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And then there was The Robber in LALD gunning down a pelican that Bond had been admiring. The killing even warranted it's own chapter title, Death of a Pelican. Bond was rather put out by the senseless killing of the pelican.
On a point of order I'm no expert but the style of bullfighting depicted in OHMSS is the Portuguese not Spanish. I think this is similar to that of the south of France with the emphasis on dodging the bull rather than the classic, ritualistic pomp and circumstance of the Spanish which centres around the kill. But I may be wrong.
In any event showing the killing of an animal on screen would be a big no no for EON and their 12 certificate. Bond can gun down as many men as you like or eat a nice steak (for which I presume an animal had to die?) but you can't show a creature being killed; unless its obviously 'evil' - snake, tarantula, rat. Don't know who makes these rules but that's the reality of the world we live in.
Interesting post. I'd be curious to find out more about Portuguese vs. Spanish bullfights.
And your point about violence on film is spot on. Somehow nudity becomes the scapegoat but never violence.
Just as a side note I'm completely against any sort of bullfight and I'm proud to say it's not done in my region.
Great observations and ideas here. A matadore henchman would be something very different. I could see a scene where the badguy revels in the killing of a bull in a corrida, while Bond finds this barbaric.
The most popular bullfighting is the Spanish corridas or faenas, where the bullfighter has to use the capote and the muleta. There are also picadores (on horses) and banderillas (only the weapons without any capote). At last, the bullfighter kills the bull with the sword.
Really they are both very different and I don´t know if they can be named "sports" any of them...
In a way, Spanish corrida is an extreme sport, the most extreme there is. A very cruel one, I have to say.
P.S. Bull fighting also appeared in an episode of Columbo called 'A Matter of Honor' from the Fifth Season. It even starred Pedro Armendariz Jnr. as a detective of the Mexican police.
What we can see at about 1:15 is an strange mix between the "Bombero Torero" Show (clowns and midgets "against" small bulls or "vaquillas") and a corrida of "Rejones" (only bullfighters on horses against the bulls). The dressing and the developmente is completely different to a real corrida de toros.
Here is a link for a real corrida:
Can anyone here think of any other spy films with bull fighting scenes or any films on bull fighting in general?
I'd really love to hear more on this subject area!
There's a scene in Once Upon A Time In Mexico where Johnny Depp rigs a bull fight so the bull kills the matador. There are also bull fighting scenes in The Matador (starring Pierce Brosnan) and a scene where bulls charge through the streets of Italy Spain in Knight and Day
As BondWillReturn points, The Matador was a good one. In Knight and Day they mix the SanFermines (Pamplona) with Sevilla... =)) Just a thousand kilometres of distance...
Personally I find kill-the-bull style bullfighting barbaric and a form of animal cruelty. It would never fly in North America. But what we saw in OHMSS looked perfectly fine and to be a good show. Presumably the bulls got a nice bath afterwards and a good feed of grain or whatever they eat.
Where's your evidence for that?
Just because he was brought up in an ostensibly Christian environment doesn't mean he was a 'believer'.
I see no evidence in the Bond books nor in the numerous biographies of Fleming I have read that ever make a single mention of God or a profession of 'faith'.
But I'm sure you can put me straight.
I know your interenet is filled up a lot these days with your athiest propaganda but that doesn't mean your heroes are not of faith a la Fleming. Let's leave that off the boards shall we and keep it about Bond?
Such as? I would say that Blofeld is a Satan figure, but that's about it. Bond, when he thinks about God, the afterlife and so on (like in say Goldfinger) thinks about it in a rather mundane, even frivolous, way. When he talks about religion he seems to be more interested about its cultural significance (such as when he asks to Draco if Tracy is Catholic). I don't know if Fleming believed in God or not, but he did not strike me as very religious in his writing. His view on adultery (for instance) seemed much more liberal than most Christians.
While I am atheist and I am all for finding Christian subtext in any piece of fiction if it is there, but you cannot use an ideological bias when you analyze literature. Anyway, back on topic, even if he was Christian, not all Christians, far from it, consider the life and well being of animals as sacred.
No kidding that was my point. Read it next time before spouting your anti-conservative athiest dogma?
Feel free to enlighten me (with quotes of course). In 14 books the mentions of God and religion are countable on one hand. Fleming is hardly Graham Greene is he?
And don't question my knowledge of the novels - I'm not one the cretins round here who is proud to state on a particular subject 'Well I've never read the books but....'