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So on reflection I would have to say that I like both mediums and feel they should both be embraced by anyone interested in James Bond.
but I do like the Fleming novels thus far - i haven't made it all the way through - i'm still way back on Moonraker.. but i loved Casino Royale and Live And Let Die.. and it's fun to read them, and find out where they got certain sequences for some of the movies - like the bit where Bond and Solitaire are dragged behind Mr Big's boat - obviously used later for the film For Your Eyes Only...... it's like playing connect the dots :)
And for your other question, i have higher expetations on Bond 23. I don't even know if Carte Blanche will be translated to swedish... :-S
EDIT: Might a mod move this to… well, here's a conundrum. Where does this thread belong?
I don't have a preference for book or film - if we're talking Fleming. Anyone else and it's the films hands down for me. They are very different, and a lot of the quirks (read sexism, and general political un-correctness) of Fleming's writing we'd never get to see on screen. That was my issue with Faulks' writing as Fleming was that he didn't go there hard enough with the 50's attitudes.
Fits better in Bond Movies than Fan Creations anyway, so I'm moving it there.
If push came to shove however i think I'd say the films, as they have been a part of my life for a lot longer than the books. They bring back a lot more happy memories.
I think the popularity with the Ian Fleming novels these days has a lot to do with the popularity of the movie series. People are curious as what this Feleming fella actually wrote. They either like him or are terribly upset that the novels are quite something else. The movie series is still something special that every so many years seems to reinvent itself and can actually change the game once more. That said the quality of the earlier movies can still compete easily with quite a few actioners these days.
I did read the books before I even knew there was such a thing as a movie series. Was quite surprised by the difference (Moonraker being the first movie I saw) but found the series lovely on their own merits. They occasionaly steer away from the 007 as written in the Fleming books but they still created a rounded well recognisable character that has been around for a long time and will be around for quite a while to come.
I quite comparing the novels with the movies simply because only Connery & Lazenby actually remained close to the Fleming stories. The later movies had Fleming pieces but less of a complete tale.
My biggest dissapointment is CR that managed to mess up the great ending of the book, the death of Vesper. The book is vastly superiour in story when compared with the movie.
I just want the films to stay true to Fleming's character, so to the continuation novels.
The films have more variety. The films are more fun. The films made a huge impact on the world of cinema (without Bond we wouldn't have Indiana Jones, Nolans Batman as well as countless parodies, 60s spy films, big films starring Sean Connery, etc).
Don't get me wrong Flemings books are great, very well written, and I prefer some to the film versions, but they haven't aged brilliantly and most of them can't match the brilliant entertainment the films have provided me for almost all my life.
I do enjoy both tremendously, though.