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It's Everything or Nothing shortened to EON. Pretty simple really.
Dana Broccoli says different.
Which means two of the people who should know disagree.
That's fine. So why did her half-brother say it didn't mean that? Again, the principals involved can't get their stories straight. Which one do you believe?
Or the company decided to change its story between the late 1990s and 2012, when the Everything Or Nothing documentary came out.
Introduction, next-to-last paragraph:
"I've also discovered that Eon Productions stands for Everything Or Nothing, an appropriate tag."
It's also known that Eon didn't like the book. It refused to supply stills (the book uses wire service photos and other sources). So perhaps Michael G. Wilson was still parroting the company line at the time Inside Dr. No was made more than a decade later. In other words, if Steven Jay Rubin was saying it, it must not be correct.
So either it always meant Everything Or Nothing, or the Eon principals grabbed onto the idea later. By the time the Everything Or Nothing documentary came out, almost nobody remembered Rubin's 1983 introduction.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeon
Eon is also the American way of spelling 'Aeon'
Ah, thank you! Case closed?
Extract from the archives official site of DAD :
(and before someneone asking : no, I will no translate, you are tall, you have Google Translate at your computer)
Ha ha. How incredibly French of you.