I've just been thinking about this lately. Hear me out on it.
To look at Charles Gray's portrayal of James Bond's arch-nemesis Ernst Stavro Blofeld in
Diamonds Are Forever (1971) it's so very left-field that it really makes one wonder where the inspiration for the character came from. It obviously doesn't come from the James Bond novels, although the Blofeld of
On Her Majesty's Secret Service looked superficially similar. This Blofeld dresses in drag, makes humorous comments, makes eloquent speeches; is in sum the perfect English gentleman (the only one?) - hardly the man who two years' earlier blasted Bond's wife, Tracy Bond to eternity. I have a theory that just as DAF is a parody, so Charles Gray's Blofeld is equally a parody of Ian Fleming himself, the creator of James Bond. The James Bond films were all lighter in tone than their 1960s predecessors or their 1980s successors, for that matter. Gray plays Blofeld as a silver fox - he is the classic English gentleman replete with tunic and cigarette holder (
a la Fleming). His background would appear to be English upper class or Eton educated, just like Fleming. His Blofeld is the best mannered (an early version of Christopher Lee's Scaramanga in some ways) and most civilised of al;l the portrayals. It's also the least effective, but I have the sneaking suspicion that the Blofeld of DAF was based on Fleming by screenwriter Tom Mankiewicz as a little in-joke to refer to the light approach taken to the Fleming novels and stories from herre in in until about 1980 or so with a return to the gritty realism of
For Your Eyes Only (1981), Roger Moore's finest and most Flemingesque portrayal of James Bond on film. Perhaps the key to understanding all of this is the fact that both Ian Fleming and his villainous creation Ernst Stavro Blofeld shared the same birthday: 28 May 1908. Both Fleming and Blofeld in DAF were accused of being poseurs, chocolate sailors and rather fey and theatrical So what do we think of my recent theory on the Blofeld of DAF?
[PHOTOS removed due to copyright infringement - a simple Google Images result will bring up the relevant pictures].
As always, I'd really love to hear your views on this one!
:)
OT, but Charles Gray even has a Flemingesque look as the narrator character of The Criminologist in the cult musical
The Rocky Horror Show (1978)
Comments
It might be worth looking at other villains now.
I've never appreciated Gray's interpretation of Blofeld. Ridiculously camp and unconvincing. But then again, DAF was equally camp so I guess in that respect he played it to perfection.
Plus, I do think there's more to my theory than circumstance, myworldisenough. I've been doing some research in this area.
I've only just been made aware of this book's existence. I'll have to purchase a copy as I'm researching the Guy Hamilton films in-depth at the moment for film reviews and Mankiewicz is obviously a key figure as screenwriter in this regard.
Regarding Grey I always felt he was more appropriately cast as Henderson than as Blofeld eventhough he plays two characters in (pretty much) the same way.
While we shouldn't forget that Blofeld of the books was a somewhat "camp" character with his suit of armour he was also portrayed to be undeniably mad - something I'm not sure Grey's Blofeld was.
Blofeld being an English gentleman has more to do with a gross misreading of the character by Makiewicz I think: he's the biggest Bond villain, Bond is British, let's make Blofeld a British villain. Makes no sense whatsoever. I am surprised it left some sort of mark on some fans: some theorise that Mallory was in fact Blofeld, or that Blofeld could pass as M, etc.
however none touch Savalas' Blofeld IMO - "I do put it like that."
But at least Pleasence has a somewhat creepy voice
I think the best Blofeld was/were Anthony Dawson and Erich Pohlmann. Together, so to speak.
But anyway, my main problem with DAF's Blofeld is that he is such a far cry from the early and also the original Blofeld. With all the flaws of Pleasence's Blofeld at least there was remnants of the source material.
I am not a fan of YOLT, not by a long shot, but I would take the dialogues between Bond and Blofeld in it over the ones of DAF.
Oh absolutely.
Because Charles Gray's Blofeld has any background? He is not even remotely the same character! At least Plesence's Blofeld had some elements from the early Blofeld, even though it was a much weaker, diluted version. There was still something ruthless about him, or trying to be. In DAF the character was so badly written. He has character, but it's all wrong. The scriptwriter seemed to have no interest into building from the source material OR the earlier movies.
I'm sorry?
To paraphrase a certain Mr Drax 'You must excuse me gentlemen. Not being American I sometimes find your language difficult to follow.'
I think I read that somewhere...
So, that's who we have to blame?
Or call him Jack Spang, or Seraffimo Spang. That still would have been a defamation of Fleming's characters, and DAF would have still sucked, but at least Blofeld would not have been that joke.
dumping ones books, is exactly how it sounds.... it's the act of smacking the books out of the hands of someone carrying them... you traditionally see this in the stereotypical high school scenes from a movie, where someone (usually the prototypical nerd) is carrying a mountain of books, and someone walks by and smacks the books, causing them to dump to the floor..
hence, book dumping..
it's a phrase i picked up from the show Mystery Science Theater 3000 - they would often times use it when a character in the film they were watching, looked or acted a little too nerdy. lol.
Is he too pretensious/civilised?