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Comments
Bond has been copied, ridiculed & written off, but yet he endures, because you can't keep a good man or good ideal down.
Can't remember how old I was when I first saw my first Bond but always remember it being a part of my childhood that's when bank holidays and Christmas meant a Bond film.
My earliest memories of Bond was Goldfinger and The Spy Who Loved Me their the two that always seemed to be on all the time. Can still remember now hiding behind the sofa when Jaws came on, I was so scared of him.
^#(^
Been a fan of the series longer than most, can't say exactly when it all first started, but Connery was in the part and would of been around the time of You Only Live Twice, but only started actually going to regular theater releases some time after that. Seen a lot of changes over time I can tell you, not all for the better
So...80? Oh, you mean Bond, not Sir Rog. ;)
:-? :))
We have one member that is in his 80s. He doesn't come around much, but he did say he went to DN with his mates when he was an adolescent.
I have licences for all sorts of things...but not a driver's. :P
Some make you taller, some make you forget...
The important question is, do you have your license to kill? I never passed the test :(
Yeah, but they don't let me out in the field that often. I always seem to wreak some kind of havoc. You know, boys with toys and all that.
back then. :D
Although I was old enough to have seen (at the very least) AVTAK, TLD, and LTK on the big screen, the first Bond I saw in the cinema was GE at the ripe old age of 25.
in 1971 never looked back since CR was the first grown up book that I read having been introduced to the books by my fathers collection in paperback .
30 years have now passed, and I'm happy to say, that spark is still there, the interest is always growing, and the whole Bond universe still has plenty to offer.
the first Bond i saw at the cinema was goldeneye and i loved it and have been to the first day showings for every one that followed
i also played the n64 goldeneye a game that as never been beaten in my view there was no better fun the blowing the crap out of your mates and goldeneye delivered every time do not get me wrong other bond games have been fun just did not ever match the n64 version for having a laugh
And then, one glorious Saturday, she put DAF playing. I absolutely loved it. I was instantly hooked. She was also a great Bond fan. That's why, despite all its flaws, DAF will always have a special place in my heart.
I was 9 years of age and I went to see Dr.No on a Monday evening, I went back with my mum and saw it again the following night and I went on my own the night after.
I then persuaded my mother to buy every Bond book that was available in Pan paperback (CR thru' FYEO) and read them in chronological order!
Between them, Terence Young and Ian Fleming instilled me with a life long love of film and literature. I owe them both a great debt.