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Comments
I always imagined Draco being too emotionally overwrought to be of any help to Bond. Bond would be a wreck to. I like the way Fleming played it that he had lost his edge. I am not sure audiences would respond to this characterization since Bond was portrayed as a Superman of sorts. I like M being fatherly in this scenario and helping him as best he could. Blofeld was trying to kill Bond and Tracey was collateral damage. I doubt he would continue to pursue Bond. He was always in the shadows. Bond was need to pursue him.
Sometimes in these scenarios we forget that cinema of the early 70's had different sensibilities then now. I don't think a revenge story would have been the right play. Just my two cents.
@TR007 It could go the other way, Bond goes off the radar (as per SF), Draco is looking for revenge (requesting Bond's help but he is not up for the fight) and hunts Blofeld down but Blofeld kills Draco in some horrible way. Perhaps Blofeld tortures Draco to find Bond's location but Draco won't talk. (I thought Draco had immense charm and this would be an amazing scene). Bond finds out and, feeling guilty that he refused the initial request for help, comes back for revenge.
That kind of sounds a bit like what Raymond Benson did with Draco in Never Dream of Dying (2001).