Skyfall question
UltimateTruth
Posts: 140MI6 Agent
Something I can"t figure out.......
What is Bond's money source when he is "Enjoying death?"
Granted, his living quarters seem very spartan, but he seems to have enough cash to party like a rock star (after the scorpion, he buys a round for the entire bar).
If MI6 thought he was dead, Bond using an ATM after being shot off the top of the train would prove he was alive...
Are we to just assume that just because he's James Bond, he has magical access to cash ?
What is Bond's money source when he is "Enjoying death?"
Granted, his living quarters seem very spartan, but he seems to have enough cash to party like a rock star (after the scorpion, he buys a round for the entire bar).
If MI6 thought he was dead, Bond using an ATM after being shot off the top of the train would prove he was alive...
Are we to just assume that just because he's James Bond, he has magical access to cash ?
Comments
http://apbateman.com
Even MI6 don't know about ( with passport, money etc ). So I'd guess he used one of
these. Either that or he sold a kidney. )
Given his job it wouldn't be too far fetched for this money to be distributed to various locations which he might be able to access without his cash card.
and im sure Bond has a mate in that neck of the woods who he can call on (I do) and the Turkish people are very generous hospitapal people ,
He was living there as his tablets and other personal stuff were there too, so pleasuring young fillies in exchange for accommodation and other material goods may be another answer to where he got his money.
http://apbateman.com
1. He is found by locals in the river and rescued. A local doctor treats him
and takes care of him after he sees Bond's ID and Bond makes up an
explanation of why he was shot. Bond tells the doctor if he informs
any authorities his assailant(s) may return and kill him.
2. The doctor lets him recover at his home until he is somewhat healed.
Then he takes him to a friend who owns a bar at a seaside beach
frequented mostly by just village locals. The owner takes Bond to a
bank where he has money wired from a Swiss account he maintains
that he would have to use in an emergency. There is enough for him
to live on for several months. He pays the doctor for his treatment
and to get pain meds. He gets some clothes and sundries he'd need
to sustain him for a while.
3. Bond gives the bar owner money for a nearby beach rental that
the bar owner either also owns or a family member owns. He settles
there to recover further.
So there are many ways writer's can come up with to explain these situations but since they take up too much screen time and actually interrupt the flow (and speed) of the film, they either leave this to
the audience to fill in the blanks or actually end up filming them then
decide to cut them out later. There are many scenes from the series
that got left out of the finished film that were cut out of the final script or actual film.
PS - Bond only being able to pick up some clothes in a local village would
explain why he was in the type of attire he appeared at the beach. Many assume those clothes are what he would normally choose to own while "bumming around" somewhere, but IMO, they are only kind he could find
in nearby shops and he may have been actually wearing those clothes to blend in with the locals. It is on that basis I would not want to own an "Enjoying Death" shirt, jacket, etc.. Similar to this is the jacket he gets from the man he kills in QOS. It's not his jacket, nor necessarily the type he would buy. Not saying some might like it and want to own one anyway, just that for me, the idea he's wearing it is not a compelling reason to own one.
only to be attacked by a local Bandit. Who Bond fights against and helps
the locals win. A sort of " Magnificent 007 " )
"Okay, get the suit dry cleaned and you can sell it for £4,000. It's a Tom Ford. These cufflinks are also Tom Ford. You'll get £1500 for the pair. £500 for the shirt, £200 for the tie. Both Tom Ford too. You might find a pair of sunglasses in the pocket. They'll sell for £200 as they're Ford as well. Shoes by Crockett and Jones, again about £200 second hand. And my watch is an Omega. Should bring £3000-£4000. If you tell folk they were owned by James Bond you'll get a premium.
In return I want a place to live in on the beach. Nothing too flash, though. Loads of pills. Bottles of Heineken. Vast quantities. And get me some clothes. Again, nothing flash. Anything from the lower end of the British high street. But I need a really good jacket. Spend, say £600, on that. Get me something vintage."
) -{
its a haven for any thing fake, but if I was going back there the last thing id pack is my leather jacket its to hot there,
and as for the Heinekens ,its all Efes beer out there its so heavily advertised in the bars ,beach umbrellas ect just a thought ?
The distant hum of a vehicle caused Bond to head into the bushes that lined the track. He watched the battered truck approach and, once satisfied that its driver was alone and not a threat, flagged him down. The man spoke no English, Bond no Turkish, but he smiled and gestured for Bond to climb inside. At the nearest town Bond got out and handed the driver his cuff links by way of payment, the farmer smiled to reveal a gold tooth and raised the cufflinks towards his mouth and an opening between teeth.
In the town's café, Bond mimed using the phone. He dialled an Antalya name that he had memorised along with dozens of other numbers throughout the world. An English voice answered. It was Barkhorn, formerly 004, now retired after a bitter falling-out with M and living the Mediterranean life with his third wife, a nubile young Indian. The conversation was brief but Barkhorn immediately wired money to the town and said he'd have someone collect him the following day.
In Antalya, Barkhorn used his local blackmarket contacts to organise new papers to replace those Bond had lost in the river. He also set him up with a local doctor who was more than happy to do anything under the table...for enough cash. He patched up Bond, no questions asked and folded the money into his pocket. The former agent told Bond that his neighbour had a rustic beach house an hour away that he used when he wanted to get away from the world. The neighbour was in Australia visiting his son for 6 months, but Barkhorn had the key and gave it to Bond, asking him to post it back to him before he left and asking that he leave the shack as he'd found it.
The town was small. The tiny fishing industry that had been its backbone had all but disappeared and been replaced by a few holiday homes and a beach-front bar frequented by the odd backpacker who had drifted well off the beaten path, drug smugglers keeping their heads down before moving on to Germany and others of various nationalities who have simply dropped off the map. Nobody asked questions: they just drank hard, played hard and were rarely seen during daylight hours. Bond fit in perfectly.
Sounds like my dream retirement.
Bond wouldn't sell any old sh1te, would he ?
It's not looking good for him so far....
http://apbateman.com
Where as some of the official "Continuing " novels have been "So Low" )
Late Gardner ? )
Gardner suddenly doesn't look so bad. ) ( just my opinion )
so that you believe in the entire story, even the more fanciful parts. -{
Which so far no other writer has managed.
How good it is. :007)
wondering why they did the tube crash " for real " and not use models, as for most
casual viewers I'd asume they would think this scene was a model or cgi.