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Comments
Have a go at this location from a film:
The Villa de Fiorano close to Rome. Well done, this audience is not easily fooled.
That is an excellent scene though. All of it.
Hopefully there's enough here to get you started!
It's Monaco, the tunnel is built through Fort Antoine and the theatre above it is where Bond spies on Xenia in Goldeneye.
Those road signs looked French, I know Monaco a separate state but the little bit of the port drew my mind to the Riviera. I'm not a formula 1 fan but I know it's a famous circuit so idk those roads are distinctive.
We are a sharp bunch. Yep it's the National Hotel, Moscow where Fleming stayed during the 1930s working for Reuters. To my knowledge Bond first goes there in 1935 in Red Nemesis and thirty years or so later he we see him return in With a Mind to Kill so it was interesting to read two different Bond authors describing the exact same place.
RN: 'Fine furniture and large vases littered the landings, and James wondered if the decorations had been seized from Russian aristocrats.'
WAMTK: '... a spacious reception half full of gilt mirrors, antique furniture and oil paintings which, [Katya] explained, had been liberated from the tsar's palaces and the homes of nobility.'
Something of a brick joke from IFP.
I promise not all my rounds will be Soviet locations but I've just finished reading WAMTK so it's still fresh in my mind.
I still have another question:
Wasn't Bond, even in the oldest Fleming novels, born 1920? How come, in that case, did he get there at the age of 15? OK, I haven't read that spinoff novel, and myself was in Moscow (with a group) at the age of 16, but not in a luxury hotel...rather the contrary.
Have fun! It's a literary location only.
Bond 'stepping up' the theatre steps to 'help provide a photo' of Xenia for Moneypenny.
Wasn't Bond, even in the oldest Fleming novels, born 1920? How come, in that case, did he get there at the age of 15? OK, I haven't read that spinoff novel, and myself was in Moscow (with a group) at the age of 16, but not in a luxury hotel...rather the contrary.[/quote]
It's the Young Bond series which does set his birth year at 1920. As to how a 15 year old boy gets into Stalin's Russia, without spoiling the novel as it's the final one in the series, he has help.
Too clever for me :))
I'm just wildly guessing, but the architecture seems British, so I thought of the MI5 building.