James Bond: The Quick Film Guide
Created | Updated Nov 18, 2015
For over 50 years and in 25 films loosely based on Ian Fleming's novels, James Bond, the best-known secret agent in the world, has attracted a huge, and constantly growing, audience to the cinema. Yet with 25 films to choose from, it is easy to get confused between them. If only there was an easy way to remember which Bond had the theme tune sung by Shirley Bassey, starred Sean Connery as Bond and had Felix Leiter in? Well, now there is, the simple James Bond film guide.
This is a simple list of all the James Bond films in order of their release. Also listed, for convenience, are the villains, henchmen, and Bond girls of each film as well as who plays them. The actors playing them have their name in brackets. Recurring characters, actors and directors have their names in bold. Each film's song has the same name as the film unless otherwise stated.
Sean Connery Era: 1962-1967
During the five films made in this era, Lois Maxwell played Miss Moneypenny in all the films, Bernard Lee played M and Desmond Llewelyn played Q in all except the first film, Dr No, where his role is played by Peter Burton. Many of the films involved Bond battling SPECTRE, the SPecial Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terror, Revenge and Extortion. SPECTRE agents are frequently known by their number, for instance Blofeld is known as Number 1.
1. Dr. No (Sean Connery) - 1962
Director | Terence Young |
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Plot | SPECTRE operative Dr No plots to disrupt an American missile programme. |
Setting | London, Jamaica and fictional Caribbean island Crab Key |
Villain | Dr Julius No (Joseph Wiseman) |
Bond Girls | Honey Ryder (Ursula Andress), Sylvia Trench (Eunice Grayson) Voices of both: Monica van der Syl1 |
Henchmen | Professor Dent (Anthony Dawson), Miss Taro (Zena Marshall) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (Jack Lord), Quarrel (John Kitzmiller), Major Boothroyd (Peter Burton) |
Source | The film closely follows Ian Fleming's 6th Bond novel of the same name. |
James Bond Theme | Monty Norman, arranged by John Barry. |
Dr No was released at the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis on 5 October, 1962. This was the very same day that 'Love Me Do', the first single by the Beatles, was first released.
Lois Maxwell was originally offered the role of Sylvia Trench, but chose the part of Moneypenny so she would not have to show her legs. Sylvia Trench returned in From Russia With Love but was written out of Goldfinger when Guy Hamilton replaced Young as the director of that film, however Maxwell's Moneypenny appeared in Bond films for the following thirteen years.
2.From Russia with Love (Sean Connery) - 1963
Director | Terence Young |
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Plot | SPECTRE want a Russian Lektor decoding device. They plot to trap James Bond with a beautiful Russian cypher clerk and then steal the Lektor from them both. |
Setting | London, Istanbul, the Orient Express, Venice |
Villain | Rosa Klebb '#3' (Lotte Lenya), Ernst Stavro Blofeld '#1' (Body: Anthony Dawson, Voice: Eric Pohlmann) |
Bond Girls | Tatiana Romanova (Body: Daniela Bianchi, Voice: Barbara Jeffoed), Sylvia Trench, (Body: Eunice Grayson, Voice: Monica Van der Syl) |
Henchmen | Donald 'Red' Grant (Robert Shaw), Kronsteen '#5' (Vladek Sheybal), |
Allies | Kerim Bey (Pedro Armendariz) |
Song Singer | Matt Monro, but only over the end credits. |
Source | The film fairly closely follows Ian Fleming's 5th Bond novel, substituting SPECTRE for SMERSH. |
In the novel the decoder was called the Spektor, but this is renamed Lektor to avoid confusion with SPECTRE. This is Desmond Llewellyn's first appearance as Q.
3. Goldfinger (Sean Connery) - 1964
Director | Guy Hamilton |
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Plot | Bond investigates Auric Goldfinger, who is a suspected gold smuggler. Yet Goldfinger has greater plans, involving atomic devices and Fort Knox... |
Setting | Miami, England, Switzerland, Kentucky and Fort Knox. |
Villain | Auric Goldfinger (Body: Gert Frobe, Voice: Michael Collins) |
Bond Girls | Pussy Galore (Honor Blackman), Jill Masterson, (Body: Shirley Eaton, Voice: Monica Van der Syl), Tilly Masterson (Tania Mallet) |
Henchmen | Oddjob (Harold Sakata) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (Cec Linder) |
Song Singer | Shirley Bassey |
Source | The film fairly closely follows Ian Fleming's 7th Bond novel, although Goldfinger now plans to irradiate the gold in Fort Knox rather than steal it. |
This film introduces the phenomenon of the James Bond Car with the heavily armed Aston Martin DB5. The revolving numberplate was inspired by director Guy Hamilton's continual stream of parking tickets.
Honor Blackman, the first Bond girl to have her own voice, had previously appeared in British television series The Avengers, playing Cathy Gale. In the following series of The Avengers in the episode 'Too Many Christmas Trees', Steed receives a Christmas card from Cathy posted from Fort Knox, in a nod to this film's climax.
4. Thunderball (Sean Connery) - 1965
Director | Terence Young |
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Plot | A bomber carrying two atomic bombs has been stolen by SPECTRE. Unless a ransom is paid, a major city will be destroyed... |
Setting | France, London and the Bahamas. |
Villain | Emilio Largo '#2' (Adolfo Celi) Ernst Stavro Blofeld '#1' (Body: Anthony Dawson Voice: Eric Pohlmann) |
Bond Girls | Dominique 'Domino' Derval (Body: Claudine Auger, Voice: Monica Van der Syl) |
Henchmen | Fiona Volpe (Luciana Paluzzi), Vargas (Phillip Locke) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (Rik van Nutter), Paula Caplan (Martine Beswick) |
Song Singer | Sir Tom Jones. Two versions of an alternative song, 'Mr Kiss Kiss Bang Bang' were sung, by Shirley Bassey and Dionne Warwick. |
Source | The film fairly closely follows the 8th Bond novel, based on an original story by Ian Fleming, Kevin McClory and Jack Whittingham. |
This is the first film in which Sean Connery plays James Bond in the opening sequence in which he walks across the screen from the right, turns and shoots at an assailant who had him in his sights.
Faye Dunaway and Raquel Welch auditioned for the role of Domino, with Raquel cast, but unable to make the film as she was making Fantastic Voyage instead. Faye Dunaway was also considered, but Claudine Auger, a former Miss France, was cast.
John Stears won the Best Visual Effects Oscar for his work on this film. Martine Beswick had previously appeared in From Russia with Love as Zora, one of the fighting gypsy girls.
5. You Only Live Twice (Sean Connery) - 1967
Director | Lewis Gilbert |
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Plot | SPECTRE, hiding in Japan, wish to start a war between the USA and USSR, and only the UK's best agent can stop it. |
Setting | Japan |
Villain | Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Donald Pleasence) |
Bond Girls | Aki (Akiko Wakabayashi), Kissy Suzuki (Body: Mie Hama, Voice: Monica Van der Syl) |
Henchmen | Mr Osato (Teru Shimada), Helga Brandt (Karin Dor) |
Allies | Tiger Tanaka (Tetsuro Tamba), Henderson (Charles Gray) |
Song Singer | Nancy Sinatra |
Source | The screenplay was by Roald Dahl, taking only the title, some characters and the Japanese setting from the 11th Bond novel. |
This film is memorable for the first full appearance of Blofeld. The character of Dr Evil in the James Bond spoof Austin Powers trilogy is clearly modelled on Pleasence's definitive Blofeld. This is also the only film to date in which Bond does not drive a car, with the car that appears, the Toyota 2000 GT convertible, made as a convertible as Sean Connery was unable to fit in the hard-top model.
All Change: A Spoof, A New Bond and Sean Connery's Last Stand
These three films mark the first period of transition from the Bond films that came before, and what came after. The first, a rival production of Casino Royale and not part of the official James Bond series, was intended as a spoof, but ended up a glorious mess.
On Her Majesty's Secret Service is the first official film without Connery that shows Bond in a more mature relationship than seen before or after. Diamonds are Forever moves Bond in an Avengers inspired comedy direction, complete with bizarre sequences involving slow-moving astronauts, moon buggies and a climax consisting of Blofeld being waved around an oil rig while being used as a demolition ball.
In both the official films Lois Maxwell continued to play Miss Moneypenny, Bernard Lee played M and Desmond Llewelyn played Q .
A. Casino Royale (David Niven) - 1967
Directors | Ken Hughes, John Huston, Joseph McGrath, Robert Parrish, Val Guest. |
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Plot | Largely missing. Sir James Bond is called out of retirement as the world's agents are being killed. He goes to Scotland for a bit and orders that all secret agents, male or female, should be renamed 'James Bond 007' to confuse the enemy. The enemy, SMERSH, plan to release a poison that will make all women beautiful and kill off all tall men. Characters turn up and go away, and everyone dies at the end. |
Setting | England, Scotland, France, East Berlin, the Afterlife |
Villain | Le Chiffre (Orson Welles), Jimmy 'Dr Noah' Bond (Woody Allen) |
Bond Girls | Vesper Lynd 'James Bond 007' (Ursula Andress), Mata Bond (Joanna Pettet), The Detainer (Daliah Lavi) |
Henchmen | Polo (Ronnie Corbett), Agent Mimi (Deborah Kerr), Miss Goodthighs (Jacqueline Bisset), |
Allies | Evelyn Tremble 'James Bond 007' (Peter Sellers), Coop 'James Bond 007' (Terence Cooper), Carlton Towers (Bernard Cribbins) |
Song Singer | 'The Look of Love' by Dusty Springfield |
Source | Moments of the film are loosely inspired by Ian Fleming's first novel, the rest appear to be a mixture of numerous hallucinations. |
After writing Casino Royale, Fleming sold the screen rights and in 1954 the story was used as the basis for a one-hour television drama. 13 years later it became a big screen spoof. The actors, writers and directors involved in the film frequently came and went, leaving no-one in a position to guide the film from start to finish.
6. On Her Majesty's Secret Service (George Lazenby) - 1969
Director | Peter Hunt |
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Plot | Bond, obsessed with finding Blofeld, rescues a mysterious girl whose father is the head of a crime syndicate. Is there a connection between Blofeld and a medical institute investigating allergy cures? |
Setting | South of France, London, Geneva, the Alps. |
Villain | Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Telly Savalas) |
Bond Girls | Contessa Teresa 'Tracy' Di Vicenzo Bond (Dame Diana Rigg) |
Henchmen | Irma Bunt (Ilse Steppat) |
Allies | Marc Ange Draco (Body: Gabriele Ferzetti, Voice: David de Keyser), Sir Hilary Bray (George Baker) |
Song Singer | 'We Have All The Time in the World', Louis Armstrong |
Source | Closely based on Fleming's 10th novel. |
This is only film in which George Lazenby plays Bond. George Baker, the actor who played Sir Hilary Bray, dubs the scenes in which Bond impersonates him. George Baker had been considered a potential actor to play Bond in Dr No. Dame Diana Rigg had, of course, shot to fame playing Emma Peel in The Avengers.
7. Diamonds Are Forever (Sean Connery) - 1971
Director | Guy Hamilton |
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Plot | Smuggling diamonds is the first step in SPECTRE's creation of a superweapon. |
Setting | South Africa, Amsterdam, London and Las Vegas |
Villain | Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Charles Gray) |
Bond Girls | Tiffany Case (Jill St John), Plenty O'Toole (Lana Wood) |
Henchmen | Mr Kidd (Putter Smith), Mr Wint (Bruce Glover) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (Norman Burton), Willard Whyte (Jimmy Dean) |
Song Singer | Shirley Bassey |
Source | A very loose adaptation of Fleming's 4th novel, using some character names. |
Reclusive millionaire Howard Hughes inspired the character of Willard Whyte.
Back for Moore
The Roger Moore era has more recurring characters than before. M (Bernard Lee until Moonraker, Robert Brown after Octopussy), Q and Moneypenny are joined by a recurring Minister of Defence, Frederick Gray. They also have a regular competitor, occasional enemy and ally General Gogol, played by Walter Gotell, who had been Morzeny in From Russia with Love. Sadly, Q, though mentioned, does not appear in Live and Let Die.
The Roger Moore era would fluctuate between the camp and silly to a more 'back to basics' Bond. This era was punctuated by Sean Connery's brief return to playing James Bond in rival film Never Say Never Again.
8. Live and Let Die (Roger Moore) - 1973
Director | Guy Hamilton |
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Plot | British agents investigating Kananga, Prime Minister of San Monique, have been killed. Will Bond learn that Kananga's secretly a drug smuggler known as 'Mr Big'? |
Setting | New York, New Orleans, London and the fictional Caribbean island San Monique |
Villain | Kananga 'Mr Big' (Yaphet Kotto) |
Bond Girls | Solitaire (Jane Seymour) |
Henchmen | Tee Hee (Julius Harris), Baron Samedi (Geoffrey Holder) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (David Hedison), Sherrif JW Pepper (Clifton James), Quarrel Junior (Roy Stewart) |
Song Singer | Paul McCartney and Wings |
Source | Only characters and the title survive from Ian Fleming's second novel. |
The character of Quarrel Junior is the son of Quarrel, who appears in Dr No. The original novel was set before Dr No. The excellent theme tune was nominated for an Oscar. This was the first film in which Q does not appear.
9. The Man with the Golden Gun (Roger Moore) - 1974
Director | Guy Hamilton |
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Plot | At the height of the fuel crisis, Bond receives a bullet from Scaramanga, an assassin known as 'The Man with the Golden Gun'. Will Bond be the mysterious murderer's next target? |
Setting | London, Beirut, Macao, Hong Kong, Bangkok and Scaramanga's island near China |
Villain | Francisco Scaramanga (Christopher Lee) |
Bond Girls | Mary Goodnight (Britt Ekland), Andrea Anders (Maud Adams) |
Henchmen | Nick Nack (Herve Villechaize), Hai Fat (Richard Loo) |
Allies | Sheriff JW Pepper (Clifton James), Lieutenant Hip (Soon-Taik Oh) |
Song Singer | Lulu |
Source | Only the title and character names survive from Ian Fleming's 12th novel |
Christopher Lee, who plays Scaramanga, was Ian Fleming's cousin.
10. The Spy Who Loved Me (Roger Moore) - 1977
Director | Lewis Gilbert |
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Plot | Someone is able to track and capture nuclear submarines! Can Bond learn who before nuclear Armageddon is unleashed in order to create a new world order beneath the sea? |
Setting | Austria, Egypt, Sardinia |
Villain | Karl Stromberg (Curt Jürgens) |
Bond Girls | Major Anya 'XXX' Amasova (Barbara Bach) |
Henchmen | Jaws (Richard Kiel), Naomi (Caroline Munro) |
Allies | General Anatol Gogol (Walter Gotell), Frederick Gray (Geoffrey Keen), Admiral Hargreaves (Robert Brown) |
Song Singer | 'Nobody Does it Better' by Carly Simon |
Source | Only the title is used from Ian Fleming's 9th Bond novel. |
The second most famous car in the James Bond series, the Lotus Esprit submarine car, appears in this film. The plot is very similar to Gilbert's previous Bond film You Only Live Twice, and it had originally been intended to include SPECTRE, however a lawsuit prevented them and so the villain became Stromberg instead.
11. Moonraker (Roger Moore) - 1979
Director | Lewis Gilbert |
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Plot | A space shuttle is stolen! Yet the owner of the shuttle, Hugo Drax, is more interested in secretly making glass canisters... |
Setting | London, California, Venice, Rio de Janeiro, a satellite orbiting Earth |
Villain | Hugo Drax (Michel Lonsdale) |
Bond Girls | Dr Holly Goodhead (Lois Chiles), Corinne Dufour (Body: Corrine Clery, Voice: Monica Van der Syl) , Manuela (Emily Bolton) |
Henchmen | Jaws (Richard Kiel), Chang (Toshiro Suga) |
Allies | Frederick Gray (Geoffrey Keen), General Anatol Gogol (Walter Gotell) |
Song Singer | Shirley Bassey |
Source | Only the title and Drax's name survive from the 3rd Bond novel. |
This is the last film in which Bernard Lee appears as M, and was made as a co-production with French company Les Productions Artistes Associés. There are some outstanding moments in the film, however there are also several silly ones and the film was made as an attempt to jump on the Star Wars bandwaggon.
12. For Your Eyes Only (Roger Moore) - 1981
Director | John Glen |
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Plot | A British spy ship carrying a top-secret device is sunk in the Ionian Sea! Bond must recover the device after the Havelocks, the people leading the previous recovery operation, are murdered. But Melina Havelock wants revenge and what else is happening in the Ionian Sea? |
Setting | The Ionian Sea, Madrid, Cortina and Corfu |
Villain | Aris Kristatos (Julian Glover), 'Wheelchair Villain' (John Hollis, obviously Blofeld) |
Bond Girls | Melina Havelock (Carole Bouquet), Countess Lisl (Cassandra Harris) |
Henchmen | Emile Leopold Locque (Michael Gothard), Eric Kriegler (John Wyman) |
Allies | Milos Columbo (Topol), Bibi Dahl (Lynn-Holly Johnson), Bill Tanner (James Villiers), Sir Frederick Gray (Geoffrey Keen), General Anatol Gogol (Walter Gotell), Margaret Thatcher (Janet Brown) |
Song Singer | Sheena Easton |
Source | Melina Havelock comes from the short story 'For Your Eyes Only', the Colombo v Kristatos theme comes from short story 'Risico' and the section where Bond and Melina are dragged behind a boat was from the novel Live and Let Die. |
Sadly, Bernard Lee passed away shortly before this film was made. In respect, he was not immediately recast and instead his role was split between Bill Tanner (M's chief of staff), Q and Sir Frederick Gray.
The Wheelchair Villain is intended to be Blofeld, but due to legal action was not able to be named as such. Cassandra Harris, who plays Countess Lisl, was the wife of Pierce Brosnan.
13. Octopussy (Roger Moore) - 1983
Director | John Glen |
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Plot | What do fake Fabergé eggs have to do with the plot to destroy an American airbase in West Germany? Only Bond can find out. |
Setting | Cuba, London, East and West Germany, India |
Villain | General Orlov (Steven Berkoff), Kamal Khan (Louis Jourdan) |
Bond Girls | Octopussy (Maud Adams) Magda (Kristina Wayborn), |
Henchmen | Gobinda (Kabir Bedi), Mischka & Grischka (David & Tony Meyer) |
Allies | Vijay (Vijay Amritraj), General Anatol Gogol (Walter Gotell), Sir Frederick Gray (Geoffrey Keen), Penelope Smallbone (Michaela Clavell) |
Song Singer | 'All Time High' by Rita Coolidge |
Source | The events in short story 'Octopussy' relate to Octopussy's father, the auction comes from short story 'The Property of a Lady' |
In Octopussy M is played by Robert Brown. He had previously played Admiral Hargreaves in The Spy who Loved Me, and it is unclear whether the character of Hargreaves has been promoted to be the new M, or whether Brown is playing the same character Bernard Lee had. Most assume that Hargreaves has been promoted to M. Maud Adams had previously appeared as Andrea Anders in The Man with the Golden Gun. The character of Penelope Smallbone was introduced as a potential replacement for Moneypenny, but never appeared again.
B. Never Say Never Again (Sean Connery) - 1983
An unofficial, rival Bond film starring Sean Connery in his last outing in the role that made him famous.
Director | Irvin Kershner |
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Plot | A remake of Thunderball but with nuclear missiles rather than atomic bombs |
Setting | England, France and the Bahamas |
Villain | Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Max Von Sydow), Maximillian Largo (Klaus Maria Brandauer) |
Bond Girls | Domino Petachi (Kim Basinger), Unnamed (Valerie Leon) |
Henchmen | Fatima Blush (Barbara Carrera), Jack Petachi (Gavan O'Herlihy) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (Bernie Casey) M (Edward Fox) Moneypenny (Pamela Salem), Q 'Algy' (Alec McCowen), Nigel Small-Fawcett (Rowan Atkinson) |
Song Singer | Lani Hall |
Source | A remake of Thunderball |
In 1959 Ian Fleming, Ernest Curero, Ivar Bryce, Kevin McClory and Jack Whittingham developed a screenplay that was used as the basis of Ian Fleming's novel Thunderball. When Fleming published his novel, McClory sued and was awarded the rights to make a film of Thunderball. McClory co-operated with Eon, the company behind the official Bond films in the 1960s on condition that he not make another film based on the story for ten years. Ten years later McClory began plans to remake Thunderball, and after some legal delays, here it was.
Rowan Atkinson would later star in the Johnny English Bond-spoof films.
14. A View to a Kill (Roger Moore) - 1985
Director | John Glen |
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Plot | What does an ex-KGB agent who drugs his racing horses have to do with Silicon Valley? Only Bond can find the truth. |
Setting | Siberia, England, France and San Francisco |
Villain | Max Zorin (Christopher Walken) |
Bond Girls | May Day (Grace Jones), Stacey Sutton (Tanya Roberts), Pola Ivanova (Fiona Fullerton) |
Henchmen | Dr Carl Mortner (Willoughby Gray), Jenny Flex |
Allies | Sir Godfrey Tibbett (Patrick Macnee), Sir Frederick Gray (Geoffrey Keen), General Anatol Gogol (Walter Gotell) |
Song Singer | Duran Duran |
Source | The title is inspired by Fleming's short story 'From a View to a Kill', but no plot points from the story survive into the film. |
This was both Roger Moore and Lois Maxwell's last Bond film. Patrick Macnee is famous for playing John Steed in The Avengers.
Dawn of Dalton's Days
In the Timothy Dalton Era, Caroline Bliss takes over as Moneypenny, but is not given much to do in either film in which she appears, while Robert Brown continues as M and Desmond Llewellyn remains as Q. Dalton is driven, seeking violence, vengeance and vendetta, with a rage barely contained behind his smiles. Dalton portrays Bond as someone who will not compromise on seeing what he considers justice done, even if his superiors disagree. His films are more complex and grown up than any Bonds since On Her Majesty's Secret Service, adult in theme. Gone are one-liners and pick-up lines, leaving raw, focused brutality barely hidden behind tuxedos and charm.
15. The Living Daylights - (Timothy Dalton) 1987
Director | John Glen |
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Plot | A defecting Russian general states that General Pushkin wishes to implement Smiert Spionem, a programme of killing all spies in the USSR that could lead to war. Yet what is the connection with an American arms dealer? |
Setting | Gibraltar, Bratislava, London, Vienna, Tangiers, Afghanistan |
Villain | General Georgi Koskov (Jeroen Krabbe), Brad Whitaker (Joe Don Baker) |
Bond Girls | Kara Milovy (Maryam d'Abo) |
Henchmen | Necros (Andreas Wisniewski) |
Allies | General Leonid Pushkin (John Rhys-Davies), Felix Leiter (John Terry), Kamran Shah (Art Malik), Saunders (Thomas Wheatley), Sir Frederick Gray (Geoffrey Keen), General Anatol Gogol (Walter Gotell) |
Song Singer | a-ha |
Source | The opening sequence is based on Ian Fleming's short story of the same name. |
A strong start to Dalton's Bond, complete with a new gadget-laden Aston Martin. Originally the story would have revolved around General Gogol's intention to kill British spies, but as Walter Gotell was ill he only appears briefly, and John Rhys-Davies plays a replacement character. Felix Leiter finally returns to a Bond film for the first official time since 1973, but sadly in only a blink-and-you'll-miss-him role.
16. Licence to Kill - (Timothy Dalton) 1989
Director | John Glen |
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Plot | Bond helps Felix Leiter arrest a drug lord, who escapes and feeds Leiter to a shark and kills Leiter's wife. Bond resigns from the Secret Service to seek revenge. |
Setting | Florida Keys and Isthmus, a fictional Central American country. |
Villain | Franz Sanchez (Robert Davi) |
Bond Girls | Pam Bouvier (Carey Lowell), Lupe Lamora (Talisa Soto) |
Henchmen | Milton Krest (Anthony Zerbe), Dario (Benicio Del Toro), Professor Joe Butcher (Wayne Newton), Killifer (Everett McGill) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (David Hedison), Della Leiter (Priscilla Barnes), Sharkey (Frank McRae) |
Song Singer | Gladys Knight |
Source | Milton Krest appeared in Fleming's short story 'The Hildebrand Rarity' and Felix being eaten by a shark came from the novel Live and Let Die. |
The last Bond film for six years, and the last for Dalton, Robert Brown and Caroline Bliss. This film remains the most adult in the series, and also has the best scenes featuring Q, who is finally allowed out and about on a mission. The climactic oil tanker chase is a highlight of the series.
Piercing: The Pierce Brosnan Era
A new Bond Era also marks a new M, Dame Judi Dench, and a new Moneypenny, played by the appropriately named Samantha Bond. Finally Bond is seen working for an organisation that consists of more than an office, hat stand and a lab in which Q tinkers with watches. M, Q and Moneypenny are joined by recurring characters Bill Tanner and Robinson, while Q gains an assistant and later replacement, played by John Cleese.
17. GoldenEye (Pierce Brosnan) - 1995
Director | Martin Campbell |
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Plot | GoldenEye is a Cold War era electromagnetic pulse weapon mounted in two satellites. With the Cold War over, a criminal with a connection to Bond's past plans to use this against London. |
Setting | Russia, French Riviera, London and Cuba |
Villain | Alec Trevelyan 006 (Sean Bean) |
Bond Girls | Natalya Fyodorovna Simonova (Izabella Scorupco), Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen) |
Henchmen | General Ourumov (Gottfried John), Boris Grishenko (Alan Cumming) |
Allies | Jack Wade (Joe Don Baker), Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky (Robbie Coltrane), Bill Tanner (Michael Kitchen) |
Song Singer | Tina Turner |
Source | Not directly based on any work by Ian Fleming, although the idea of a villain attacking London with a nuclear device in revenge for the Second World War comes from Moonraker. The title was the name of Fleming's house. |
The reason behind the gap between making Licence to Kill and GoldenEye was caused by legal wranglings over television distribution rights. MGM/UA were merging with Pathé and Danjaq, the company that actually made the Bond films, felt the television distribution deal was unfair.
Minnie Driver plays Irina, Zukovsky's tone-deaf Russian mistress and nightclub singer. This film also inspired the phenomenally successful GoldenEye 007 - video game.
18.Tomorrow Never Dies (Pierce Brosnan) - 1997
Director | Roger Spottiswoode |
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Plot | A media mogul manipulates Britain and China into declaring war in order to get good ratings. |
Setting | The Khyber Pass, South China Sea, London, Oxford, Hamburg and Saigon |
Villain | Elliot Carver (Jonathan Pryce) |
Bond Girls | Wai Lin (Michelle Yeoh), Paris Carver (Teri Hatcher) |
Henchmen | Stamper (Götz Otto), Henry Gupta (Ricky Jay), Dr Kaufman (Vincent Schiavelli) |
Allies | Admiral Roebuck (Geoffrey Palmer), Charles Robinson (Colin Salmon), Jack Wade (Joe Don Baker) |
Song Singer | Sheryl Crow |
Source | Not based on any Ian Fleming story. |
19. The World is Not Enough (Pierce Brosnan) - 1999
Director | Michael Apted |
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Plot | Terrorist Renard threatens a billionaire oil baron's daughter. |
Setting | London (including outside MI6 Headquarters and Millennium Dome), Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkey |
Villain | Elektra King (Sophie Marceau), Viktor 'Renard' Zokas (Robert Carlyle) |
Bond Girls | Dr Christmas Jones (Denise Richards), Dr Molly Warmflash (Serena Scott-Thomas) |
Henchmen | Bullion 'The Bull' (Goldie) |
Allies | Valentin Zukovsky (Robbie Coltrane), Charles Robinson (Colin Salmon), Bill Tanner (Michael Kitchen) |
Song Singer | Garbage |
Source | The title comes from the Bond family motto. |
This is the first appearance of John Cleese as Q's assistant, who Bond nicknames 'R'. It is also the last film in which Desmond Llewellyn appears.
20. Die Another Day (Pierce Brosnan) - 2002
Director | Lee Tamahori |
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Plot | Bond was betrayed in Korea! Freed, Bond investigates the connection between dodgy diamonds and tycoon Gustav Graves. |
Setting | North Korea, Hong Kong, England, Cuba, Iceland |
Villain | Colonel Moon (Will Yun Lee) / Gustav Graves (Toby Stephens) |
Bond Girls | Jacintha 'Jinx' Jonselle (Halle Berry), Miranda Frost (Rosamund Pike) |
Henchmen | Zao (Rick Yune), Mr Kil (Lawrence Makoare) |
Allies | General Moon (Kenneth Tsang), Charles Robinson (Colin Salmon), Damian Falco (Michael Madsen) |
Song Singer | Madonna |
Source | A new story for the film. |
John Cleese is now Q, full time; Desmond Llewelyn sadly passed away before this film, made to celebrate the Bond films' 40th anniversary.
Blond Bond? The Daniel Craig Era
In the early 21st Century, Bond was played by an actor who, apparently controversially for some reason, didn't have naturally dark hair. His era loses the team ethos, returning to the angry, driven solitary wolf approach of the Dalton days.
The Craig era does at least finally feature Felix Leiter again, even if initially missing Moneypenny and Q.
21. Casino Royale (Daniel Craig) - 2006
Director | Martin Campbell |
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Plot | A secret, powerful criminal organisation uses Le Chiffre as their banker, but Bond foils their attempts to destroy an aeroplane and Le Chiffre desperately needs money. If Bond can beat him at poker in the Casino Royale, Le Chiffre will have no choice but to ask for protection from his former terrorist allies in exchange for information. Or will he? |
Setting | Prague, Madagascar, Bahamas, Miami, Montenegro, Venice |
Villain | Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen) |
Bond Girls | Vesper Lynd (Eva Green), Solange (Caterina Murino) |
Henchmen | Mr White (Jesper Christiansen), Alex Dimitrios (Simon Abkarian) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (Jeffrey Wright), René Mathis (Giancarlo Giannini) |
Song Singer | 'You Know My Name' Chris Cornell |
Source | Parts of the film are surprisingly faithful to the first Bond novel. |
A strong start and finally an official version of Ian Fleming's first novel.
22. Quantum of Solace (Daniel Craig) - 2008
Director | Marc Forster |
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Plot | Bond seeks revenge against the secret criminal organisation, which he learns is called 'Quantum', stumbling on a plan to own all the water in a desert |
Setting | Italy, Austria, Haiti, Bolivia, Russia |
Villain | Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric) |
Bond Girls | Camille (Olga Kurylenko), Strawberry Fields (Gemma Aterton) |
Henchmen | Mr White (Jesper Christiansen), General Medrano (Joaquín Cosio) |
Allies | Felix Leiter (Jeffrey Wright), René Mathis (Giancarlo Giannini), Bill Tanner (Rory Kinnear), Foreign Secretary (Tim Pigott-Smith) |
Song Singer | 'Another Way to Die', Jack White and Alicia Keys |
Source | The title comes from the Ian Fleming short story |
This film begins where the previous film ended, forming the second part of the same story, with Bond battling Quantum.
C. Happy and Glorious (Daniel Craig) - 2012
Director | Danny Boyle |
---|---|
Plot | James Bond must escort the Queen to the opening of the 2012 London Olympic Games |
Setting | Buckingham Palace, Olympic Stadium |
Bond Girls | Her Royal Highness Queen Elizabeth II (Herself) |
A short film that formed part of the Opening Ceremony of the London Olympic Games. The Queen won an honorary BAFTA award for her role in playing herself, although a stunt double, rather than the Queen herself, is believed to have done the actual parachute2 jump from a helicopter.
23. Skyfall (Daniel Craig) - 2012
Director | Sam Mendes |
---|---|
Plot | A former agent seeks revenge against M. Only Bond can stop him. |
Setting | Istanbul, England, Shanghai, Macau, Scotland |
Villain | Raoul Silva (Javier Bardem) |
Bond Girls | Eve Moneypenny (Naomie Harris), Séverine (Bérénice Marlohe) |
Henchmen | Patrice (Ola Rapace) |
Allies | Gareth Mallory (Ralph Fiennes), Kincade (Albert Finney), Bill Tanner (Rory Kinnear) |
Song Singer | Adele |
Source | Not based on any work by Ian Fleming |
Finally for the Craig era we get a Moneypenny (Naomie Harris), a new Q, played by Ben Whishaw rather than a return to John Cleese. We also get a new M, played by Ralph Fiennes.
Recurring Characters
One extra piece of trivia is that Desmond Llewelyn has appeared in more James Bond films than any other actor, playing the role of Q.
Year | Film | James Bond | M | Q | Moneypenny | Felix Leiter |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1962 | Dr. No | Sean Connery | Bernard Lee | Peter Burton | Lois Maxwell | Jack Lord |
1963 | From Russia with Love | Desmond Llewelyn | ||||
1964 | Goldfinger | Cec Linder | ||||
1965 | Thunderball | Rik Van Nutter | ||||
1967 | You Only Live Twice | |||||
1969 | On Her Majesty's Secret Service | George Lazenby | ||||
1971 | Diamonds Are Forever | Sean Connery | Norman Burton | |||
1973 | Live and Let Die | Roger Moore | David Hedison | |||
1974 | The Man with the Golden Gun | Desmond Llewelyn | ||||
1977 | The Spy Who Loved Me | |||||
1979 | Moonraker | |||||
1981 | For Your Eyes Only | |||||
1983 | Octopussy | Robert Brown | ||||
1985 | A View to a Kill | |||||
1987 | The Living Daylights | Timothy Dalton | Caroline Bliss | John Terry | ||
1989 | Licence to Kill | David Hedison | ||||
1995 | GoldenEye | Pierce Brosnan | Judi Dench | Samantha Bond | ||
1997 | Tomorrow Never Dies | |||||
1999 | The World Is Not Enough | John Cleese3 | ||||
2002 | Die Another Day | |||||
2006 | Casino Royale | Daniel Craig | Jeffrey Wright | |||
2008 | Quantum of Solace | |||||
2012 | Skyfall | Ralph Fiennes4 | Ben Whishaw | Naomie Harris | ||
2015 | Spectre | |||||
Unofficial Bond Films | ||||||
1967 | Casino Royale | David Niven et al | John Huston | Geoffrey Bayldon | Barbara Bouchet | |
1983 | Never Say Never Again | Sean Connery | Edward Fox | Alec McCowen | Pamela Salem | Bernie Casey |
Recurring Actors in the Same Role
Actor | Character | Number of Films | Years |
---|---|---|---|
Joe Don Baker5 | Jack Wade | 2 | 1995-1997 |
Jesper Christiansen | Mr White | 2 | 2006-2008 |
John Cleese | Q (and Q's Assistant) | 2 | 1999-2002 |
Robbie Coltrane | Valentin Zukovsky | 2 | 1995-1999 |
Timothy Dalton | James Bond | 2 | 1987-1989 |
Giancarlo Giannini | René Mathis | 2 | 2006-2008 |
Eunice Grayson (& Monica van der Syl) | Sylvia Trench | 2 | 1962-1963 |
David Hedison | Felix Leiter | 2 | 1973-1989 |
Clifton James | Sheriff JW Pepper | 2 | 1973-1974 |
Richard Kiel | Jaws | 2 | 1977-1979 |
Rory Kinnear | Bill Tanner | 2 | 2008-2012+ |
Michael Kitchen | Bill Tanner | 2 | 1995-1999 |
Jeffrey Wright | Felix Leiter | 2 | 2006-2008 |
Daniel Craig | James Bond | 3 | 2006-2012+ |
Colin Salmon | Charles Robinson | 3 | 1997-2002 |
Samantha Bond | Miss Moneypenny | 4 | 1995-2002 |
Pierce Brosnan | James Bond | 4 | 1995-2002 |
Robert Brown | M (and Admiral Hargreaves) | 5 | 1977-1989 |
Sir Sean Connery | James Bond | 6 | 1962-19716 |
Walter Gotell | General Anatol Gogol | 6 | 1977-1987 |
Geoffrey Keen | Sir Frederick Gray | 6 | 1977-1987 |
Dame Judi Dench | M | 7 | 1995-2012 |
Sir Roger Moore | James Bond | 7 | 1973-1985 |
Bernard Lee | M | 11 | 1962-1979 |
Lois Maxwell | Miss Moneypenny | 14 | 1962-1985 |
Desmond Llewellyn | Q | 17 | 1963-1999 |