Where does Bond go after Craig?

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  • Posts: 1,870
    Can you do another 15 minutes on it? Plot points are too convenient, not much action only the assassin confrontations, is Bond not saving the world? Add in an additional threat after the Chancellor false victory.

    Another 15 minutes and I could rule the world.
  • edited August 12 Posts: 4,300
    I know we all want to see James Bond right from the start in Bond 26. But I'm wondering if it would add more mystery by having a very shadowy villain terrorize MI6 and the world, but Bond is nowhere to be found at first. Other 00s are assigned by M to find and deal with the villain, but with little to no success. Bond later shows up 30mins into the film to save the world and when Bond shows up, he's relentless as well as the film. Now I'm not sure if this is a good idea for the first film of a Bond actor. James Bond missing in the first 30mins, but I was just thinking, though.

    If the PTS introduced the villain and perhaps the key characters, set up the plot, and included a gripping action sequence (and of course there was sustained tension afterwards until Bond arrived) then I can certainly imagine a Bond movie where he’s introduced late. Connery and Moore were effectively introduced that way in their films. Maybe 30 minutes is pushing it, but it depends. Also Bond would have to have a hell of an introduction scene. But honestly, it’s possible. I like the idea actually.
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    edited August 12 Posts: 2,186
    007HallY wrote: »
    I know we all want to see James Bond right from the start in Bond 26. But I'm wondering if it would add more mystery by having a very shadowy villain terrorize MI6 and the world, but Bond is nowhere to be found at first. Other 00s are assigned by M to find and deal with the villain, but with little to no success. Bond later shows up 30mins into the film to save the world and when Bond shows up, he's relentless as well as the film. Now I'm not sure if this is a good idea for the first film of a Bond actor. James Bond missing in the first 30mins, but I was just thinking, though.

    If the PTS introduced the villain and perhaps the key characters, set up the plot, and included a gripping action sequence (and of course there was sustained tension afterwards until Bond arrived) then I can certainly imagine a Bond movie where he’s introduced late. Connery and Moore were effectively introduced that way in their films. Maybe 30 minutes is pushing it, but it depends. Also Bond would have to have a hell of an introduction scene. But honestly, it’s possible. I like the idea actually.

    Yeah, if done right. I know 30mins is really pushing it. But if done right, it would feel like two films into one. The first half showing MI6 and the world living in fear and suspenseful action scenes and stuffs going on, because of the new advanced and supervillain, whom they only know by his voice and have never seen him. Then the second half, James Bond triumphantly enters the scene and begins his 007 thing on the villain...it won't be easy of course, but Bond wins at the end.
  • edited August 12 Posts: 343
    I like it.

    Introducing Connery and Moore later showed that the mission / threat to UK is the central point of the film, and 007 is part of the government machine deployed to counter the threat.

    That’s preferable to me to the Craig era, where Bond is central to the film, supported by his little gang. Craig’s approach was fresh and interesting, but we’ve done the story arc of how James Bond began and ended his career as a 00. Let’s get away from the personal / superhero, and get back to the thriller.


    Regarding the scenario. Maybe it could begin with a police investigation (perhaps a poisoning) which is escalated to anti-terror police / military special services, before the government decides to deploy the ultimate ‘blunt weapon’ - a 00. Bond could be introduced either in a The Spy Who Loved Me (novel) manner, or perhaps in a FRWL PTS punting-type scene.
  • Posts: 2,026
    Another origin story would cement the idea there are multiple Bonds in different timelines. Pointless.
  • Posts: 1,448
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Another origin story would cement the idea there are multiple Bonds in different timelines. Pointless.

    Well, Craig's Bond is dead and the new bond can't be a cold war veteran.
  • Posts: 1,085
    I really hope we have no more timelines, (or alternate universes, or character arcs, or reboots, or whatever people like to call them). Just make a great spy movie with James Bond 007 in it, and let's hope he gets a proper mission for a change.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    edited August 13 Posts: 24,256
    I'd prefer it if we got more standalone films, like in "the old days", when you could watch the Roger Moore, Tim Dalton, Pierce Brosnan and most Connery films in any order of your choosing, and you wouldn't end up confused. While I appreciate that the Craig era delivered a tighter continuity (albeit muddled), I'm ready to abandon that approach unless they have the next several films outlined from the start. Even then, Bond can return to being a less personally involved protagonist.

    Regarding Craig, if the Spectre rights had been acquired along with Casino Royale, that could have resulted in an awesome pentalogy without awkward retcons along the way. Imagine that. ;-)
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited August 13 Posts: 16,598
    peter wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    Denbigh wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    But then still, I'm sure that you don't write a good Bond script in a few weeks.
    Not that my experience bares any weight, but based on working on a Bond 26 script myself, it's not easy. And that's coming from someone who has nothing to lose.
    Zekidk wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    The previous Bond film was only made a couple of years ago

    Final wrap was five years ago. I envy the patience from other members. Other brands and franchises, Star Wars, Marvel etc, try to keep the fire burning between huge productions. Games, spin-offs, toys, anything to wet the appetite. EON has given us nothing and there's not a single piece of news that promises anything in the future. This is the first time in Bond history I have seen this. Even after LTK they were eager to go.

    Yes, we may be heading into a longer gap than the LTK to GE one. I cannot remember what the feeling was back then during the early 90's, whether the Bond rumour mill was in full swing, and there was never any doubt that a new Bond film was in the making, or whether there was just stoned silence like we have now.

    Obviously this was before the internet, but I cannot remember what gossip was being churned up in the tabloids during those years, to make every Bond fan be reassured that the franchise was still alive and well, and a new film and a new Bond was just around the corner.

    Can anyone else remember?
    I wasn't plugged into Bond fan circles back then (I think there might have been a fanzine called BondAge, but I'm afraid to type that into a search engine), going to see a new 007 film was simply a tradition for me. I remember the gossip from whatever I was reading (it might have been the Channel 4 teletext film news & gossip page) that all the talk was about how long it would take for the legal and financial issues to be resolved before we get a new Bond film, never the idea that a new film wouldn't happen.

    I do remember rumours that Timothy Dalton had been fired or had quit the role going around, only for Dalton to announce 'I'm still James Bond'.

    Frankly, aside from a few people here, the idea that we won't get a new Bond film at some point is just not something I hear. It will happen eventually, it's still one of the most sure-fire franchises around.
    The hiatus between LTK and GE must have been a long drawn out affair, but I don't remember feeling it like I do with this period, and I was just as big as Bond fan back then as I am now.
    Well back then you had less access to information on EON's progress, so people had no choice to be patient. Now, we can literally analyse every single corner of the internet...

    @Denbigh
    In my case, sleepless nights invite occasional attempts at writing not even a Bond script, but a good story for starters. It's extremely difficult, IMO. I'm not a professional, of course. ;-)

    Best advice that has ever been given about writing, @DarthDimi : know your ending. If you can figure out your ending, you now have a beacon of light to follow.

    Once this is sorted, go back to the beginning, and now allow yourself to free flow your ideas, and when you get lost, just get back on the path that will lead to your ending.

    Also, Hemingway was right: all first drafts are sh!t, so don’t worry about anyone laying eyes on it, just get the first draft out for you and no one else. Ignore the inner critic that’s telling you what you’re writing is crap. Just keep going until the end.

    The real writing comes in the re-writes.

    I've been reading that 'After Fleming' book about the continuation novels, and I'm sure I remember John Gardner saying that he made up his plots as he went along rather than planning them out, and reading those synopses, my goodness it shows! :) I would be curious to know how many drafts he did.


    007HallY wrote: »
    I know we all want to see James Bond right from the start in Bond 26. But I'm wondering if it would add more mystery by having a very shadowy villain terrorize MI6 and the world, but Bond is nowhere to be found at first. Other 00s are assigned by M to find and deal with the villain, but with little to no success. Bond later shows up 30mins into the film to save the world and when Bond shows up, he's relentless as well as the film. Now I'm not sure if this is a good idea for the first film of a Bond actor. James Bond missing in the first 30mins, but I was just thinking, though.

    If the PTS introduced the villain and perhaps the key characters, set up the plot, and included a gripping action sequence (and of course there was sustained tension afterwards until Bond arrived) then I can certainly imagine a Bond movie where he’s introduced late. Connery and Moore were effectively introduced that way in their films. Maybe 30 minutes is pushing it, but it depends. Also Bond would have to have a hell of an introduction scene. But honestly, it’s possible. I like the idea actually.

    Yeah, if done right. I know 30mins is really pushing it. But if done right, it would feel like two films into one. The first half showing MI6 and the world living in fear and suspenseful action scenes and stuffs going on, because of the new advanced and supervillain, whom they only know by his voice and have never seen him. Then the second half, James Bond triumphantly enters the scene and begins his 007 thing on the villain...it won't be easy of course, but Bond wins at the end.

    I think there's something in it, it could be a fresh way of looking at it and build up anticipation. Maybe play around with time a bit: show a shortish sequence of events where things keep going wrong for the main characters, and then we see the same events again but Bond makes a triumphant appearance and was actually working behind the scenes all along, blowing all their stuff up! :)
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    edited August 13 Posts: 2,186
    Yesssh! Something of that ilk @mtm :)
  • Posts: 978
    I think that might cause some walkouts. What could be done to entertain people for thirty minutes without the main guy.

    M: "When's Bond arriving?"
    P: "E.T.A. thirty minutes, sir."
    M: "Right. Let's brief Q-branch first."
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    edited August 13 Posts: 2,186
    I think that might cause some walkouts. What could be done to entertain people for thirty minutes without the main guy.

    M: "When's Bond arriving?"
    P: "E.T.A. thirty minutes, sir."
    M: "Right. Let's brief Q-branch first."

    @007HallY @Troy & @mtm have already said it better than I ever could. If done right, it would work. I want to see Bond from the very first shot, for sure. But just to have a different style to a Bond film, I would like to see it that way. It's all about intense suspense, real thriller scenes and we would be engaged enough, until Bond shows up. The thing is, the film needs to start with gunbarrel sequence for this to work. So knowing that James Bond is around somewhere, and is coming to save the day, is something that would keep people interested.
  • Posts: 978
    I think that might cause some walkouts. What could be done to entertain people for thirty minutes without the main guy.

    M: "When's Bond arriving?"
    P: "E.T.A. thirty minutes, sir."
    M: "Right. Let's brief Q-branch first."

    @007HallY @Troy & @mtm have already said it better than I ever could. If done right, it would work. I want to see Bond from the very first shot, for sure. But just to have a different style to a Bond film, I would like to see it that way. It's all about intense suspense, real thriller scenes and we would be engaged enough, until Bond shows up. The thing is, the film needs to start with gunbarrel sequence for this to work. So knowing that James Bond is around somewhere, and is coming to save the day, is something that would keep people interested.

    yeah that's cool with me, dude. I'm just giving a counter-argument to why delaying the main protagonist would cause disengagement with the audience, and goes against natural storytelling and filmmaking. These character delays are for the antagonists usually.
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    edited August 13 Posts: 2,186
    I think that might cause some walkouts. What could be done to entertain people for thirty minutes without the main guy.

    M: "When's Bond arriving?"
    P: "E.T.A. thirty minutes, sir."
    M: "Right. Let's brief Q-branch first."

    @007HallY @Troy & @mtm have already said it better than I ever could. If done right, it would work. I want to see Bond from the very first shot, for sure. But just to have a different style to a Bond film, I would like to see it that way. It's all about intense suspense, real thriller scenes and we would be engaged enough, until Bond shows up. The thing is, the film needs to start with gunbarrel sequence for this to work. So knowing that James Bond is around somewhere, and is coming to save the day, is something that would keep people interested.

    yeah that's cool with me, dude. I'm just giving a counter-argument to why delaying the main protagonist would cause disengagement with the audience, and goes against natural storytelling and filmmaking. These character delays are for the antagonists usually.

    Oh, yeah. It's probably not going to happen. I'm not sure Barbara would want to wait that long to unleash her new Bond. We hope for a blitz of a film for Bond 7's debut, though. I was just thinking of new ways to make Bond 26 feel fresh.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,256
    I think that might cause some walkouts. What could be done to entertain people for thirty minutes without the main guy.

    M: "When's Bond arriving?"
    P: "E.T.A. thirty minutes, sir."
    M: "Right. Let's brief Q-branch first."

    @007HallY @Troy & @mtm have already said it better than I ever could. If done right, it would work. I want to see Bond from the very first shot, for sure. But just to have a different style to a Bond film, I would like to see it that way. It's all about intense suspense, real thriller scenes and we would be engaged enough, until Bond shows up. The thing is, the film needs to start with gunbarrel sequence for this to work. So knowing that James Bond is around somewhere, and is coming to save the day, is something that would keep people interested.

    yeah that's cool with me, dude. I'm just giving a counter-argument to why delaying the main protagonist would cause disengagement with the audience, and goes against natural storytelling and filmmaking. These character delays are for the antagonists usually.

    I'm not sure about disengagement, but I do think that when the next Bond film hits theatres, it's best not to beat around the bush. Fans will be excited to see the new Bond, new audience members will have to be sucked in from the start. When introducing a new Bond after a long hiatus (GE, CR), seeing that new Bond is a very big deal. Why delay that? If you can get the guy sold to your audience within seconds, the rest is easy.

    Obviously, the few minutes before seeing Bond in DN and TLD weren't a problem, nor was Lazenby's introduction. But reserving Bond for after the OT, like they did in LALD, is something I'd rather not see repeated.
  • Posts: 978
    I think that might cause some walkouts. What could be done to entertain people for thirty minutes without the main guy.

    M: "When's Bond arriving?"
    P: "E.T.A. thirty minutes, sir."
    M: "Right. Let's brief Q-branch first."

    @007HallY @Troy & @mtm have already said it better than I ever could. If done right, it would work. I want to see Bond from the very first shot, for sure. But just to have a different style to a Bond film, I would like to see it that way. It's all about intense suspense, real thriller scenes and we would be engaged enough, until Bond shows up. The thing is, the film needs to start with gunbarrel sequence for this to work. So knowing that James Bond is around somewhere, and is coming to save the day, is something that would keep people interested.

    yeah that's cool with me, dude. I'm just giving a counter-argument to why delaying the main protagonist would cause disengagement with the audience, and goes against natural storytelling and filmmaking. These character delays are for the antagonists usually.

    Oh, yeah. It's probably not going to happen. I'm not sure Barbara would want to wait that long to unleash her new Bond. We hope for a blitz of a film for Bond 7's debut, though. I was just thinking of new ways to make Bond 26 feel fresh.

    Well, I think it's absurd and you've hurt my feelings. I'll make it fresh, bro.
  • mattjoesmattjoes Pay more attention to your chef
    Posts: 7,057
    You already are the best Bond as far as I'm concerned.
  • Posts: 978
    I greatly appreciate that @mattjoes . Although, I'm not Bond unless I'm on the silver screen, I'm excited to showcase it to a world-wide audience.
  • Posts: 2,026
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Another origin story would cement the idea there are multiple Bonds in different timelines. Pointless.

    Well, Craig's Bond is dead and the new bond can't be a cold war veteran.

    Nor does he need to be. The Bond in films doesn't need a past. Bond has always been a man in the moment. Keep him that way. Ignore his pre Double-O life completely. Do we really need to know what war (if any) he was a veteran of?
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,231
    Craig's Bond wasn't a Cold War veteran either. There'll always be another war that a young Bond can serve in.
  • Does Bond even need to be a veteran? He's a career intelligence agent. Yeah he served during a war, but ultimately he's been in the Secret Service (or Naval Intelligence) for his adult life. All we need for the character is peripheral engagement in some sort of conflict involving the Navy (like the bombing of the Suez Canal for example) and Bond can easily be formed from there, without even being directly in Egypt for example (stopping shipments etc.)
  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,916
    Believe he needs to be a veteran, yes. It's cooked into the character as Fleming made him.

    There are plenty of conflicts to draw on as the 2006 Eon dossier did.


  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,693
    Jeffery Deaver made him a Afghan veteran in Carte Blanche. He was born in 1979, and he would be forced to retire this year, as he would turn 45. So it makes sense for Bond to at least have some military experience, in any form. It makes sense for him, as MI6 wouldn't pick him up if he didn't.
  • Believe he needs to be a veteran, yes. It's cooked into the character as Fleming made him.

    There are plenty of conflicts to draw on as the 2006 Eon dossier did.


    Is he though?

    Not a veteran in terms of active war zone combat I don't think. In From Russia With Love, Bond is said to have joined the Secret Service in 1938. During the war, it might be very probable that he (and the secret) was involved in sabotage, helping the resistance et cetera. But that doesn't line up with the potrayal of someone who served in active war.

    In Thunderball, Bond claims he was "supercargo" (meaning: "sent by the owner of the ship"), that he worked for intelligence, and he was a "chocolate sailor," referring to the idea of a chocolate solider who doesn't fight. This again matches the idea that Bond was a spy and not a soldier.

    In Live and Let Die, Bond says he spent part of the war at Station A (of the Secret Service). That's not normally where active officers of the Royal Navy spend their time.

    Finally, in the YOLT obit it says that Bond in 1941 joined a department of the MoD (not the Royal Navy as would make the most sense if he was an active combatant) and dealt with confidential matters. Then M refers to himself approving Bond's job to continue with the same department after the war, where he continued his rise in rank to the "Principal Officer" title we hear about in Moonraker.

    There is one mention of Bond and the Ardennes, but that could easily be Bond working with battle intelligence to find out what the Nazis were planning.

    Basically, in summary, I don't think Bond needs to be fighting active warzones all the time. He could easily have come up handling arms running to terrorists or smuggling or whatever that required the same duties that he did about intelligence in World War II (and its potential knockon effects). I feel wary about Bond spending long periods of time in non-European war theatres because that impacts a lot of the cultural experience and impact of the situation.
  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,916
    Before he's an MI6 agent? Based on timelines and minimal details shared, ideally we suspect his experience but don't know exactly.

    Whether or not John Pearson is considered canon, he had fun coming up with this background for Fleming's Bond.


    https://jamesbond.fandom.com/wiki/John_Pearson's_timeline
    1939

    May:[19] Ian Fleming is recruited by Rear Admiral John Godfrey, Director of Naval Intelligence (D.N.I.) of the Royal Navy, to become his personal assistant.

    ...

    September 1: World War II begins in Europe, when Germany invades Poland. Bond returns to Paris where he finds a movement order from Headquarters to return to Regent's Park, London.[21] With Fleming's backing, Bond is commissioned as lieutenant in the Royal Navy with immediate secondment to the D.N.I.

    November 11: James Bond's 19th birthday.[2]

    1940

    February:[22] Bond is sent by Fleming on a solitary assignment to monitor German naval traffic from the barren Frisian island of Wangerooge. His transmissions are detected by the Germans and he is forced to abandon his mission; hijacking the seaplane sent to search for him. He is accidentally shot down by the RAF and is rescued at sea.

    Early 1940:[23] Disgraced by the Wangerooge Affair, Bond is given a desk job. He subsequently applies for transfer to active service in the Royal Navy. He is trained at Devonport and seconded to destroyers.

    May:[24] Bond joins his first ship, H.M.S. Sabre, as a lieutenant. The ship is present at the evacuation of Dunkirk and, after repairs, she is sent on convoy duty in the North Atlantic.

    June 22: France surrenders to National Socialist Germany.
    Maddox makes his way to London, picks up a colonel's job with Military Intelligence and spends most of the war in the Middle East.

    November 11: James Bond's 20th birthday.[2]

    1941

    Easter:[25] Bond meets and falls in love with Muriel; the sister of H.M.S. Sabre's second-in-command.

    Late July:[26] H.M.S. Sabre steams home from the West Indies for a refit at Birkenhead. Roughly three weeks later he proposes to Muriel. While staying together at the Dorchester Hotel in London, a chance encounter with Fleming leads to his return to the D.N.I.

    October:[27] Fleming sends Bond to New York to assassinate a Japanese cypher expert named Shingushi.

    November 11: James Bond's 21st birthday.[2]

    1942

    February:[28] Bond destroys a large refinery at Brest in Brittany, in northwestern France.

    April:[28] Bond engineers the release of three Allied agents from a local gaol in Vichy, central France.

    Late April or early May:[28] At Alexandria, Egypt, Bond successfully takes charge of countermeasures against the Italian midget submarines which plagued Allied shipping.

    November 11: James Bond's 22nd birthday.[2]

    End of 1942:[28] Bond is promoted to Lieutenant-Commander and brought back to London.

    1943

    Early 1943:[29] Fleming sends Bond to Stockholm, Sweden to assassinate a double-agent called Svenson. Bond gives him an opportunity to kill himself, but is forced to shoot him dead.

    November 11: James Bond's 23rd birthday.[2]

    End of 1943:[30] In Switzerland Bond organizes the escape of two important Jewish scientists from Germany across Lake Constance.

    1944

    June 6: D-Day landings in Normandy, France. Bond is attached to the naval task force liaising with the French resistance in the Channel ports before D-Day.[31]

    August 25: The Allies liberate Paris. Following the Liberation, former British spymaster Maddox returns to France and begins working for a syndicate of influential French bankers as ‘security director’; protecting the group's interests throughout the world.[32]

    November 11: James Bond's 24th birthday.[2]

    1945

    May: Ian Fleming leaves military service and becomes the foreign manager of the Sunday Times.

    November 11: James Bond's 25th birthday.[2]

    1946

    Sir Miles Messervy is appointed head of the Secret Service.[33]

    February: Bond joins the Secret Service on probation and is dispatched to America to liaise with their intelligence services.[33]

    Early summer:[34] After a series of controversies, culminating in the accidental death of a Congressman's wife, Bond returns to Britain and is ejected unceremoniously from the Secret Service. Several weeks later, Bond bumps into Maddox outside the Ritz Hotel and if offered a job as a mercenary. He accepts and works for him and the French banking syndicate for the next four years.

    ...

    1949

    July:[35] Following civil unrest in Algeria, there are raids on banks owned by the Syndicate. Wary of Bond's friendship with his wife, Maddox takes advantage of the situation to rid himself of him - plotting to frame him for the murder of a moderate Algerian nationalist. The plot is foiled by the death of Bond's assailant.

    Rather than seeking revenge against Maddox, Bond covers up the incident and leaves his employ. He travels to Nairobi, Kenya and works for an American who made wild-life films for television. He later moves to Mombasa.

    Autumn:[36] Short of funds, Bond departs for the Seychelles where he bums a living. While there he works for an American millionaire who was searching for rare fish. After his sudden demise Bond lives with the man's wealthy widow.

    ???[37] The 00 section is formed in reaction to the existence of SMERSH.

    November 11: James Bond's 29th birthday.[2]

    1950

    Early 1950:[36] Bond crosses paths with Fleming, who is travelling for the Sunday Times and writing about buried treasure.[38] He encourages him to return to Britain and the Secret Service. With Fleming's help, Bond progresses through the application process for the Secret Service. Bond spends several months vigorously training, purchases a new flat and hires a housekeeper.

    July:[39] Bond is officially seconded to the 00 section and allocated the number 007. His first assignment is in Jamaica where, posing as local merchant Da Silva, he dismantles the Communist-aligned Cult of the Goddess Kull.

    August 18:[40][41] Bond, as Da Silva, meets with the Kull Cult at their base of operations in the middle of the Kingston red-light district. He kills their leadership and rescues a blind and deaf girl whom the locals believed to be Kull.

    November 11: James Bond's 30th birthday.[2]

    1951

    January:[42] In a flurry of SMERSH-related activity, 008 is found dead in a parked car fifty yards inside the Western zone of Berlin. 3 weeks later 0011, passing through China on the so-called ‘Blue Route’, fails to make contact in Hong Kong. Later still, a maimed 003 is dragged from a blazing car outside Belgrade.

    Early Spring:[43] Bond learns that Maddox had died, and that Regine had bought a house a few miles inland from Montpelier.

    Spring:[44] Bond returns from Jamaica[45] and within a few days of his return is dispatched to Greece to sink the ship of a Syrian gunrunner who had been carrying arms and ammunition for the EOKA terrorists in Cyprus.

    1st week of July:[46] Bond takes his ailing Aunt Charmian on holiday to the South of France.

    3rd week of July:[47] Bond is recalled to London where he is briefed and dispatched to bankrupt Le Chiffre at the Casino Royale in Royale-les-Eaux, France. He succeeds, but is marked (ш, the Russian "S" for Spion, carved on the back of his hand) by the SMERSH assassin sent to murder Le Chiffre for his failures. His love interest and double-agent, Vesper Lynd, kills herself.

    End of August:[48] Bond takes three weeks leave to recover. He spends it in Provence with Maddox's widow and children.

    November:[49] Bond is dispatched to investigate the activities of Mr. Big and dismantles his gold-smuggling racket from the Caribbean.

    November 11: James Bond's 31st birthday.[2]

    1952

    April:[50] The killer who marked Bond at Royale-les-Eaux is identified by the Secret Service as one of SMERSH's top professionals, Oborin. M warns 007 that he may become a special target for the organisation.

    Late Autumn:[51] In Finland SMERSH set a trap to capture 007 and extract him to the USSR. Bond intentionally takes the bait, is captured by Oborin and taken to a cell in a sunken German warship. In his hubris, the vengeful assassin deliberately allows Bond to escape so he can kill him - but ends up shot instead.

    November 11: James Bond's 32nd birthday.[2]

    End of November:[52] In Cairo, Bond protects a British businessman who had been threatened by a group of extremist Arabs; saving an important trade agreement.

    December:[53] In retaliation for Oborin's death, several high-profile attempts are made on Bond's life by SMERSH. As M prepares to suspend him from the 00 section, and assign him a foreign posting until it blows over, Ian Fleming proposes a creative alternative: to persuade SMERSH that James Bond does not exist and is, in fact, a fictional character. They agree and Fleming begins to write Casino Royale.

    1953

    End of March:[54][55] Fleming returns to Britain with his manuscript; Bond takes a strong disliking to Fleming's characterization of himself.
    71WWfFX9ZwL._AC_UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg
  • Posts: 1,870
    From Dr. No to Thunderball we literally knew nothing about Bond other than he is a secret agent and we faired rather well. To me, he works best as a cypher that you can overlay whatever you want on him. I think today's audiences could handle this idea just fine.
  • edited August 14 Posts: 262
    I read John Pearson's book, and James Bond is not a Royal Navy man from 1939 as the site claims. He is with the "DNI" that is, he's with Naval Intelligence from the start (the use of "secondment" doesn't really make sense in that case).

    1940 is only when Bond is a part of the Royal Navy when he's expelled: however this has no basis in Fleming and I don't think this is the sort of thing to point to in saying that "James Bond must be a veteran." And anyway, Bond's work in the Royal Navy was far away from any theatre of action in Jamaica! Bond's work in the action was as a part of Naval Intelligence.

    I enjoyed Pearson's work but it doesn't stand as "canon" through and through and I don't think that's enough proof to definitely assert Bond's active service. Otherwise we'd agree as a fanbase Moonraker shouldn't be adapted because it is fake, and ask for stories of Bond under the private employ of bankers.

    In terms of Fleming's iterations of Bond's pre-MI6 work, I think the answer is relatively clear. I just want to keep in mind that we don't even know that Secret Service=MI6. As it is mentioned that Bond works in the Ministry of Defence, when MI6 is with the Foreign Office. I think it makes more sense to equate Secret Service with a sort of beefed up (but also civilian) Defence Intelligence, that controls all the foreign intelligence, both military and diplomatic.

    Anyway, I think Fleming's work paints a clear story, whether you work with the FRWL timeline or the YOLT one: the info stays the same.

    1. Joins the "Secret Service" (MoD) in 1938/1941, gets involved in Monte Carlo job (can be excluded if one believes YOLT over previous novels)
    Evidence: YOLT/FRWL for the first bit, CR/MR for the Monte Carlo job

    2. Gets the lieutenant title in 1941 so he can have the authorization to deal with confidential matters.
    Evidence: You Only Live Twice

    3. The Secret Service/MoD deploy Bond in Naval Intelligence (RNVR Special Branch) throughout the war, where he describes himself as "supercargo" and a "chocolate sailor." The RNVR "Special Branch" refers to non-seagoing members of the RNVR. Presumably this served as his cover.
    Evidence: Thunderball

    4. Secret Service/MoD deploy Bond in America with Station A "for a time." This implies work that wouldn't apply to proper sailor. Pearson ignores this and shifts this period to after the war.
    Evidence: Live and Let Die

    5. Bond finds himself in the Ardennes. Why is unknown but there are plenty of explanations that could be plausible that still maintain the consistent story of Bond in the Ministry of Defence rather than fighing (investigating strongholds, or like Fleming's own intelligence units, stealing documents).
    Evidence: Dr. No

    6. James Bond ends the war in Hong Kong (for some reason), discovers "pyjama coats". Again no reason to suggest he was actually involved in battle.
    Evidence: CR, backed up by YOLT

    7. Bond ends the war as Commander, applies to continue with the Secret Service (in the obit referred to as the Ministry of Defence). The obit makes it quite clear that Bond has been working for the same people from his joining of the MoD in 1941 to his continuation in 1945 to his "death" in 1963.
    Evidence: You Only Live Twice


    8. The rest: Bond does jobs in Jamaica with labour unions after the war, gets posted in Moscow (we don't know if that was during the war or not), becomes 007 in 1950, and the rest is history.
    Evidence: LALD (Jamaica), MR (Moscow), FRWL (00 number).
  • Posts: 2,026
    delfloria wrote: »
    From Dr. No to Thunderball we literally knew nothing about Bond other than he is a secret agent and we faired rather well. To me, he works best as a cypher that you can overlay whatever you want on him. I think today's audiences could handle this idea just fine.

    It works for me.

    The less the film Bond is tied to wars the better. In 1962 SC starred in DN at 32, too young to have been a WWII vet. RM took over the role in 73 and would also have been too young to be a WWII vet. GL too young to have been a Korean vet. TD also too young to have been a Korean War vet and British did not fight in Vietnam. As for Brosnan and Craig, Falklands, Lebanon, Afghanistan?

    For me knowing Bond is a war vet doesn't add anything.

  • George_KaplanGeorge_Kaplan Being chauffeured by Tibbett
    edited August 14 Posts: 701
    I suppose you could argue if a contemporary Bond needs to have served in the armed forces at all. Being a commander in the Royal Navy does feel like a bit of a relic of the post-war era the novels were written in. I think having a long career in intelligence is enough.
  • edited August 14 Posts: 4,300
    I think this particular aspect of Bond will come up seldom, if at all in the actual film. But they do think about these things (there’s of course that whole ‘report’ about Craig’s Bond that was used to promote CR that included details of his naval background. Very much a thing for fans, but it’s there).

    Personally, it’s not something about Bond I’d overthink. I wouldn’t mess around too much with it either. Just keep him as a Commander with a navy background and use this detail when or if necessary in the film should it suit the story.
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