Discovering Bond

wahwahkitswahwahkits ellesmere port, englandPosts: 8MI6 Agent
Hi all, with me being new to this site there might be a thread elsewhere but i'd just like to ask how did you all discover James Bond?
I discovered him when my Dad took me to the pics (in my 11th birthday) to watch AVTAK. It was a revelation to me and is still one of my fave films to this day.

Comments

  • 2nd blind mouse2nd blind mouse Posts: 35MI6 Agent
    edited June 2007
    A cartoon with the most beautiful clip of music in it (I'd tell you, but I'm too embarrased), which I looked up and discovered was from Moonraker!

    Or so they said, upon watching the actual movie I realized that it was at best a mild homage and that the music appeared nowhere in the film. Still I enjoyed the experience much more than I did with previous encounters with Bond (watching small bits of LTK and NSNA earlier, and being bored/not really caring), and not too long after found myself viewing Goldeneye at my aunt's place, and I became a fan since that day.

    (NOTE: Up till that point, of course I know who and what James Bond was, but the aforementioned thing was the first I really got into it)
  • wahwahkitswahwahkits ellesmere port, englandPosts: 8MI6 Agent
    Same with me, I knew of James Bond but had never taken an interest until my dad took me to pics!! And now 22 years on i'm more obsessed with it than ever!!:)
  • DAWUSSDAWUSS My homepagePosts: 517MI6 Agent
    For me it was Goldeneye for the N64. Can't remember any specifics though.
  • 3rbrown3rbrown MI6 Top Secret - Scotland, GlaPosts: 100MI6 Agent
    Goldeneye trailer at the age of 4 but I thought much of it I thought Bonds were just other action films, how wrong I was
  • PendragonPendragon ColoradoPosts: 2,640MI6 Agent
    I was nine, and my uncle sat me down in his living room to watch FYEO. It all spawned form there.

    ~Pen -{
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  • Slyguy3129Slyguy3129 Posts: 58MI6 Agent
    This is an interseting topic.

    Unfortunatley due to my age, I had not known Bond or any of the movies until maybe the last 5-6 years.

    I recieved a N64 for Christmas (the year escapes me) with the hit Goldeneye. After my dad had watched me play it for hours on end, he informaed me that there were plenty of movies to go along with it. The next day after he got off from work he ran by Blockbuster and rented Goldfinger for me to watch. Brought it home and started talking about it. I had no idea that Connery had been Bond or ever that he was the first. I was a big Connery fan, because at the time my father and I's favorite movie was "The Rock" with Connery and Cage. I immediately sat down and watch Goldfinger, and from then on out everyweekend till I had seen all of them, I would rent one and watch it. And so another Bond fan was born.
  • stumac7stumac7 ScotlandPosts: 295MI6 Agent
    I 'liked' bond until Goldeneye on the N64, which I loved and became obsessed with. This made me re-watch Goldeneye the film and spot the similarities.

    Then one day I was at a car boot sale and there was a guy selling most of the bond films on video dirt cheap (worked out at about £1 each). Most were the editions with the pictures going along the side, so me being a bit of a completist I bought the rest of the set.

    Then I was in Borders looking in the 'bargain bin' and saw all the bond special edition dvd's at £3.99 each, so bought the lot and sold the videos on ebay. Finally bought all the ultimate editions on-line when they became buy one get one free. Again sold the other dvd's on ebay.
  • Willie GarvinWillie Garvin Posts: 1,412MI6 Agent
    edited June 2007
    I saw Goldfinger during it's first week in the cinema in 1964--and before the movie was over,007 had another fan.:)After Goldfinger,I saw the From Russia With Love/Dr.No double bill, and a few months later attended one of the first screenings for Thunderball,which--in 1965--was a major motion picture event.This was the very height of Bondmania-a peroid which will never come again.Looking back,it's really quite interesting to realize that Eon once made their James Bond films every year--there were no 2 or 3 year waits between films,and their quality didn't suffer because of that schedule either.
  • Mark HazardMark Hazard West Midlands, UKPosts: 495MI6 Agent
    As a young kid I would read anything, comics: Beano, Dandy, Valiant & Knockout, TV21, Topper, Beezer etc - as well as the daily papers at home (Mirror and Birmingham Evening Mail) and even my sisters comics (Bunty and Judy anyone? - one of which sometimes carried a serial about Jane Bond, but other than the title I can't remember any more about the character).

    When I ran out of the comics and papers at home, if I could afford it I would occasionaly buy a DC Batman or Superman comic. And of course there was the Public Library - but had to settle for books available on a kid's ticket.

    When I had exhausted these options I used to delve into my dad's bookcase, although the only books that I remember were a Sherlock Holmes novel and three Bond Pan paperbacks: CR, FRWL & DN (which were the start of my collection).

    I enjoyed these three Bond books so much (I was hooked) that I enquired for more of the series at my local library, where I was told that they were in the adults section and weren't available to children (this was the vey early 60s by the way, I was a Junior school pupil, aged 9 or 10). Upon telling them that I had read three of them, they told me to come back the following week when they would have an answer to my query. The following week I was told that I was to be allowed one book at a time after one of the librarians had vetted the book. The only one I was denied access to was TSWLM, I had to wait until we moved and actually didn't get to read it until I started work, when I bought the then current Pan paperback version of it.

    I was well and truly hooked by trhe time I became aware of the film GF at the age of 12 (DN & FRWL had managed to pass me by).
  • TOOTSTOOTS Posts: 114MI6 Agent
    CONFESSIONS OF A BOND FAN!

    My first memory of Bond was the British TV premiere of Dr No in October 1975. I remember my parents sitting down to watch it (they'd seen the films in the 60's at the cinema!) and I remember watching it myself - vaguely. However, the emergence of the dragon tank scared the living daylights out of me and, in my alarm, alerted my parents to the fact that it was way past my bedtime. I was, thus, frog-marched to bed!

    Subsequently, I remember the odd, early British TV screenings/premieres of the films but I became a fan on holiday in Carnarveon, North Wales in August 1977. A trip to the cinema (it was a rainy day) resulted in me seeing The Spy Who Loved Me. From the ski-chase to the Lotus to the Liparus to the Pyramids, I was hooked. From women with smoke-jet cigarettes to the underwater emergence of Atlantis, I was enthralled. Jaws' first appearance, cloaked in shadow, was genuinely terrifying. And, to cap it all, Roger Moore as James Bond finally gave me a hero I could respond to; cool, daring, adventurous, funny, assured, sophisticated and, uniquely, British.

    Of course, other things struck me too; Ken Adam's giant, gleaming sets, Marvin Hamlisch's shimmering, exciting score and the compact and ingenious gadgets (I have never looked at ordinary objects the same way since!). I was too young to appreciate the libidinous quality to the film - that came later - but I did enjoy the humour. The little knowledge I had informed me that there were such things as Polaris submarines and Lotus cars and Pyramids and so the story actually seemed scarily possible to my young mind! (However, a little knowledge is always dangerous - later, I had nightmares when I read the publicity about Moonraker being "not science fiction but science fact"!).

    Remember, this was 1977. In the next few years I was to be bombarded by Star Wars, Star Trek and Superman, all of which I would love. But Bond held me and the damage had been done! My theory is that we become Bond fans after the second Bond film we see. This is because we connect the dots and see the similarities between the second and first Bond film we see. The gunbarrel, the music, the titles, the continuity characters trigger a sense of connectivity in us that makes us want to track down the whole series. Anyway, I digress.

    In 1978 I saw The Spy Who Loved Me again (in a double bill with The Pink Panther Strikes Again - tag line; "Nobody Does It Better Than Bond and The Panther Together!") as well as a double bill of the first two Roger Moore Bond films (chosen in preference to a double-bill of DAF and OHMSS - heresy!). From that point on, I would always watch the "Bond is Back to Back/Double Double-O-Seven" double bills that traditionally followed in the Easter after the release of a new film (usually consisting of the latest two films) which are now, alas, extinct due to video and DVD.

    I began to anticipate the each film on TV or the cinema. In those days, when Bond films were due to be shown on TV, it was a BIG thing. They were advertised heavily, sometimes months in advance and I (and the nation - they garnered record viewing figures) would eagerly await each screening. In September 1978, I remember rushing down to check the TV Times one morning to find that a Bond film called OHMSS had me confused. George Lazenby puzzled and momentarily disappointed me but, after a surprisingly accurate explanation from my parents, my education continued with vigour. Occasionally I stumbled - I remember arguing with a friend, saying that there hadn't yet been a movie of Casino Royale and that if there had, it would never have starred Peter Sellers and David Niven, both as Bond!

    Also in 1978, I saw an article in my mother's "Women" magazine (about the return of Sean Connery as 007 in Warhead - "The Battle of the Bonds") which I cut out and pasted in a scrap book. Thus, began my James Bond collection, which was soon followed by the Moonraker soundtrack and brochure!

    However, it would only be a matter of time until I discovered Fleming, Ian Fleming.

    I had been given an odd assortment of Ian Fleming novels in 1980 and I remember trying to read The Man With The Golden Gun (a dog-eared film tie-in paperback!) and giving up. This wasn't the Bond I knew - where was Nick Nack and Sheriff Pepper? These stories were old-fashioned and action-less and I didn't understand half of what I read. It was only when I was holiday in Devon in the Easter on 1982 that I trawled those beautiful second-hand book shops and bought most of the novels which I then sat down to read, in order. That summer I won a prize in school and the book token I received was used to order a copy of Colonel Sun (it wasn't readily available). That same autumn, I bought the paperback of the new John Gardner Bond novel, Licence Renewed. Thus, my introduction to the literary Bond had a seamless journey from Fleming to Amis to Gardner. Of course, my whole perception of Bond changed and I began to realise that 007 had been vastly misunderstood and mis-interpreted.

    Anyway, until they find a cure, I'm stuck with Bondmania!
  • DEFIANT 74205DEFIANT 74205 Perth, AustraliaPosts: 1,881MI6 Agent
    edited June 2007
    Having been born in 1981, my first connection with Bond was some time in the mid to late 1980s when I was still living in Hong Kong. I watched The Man With The Golden Gun on TV, and that was my first taste of Bond. I liked it, but I wasn't quite a fan just yet.

    When my family moved to Australia in 1990, I started renting out Bond movies from the video store (my main aim being to learn English at the time). I remember watching the first few Connery Bonds - Dr No, From Russia With Love, Goldfinger and Thunderball, and from then on, I was hooked. The first Bond I went to see at the cinema was Goldeneye, but I have to say that I was extremely disappointed with the way they "modernised" Bond. It remains my second least favourite Bond film today.

    I started getting into the literary Bond a few years later when I became more proficient with English, but for some reason, I could never read through an entire book. I found reading as a whole to be boring. It wasn't until a few years ago that I finally bought all 14 of Ian Fleming's novels and read them all, in order. I have not, and refuse to read any Bond novels that are not written by Fleming.
    "Watch the birdie, you bastard!"
  • Brosnan_fanBrosnan_fan Sydney, AustraliaPosts: 521MI6 Agent
    I had seen TSWLM as a boy with my family, but I did not actually become a Bond fan as such until the mid 80s, when I started watching the Connery classics on TV. I was watching DN and as soon as Ursula Andress emerged from the sea in her bikini, I was absolutely hooked. :D
    "Well, he certainly left with his tails between his legs."
  • HardyboyHardyboy Posts: 5,906Chief of Staff
    My first encounter with James Bond would have been in autumn 1972, when I started the first grade. A kid in my class had a "James Bond 007" lunch box, but to my mind the stylized 007 logo, with the gun coming out of the seven, looked like a word: OOT. "Oot?" I thought. "Who's Oot?" Eventually I figured out who Bond was, and I sort-of lingered in the living room a bit when my parents and family were watching Bond films. I didn't see one all the way through, though, until TSWLM.
    Vox clamantis in deserto
  • John DrakeJohn Drake On assignmentPosts: 2,564MI6 Agent
    I can remember watching Moonraker at a friend's house on video in perhaps 1982 or 83. That's the earliest my memory can place of actually watching a Bond film. However, I can remember seeing a For Your Eyes Only album on sale and knowing who Bond was, so I must have seen one on TV. The first I saw at the cinema would have been The Living Daylights in 1987.
  • AlexAlex The Eastern SeaboardPosts: 2,694MI6 Agent
    It was the mid 70s. I was around 5 or six, and we were stationed in Tel Aviv. My dad brought home the DAF reel, and the family and neighborhood set out lawn chairs and blankets in a basketball court.

    A couple of things I remember very well.

    1) The sound of that reel to reel.

    2) Mr. Kidd was creepy!

    3) Purple bikinis evoke strange feelings.

    4) Why does my dad always have to store his pipe tobacco in old dorito tins? :))
  • superadosuperado Regent's Park West (CaliforniaPosts: 2,656MI6 Agent
    My dad let me stay up to watch FRWL, during 1973 or 74. Back then, ABC in the US had exclusive broadcast rigths to the Bonds, usually on Sudnay evenings and were promoted as special broadcast events not unlike the 10 Commandments on Easter. The effect on me was captivating, and the next day in my 1st grade class, I drew James Bond holding a briefcase and a gun for my picture of the day.

    Well, anyway, I'm a bit proud to say that with the minimal gadgetry in FRWL, I was attracted to the "essence" of Bond despite the larger-than-life, comic book proportions that the series evolved into, which I have yet to witness; don't get me wrong, the gagetry eventually completed its spell on me, when I saw the GF broadcast in 1975, prompting me to ask my visiting aunt to buy me a Corgi DB5.
    "...the purposeful slant of his striding figure looked dangerous, as if he was making quickly for something bad that was happening further down the street." -SMERSH on 007 dossier photo, Ch. 6 FRWL.....
  • AlexAlex The Eastern SeaboardPosts: 2,694MI6 Agent
    superado wrote:
    My dad let me stay up to watch FRWL, during 1973 or 74. Back then, ABC in the US had exclusive broadcast rigths to the Bonds, usually on Sudnay evenings and were promoted as special broadcast events not unlike the 10 Commandments on Easter. The effect on me was captivating, and the next day in my 1st grade class, I drew James Bond holding a briefcase and a gun for my picture of the day.

    Well, anyway, I'm a bit proud to say that with the minimal gadgetry in FRWL, I was attracted to the "essence" of Bond despite the larger-than-life, comic book proportions that the series evolved into, which I have yet to witness; don't get me wrong, the gagetry eventually completed its spell on me, when I saw the GF broadcast in 1975, prompting me to ask my visiting aunt to buy me a Corgi DB5.
    I wish we had gotten ABC. Or any American channel to be honest. All I got was the "Armed Forces Network" (AFN) The sunday night movie would be something like KRAMER VS. KRAMER. Or if I was real lucky, a John Wayne flick. Must have seen RIO LOBO a million times. (Never knew that was Robert Mitchum's son!) :))
  • LoeffelholzLoeffelholz The United States, With LovePosts: 8,998Quartermasters
    superado wrote:
    My dad let me stay up to watch FRWL, during 1973 or 74. Back then, ABC in the US had exclusive broadcast rigths to the Bonds, usually on Sudnay evenings and were promoted as special broadcast events not unlike the 10 Commandments on Easter.

    Absolutely B-)

    ABC's "Sunday Night at the Movies." That's how I first experienced Bond as well...and he had my undivided attention :o

    In Lincoln, Illinois, where I grew up, there was a classic 1920's-era movie palace, the Lincoln Theatre. In 1971, at the age of 9, my buddies and I walked the four blocks from our houses to the theatre---which at the time was a bit timeworn---and saw Diamonds Are Forever on the big screen. The moment when Sean Connery hangs outside the Whyte House changed everything for me...
    Check out my Amazon author page! Mark Loeffelholz
    "I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
    "Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
  • JamesbondjrJamesbondjr Posts: 462MI6 Agent
    The films:
    I used to stay up and watch the films when they were on tv with my dad when I was quite young, 5 or 6 maybe. But I really got into it when I was about 14, just as Goldeneye was released. I decided to watch them all again as I hadn't seen them for years and was hooked.

    Books:
    Before last week I had read CR about 10 years ago. Then i decided to re-read it again last week and again was hooked. As soon as I had finished CR I started FRWL, I'm now on DN. I wanted to read them in order but only had those 3, ive ordered the rest from amazon and im going to read them chronologically when ive finished Dr. No.
    1- On Her Majesty's Secret Service 2- Casino Royale 3- Licence To Kill 4- Goldeneye 5- From Russia With Love
  • Andy A 007Andy A 007 Posts: 199MI6 Agent
    I was 8. I came home from school one afternoon and my parents had rented a movie called Tomorrow Never Dies. I immediately fell in love and began to watch all the Connery and Moore films soonafter, easily preferring the Connery ones to TND. Its all history from there.
  • superadosuperado Regent's Park West (CaliforniaPosts: 2,656MI6 Agent
    superado wrote:
    My dad let me stay up to watch FRWL, during 1973 or 74. Back then, ABC in the US had exclusive broadcast rigths to the Bonds, usually on Sudnay evenings and were promoted as special broadcast events not unlike the 10 Commandments on Easter.

    Absolutely B-)

    ABC's "Sunday Night at the Movies." That's how I first experienced Bond as well...and he had my undivided attention :o

    In Lincoln, Illinois, where I grew up, there was a classic 1920's-era movie palace, the Lincoln Theatre. In 1971, at the age of 9, my buddies and I walked the four blocks from our houses to the theatre---which at the time was a bit timeworn---and saw Diamonds Are Forever on the big screen. The moment when Sean Connery hangs outside the Whyte House changed everything for me...

    I can imagine how iconic that scene would be to a 9-year old Bond 1st timer! Did you also afterwards find yourself fixated with redheaded girls and cassette tapes? :))

    DAF...my grandparents took my two older siblings, my sisters with them to watch that and left me behind because I was too young (and maybe too because I was a fidgety, whiney, big pain in the butt when they took me to watch this really long boring western that had too much "talk talk talk" :)), come to think, it might have been Eastwood!), and when they got back, all my sisters did was tell me about the car on two wheels and the coolery of Bond, which really got me mad!
    "...the purposeful slant of his striding figure looked dangerous, as if he was making quickly for something bad that was happening further down the street." -SMERSH on 007 dossier photo, Ch. 6 FRWL.....
  • JennyFlexFanJennyFlexFan Posts: 1,497MI6 Agent
    Goldeneye for the N64 probably produced many Bond fans for the 90s, and is one of the main reasons why Goldeneye, the film, is so well loved and considered "classic" to fans. It's what drew me in. I played it, saw the movie, then saw AVTAK on TV and I was hooked. Shortly after I went to see TND in the theater and liked it. I remembered thinking how much Paris Carver's hair reminded me of Natalya.
  • the golden gun guythe golden gun guy USAPosts: 102MI6 Agent
    edited June 2007
    The first time i ever even heard of James Bond was when i was 4 or 5, my parents were going to see a movie and i asked them what movie they were seeing and they said a James Bond movie and that i couldn't go and I said "That sounds dumb,I don't even want to go." :o

    Then on a Saturday night in August of 2001 when I was 9 years old I wanted to rent a movie (probably some dumb kids cartoon movie). Then just as me and my mom were about to leave my dad announced that their friends were coming over. My mom said we would go rent a movie as soon as they left as long as I behaved. So i waited in my room while they talked and talked and talked, then finally I was tired of waiting so I went and sat by my mom and whispered "When will they leave?" I didn't think that was so bad,but when they left my mom said that I couldn't rent a movie. I was REALLY MAD X-(!!!!! So then I automatically went to see if there was a movie on tv,and there was! It was Dr.No! But I didn't know what it was, I asked and my older brother and dad said it was a James Bond movie and that I should watch it. SO I DID!!! And I loved it! Then the tv station said next week another James Bond movie called From Russia With Love was on,I thought the title didn't sound great but I watched it anyway and I loved it more than the first one :D. The next week my dad was gone and my mom hated James Bond and thought I was too young to watch it so she wouldn't let me watch Goldfinger :(. From then on I watched Bond films whenever I could,on tv,or renting them. Wow, my misbehaving changed my life in a GREAT way. A Bond fan was born :007)
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    On my grandfather's death in 1966 I was given his books- Agatha Christie, Alistair MacLean, and Ian Fleming. I read them all voraciously, and Bond immediately became my favourite. Aged 8, hooked for life. Later, I remember my 10 year old confusion on finding Colonel Sun and looking for others with no success.

    I began pressing to see the Bond movies ( no DVD or video in the 60s, young 'uns, and they weren't yet on TV; you had to go to the cinema) and soon caught up, mostly on double bills. In those days and in these parts, a new film (or perhaps a re-release on a double bill) would first appear at a big cinema in Glasgow (city). After a few weeks there it would begin showing in Paisley (big town) before ending up in Barrhead (small town). I would therefore see a given film multiple times in the cinema (my record was 14 times, but that was a bit later- DAF).

    Hand in hand with all that went my interest- oh, let's be honest- obsession with Bond music. Starting off with cover albums and compilations (The Best Of Bond, Cat!) which were naturally vinyl, then into the OSTs proper and John Barry's various albums.

    Apparently a lot of this has rubbed of on Son Of Barbel, who has begun collecting and reading Bond stuff after growing up seeing the movies, playing the games, etc. Of course, it helps that he can see any of the films or read any of the books whenever he wants, which wasn't possible when I was his age!
  • LoeffelholzLoeffelholz The United States, With LovePosts: 8,998Quartermasters
    LOL, Barbel---Loeff Jr and Loeff III have no idea what it's like to pine on, for months or years, without a Bond fix...

    Kids these days :v :D
    Check out my Amazon author page! Mark Loeffelholz
    "I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
    "Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    LOL, Barbel---Loeff Jr and Loeff III have no idea what it's like to pine on, for months or years, without a Bond fix...

    Kids these days :v :D

    (Monty Python mode:) "I remember when I were a lad..." {[]
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