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Comments
I think you're giving the public too much credit. The large majority of movie-going adults, I suspect, don't even know who Laz is, and probably know little more about Dalts.
I think Blofeld was working for the Chinese in YOLT, but clearly alluded to taking over the world as a result of the chaos from nuclear war, as he had alluded previously.
Craig's distinctly different Bond-take has developed comparable profile, what with all the attention his era has received.
The Brozzer era....I think the general populace are quite aware that it exists, but it lacks identity, being overshadowed by the Connery and Moore films.
Both Laz and Dalts though, are footnotes I think with the general populace.
ie most filmgoers could name you four Bonds with little prompting. They often struggle to come up with the other two names (laz and dalts) or even understand that the total is 6.
Just my perception, but it's also based on my own experience. I don't know how many times I've answered the old, "who was that other guy that played Bond?" and they are always referring to either Laz or Dalts.
Where is this except per chance?
The excerpt appears in Cubby Broccoli's autobiography When the Snow Melts (1998) with Donald Zec. I have some discs I bought containing every Playboy issue of the 1960s, so I will have to look it out on there, too. I'll get back to you when I find it, @007InVT.
The general public has not nor will they ever read a Bond novel by Fleming or anyone else, but Connery is in the collective movie-history memory. A charming albeit dated version of the hero.