CommanderBond.net
  1. CBn Reviews 'Dr. No'

    By Devin Zydel on 2005-04-19

    Over the last several months, members of the CBn Forum have been reviewing all the James Bond films in the “Countdown Threads“. If you wish to join in on the forum discussion all you have to do is register. Now here are some select reviews, varying in opinions, of Dr. No

    ‘Dr. No’ -by freemo

    'Dr. No' litho by Jeff Marshall

    ‘Dr. No’ litho by Jeff Marshall

    Fifth place in my “all-Connery Top Six” goes to Dr. No. This film seems to have alot more bite to it than future films would. It’s slick and sharp with lots of danger and sex and dark humour, everything a Bond film should have. I think I read somewhere that at the time the Catholic Church described the film as “satanic”. Damn, these were the days.

    While still refinded and sophicated and all that, Bond is also rougher and tougher at times. The film also benefits from sticking closer to the book, even lifting dialouge from it. Top stuff.

    ‘Dr. No’ -by Genrewriter

    Like the other films in my bottom ten, this ranking is quite subjective as the film is excellent in pretty much every way imaginable. A great Bond Girl and villain along with some great iconic 007 moments make for a splendid introduction to the character. The only drawbacks for me are one or two lines of dialogue and the pacing seems to be a bit off towards the end.

    ‘Dr. No’ -by hrabb04

    The first, the one that started it all, the one that introduced Ursula Undress to a lot of red blooded males. Dr. No is the weaker of the Terence Young Bonds. It’s not a bad movie, it’s just a bit rough around some of the edges considering it’s the first one in the series.

    Sean Connery, as good as he is as Bond, doesn’t quite hit 100% in the role. He seems a bit unsure in some areas, but it’s not a distraction. The acting here is a long step away from the self-assuredness of his next Bonds. Ahhhh, Ursula. She isn’t called upon to do much, and that is fine. It’s the role, that’s how it was written. It doesn’t call for Meryl Streep. We want eye candy, and boy, oh, boy, do we get it! She’s a hottie! And when Bond gets to play tonsil hockey with her in that boat, a lot of us guys were sitting there watching very enviously, wishing we could get Ursula…even in the back of a Studabaker would be fine!

    Joseph Wiseman plays Dr. No like a robot, making him very inhuman, with his cold voice and metal hands. It could be the precursor to Ralph Nader–I mean, Darth Vader–with his mechanical villainy. Jack Lord is perfect as Felix Leiter, one of the few times EON has gotten the part right. Guy Hamilton sure as hell didn’t know how to cast the part! Jack Lord is tough as nails and straight to the point, the JFK CIA era man!

    John Barry is a God among film composers. He saved the James Bond Theme. Monty Norman’s score here sounds like a piece from a 1930s serial. If you like that sort of thing, fine, but when you have Bond, it calls for something more. Norman is one of the luckiest men in the world. He’s a mediocre composer who will always be credited with one of the best, most recognizable themes around.

    For what it’s worth, I always get a lump in my throat at the beginning of Dr. No when the beeps start up. Why, you ask? Because this is when things started. Yes, I know, it all really started about 10 years prior, but this is when things really took off.

    Terence Young is proof that they don’t make them like they used to. He was James Bond, basically, and he infused everything in his Bond films with everything it needed. Bond was the guy Fleming created, but with more oomph. All in all, a damned good Bond film.

    ‘Dr. No’ -by Moonraker

    It is a memorable film, but it is very dated compared to today. Dr. No, Bond, and Honey Ryder are excellent, but the movie is not interesting at some points and the music isn’t that spectacular (except the Bond Theme of course). My biggest complaint is Dr. No’s screen time, not enough time to delve into his character. Honey Ryder was excellent, beautiful and interesting too. Of cource it’s dated but then you half to think of the 1 million dollar budget or so. Its a good film, nothing really horrible about it, set the series off on high note, but some films had better quality.

    ‘Dr. No’ -by Qwerty

    Dr. No is an all around good James Bond, it really doesn’t have any large problems with it. It’s just never become the Bond film that I truly love, or something of that nature. Sean Connery is excellent in the role. He plays the role terrifically, and the rest is history.

    Joseph Wiseman and Ursula Andress are standouts in their respected categories, and both have some very good scenes in the film. If I have a minor quibble, it’s the music of the film, but Barry quickly showed in the following films, how some great 007 music sounds.

    ‘Dr. No’ -by Turn

    Another film I can only imagine the reaction to in retrospect. Here comes a new hero into a world dominated by cowboy, private eye and war hero types. Only Bond was an early sort of anti-hero, which would be a popular ’60s variation on the traditional John Wayne type of good guy.

    How anybody can tell me anything in the Brosnan films is gritty after seeing Dr. No will never fly with me. The violence is unsettling and done in a way that had to be radical for its time. From the stark execution of Strangways and is secretary to the photographer scraping her bulb across Quarrel’s face to Bond eliminating the guard in the swamp to No’s guard’s “softening” Bond up, this is hard stuff. But it also counterbalance’s Bond’s brutality and his need for a license to kill.

    I really like the way Dr. No is handled. For the first 2/3rds of the film, he is just a voice and his name seems to strike fear in everybody. And when we meet him it pays off, unlike Blofeld in YOLT 5 years later. When was the last time a villain did that in a Bond film? The dialogue at the dinner table between No and Bond is classic.

    Andress is simply stunning. Her entrance along with Bond’s intro are two of the best in cinema history in one film. Jack Lord is a fitting Felix and Quarrel is a decent secondary character. While this was hardly the definitive Bond showcase, it’s a good start as Connery shows early evidence of why he will always be the definitive Bond — tough, sexually agressive and clever.

    The film feels strange in relation to the rest of the series. I can’t imagine how a newbie would react to it after seeing the hyper energy of the later films. It often feels much more like a hard-boiled detective story than a spy story. There are several interesting scenes where Bond is alone — drinking, laying bait, investigating — you don’t see anymore. The scene after he kills the spider is especially weird to see these days. But there are several images I have remembered for years that I remember as a kid, like the climb through the tunnel and the dragon tanks, etc. The score (aside from the Bond theme) doesn’t help, but I’ll be if Underneath the Mango Tree doesn’t stay stuck in my head after I hear it here.

    Not the best or most definitive Bond film, but one I find more interesting as the years go by.

  2. "It definitely will not be Pierce Brosnan"

    By Matt Weston on 2005-04-17

    “We haven’t even started preproduction. There is no James Bond yet cast. All we can confirm is that it definitely will not be Pierce Brosnan, the film will be called ‘Casino Royale’, it is being written by Neal Purvis and Robert Wade and it will be directed by Martin Campbell. If you want anything more, ring back in a couple of months.”

    – Eon spokesperson

    In three short sentences, speaking to the UK’s Guardian Unlimited, an Eon spokesperson summed up the current status of Casino Royale and categorically stated that Pierce Brosnan is out as James Bond.

    Pierce Brosnan

    Pierce Brosnan

    Despite denial from Pierce Brosnan’s people, rumours of a potential return to the role of 007 have continued to circulate in the media in recent weeks (Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang! recently reported on some of the latest articles on that front).

    While this only confirms the suspicions of most Bond fans in that the latest round of Brosnan rumours were poppycock, this is perhaps the most forward Eon has been to date regarding the Brosnan Axed saga. In the only news release to emerge from the production company, Eon played their cards close to their chest, simply stating, “No decision has yet been made regarding casting for the role of ‘James Bond'”. Interviews with director Campbell, writers Purvis and Wade and composer David Arnold had all indicated Brosnan was out, but Eon themselves had never been overly forward in saying a fifth film for Brosnan was out of the question.

    With articles quoting representatives from the production company emerging more frequently, Eon spokespeople have been slightly more vocal in recent times, after more than a year of hearing next to nothing from the company. So, why the slight change of tact? In the past couple of months, the Bond rumour pot has boiled over, with a new candidate alledgedly being considered by the production company every other day. From a PR standpoint, any publicity’s good publicity, but when the rumours are being run as fact, as has been the case in recent times, a bit of damage control on Eon’s behalf would not go astray.

    Indeed, The Guardian feature claims there is a list posted at Eon’s office of 72 names that have been mentioned by British newspapers as being linked to the role, two of which are women, and one of which is a dwarf. Not the sort of publicity Eon would be after.

    Based on Ian Fleming’s first novel of the same name, the current Casino Royale script explores Bond’s formative years at MI6.

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  3. Looking Back: Licence Renewed

    By Devin Zydel on 2005-04-15

    In May of 1981 John Gardner’s first James Bond 007 novel, Licence Renewed, was published. It represented the return of literary Bond and the entrance of Bond into the 80s. Read by many fans, it is generally regarded as one of his better continuation novels. CBn looks back at the first of ultimately 16 novels in total written by Gardner in the 80s and 90s. Included are trivia notes about the book and CBn forum fan reactions.

    License Renewed UK first edition

    UK First Edition

    I would like, especially, to thank the Board of Directors of Glidrose Publications Ltd, the owners of the James Bond literary copyright, for asking me to undertake the somewhat daunting task of picking up where Mr. Ian Fleming left off, and transporting 007 into the 1980s. In particular, my thanks to Mr. Dennis Joss and Mr. Peter Janson-Smith; also to H.R.F.K., who acted as the original ‘Go-Between’.

    We have become so used to James Bond gadgets which boggle the mind that I would like to point out to any unbelievers that all the ‘hardware’ used by Mr. Bond in this story is genuine. Everything provided by Q Branch and carried by Bond – even the modifications to Mr. Bond’s Saab – is obtainable on either the open, or clandestine, markets. For assistance in seeking details about such equipment I am especially indebted to Communication Control Systems Ltd and, more particularly, to the delicious Ms Jo Ann O’Neill and the redoubtable Sidney.

    As for the inventions of Anton Murik, Laird of Murcaldy, only time will tell.

    – John Gardner, 1981

    Other Titles

    • Working title/originally announced as: Meltdown
    • Published in France as Operation Warlock

    Relationship to the film series

    • Licence Renewed: James Bond gets his first glimpse of villain industrialist Anton Murik at England’s famous Ascot racetrack.
    • A View to a Kill (1985): James Bond gets his fist glimpse of villain industrialist Max Zorin at England’s famous Ascot racetrack.
    • Licence Renewed: Bond poses as a weekend party guest at Murik’s large country estate in Scotland.
    • A View to a Kill (1985): Bond poses as a weekend party guest at Zorin’s large country estate in France.
    • Licence Renewed: Bond’s SAAB ejects tear gas from its vents when surrounded by henchmen.
    • Tomorrow Never Dies (1997): Bond’s BMW ejects tear gas from its vents when surrounded by henchmen.
    • Licence Renewed: Bond fights henchman Caber in the cargo hold of C-130 over Spain in the book’s climax.
    • The Living Daylights (1987): Bond fights henchman Necros in the cargo hold of C-130 over Afghanistan in the film’s climax.

    Release Timeline

    • 1981: 1st British Jonathan Cape Hardback Edition
    • 1981: 1st American Richard Marek Hardback Edition
    • 1981: 2nd British Jonathan Cape Hardback Edition
    • 1981: 1st British Book Club Associates Hardback Edition
    • 1981: 1st American G.K. Hall Large Print Hardback Edition
    • 1981: 1st Merved ‘Licens Fornyet’ Edition (Denmark)
    • 1982: 1st American Berkley Paperback Edition
    • 1982: 1st British Coronet Paperback
    • 1986: 18th American Berkley Paperback Edition
    • 2004: 1st British Coronet Omnibus Paperback Edition

    Forum Reviews

    ‘What is your favourite Gardner Bond novel?’

    Probably Licence Renewed, as it had that “first book in a long time” event element to it and it was also a straight forward thriller without all the double, triple, quadruple crosses that plagued the later novels.

    CBn Forum Member, Simon

    License Renewed

    Have just read my first Gardner, Licence Renewed. My verdict? Not bad at all, on the whole. The book is slow-starting (with a false “gripping start” that makes you think a character applying an elaborate disguise at an airport is going to hijack a plane or do something exciting – nothing happens), but once it gets going you know you’re in the hands of a professional thriller writer who knows how to keep you turning the pages.

    It’s Gardner’s writing skill that really makes Licence Renewed , since the plot is nothing revolutionary (and struck me as a retread of that of Thunderball, while the ending borrows heavily from Goldfinger). However, Murik’s scheme seems very credible by Bond standards, and is genuinely horrifying. Gardner does a fine job of putting 007 in situations that seem convincingly dangerous. He’s great at atmosphere and action. There’s a drug-assisted torture/interrogation scene that’s somehow all the more frightening for not being brutal and bloody, and the scenes during the Perpignan festival are superb.

    It’s not a million miles away from Fleming, but neither do we get the sense of great fidelity to Fleming’s creation. In places, Gardner tries too hard: bones thrown to the purists with train spotting references to Casino Royale and From Russia With Love. Q’ute’s bedroom scene with Bond, presumably intended as a jokey, pre-emptive acknowledgement that Bond has been updated for the 80s, comes across as laboured and more appropriate to an Austin Powers film.

    CBn Forum Member, Loomis

    Licence Renewed is a pretty good place to start but I wouldn’t call it his best. It has it’s moments but there are a few dull patches where you’ll probably stop reading.

    CBn Forum Member, Tanger

    License Renewed recalled 1st UK paperback

    Recalled 1st UK paperback

    I really like Licence Renewed. It’s a good, straight-forward, PG-13 Bond adventure with all the elements in harmony (good locations, good car, good villain, henchman, girl…). Bond’s mission is very straightforward, and I especially like that he doesn’t have a foil or sidekick. He’s on his own, and this keeps most of the dialogue inside his head. I also really like the sense that he’s a knight sent to a castle to slay the ogre and free the maiden. And speaking of the maiden, I really like Lavender. She’s in the Domino mold. An exquisite beauty held in bondage by a sadist. These types of Bond girls are too few and far between, IMO (we wouldn’t get another until Benson’s Never Dream Of Dying).

    CBn Team Member, Zencat

    The Looking Back at John Gardner Series:

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  4. Charlie Higson U.S. Book Tour Schedule

    By johncox on 2005-04-12

    The first Young James Bond novel, SilverFin, will be released in the U.S. by Miramax Books on April 27, 2005. Starting that very day, author Charlie Higson will embark on a seven city book reading and signing tour. While some of the stops were announced last week on the official Young Bond website, CBn has uncovered additional tour stops as well as exact appearance times and locations.

    • Wed. April 27 – Chicago
      SKOKIE MIDDLE SCHOOL
      Reading & Signing
    • Wed. April 27 – Chicago
      BORDERS
      1660 S. Randall Road
      Geneva, IL 60134
      7PM – Reading & Signing
    • Thurs. April 28 – Denver
      TATTERED COVER BOOKSTORE
      2955 East First Ave
      Denver, CO 80206
      7PM – Reading & Signing
    • Fri. April 29 – San Francisco
      BOOKSELLER LUNCHEON
      Bookseller Luncheon
    • Sat. April 30 – San Francisco
      BORDERS
      588 Francisco Blvd., West
      San Rafael, CA 94901
      2PM – Reading & Signing
    • Mon. May 2 – Seattle
      THIRD PLACE BOOKS
      17171 Bothell Way, NE
      Lake Forest, WA 98155
      7PM – Reading & Signing
    • Tues. May 3 – Los Angeles
      BORDERS
      3700 Torrance Blvd.
      Torrance, CA 90503
      7PM – Reading & Signing
    • Thurs. May 5 – New York
      BARNES & NOBLE
      3981 US Hwy 9
      Freehold, NJ
      7PM – Reading & Signing
    • Fri. May 6 – Washington, D.C.
      OLSSON’S BOOKS
      2111 Wilson Blvd.
      Arlington, VA
      7PM – Reading & Signing
    • *Some of these times may be tentative — please call and confirm the exact time with the store in your area.

    Related Links

  5. Title Song Performers of the Brosnan Era

    By David Winter on 2005-04-10

    Tina Turner

    Tina Turner

    Six years after the release of Licence To Kill, James Bond returned to the big screen in 1995’s GoldenEye. Pierce Brosnan donned the tuxedo and Tina Turner performed the title song that was written by Bono and The Edge of the band, U2. This superb song complements Danny Kleinman’s title sequence very nicely. Eric Serra’s score for the film is different but fits the film very well.

    Title Song: “GoldenEye”
    Film: GoldenEye, 1995
    Highest Chart Position: United Kingdom: #10
    Highest Chart Position: United States: #71
    Official Web Site: officialtina.com
    Status: Active

    Albums

    • Tina Turns The Country On (1974)
    • Acid Queen (1975)
    • Rough (1978)
    • Love Explosion (1979)
    • Private Dancer (1984)
    • Private Dance Mixes (1984)
    • Break Every Rule (1986)
    • Tina Live In Europe (1988)
    • Foreign Affair (1989)
    • Simply The Best (1991)
    • Tina Turner (1995)
    • Wildest Dreams (1996)
    • Twenty Four Seven (1999)

    Compilations

    • Simply The Best (1991)
    • Greatest Hits (1994)
    • The Collected Recordings: Sixties To Nineties (1994)
    • Simply Tina (1995)
    • All That Glitters (2000)
    • All The Best (2005)

    Purchase Tina’s Latest Compilation: “All The Best”
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Soundtracks

    • Tommy (1975)
    • Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985)
    • What’s Love Got To Do With It (1993)
    • GoldenEye (1995)
    • Brother Bear (2003)
    • The Goddess (2005)

    Purchase the GoldenEye Soundtrack
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Sheryl Crow

    Sheryl Crow

    In 1997, James Bond returned in Tomorrow Never Dies. Sheryl Crow performed the title song she wrote herself along with Mitchell Froom. The main title design, Sheryl Crow’s song and David Arnold’s score work perfectly in this film.

    Title Song: “Tomorrow Never Dies”
    Film: Tomorrow Never Dies, 1997
    Highest Chart Position: United Kingdom: #12
    Highest Chart Position: United States: Didn’t Chart
    Official Web Site: sherylcrow.com
    Status: Active

    Albums

    • Tuesday Night Music Club (1993)
    • Sheryl Crow (1996)
    • The Globe Sessions (1998)
    • C’mon, C’mon (2002)

    Purchase Sheryl’s Latest Album: “C’mon, C’mon”
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Compilations

    • Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live in Central Park (1999)
    • The Very Best of Sheryl Crow (2003)

    Purchase Sheryl’s Latest Compilation: “The Very Best of Sheryl Crow”
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Soundtracks

    • Point Break (1991)
    • Kalifornia (1993)
    • Boys On The Side (1995)
    • Songs In The Key Of X (1996)
    • Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
    • The Faculty (1998)
    • Hope Floats (1998)
    • Big Daddy (1999)
    • Message In A Bottle (1999)
    • Erin Brockovich (2000)
    • Steal This Movie (2000)
    • Shallow Hal (2001)
    • I Am Sam (2001)
    • Sweet Home Alabama (2002)
    • De-Lovely (2004)

    Purchase the Tomorrow Never Dies Soundtrack
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Garbage

    Garbage

    James Bond returned two years later in 1999’s The World Is Not Enough. Garbage performed the title song which was written by Don Black. This is the first time a rock band had performed a title song since a-ha in 1987’s The Living Daylights. Danny Kleinman and David Arnold both returned.

    Title Song: “The World Is Not Enough”
    Film: The World Is Not Enough, 1999
    Highest Chart Position: United Kingdom: #11
    Highest Chart Position: United States: #13
    Official Web Site: garbage.com
    Status: Active

    Albums

    • Garbage (1995)
    • Version 2.0 (1998)
    • beautifulgarbage (2001)
    • Bleed Like Me (2005)

    Purchase Garbage’s Latest Album: “Bleed Like Me”
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Soundtracks

    • William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet (1996)
    • The Faculty (1998)
    • Big Daddy (1999)
    • Buffy, The Vampire Slayer: The Album (1999)
    • The World Is Not Enough (1999)

    Purchase The World Is Not Enough Soundtrack
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Madonna

    Madonna

    Pierce Brosnan makes his fourth and last appearance as James Bond in 2002’s Die Another Day. Madonna performed the title song that she wrote herself along with Mirwais Ahmadzaï. Not only did she perform the song but she also got a cameo in the film. She plays Verity, a fencing instructor, at Blades Club. Let’s just say Madonna’s singing ability is much better than her acting ability. This techno-pulsed song worked well with Danny Kleinman’s unique title sequence. David Arnold also returned to deliver another great score.

    Title Song: “Die Another Day”
    Film: Die Another Day, 2002
    Highest Chart Position: United Kingdom: #3
    Highest Chart Position: United States: #8
    Official Web Site: madonna.com
    Status: Active

    Albums

    • Madonna (1983)
    • Like A Virgin (1984)
    • True Blue (1986)
    • Like A Prayer (1989)
    • Erotica (1992)
    • Bedtime Stories (1994)
    • Ray of Light (1998)
    • Music (2000)
    • American Life (2003)

    Purchase Madonna’s Latest Album: “American Life”
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Compilations

    • You Can Dance (1987)
    • The Immaculate Collection (1990)
    • Something To Remember (1995)
    • GHV2 (2001)
    • Remixed & Revisited (2003)

    Purchase Madonna’s Latest Compilation: “Remixed & Revisited”
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

    Soundtracks

    • Vision Quest (1985)
    • Who’s That Girl (1987)
    • I’m Breathless (1990)
    • With Honors (1994)
    • The Postman (Il Postino) (1995)
    • Evita (1996)
    • The Wedding Singer Volume 2 (1998)
    • Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999)
    • Next Best Thing (2000)
    • Snatch (2001)
    • Die Another Day (2002)
    • 13 Going On 30 (2004)

    Purchase the Die Another Day Soundtrack
    from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.

  6. EA Launches Official 'From Russia With Love' Website

    By Athena Stamos on 2005-04-08
    Sean Connery is back!

    Sean Connery is back!

    Electronic Arts (EA) and MGM Interactive have today launched the official website for their new James Bond video game, From Russia With Love.

    The new website currently features a teaser page sporting the official From Russia With Love logo, and promises official news on April 27, 2005 (coincidently the same day as the U.S. release of Ian Fleming Publications first Young Bond novel, SilverFin).

    Sean Connery will return to the role of 007 in both image and voice in the new game due out late 2005.

    Game Informer magazine recently ran 10 pages of coverage of the new EA Bond game, including the first pictures. CLICK HERE for CBn’s full coverage of that article.

  7. "You fancy yourself as a bit of a swimmer, do you, Bond?"

    By Guest writer on 2005-04-07

    Today CBn can offer an extended excerpt from SilverFin, the bestselling first Young Bond novel by Charlie Higson. SilverFin will be published in the U.S. by Miramax Books on April 27.

    Young Bond

    James was shivering. His body felt raw, as if he’d had the skin peeled off it, like Croaker’s eel. He rubbed his arms to try to get some feeling back into them, and the raised goose bumps made them feel as rough as sandpaper.

    If it was this cold out of the water, what was it going to be like in it?

    Well, there was only one way to find out.

    It was half an hour before afternoon lessons and he was standing on a low diving board at Ward’s Mead, peering at the water, which looked like some of Codrose’s less appetizing soup. Cold soup. Freezing-cold soup.

    “Come on, then,” he said out loud. “Just do it.”

    He pulled back his arms, took a deep breath and flung himself forward. When he entered the water it was like being hit by a cricket bat. He was stunned by the cold and for a moment he couldn’t move, but then he came alive, clawed his way to the surface and gasped. All his limbs were aching and his throbbing head felt numb. The only way to stay in the water and stop himself from jumping out was to swim. He thrashed across the Mead to the other side and fought the urge to get out and run back to his room. After a moment’s hesitation, he forced himself round and swam back to the other side.

    Weak sunlight was filtering through the low cloud; at least it was warmer than yesterday, but these were hardly ideal swimming conditions. Nevertheless, if he was going to stand any chance in the cup, which was only three weeks away, he knew that he would have to get used to it.

    After three widths he found that his body was adjusting to the temperature and, while it could never have been described as pleasant, at least he knew that he was not going to die after all.

    He swam a few more widths, and when he had had just about all that he could stand he swam over to where he’d left his clothes and prepared to pull himself out of the water. But, just as he was getting his knees up, somebody put a shoe in his face and shoved him back into the Mead.

    He looked up. It was George Hellebore.

    “Hey, if it ain’t my old pal, Jimmy Bond,” he said.

    “Hello, Hellebore.” James once more tried to scramble out on to the grassy bank.

    “Where do you think you’re going in such a hurry?” said Hellebore, pushing him back in again.

    “To get changed.”

    “Always in a hurry, aren’t you, Bond? Always got to go somewhere fast.”

    “I’m cold and I want to get out.”

    “Yeah, I bet you do. Well, I’m in charge of the river today.” Hellebore knelt down and gave James a big, sinister smile. “And if you want to get out, first of all you have to pass a little test.”

    James looked up into George’s face. His china-blue eyes were glinting with crazy amusement and there was an ugly smirk on his lips.

    “Look, Hellebore,” said James, holding on to the side. “You’re not in charge here.”

    “Hey, if I say I’m in charge, I’m in charge.”

    There was no point in arguing, Hellebore was backed up by his usual gang of cronies: Wallace, with his big, square head and gap-toothed grin, Sedgepole, who had an extremely small head and sticking-out ears, and Pruitt, who was rather good-looking and elegant. They leered at James, daring him to try his luck.

    “What do you want?” said James, trying not to let his teeth rattle together with the cold.

    “You fancy yourself as a bit of a swimmer, do you, Bond?” said the American, and Bond shrugged. “Well, I’ve not seen anybody in this country of yours that was half as good a swimmer as me. I practically grew up in the water.”

    “Yes,” said Bond, kicking his legs to try and keep warm. “You’re supposed to be quite good.”

    “Quite good?” Hellebore opened his eyes wide in mock amazement: “Quite good? I’m the best, Bond. Care to have a race?”

    “Not now, Hellebore.”

    “But that’s the test you have to pass, Bond, old boy. You have to win a swimming race.”

    “I’m not racing you, Hellebore . . .”

    “Who said anything about racing me? You couldn’t beat me in a thousand years. No, you’re not racing me.” Hellebore whistled and a boy in swimming trunks shuffled reluctantly over from the bushes where he’d been sheltering. It was Leo Butcher, a robust, cheerful, round boy who played in the school brass band. Bond had seen him puffing away at a recent concert given by the Musical Society in School Hall.

    “Hello, Bond,” he said sheepishly. It was obvious that he had no more desire to be here than James.

    ‘Hello, Butcher,’ said James.

    “The deal is . . .” said Hellebore. “You get to race Butcher.”

    Bond frowned. Butcher didn’t look like much of a swimmer. What was the catch?

    “What do you say, Bond?” Hellebore slapped Butcher hard across the shoulders, and Bond saw him wince with the pain. “A race against fatty Butcher here. The loser gives me . . .” Hellebore paused for dramatic effect, “let’s say, their hat.”

    Bond glanced at Butcher, who was staring at the ground.

    “It should be a fun race,” said Hellebore. “But I’ll warn you, Bond, Butcher’s good. He’s the best.” The older boys laughed.

    “If it’s all the same to you,” said James, “I’d rather not . . .”

    Hellebore suddenly grabbed James by the hair and forced his head under the surface. Taken by surprise, James swallowed a mouthful of muddy water. He came up, coughing and retching.

    “You race Butcher, Bond. Or me and my good friends are going to play football with your head. Understand?” Hellebore grabbed him and pulled him on to the bank. “So, what’s it to be?”

    James stood up; George’s hands had left red marks on his arms.

    “All right,” he said quietly.

    Hellebore clapped his hands. “Good fellow,” he said. “May the best man win.”

    James and Butcher arranged themselves at the edge of the Mead. Butcher was shivering madly and his knees were knocking together. James wondered what threats Hellebore had used to get him to cooperate.

    “Are you all set?” Hellebore called out. “Two widths, loser pays out the forfeit.”

    Try as he might, James couldn’t understand what Hellebore was up to. He could beat Butcher easily — the blond American must be planning some kind of trick. But what?

    “On your marks, get set . . .” Hellebore stopped suddenly. Butcher was caught off guard and toppled into the water. Hellebore’s pals laughed.

    “Oh, I forgot, Bond,” said Hellebore as Butcher clambered back out again. “One more thing.”

    James looked over at him. Here it came.

    “You have to stay under the water.”

    “What?'”

    “You heard me. It’s an underwater race. As soon as you come up for air, you’re out of the running. If you don’t make it back, then whoever gets the furthest is the winner.”

    James looked over at Butcher, who looked away.

    He’d known.

    Oh, well. It wasn’t the end of the world. James still had a chance. Butcher couldn’t be that good, and James was pretty confident that he could hold his breath for quite a while.

    “Set! Go!” shouted Hellebore quickly, and they dived in.

    James was ready for the coldness this time, but it was worse having to swim underwater. He could only see about three inches in front of him; it was like trying to peer through a particularly vile, greenish-brown fog. Indefinable scraps and dross floated past in the gloom and he thought he glimpsed a pale shape far off that could have been Butcher, but it was gone before he could see it clearly. Slimy weeds brushed against his belly and the thought of the eels waiting below in the mud made him shudder.

    He had no idea how far he’d gone, but he knew that it was going to be a struggle reaching the far side, let alone turning round and swimming back again.

    He felt awful, as if a cold iron cage were clamped round his head; all he wanted to do was to get to the surface, stick his head out and be up in the fresh air, warmth and light. But he resisted the urge and swam harder, using a clean, strong breaststroke, deciding that the quicker he went, the less time he’d need to hold his breath. However, the quicker he went, the more oxygen he used up, and soon his lungs began to burn. He struggled on, the pounding in his head getting worse and worse. A few more strokes and he had to let some air out, then some more, until his lungs were completely empty and the pain was crippling him. Still he battled on, one more stroke, another, then — no, it was too much, his whole body was crying out for oxygen, he couldn’t fight it any longer. He bobbed to the surface and gulped in several great mouthfuls of air. Then he trod water, panting and choking. He’d drifted way off course and was nowhere near the other side, but where was Butcher? He must still be down there somewhere. Was he all right? Maybe he’d got tangled in weeds?

    No, he saw his feet splashing near the far bank. He’d reached the other side, but still he didn’t come up. James caught sight of him doggedly sculling back towards the start point. Bond forgot all about losing, forgot all about the cold, forgot all about the older boys jeering from the edge of the Mead. He marveled at Butcher’s capacity for holding his breath. It was only when he was within five or six feet of the edge that he finally floated up and took in more air, although he hardly seemed out of breath at all.

    “Well done, Butcher,” yelled Hellebore. “You’re a champion turtle.”

    James swam to them. He was looking forward to getting warm and dry but, as he reached the older boys, Hellebore suddenly grabbed him by the hair again and forced him back under the water. He had had no time to take a breath and was soon struggling, but, try as he might, he couldn’t break free of Hellebore’s grip and come up again. The last of his air came out in a huge bubble and he swallowed a gut-full of water. He mustn’t panic, that would only make things worse. The American wasn’t going to drown him . . . he wasn’t . . .

    Or was he? A few more moments and he’d be breathing in water . . . He couldn’t force himself upwards, the boy’s arm was too strong . . . But if he couldn’t go upwards . . . maybe he could go the other way.

    It was drastic, but it was the only solution.

    He suddenly grabbed hold of Hellebore’s wrist and pulled. Caught off guard, the boy tumbled over and landed in the water with an almighty splash, letting go of James in the process. James quickly squirmed on to the bank and vomited up a stream of mucus and river scum.

    Hellebore was furious; he yelled something, and Sedgepole and Pruitt grabbed James. He knew he was in big trouble now, but anything was better than drowning.

    Hellebore clumsily scrambled out in his soaking clothes. His eyes were red, his blue lips pulled back from his teeth in a snarl, his hair flattened to his head. All traces of the handsome young boy had gone, to be replaced by the features of a crazed animal.

    “You shouldn’t have done that, Bond,” he rasped.

    SilverFin copyright © 2005 by Ian Fleming Publications Ltd. Reprinted with permission.

    For more information, visit www.youngbond.com

    Pre-order the U.S. hardcover edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)

    Pre-order the U.S. paperback edition of SilverFin (April 27, 2005)

    Purchase the UK paperback edition of SilverFin

    Purchase the SilverFin audio book

  8. 'GoldenEye: Rogue Agent' Formally Announced for Nintendo DS

    By Matt Weston on 2005-04-07

    It’s been a long time coming, but EA have made a formal announcement about the upcoming Nintendo DS version of GoldenEye: Rogue Agent. Released on Nintendo GameCube, PlayStation 2 and Xbox late last year, GoldenEye: Rogue Agentthe handheld version has been in the works for some time.

    Earlier rumoured to be a port of Rare’s original masterpiece also titled GoldenEye (based on the film of the same name), it was soon revealed that the new game would be an adaptation of EA’s most recent entry in their lucrative Bond game franchise.

    In GoldenEye: Rogue Agent, the player assumes the role of an MI6 agent cast out of the spying game after a reckless mission. The player – in the title role of GoldenEye – soon encounters various Bond characters from all throughout the filmic series (and even an appearance by Bond himself!), as he moves up the ranks of Auric Goldfinger’s villainous organisation.

    EA’s press release follows.

    EA Announces GoldenEye: Rogue Agent for the Nintendo DS; Villains Rule in Latest Edition in James Bond Videogame Series

    REDWOOD CITY, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–April 7, 2005

    Electronic Arts (Nasdaq:ERTS) today announced plans to release GoldenEye: Rogue Agent for the Nintendo DS this June. Going where no previous James Bond game has dared tread, this first-person shooter gives players the chance to explore the dark side of the Bond universe and experience life as a ruthless, unpredictable villain. All-new features and innovative gameplay are only made possible by the Nintendo DS platform.

    “We are thrilled to bring GoldenEye: Rogue Agent to the Nintendo DS and create distinctive new features to benefit from the platform’s unique technology,” said Jon Dean, Executive Producer at EA Tiburon. “Playing this action-packed game on the go and right in the palm of your hands is incredible. Bond fans will not be disappointed.”

    GERA Nintendo DS Screenshot

    As an aspiring 00 agent dismissed from MI6 for reckless brutality, the player is recruited by Auric Goldfinger in a ruthless war against Dr. No for control of the Bond underworld. Players wreak havoc as they make their unrelenting rise through the ranks of villainy. On globe-spanning missions of vengeance and demolition, players encounter such legendary Bond characters as Oddjob, Dr. No, Goldfinger, Scaramanga, and Xenia Onatopp.

    Gamers outwit villainous rivals and battle it out in the intense wireless multiplayer mayhem with up to seven other players using only one cartridge, a unique feature for the Nintendo DS. The game also features a robust single-player campaign divided into six missions. Players can exploit multiple weapon combinations through the dual-wield gunplay system, or go head-to-head, melee-style, by taking enemies hostage or knocking them out with one punch.

    GERA Nintendo DS Screenshot

    The dual-screen display provides a gameplay window on the top screen and the heads-up-display (HUD) on the touch screen. The HUD provides vital intelligence to players and allows for them to check ammunition levels, hack electronic devices and weapons, decode security locks, and more. In the all-new for DS ‘Virtual Training’ mode, players sharpen their lethal edge and gain experience by defeating infamous Bond villains in order to earn valuable upgrades for their GoldenEye weaponry. Left and right-handed gameplay controls, plus stylus and thumb-pad play, take full advantage of the platform’s unique touch-screen capabilities.

    Officially licensed by MGM Interactive, GoldenEye: Rogue Agent for the Nintendo DS is developed at EA’s Tiburon studio under the EA GAMES brand. The game is rated “T” for Teen by the ESRB.

    GoldenEye: Rogue Agent is also available on the PlayStation 2 computer entertainment system, Xbox video game system from Microsoft, and Nintendo GameCube. For more information, please visit the game’s official site at www.goldeneye.ea.com or press site at www.info.ea.com.

    CBn recently obtained early screenshots from the game, which is due for release this June.

    EA is still to make a formal announcement about its next Bond adventure, From Russia With Love, in which the original 007, Sean Connery, will reprise his role as James Bond by providing both his likeness and voice to the character.

  9. Eon Stay Silent on Speculation

    By Matt Weston on 2005-04-06

    Ever since it became clear back in February last year that something was awry behind the scenes of Casino Royale – then James Bond 21 – the media has been spouting potential 007 replacements left, right and centre. In the process, Eon’s juggernaut film franchise has been absorbing the most press it has had in years.

    Eon has remained tight-lipped throughout the whole affair, maintaining that casting for the role of 007 will take place in due time. Yet the Bond rumour pot has inexplicably boiled over in the past fortnight or so, as tabloids continue to churn out “next Bond” stories with names attached ranging from Julian McMahon and Orlando Bloom to Clive Owen, whose cryptic comments last week sent the Bond community into a frenzy. Latest Internet rumours even suggest Pierce Brosnan may return after all, despite a year’s worth of news indicating otherwise.

    However, after one Bond rumour too many (this time, a Daniel Craig one), BBC News contacted Eon, whose spokesperson put the matter to rest and commented that no announcement is imminent.

    “We’re waiting for our director to finish the film he’s currently working on,” said the spokesperson, referring to Martin Campbell, who is currently wrapping The Legend of Zorro. “Then I’m sure we’ll be commenting a lot on all sorts of things.”

    The Zorro sequel is currently in post-production aiming for an October 2005 release date. Whenever Campbell moves onto Casino Royale is anyone’s guess, but sources close to CBn indicated in February that Sony wanted Campbell to wrap on The Legend of Zorro by mid-July and start work on the new Bond picture immediately.

    Casino Royale is tentatively scheduled for release on 17 November 2006.

    UPDATE: In an article discussing the state of the James Bond franchise, Variety contacted Pierce Brosnan’s reps who have denied any talks are taking place for him to return to the role of 007.

    Meanwhile, as the Daniel Craig fire spreads through media sources over the world, convinced it’s a done deal, ThisisLondon reports that a spokesperson for the actor has denied the rumours.

    Likewise, Orlando Bloom, who has been linked in the press to a series of Bond films based on the new Young Bond novels by Charlie Higson, has issued the most emphatic denial of them all. Says Bloom, “I’m not doing Young James Bond. No, no, no. It’s funny, my cousin called me up, he said, ‘Is there something you’re not telling me? That you’re playing James Bond? I just saw it on CNN.’ I was like, ‘Dude, my manager, my agent have never mentioned it to me, so not to date. Young or old, it had never been mentioned to me. I don’t know where that came from but I can tell you that I’ve never heard a whiff of it, not a whiff.”

  10. CBn Visits "BOND. James Bond. The Exhibition"

    By David Winter on 2005-04-04

    – IMPORTANT NOTE –
    – for all pictures click thumbnails to enlarge –

    Last month your intrepid CBn correspondents made the five hour plus trek from John CoxAthena StamosLos Angeles to Phoenix to visit “BOND. James Bond. The Exhibition”, at the Arizona Science Center. Good thing too, as it now looks like this will be the final U.S. stop for this traveling exhibition of authentic James Bond props and memorabilia. According to museum officials, the exhibit will be going back to England or into storage when its run is complete on April 24, 2005.


    Mi6 Sign

    The ultra modern Arizona Science Center was easy to spot when we pulled into town – as was the two storey high image of Pierce Brosnan and Michelle Yeoh Arizona Science Centerfrom Tomorrow Never Dies that adorned one side of the building. Inside, Zao’s battle-ready Jaguar from Die Another Day greets visitors at the ticket area. Zao's Die Another Day JaguarWhen we asked where the Bond exhibit was located, a helpful museum staffer pointed us down the length of the first floor and said we “couldn’t miss it.”

    Indeed, the exhibit is easy to spot with the Aston Martin DB5 from GoldenEye sitting right out front! We all know what the DB5 looks like, but there is something about seeing his car “in Entrance to the Bond Exhibitionthe flesh” that is indescribable. It really is one of the most beautiful cars ever made. Just past the DB5 is the special entrance to the exhibit. Here we were given our exhibit pass – a credit card that would be our access to special trivia questions, etc. GoldenEye's Aston Martin DB5We harassed the poor ticket taker for information and, after being told we couldn’t take pictures inside the exhibit (due to issues of copyrighted material on the walls—always with the copyrights, Eon!), we proceeded to take his picture. As no alarm bells sounded, so we figured maybe we’d sneak a few pics inside as well.

    Upon entering the exhibit, you find yourself inside a small room where you can watch a film about the Cold War (or not). The film gives some context as to the creation of Ian Fleming’s superspy. I guess this is to convince wary parents that there’s some educational value to all this. John Cox in the Gun BarrelOkay, we’re educated, now where’s Jinx’s bikini!?

    Traveling through a circular tunnel that changes in the light (it took us a few minutes to realize this is supposed to be the opening gun barrel) you emerge inside the “Restricted Area.” Here you swipe your pass card so you can “gain access” to the various information screens along the way. A nifty item here was a transparent Walther PPK used by Daniel Kleinman in the title sequence for Tomorrow Never Dies. It was sort of odd that the large 007 logos that decorated the walls of this room (and later rooms) were lacking the gun portion Door from The Spy Who Loved Meon the seven. Being official, I would think the full official logo would not be a problem. Go figure.

    The next room is a real treat; a full replica of M’s office! It’s time for your briefing, 007. Here you see a film about the creation of Bond and the beginnings of the cinematic Bond empire. The office is a mock up of the classic Universal Exports office of Mock Universal Exports OfficeBernard Lee/Robert Brown fame. The desk is open to sit behind and snap a few pictures… (wait, I thought we couldn’t do that?). The only authentic part of the office is the padded door from The Spy Who Loved Me, which sits behind glass.

    Leaving M’s office you travel through a long hallway where you can test your Bond trivia knowledge and view video clips and pics on the many interactive monitors that line the walls. Most of the information and videos are from the DVD documentaries produced by the cuddly John Cork.

    Alligator submersible from OctopussyAcroStar mini-jet from OctopussyThe snooper from A View to A KillLotus submersible from The Spy Who Loved Me

    At the end of the hall is “Q’s Workshop.” (You’re traveling through the typical structure of James Bond film – get it?) Here sit the Alligator submersible and the AcroStar Rappelling Gun and Belt fro GoldenEyemini-jet (bigger than I thought) from Octopussy. Display cases all around the room contain other such memorable Q props as the snooper from A View To A Kill, a model of the Lotus submersible from The Spy Who Loved Me, and Bond’s camera sniper rifle from Licence To Kill. A big video screen at one end of the room plays clips of favorite Q scenes from all the films. On the walls are framed sketches and designs of famous gadgets, includes some that didn’t make it into the final films. A grenade cocktail shaker from Goldfinger? The World Is Not Enough torture chairA retinal scanner from The World Is Not Enough? Guess these were the things that we shouldn’t photograph. (I’m not telling if we did or not.)

    At the end of the room was the torture chair from The World Is Not Enough where Electra King puts the screws to 007. This The Golden Gunsuggests you are about to enter the realm of…the villain!

    Now you find yourself entering a dark room made to resemble Scaramanga’s funhouse. Inside are famous props used by famous villains (or “Rogues” as the official program calls them); Jaw’s metal teeth, Solitarie's fortune telling costume from Live And Let DieOddjob’s deadly bowler hat, Scaramanga’s golden gun, Rosa Klebb’s spiked shoe…you get the point. A nifty design all this, but the ever changing lighting does make it a bit difficult to have a real good look at these iconic props. Here, less would have been more.

    If you survive the funhouse, you then emerge into the realm of the Bond Girl. On displays is Jinx’s bikini from Die Another Day (hey, there it is!), Electra King’s red dress from The World Is Not Enough, Solitarie’s fortune telling costume from Live And Let Die, and sketches of other various costumes designs, etc.

    Christmas Jones / Denise Richards Outfit SketchesThe Action hall Green RoomA View to A Kill green screenModel of Zukovsky's caviar factory

    After being shaken and stirred by the Bond babes, you come to the hall of the explosive climax (okay, they call it the “Action” hall). Here is the exhibit’s best Gold bar from Goldfingerinteractive feature – a green screen room where you can see yourself hanging from the Golden Gate Bridge ala Stacy Sutton in A View To A Kill. Outside the green screen Faberge egg from Octopussyroom are model props from famous 007 action sequences; including a model of Zukovsky’s caviar factory from The World Is Not Enough, the Neptune sub from For Your Eyes Only, Zorin’s blimp from A View To A Kill, a gold bar (signed by Sean Connery) from Goldfinger, and the Faberge egg from Octopussy. Timothy Dalton's Passport from The Living DaylightsIt’s easy to miss, but a model of the Tiger helicopter from GoldenEye and a full size Parahawk from The World Is Not Enough are hanging overhead.

    After the movie comes the marketing, and on your way out you Athena Stamos at James Bond The Exhibitiontravel down a long hallway filled with Bond posters, most foreign sheets, including some rare unused mockups (Bond fans will be familiar with these from Tony Nourmand ‘s terrific book, James Bond Movie Posters).

    On leaving the exhibit you enter the special exhibition gift shop where you can buy exhibition T-shirts, posters, and programs, as well as Corgi cars and 007 Sideshow figures. A cool detail here is the Bond silhouette in a light pool on the floor.

    The Cary Grant suiteHotel San Carlosclassic Bond villain's lairClaude Bell's Dinosaurs

    After spending the night in the Cary Grant suite (Bond connection? Cary Grant was Cubby’s best man at his wedding to Dana, and his first choice to play 007) in the Hotel San Carlos, the “third most haunted hotel in America”, we motored on back to L.A. On the way we passed a classic Bond villain’s lair and Claude Bell’s Dinosaurs in the desert…certainly these MUST be from a James Bond movie? Or maybe we just had Bond on the brain after our memorable visit to “BOND. James Bond. The Exhibition.”

    Thanks to the Arizona Science Center. Nobody does it better!