised to be much more aggressive, and even controversial in its editorial opinions. In that spirit, what do you think about the current Bond films and the direction the series is taking?

    “Caricature is the tribute that mediocrity pays to genius.”–this Oscar Wilde quote just about sums up the current state of affairs for me. Anyone reading my article in OO7 Magazine (#41) will know exactly what I thought about Die Another Day, which I don’t want to labour here—but for me it’s still the worst movie in the series!

    I like Pierce Brosnan as James Bond. He’s got all the right qualities a good Bond should have: he’s tall dark and handsome, he handles the humour well, he’s believable in the action scenes—and the cinema-going public love him! Unfortunately I don’t think the films measure up to his ability as an actor to do something more with the role than he’s been allowed to show to date. In GoldenEye, a colourless drab looking film, he was given little to do except react to the other characters and situations around him. Tomorrow Never Dies was his finest hour as Bond, and I do mean hour. The first half of the movie is the best Brosnan/Bond to date, with some nice Bondian touches, up until the model of his BMW crashes off the hotel roof through a flurry of polystyrene bricks, then the film just simply rambles until it falls apart. I thoroughly enjoyed The World Is Not Enough, which had the best narrative structure of all the Brosnan/Bond films, and the story unfolded much more in the style of a Sixties’ Bond. Although the film is uneven, it’s about 200% better than the dire Die Another Day—quasi science fiction badly executed and acted by everyone but Brosnan.

    If MGM/SONY are currently trying to make James Bond a character that will appeal to younger audiences, I personally think they’re flogging a dead horse. I’m still not convinced that we’ve seen the last of Brosnan regardless of what’s been said or reportedly said and printed in newspapers, websites etc. I certainly hope he’ll return because he’s still the only man for the job! He has no natural successor. And as for the short list that’s been dragged out in various publications and on websites—it’s laughable. But when you consider the filmmakers and United Artists nearly ran with John Gavin as James Bond in 1971, and have tested James Brolin, Sam Neill, and Lambert Wilson for the 007 role in the past (shakes head in amazement and laughs demonically)—anything could happen! If they do eventually recast the role with the wrong actor (if indeed there is a right actor—and I really doubt there is after Brosnan) it could prove the death knell for the series. But anyway—how much longer can it really last? MGM/SONY need Bond—he’s their cash cow. And with Die Another Day tipping the box-office scales over the $400 million dollar mark worldwide they’re hardly going to shunt it off to the abattoir. Eon? Who knows? Do they really need the entire hassle? Personally, I’d have sooner stayed in Tunbridge Wells.

    What would you do with Casino Royale if you were Eon?

    I’m not Eon so I’d definitely play the game differently. I would certainly avoid the title Casino Royale like the plague in the first place. It probably doesn’t mean anything to the cinemagoing public, but if it does it’s the bad memory of the 1967 spoof version. and believe me, when the new Casino Royale movie opens, every film magazine and newspaper on the planet will resurrect the 1967 spoof by running stills of the film together with the Barry Nelson TV play alongside the new movie—not a comparison anyone will enjoy, I’m sure.

    If I was in control of the franchise I’d cast Pierce Brosnan in a remake of On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and You Only Live Twice (based more on the themes featured in Ian Fleming’s novel), and film them back-to-back in the correct order—if it can be done with Lord of the Rings, I’m sure it can be achieved with Bond. Both On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and You Only Live Twice mean next-to-nothing to today’s cinemagoers, so I don’t see a problem with remakes being accepted by the general public who make up the majority of the paying audience. Some Bond fans may balk at the idea of meddling with Peter Hunt’s classic OHMSS like it’s the Holy Grail, but I think that would be denying the possibility of another great Bond film, rather like saying why on earth are they remaking The Thomas Crown Affair, they can’t possibly top the original McQueen/Dunaway version – well didn’t they just!

    Re-use/arrange the original musical soundtracks (because no one is ever going to equal John Barry’s eternal scores, let alone better them—and certainly not David Arnold). Have Bond lose his memory at the end of You Only Live Twice and heading off for Vladivostok (which he sees on piece of makeshift toilet paper [i.e. newsprint] in Kissy’s outhouse as in Fleming’s novel). The result: Brosnan leaves the series on a classy high, which opens the door for Bond Actor Number Six to return as the new Bond who’s been brainwashed (hence his different appearance) and who attempt’s to kill M like the beginning of the following novel in Fleming’s series, The Man With The Golden Gun. Then to redeem himself M gives Bond an almost impossible/suicide mission which would be a completely new screen story. I’d prefer to see an older main villain, say the very classy Christopher Plummer, and an older Bond Girl, say the very sexy Monica Bellucci, and the svelte and sinister Lambert Wilson as Plummer’s henchman. For my own entertainment I’ve written a treatment with those actors in mind. I wouldn’t reproduce it anywhere because it may still prove useful as a treatment for another movie. A while back I met with Jean-Claude Van Damme and his business manager in an attempt to sell them a treatment for a movie tailored to Van Damme’s screen image. Your guess is as good as mine is whether anything will pan out or not. But knowing the business—probably not.

    What are your thoughts on Ian Fleming Publication’s new ‘Young Bond’ series of novels? [Ed NOTE: This interview was conducted before the release of SilverFin.]

    As I mentioned earlier, I think the whole thing reeks of ‘Harry Bond & The Whimsical Nonsense’—and desperation in an ailing literary franchise with a woefully inadequate lack of creative imagination on the part of the copyright holders, coupled with a complete disrespect for Ian Fleming’s original unique, and rather special, literary character. While I would never have the slightest objection to Charlie Higson increasing the size of his bank balance or Ian Fleming Publications accruing even more coinage to their already overflowing pot of gold, I do object to the further denigration of Ian Fleming’s James Bond character. As if the evolution of the film series through the 70s into the 2000s weren’t bad enough, eventually bringing the whole game down a peg or three, now the final nail in the coffin must surely be YOUNG BOND: SilverFin. I would urge any parent who is considering purchasing this book for their 10 or 12-year-old son to think again, and instead, look beyond this new unnecessary nonsense to the original wonderful Ian Fleming stories. Although considered anachronistic by many, including even their British publisher, Fleming’s novels remain a masterclass in concise writing, and long should have been included on the National Curriculum in British Schools, not that it would matter now, as there’s probably barely anyone left who can read. SilverFin—‘Suits you sir!’ Don’t think so.

    What do you think of the new cover designs of the Fleming books, particularly the ‘retro’ covers by Richie Fahey?

    I love ’em! Every so often in the sea of mediocrity perpetrated in the name of James Bond 007, something of worth is produced which is not only a joy to behold and own, but in time will become a desirable and much sought-after collectable. This set of the 14 Ian Fleming James Bond titles published by Penguin Books (U.S.) is one such case in point. Designed by Rosanne Serra and Richie Fahey in broad stylish strokes, the flair and tongue-in-cheek humour—dare-I-say-it—bordering on camp that pervade these designs, enable these covers to succeed exactly in their intended purpose—they actually make you want to handle the book to discover ‘what’s this all about!’

    Significantly sexier than their Penguin Books (UK) counterparts, whose pointless abstract cover designs wouldn’t look out of place on the walls of the Holiday Inn hotel chain, Penguin Books (U.S.) have succeeded in breathing ‘old life’ back into the Bond novels with the decidedly ‘retro’ look of their new printings. I can think of no better way of introducing Ian Fleming’s wonderful novels to a friend or relation than purchasing the set as one of the most enjoyable and impressive gifts they may ever receive.

    In contrast, Penguin Modern Classics (UK) should have taken heed of their American cousin’s flair for art direction. The first 10 Ian Fleming 007 titles were newly republished in June 2004 as Large Crown format paperbacks (198x129mm) and are as ineffectually designed as a glass hammer. Absolutely dreadful!

    With your expertise in Bond and graphic design, what advice would you give MGM marketing in regards to designing the ad campaign for Casino Royale?

    These days most all movie posters are produced using photographic reality. It’s as though if the public can’t see their favourite star’s face up there on the billboard then they’re not going to realise that they’re in the movie and subsequently won’t visit their local cinema. There may be something in that—but who knows unless someone tries a different approach. While other films fighting for their audience may need to slap retouched photographs of the main actors on their movie 1-sheet posters and mega-size billboards, the James Bond movie series is an all together different animal. I could think of nothing better than designing a campaign for Casino Royale that relies on a series of teasers and final posters that feature an illustration of Pierce Brosnan in a tuxedo holding a gun across his chest with a variety of nubile long-legged busty young ladies, similar in style to the wonderful campaigns overseen by Donald Smolen for Thunderball and You Only Live Twice. It won’t happen—but it’s nice to daydream.

    What do you think of online James Bond websites like CBn? Are you concerned that fan sites are in danger of replacing the traditional fan club and fanzine?

    For news, you can’t beat an Internet publication. The speed by which information can be disseminated these days is staggering. The day of the printed newsletter is long gone. Sites like CBn, and to a lesser extent MI6, seem to be the front runners these days, with MKKBB (website defunct since May 2006) having lost the high ground after kind of starting the snowball rolling, which is a shame because they really set the standard when they first appeared. Everything in a professional life, a career, is very much like a race, so you have to pace yourself, but you also have to have a great deal of stamina if you’re going to enter the race and stay the course—and hopefully win! I’ve been around for over 25 years in this business and have seen many organisations and companies, publicity managers, marketing managers, personal assistants, licensees, producers, writers, actors, you-name-it, come and go. I’m still here—so I must be doing something right.

    As entertaining as many of the James Bond-related websites are in 2005, and I think they make a real and worthwhile contribution to what I can only describe as ‘the James Bond phenomenon’, I still believe that people will always enjoy handling a high-quality deluxe glossy publication like OO7 Magazine. I’m sure there’s still many subscribers whose hearts race when they hear the magazine slip through their mailbox and hit the doormat. I know mine did many years ago when my Dad took out a subscription for me to the National Geographic magazine.

    Has running The JBIFC and OO7 Magazine made you a wealthy man?

    Someone once wrote, “Experience is simply the name we give our mistakes.” Believe me, I’m wealthy beyond my dreams in experience. But financially, no. Just the opposite I’m afraid. It has drained my bank balance and my life-force. Everything happens to everybody sooner or later if there is time enough, and I’ve certainly had time enough in this game for everything to happen to me—and it has!

    Finally, are you still a Bond fan?

    I suppose I must be. I still get a great thrill out of producing OO7 Magazine and when I first see that gun barrel at the opening of every Bond film. I suppose I wouldn’t get so angry about a bad James Bond film if I didn’t care. It’s something that I’ve always loved dearly, and it’s given me so much to remember with great affection. When I sat in that dark smoky cinema in Southall over 40 years ago I could never have imagined that one day I would meet, entertain, and become friends with many of those names up on the screen. It still remains a wonderment to me. So yes—I’m still a James Bond fan, and will almost certainly remain so until my dying day, regardless of wherever the franchise holders decide they’re going to drag Ian Fleming’s James Bond character in 2006 and beyond. Just lock me in a rubber room somewhere with the first six films in the series and I’ll be as happy as only a ‘traditionalist Bond fan’ will ever be.

    Thank you so much for sharing your time and answering so many questions. We all look forward to many more years of OO7 Magazine.

    Visit the official OO7 Magazine website to purchase the latest issue, SUBSCRIBE, or buy back issues.

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  6. Unseen 'OO7'

    By johncox on 2005-07-09

    In 2003 ‘OO7’ Magazine launched an all-new look with its Special Die Another Day issue #41. But before the issue we all know arrived in our mailboxes, publisher, editor and designer Graham Rye considered a very different approach. Now CBn gets a peek inside the ‘OO7’ Magazine design studio at two unused covers for issue #41, with the story behind the story from Graham Rye himself.

    Prisoner 007 cover

    “Prisoner 007” cover

    Pierce & Halle cover

    Pierce & Halle cover

    Final cover of issue 41

    Final cover of issue 41

    I was originally going to run with two different covers for issue #41. The Pierce and Halle cover was going out through our distributors, and the “Prisoner oo7” cover was the design to be received by JBIFC subscribers — or the other way round — I can’t remember which. It’s a real shame it didn’t come to pass, because we had the jump on everyone with, what I liked to call, “the hairy Bond” shot. Unfortunately it was not to be.

    The reason neither of the cover designs were used was because it was at the time that everything came crashing down around my head and The JBIFC closed down. Issue #40 (January 2002) had been the last issue published, and it would prove to be a full 20 months until the Die Another Day issue #41 would be appear, by which time of course, the fact that Bond/Brosnan was incarcerated was old news.

    In the past I very rarely had the luxury of mocking up alternative covers for the same issue, and usually went with what first came to hand. Only since issue #41 onwards do I now have the time to bother with different cover concepts, but it’s usually my first choice that makes the final cover. I also re-designed the magazine logo as a block that could be positioned anywhere (within reason) on the cover, as this allows for a far greater selection of images to be used as a cover picture.

    To learn about the colorful history of ‘OO7’ Magazine and how the magazine is put together, please read The Graham Rye CBn Interview. Visit the official ‘OO7’ Magazine website to purchase the latest issue, SUBSCRIBE, or back issues.

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  7. The Graham Rye CBn Interview (Part I)

    By johncox on 2005-07-06

    Sean Connery, Roger Moore, Pierce Brosnan… Graham Rye? James Bond actors may come and go, but for almost as long as there have been James Bond movies, Graham Rye, editor and publisher of OO7 Magazine, 007 archivist and preservationist, and past president of the James Bond International Fan Club, has been a consistently familiar face in front of every film; reporting news and sharing his insights for an international audience of devoted James Bond fans. Along with a stable of talented contributors, Graham turned what started out as a one-page photocopied fan club mailer into a highly professional 48-page full color magazine devoted to all things Bond. Twenty-six years and 46 issues later, OO7 Magazine is still going strong, even in an era when James Bond websites provide Bond fans with an endless supply of news and rumor daily.

    Graham is also the author of The James Bond Girls, a definitive look at the lovely ladies who have shared screen time with 007, many of whom Graham counts as personal friends. As a 007 archivist and preservationist Graham and the JBIFC have rescued many famous Bond props from extinction, including a decaying Diamonds Are Forever Moon Buggy. He even owned Oddjob’s hat!

    Now, for the first time, the man who published interviews with such Bond luminaries as Peter Hunt, Desmond Llewelyn, and Timothy Dalton, gets the spotlight turned on him, and shares with CBn the highs and lows of a lifetime in Bondage.

    To start, can you tell us a little about yourself? Where did you grow up, and what’s your life like outside of James Bond?

    I was born September 13th 1951 in Southall, West London where I lived until my first marriage in 1972 when I moved to Finchley, North London, until the marriage broke up in 1976. When I’m not occupied producing editions of OO7 Magazine, which mostly fills my calendar for the year and has generally taken over my life since 1983 (each issue can take anything from 12 to 14 weeks to produce from scratch), I like reading, cinema, theatre, music, dance, dining out, and shooting and riding when I get the opportunity. I used to take photographs for pleasure and draw and paint a bit, but unfortunately have long since seen the time for such esoteric pleasures dwindle to no time at all. While working in London in the late Sixties I would often spend my lunch hours in the National Gallery, the British Museum or other art galleries scattered around town. I very much miss these times.

    I left school in 1968, and a week later got myself a job as a messenger boy at an advertising art studio in the West End of London, which gave me an invaluable knowledge and love of the city, and for which I was paid the princely sum of £6 per week. When I remember I would purchase my London Underground season ticket, give my Mum money for housekeeping, buy this and that—and still have enough money left over for a boozy Friday night with my old school chum and Bond fan Fred Bryant, the mind boggles. I still don’t believe the rate of inflation over the last 30 years in the UK would ever have been accepted as even-tempered as it has been by the people of this country if our currency hadn’t been decimalised. The greatest con-trick ever perpetrated on the British public by Her Majesty’s government! Now they’re trying to pull the same trick with the Euro.

    There’s a photograph of you as a young boy meeting Molly Peters at a Thunderball screening in 1965. Was Thunderball the movie that first ignited your Bond interest?

    No not really. I was completely excited by Dr. No, there really hadn’t been anything like it before in cinema; then mesmerized by From Russia With Love (that pre-credit opening sequence was the cleverest thing I’d seen in the movies or TV at that time), and totally blown away by Goldfinger. Thunderball kind of underlined the whole Bond mystique for me; an expensive lifestyle in exotic locations surrounded by fabulous looking women, with the occasional villain having to be bumped off before everything settles down again in paradise. Although Thunderball is undoubtedly the most sophisticated and cosmopolitan of the Bond films (and the most successful, regardless of whatever the official story relates!), even then I wondered where it could go from there, and probably thought—and hoped—that Sean Connery would go on forever in the 007 role. For me, You Only Live Twice and On Her Majesty’s Secret Service are the last two films in the series that are a cohesive whole, rather than a mish-mash of hit and miss ideas strung together masquerading as a Bond movie.

    How did you become involved with The JBIFC? Were you a part of it from the very start?

    No, I didn’t get involved in The James Bond British Fan Club (as it was then named) until 1980. A likeable and enthusiastic teenager by the name of Ross Hendry started The JBBFC in 1979. With my experience in graphic design, I came on board to add some flair to the visual look of OO7, the Club’s publication, such as it was in those early days.

    Did you ever imagine it would last 25 years?

    I don’t think I’ve ever really had time to think about much else other than producing the next issue of OO7 Magazine or the next JBIFC event or whatever. They’re things I’ve always been totally committed to and involved in. When you’re simultaneously chasing a dream and running to keep up with the bills you can’t afford the luxury of contemplation. Mostly its been trying to survive, literally to put food on the table. When I look back now it really has been a fantastic journey, and I believe, in its way, a pretty incredible achievement. A lot of laughter and tears along the way, but I wouldn’t change a day of it.

    Being in your position you’ve met many Bond celebrities. Can you talk a bit about the people you’ve met and some of the friends (or enemies) you’ve made along the way?

    Enemies? To paraphrase Oscar Wilde: “Graham Rye is an excellent man; he has not an enemy in the world, and none of his friends like him.” Well I suppose they know who they are, but personally, I’ve never had time to waste on negativity or small and petty minded people, who mainly have their own axes to grind and agendas to amplify. Life’s too short and so are they (mostly).

    Desmond Llewelyn and Maurice Binder are really the main two Bond celebrities who became real friends. They were both truly wonderful men, each of whom supported wholeheartedly what I was trying to achieve with The JBIFC and OO7 Magazine. Desmond supported our events from day one and was always there to help when he could. Maurice was very much a mentor. We had some wonderful conversations together. I still miss them both terribly.

    It’s part of fan lore that The JBIFC ran afoul of Eon when OO7 published the first ever ‘tell all’ interview with George Lazenby. Is this true?

    No, not really. I think the die was cast well before then. It was, and remains, a case of different agendas. From day one Eon have never believed that any James Bond fan club would necessarily be acting in their best interest, and they’re probably correct, especially if the organization is going to be independent and unaffiliated—and unlicensed. To them, control is everything, an idea that isn’t foreign to me. I certainly wouldn’t want to see a OO7 Magazine that had to seek approval from anyone, forgiveness on occasions possibly, but approval—never!

    How are relations with Eon now?

    With whom? What can I say? To be completely honest and very frank, if it were a divorce we’d both probably cite irreconcilable differences for the breakdown of the ‘marriage’, though we were never ‘married’ in the first place, however we have ‘dated’ on several occasions when it was convenient to do so. And too much damage has been done during the relationship for any thought or need of reconciliation. It’s always been a case of entirely separate agendas and I believe it will always remain so. I’m a loose cannon and can’t be controlled, which is probably where the problem begins and ends. I can’t work within the tight parameters of a licensed entity where every last full stop, comma and photograph has to be approved for an ‘official’ version—I leave that to others. Simple as that! What Eon’s opinion of me is, or their ‘official’ policy or stance toward OO7 Magazine and me is, I have no idea. But in recent years I have come up against deliberate blocking of me appearing on various TV programs, and I no longer receive any invitations to official events or invitations to visit the set of the latest film. So that kind of behavior tells me all I need to know, although I have no written statement of any kind from Eon Productions laying out exactly what their objections are. They’re in the business of making James Bond movies, I’m in the business of publishing an unlicensed magazine about James Bond, and never the twain shall meet it would seem. End of story.

    Tell me about the step-by-step process of putting together an issue of OO7 Magazine?

    The strength of OO7 Magazine has always been its balance between great photographs and strong text. As a photographer I’ve always been in love with the image, so that’s one of the main reasons why I like to use so many great shots in one issue. I have so many stills in my archive it would be a real shame not to let readers see them whenever it’s possible. Anyone regularly subscribing to OO7 Magazine over the years know they are going to see and read material in every issue they can’t access anywhere else.

    It’s always frustrating to me that the still photographers on the early Bonds are mostly unidentifiable from the photographs—as I know personally how annoying it can be to see one’s work reproduced without any credit—but whenever possible the photograph is credited. I’d love to hear from some of these early Bond photographers like Loomis Dean, Arthur Evans, James and Linda Swarbrick, Bert Cann, Frank Connor, David Hurn, and George Whitear.

    My ideas for OO7 Magazine always seem to come out of thin air; usually either late at night or in the wee small hours when I’m relaxing with two fingers of Highland Park malt whisky. Sometimes these ideas snowball and develop with a life of their own during the production layout of the publication—one thing leads to another and so on and so onä I started off making James Bond picture story scrapbooks as a kid, so I suppose OO7 Magazine has become the logical extension of that schoolboy hobby.

    The graphic design of OO7 Magazine really sets it apart from other fanzines—in fact, I’m not even sure I should call OO7 Magazine a ‘fanzine’ but rather ‘a magazine devoted to James Bond.’ Can you tell us a bit about how the look of the mag has evolved over the years and your role in its changing design?

    ‘Fanzine?’ Shame on you! Well I deliberately changed the title of the publication to OO7 Magazine because I wanted to distance it from being seen as ‘just’ a ‘fanzine’, a fan-based publication, which I don’t think it has been for many years, and certainly isn’t now. It really is a magazine devoted to James Bond. If people like it then they’ll buy it, if they don’t they won’t. I’ve always believed that if you work in any creative medium the only arbiters you can use is your own taste and standards. You assemble a publication that pleases you and hope mostly everyone else enjoys it. Obviously you can’t please all the people all the time, and you’re always going to have a percentage that you can’t please any of the time (but they probably don’t buy the publication anyway!). Though over the last quarter century I’m pleased, and proud, to relate that I’ve had much more positive than negative feedback from readers. There has been some criticism regarding the retail cost of OO7 Magazine, but unfortunately this is unavoidable when producing anything in such limited quantities, your unit cost will always mean your end product will be expensive, but that said, I still believe the publication is excellent value for money for the discerning James Bond enthusiast.

    With the new-look editions of OO7 Magazine starting from issue number #41 onwards, I’ve wanted to open out the editorial content of the publication so it has a broader appeal. I don’t see why a James Bond magazine needs to be dull, stuffy or anally retentive. I leave that to others. I want OO7 Magazine to be an artistically bright-looking publication with features that will be interesting, informative and entertaining to read and to look at, and if it can educate a little along the way that’s an added bonus. I also hope the publication will now appeal to less hardcore Bond fans. Basically, I have a unique knowledge of the subject and want to share it with my readers, who I hope enjoy the end product. OO7 Magazine has always set the standard, and will continue this trend as long as I’m able to maintain my current level of commitment to the publication. An infinite part-work?

    The editions of OO7 Magazine from issue #41 onwards are also more considered. Because I no longer have the myriad distractions of the day-to-day running of The JBIFC, its on-line store, and the many other offshoots I was pestered with every hour of the day every day of the week, I can plan the structure of a number of issues in advance. It’s a luxury I’ve never had before and it’s much my preferred way of working.

    Being a child of the Roger Moore era, I’ve noticed that OO7 Magazine seems to have a bit of a Connery bias—number of Connery covers vs. Moore covers, etc. What do you say to cranky Moore fans like myself who complain about this?

    I’d say it was a very fair criticism and not at all cranky—and one I’m currently addressing [Ed NOTE: see ‘OO7’ Magazine #46 – Roger Moore Special]. Unfortunately, most of our contributors, including the current writers for OO7 Magazine, aren’t huge Roger Moore Bond fans, so it’s been difficult for a long while to feature his films with the coverage they most certainly deserve. His casting in the role undoubtedly enabled the Bond series to survive two decades. If Sean Connery hadn’t been cast in the role originally I don’t think anyone would currently be talking about BOND 21: Casino Royale. But by the same token, if Roger hadn’t been cast in 1973 I don’t think we’d have seen Timothy Dalton and Pierce Brosnan follow on to portray James Bond.

    If there’s anyone out there who feels they can write and would like to showcase a Roger Moore 007 film in a positive fashion—please write to me at [email protected] (enthusiasm and a sound accurate knowledge of the subject are the key factors in writing for OO7 Magazine—don’t worry about your English grammar—that’s my job as editor to knock it into shape!)

    In the beginning the club reported a great deal on the progress of McClory’s Thunderball remake, and when Never Say Never Again finally came out OO7 featured more coverage of this film than Octopussy. Was this because of the excitement over Connery’s return, or did McClory offer the club the co-operation Eon wouldn’t?

    Obviously everyone was excited by Sean’s return (however short-lived both the excitement and the return was), but no, we were never afforded any special treatment by Kevin McClory, and we were unable to obtain any stills through ‘official’ channels from either Octopussy, or even two years later for A View To A Kill. However, Warner Brothers, who originally released Never Say Never Again, were incredibly helpful. I suppose it was because they felt they needed all the help they could get in opposition (which is how they felt about the situation) to Octopussy. Warner gave me total access to an unlimited number of stills and transparencies and eventually even gave me the prop nuclear warhead used in the film. They’d had it on display in the West End cinema showing the film in London’s Haymarket, and I don’t think they knew what to do with it after the film’s run. I remember it only just fit nose to tail in the company estate car I had at the time. After humping the damn thing around all over the place in various ‘moves’ over the years the prop warhead was eventually purchased by Planet Hollywood, and as far as I know is still on display in one of their restaurants.

    OO7 seemed to heartily endorse Timothy Dalton’s Bond with many excellent issues and covers. Looking back, what do you think of the Dalton era now?

    I think it was a valiant attempt by Timothy Dalton and the filmmakers to bring Bond back down to basics, nearer to the first two films in the series. At the time I think it was certainly the best Bond film since On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, although not really in quite the same class as George Lazenby’s one shot appearance as 007. Unfortunately with Licence To Kill I think Dalton’s influence for a darker more somber Bond backfired, and led the filmmakers up the wrong path. The film also wasn’t helped by a monumentally inadequate promotional campaign that just more or less said to the public, ‘ho hum here’s another James Bond movie.’ The James Bond of Licence To Kill, for me, is neither the Bond of Ian Fleming’s novels or the accepted movie version, the latter probably being nearer the reason for the film’s cool reception. Its international distributors UIP publicized that the film had grossed over $42,553,744 in the international market place, putting it substantially ahead of all other Bond films in the series at that time in its release. But this did little to dispel the feeling that the general public at large just weren’t on the same wavelength as Timothy Dalton’s interpretation of James Bond. Regardless of what the band of faithful believe, Timothy Dalton just wasn’t popular with the everyday cinema-going public. Regularly meeting people from all walks of life, if they discover my profession the conversation usually turns to a brief summary of who they think the best James Bond actor was, almost universally, especially from men, panning Timothy Dalton in the role, with George Lazenby running a close second. However, I still believe that The Living Daylights, Dalton’s Bond debut film, is vastly superior to GoldenEye as a first outing for a new Bond actor.

    OO7 has always been a good source for news and reviews on the continuation novels. Can you tell us a little about your relationship with authors John Gardner and Raymond Benson?

    Well I’ve known Raymond on and off for many years now, and even designed and photographed the cover for the UK paperback edition of his excellent ‘James Bond Bedside Companion’ in 1988. He’s also been kind enough to contribute articles to OO7 Magazine in the past, his interviews with Timothy Dalton and John Gardner both being particularly memorable. I’ve met John Gardner on a couple of brief occasions. Both authors are very nice people.

    I’ve probably upset a few people in the past with various comments that have found their way into the press regarding the continuation Bond novels—but hey—if you don’t want to get burned, don’t jump into the fire! I think trying to take over Ian Fleming’s James Bond, while being an extraordinary challenge, is very much a ‘poison chalice’. It doesn’t matter what you do you’re never really going to win. The novelty of the new literary James Bond wore off on me after For Special Services, and I’m afraid nothing I’ve read since has changed my mind. The intrinsic problem of updating Fleming’s literary character is that in updating him you lose the sense that you are reading about the same man Fleming was writing about, which to me seems a pointless—and thankless—exercise. However, I understand that both John and Raymond have their own fan following, and good luck to them. I’d certainly have preferred to see Raymond continue as the Bond author than Glidrose perpetrate a series of young James Bond adventures on the world. But I suppose it comes down to basics—‘How can we make more money out of this ailing literary franchise?’ ‘Ah yes! We’ll go the Harry Potter route.’ Please God they never make any films from these books in my lifetime.

    You’ve done terrific special issues on OHMSS, Thunderball, and You Only Live Twice (in two parts). Can you tell us a what inspired these issues, and have you ever considered doing a ‘special’ on one of the more recent films, say For Your Eyes Only or Licence To Kill?

    Thank you. The reason for the specials produced to date was that all these films hold a certain fascination for me, as I’m sure they do for many of our readers. I’d like to do more specials, and certainly have no problem in principal with the idea of covering a Roger Moore or Timothy Dalton James Bond movie in this way—unfortunately, in practical terms these issues take around two to three times longer to produce than a standard issue of OO7 Magazine. Then there’s always the problem of finding writers of quality who can cover the various aspects of the film that you need to discuss. So, because of the problem with production time on specials, it may be a better idea in the future to integrate these kinds of specialist articles into the body of a usual edition of the magazine like I have done in recent issues. Who knows? We’ll have to see.

    Was there ever anything you ran in OO7 Magazine that in hindsight you wished you hadn’t?

    Probably the reverse. Sometimes I think the publication should have been more candid and aggressive with its opinions, which it is now and will continue to be in the future.

    How do you respond to criticisms that the production of OO7 Magazine is uneven, with long periods between some issues?

    When you’re a one-man band and you have to work within an extremely limited budget, sometimes other things take president. Simple as that. Only a major influx of a substantial amount of cash will ever remove that particular problem. However, during 2004 the publication of OO7 Magazine became far more regular than at anytime in the past. But to quote Mae West, “Anything worth doing is worth doing slowly.”

    Do you have a favourite issue of OO7 Magazine?

    I was very pleased with the special issue that covered Casino Royale and Never Say Never Again. I think Matthew Field did an excellent job and produced the definitive work on Never Say Never Again. And his exclusive interview with the movie’s director Irvin Kershner was the icing on the cake. I feel that issue set the record straight on the two ‘infamous’ rogue Bond movies and remains the definitive work.

    I’m very proud of the double issue that covered You Only Live Twice. It was ‘a real labour of love as we say’—more like a book in the quantity of production requirements. I believe it’s the definitive work on that wonderful film. Having recently unearthed some fabulous photographs of Connery’s time in Japan on location during the shooting of You Only Live Twice, I’m itching to put out another special—perhaps for the film’s 40th anniversary in 2007? But generally my favourite issue is the last one to roll off the printing press. I’ve lived and breathed with it morning noon and night for around three months, so believe me, I’m more than a bit happy to get OO7 Magazine off my hands and out to my subscribers. By that time I have the next issue blocked out in my head and am desperate to get it down on paper. And so it goes on…

    Part Two of this interview with Graham Rye will appear in one week including questions on Graham’s book, The James Bond Girls.

    Continue to Part II

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  8. 'OO7' Magazine #46, Roger Moore Special

    By johncox on 2005-06-23

    Publisher and editor Graham Rye reports that ‘OO7’ Magazine #46 will ship to subscribers and select retailers the first week in July. Roger Moore fans will be delighted to hear that a large portion of this latest issue of ‘OO7’ will be devoted to the unflappable James Bond #3.

    Here’s an exclusive first look at what’s inside the new issue.

    'OO7' Magazine  #46

    ‘OO7’ Magazine #46

    • INTERVIEW: The Full Monty. THOMAS HEDMAN spoke with Monty Norman, the composer who has written music for many films, and even more stage musicals and TV shows. However, his place in cinema history was assured in 1962 when he composed the immortal “James Bond Theme.”
    • FEATURE: Jolly Roger! GARETH OWEN examines Sir Roger Moore’s remarkable tenure in the role of James Bond, which spanned seven films over an incredible 12 years, and included some of the most financially successful movies in the history of the oo7 franchise. 32-page special feature showcasing over 200 photographs.
    • MUSIC: Hear You Loud And Clear! GREG BECHTLOFF takes a concise view of the James Bond film soundtracks.

    Visit the official ‘OO7’ Magazine website to purchase this latest issue of ‘OO7’ or back issues. SUBSCRIBE NOW and receive ‘OO7’ #46 as your first issue!

    * ‘OO7’ Magazine is no longer affiliated with The James Bond International Fan Club. The JBIFC has announced plans to release their own club magazine in ’05.

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  9. 'Collecting 007' #20 Arriving Mid March

    By johncox on 2005-02-26
    Issue 20

    Issue 20

    Collecting 007, the excellent fanzine of the James Bond Collectors Club, will be shipping to club members starting the week of March 14, reports club president Dave Worrall.

    This latest issue will feature articles by club members, including two articles originally found right here on CBn; a report on the Diamonds Are Forever Mustang Mach 1 auction in Los Angeles, and the story behind the discovery of the Sanchez escape plane from Licence To Kill at last year’s Bond Collector’s Weekend (BCW7).

    The issue will also feature articles about the recent purchases by the Ian Fleming Foundation of the Thunderball model plane and the Live And Let Die speedboat, as well as reviews of the latest James Bond action figures from Sideshow Collectibles and scale model cars from Corgi.

    To subscribe to Collecting 007 in time to receive this latest issue, visit the Solo Publishing website.

  10. Cinema Retro #1 Arrives

    By johncox on 2005-01-15

    The first issue of Cinema Retro — a 64-page subscription only magazine devoted to the movies of the 60’s and 70’s — has just been released and features some choice James Bond-related articles and contributions by 007 notables. This terrific new magazine is the brain child of authors Dave Worrall (The Most Famous Car in the World, The James Bond Diecasts of Corgi) and Lee Pfeiffer (The Essential James Bond, The Incredible World of 007).

    Here’s a look at the Bond-related material inside issue #1.

    007 PHOTO GALLERY: THUNDERBALL – we’ll say it up front – our passion for the James Bond films will ensure that Mr. Kiss-Kiss-Bang-Bang has a notable presence in every issue of Cinema Retro. We don’t expect to hear many complaints, especially after 007 fans view six full pages of previously rarely seen photographs taken on location at the French chateau for the pre-credits sequence of the film. Rare shots of pilot Bill Suitor practicing flying the Bell Textron jet pack, Sean Connery holding court with the press and dining with stuntman Bob Simmons (still in drag as the deadly SPECTRE “widow”!) and many other fantastic shots designed to make even the most die-hard Bond clamour for more.

    BARBARA’S A STARR – Before she became Mrs. Ringo Starr, the sultry Bach raised temperatures with her eye-popping appearances in a wide range of low-budget Italian films, leading up to her memorable starring role in The Spy Who Loved Me. Tim Greaves, our resident expert on all female sex-bombs of the 1960’s and 1970’s, takes the first in-depth look at Bach’s remarkable career (and for the record, Greaves’ job is not open to other candidates!)

    THE TIES THAT BOND – Mac McSharry and Terry Hine discover producer Euan Lloyd’s connection to 007.

    This début issue also features the first column by former James Bond continuation author Raymond Benson (Benson Turns Back The Clock), a report on the John Barry tribute at Carnegie Hall, Richard Kiel‘s début column Tall Tales, a review of the Goldfinger soundtrack by Jamie Beerman, an obituary of Julius (“Tee Hee”) Harris, a terrific article about The Great Escape by Steven Jay Rubin (The James Bond Films, The James Bond Encyclopedia), and a report on the sale of MGM to Sony.

    Issue #2, coming in May 2005, promises a “very revealing in-depth feature” on Goldfinger‘s Margaret (“Dink”) Nolan by Tim Greaves, and a full report on Dave Worall’s recent luncheon with Sir Roger Moore at the Cinema & Television Benevolent Fund’s 80th Birthday celebration (also attended by Lewis Gilbert and Michael G. Wilson).

    Visit www.cinemaretro.com to sign up for a subscription and see the amazing lineup of writers and contributors that will be working on the magazine.