OHMSS- Bond getting his Happily Ever After?
James Suzuki
New ZealandPosts: 2,406MI6 Agent
So I just finished reading OHMSS.
I'd seen the film heaps of times, knowing how it would end but this is the first time reading it. I really enjoyed it. My favourite Fleming Novel would be DN, but I have a feeling OHMSS might take that top spot. It was so sad, knowing how it would end.
My favourite chapter would have to be, Love For Breakfast. I reckon that moment in which Bond decides that he loves Tracy, and wants to marry her is so well written. -{
Its no doubt that Fleming considered keeping Tracy alive. Does anyone else wish this was the final novel? And that Bond had a happy ending?
I'd seen the film heaps of times, knowing how it would end but this is the first time reading it. I really enjoyed it. My favourite Fleming Novel would be DN, but I have a feeling OHMSS might take that top spot. It was so sad, knowing how it would end.
My favourite chapter would have to be, Love For Breakfast. I reckon that moment in which Bond decides that he loves Tracy, and wants to marry her is so well written. -{
Its no doubt that Fleming considered keeping Tracy alive. Does anyone else wish this was the final novel? And that Bond had a happy ending?
“The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. "
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
Comments
Personally, I wish Bond never got married. Thunderball would have been a good "final novel"
1. GE 2. MR 3. OP 4. TMWTGG 5. TSWLM 6. TND 7. TWINE 8.DN 9. GF 10. AVTAK
IMHO, I think it was a great way to show more of Bond's character.
I reckon it would have been a good final novel, with Blofeld dead, Bond married. but look at me. I'm a romantic ) )
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
As for a Happy Ending. NO! Not for me thanks. )
Yes, the Book ends with Bond collapsing to the Floor -{
But had to bring him back due to public demand.
Hmm wonder what would have happened to the entire series if Fleming had carried this out
In1962, with James Bond and Sean Connery just launched in the cinema and hopefully going to explode?
Marry him off?
Not a chance.
However, a happy ending? Pfft! Bond has already had more than his fair share of 'happy endings'.
I wouldn't change a thing about the ending of OHMSS: it's the tragedy at the end that makes it all the more profoundly felt and, had the series ended there, just imagine how rich it would seem to consider what happened next?
Chandler started his next novel with Marlowe chafing at his now idle rich lifestyle (though in love with his wife) and keen to get back to normal business but died before finishing (it was later finished by another writer, Robert B. Parker). Given Fleming's admiration of Chandler, if Tracy had lived then pehaps this was the direction he would have gone in.
A lot of Chandler readers wonder what direction he - Chandler - would have gone with beyond the first couple of chapters of POODLE SPRINGS. Consensus seems to be that Chandler had painted himself into a bit of a corner with the marriage, and besides how would Marlowe have survived living with spoiled brat Linda Loring? (Parker gets round this, IIRC, by having Marlowe strop off back LA regular Linda sulks - how many books could this have worked for?) Substitute Tracy here if you wish.... and consider the Marlowe books didn't rely on him coping a shag from some exotically named female per book as Bond
And as much as Fleming wrote about Chandler and admired his work, I don't recall ever seeing Fleming comment on the Marlowe-Loring union?
What was said? What was IF's view on marrying off the male lead, do you recall?
On a tangent, in Howard Hawks' film of "The Big Sleep" practically every female (not Agnes, of course) hankers for Marlowe in much the same way as happens in the Bond movies.
On a different tangent I thought "Poodle Springs" was passable but "Perchance To Dream" pretty poor. More recently I enjoyed "The Black-Eyed Blonde".
Well, Bogart isn't Marlowe, is he?
POODLE SPRINGS was, as you say, ok and I didn't like PTD at all. Couldn't see the point in a sequel to THE BIG SLEEP with PTD, nor to THE LONG GOODBYE with B-E B????
Some of the short stories in the Priess collection are far better, IHMO. Wonder if Black/Banville wil get a second gig? Hope not myself.
And I agree that Bogie ain't Marlowe- Mitchum is! (albeit about 15-20 years too late).
You, sir, are my new bessy mate (though read my PM! ) Mitch is Marlowe even in THE BIG SLEEP, swanning around 70s London in some very dubious fashions...
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