Question for vintage 007 fans ?
Thunderpussy
Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
On another thread it was mentioned that some members were around before
The Films even started. So I was wondering, Were some people already into
Bond just from the books, eagerly waiting for the next book ? and indeed what
Was your reaction to those first few films ? Was Connery the Bond you imagined.
Indeed did the films live up to your expectations ?
As the films were already up and running when I got into Bond, so I think it would
Be interesting to see some views from fans before it became the huge, world wide
Success and Icon it now is. -{
The Films even started. So I was wondering, Were some people already into
Bond just from the books, eagerly waiting for the next book ? and indeed what
Was your reaction to those first few films ? Was Connery the Bond you imagined.
Indeed did the films live up to your expectations ?
As the films were already up and running when I got into Bond, so I think it would
Be interesting to see some views from fans before it became the huge, world wide
Success and Icon it now is. -{
"I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
Comments
When FRWL came out, I think I became even more enthralled, to the point that I became thrilled at getting the toy briefcase for a present. This led to a seemingly endless series of summer neighborhood adventures as an imaginative but immature 00 agent fighting off or fighting with my male friends.
By the time GF comes out, the pop culture is screaming for anything Bond as much as it was for the Beatles and the whole EON/Bond culture took off. However, it wasn't until TB came out that I decided to start reading the Fleming novels. My father had all of them in paperback, so after reading TB I read the rest in the sequence they were published and I was hooked.
Not only did I find Fleming's writing to be wonderfully graphic and descriptive, it opened up a whole new world for me of foreign travel, history, cuisine, lanquage (I learned a LOT of new vocabulary from the novels - esp French as well as British colloquialisms), etc. As important, I began to realize the novels and films were quite different animals, which led me to read Fleming's bio and learn everything I could about what made him tick.
Reading Thunderball I could only see Connery as Bond having just saw the film, but after reading Fleming's bio and subsequent novels I started to see more of Fleming in Bond's character. Strangely, after seeing an old black and white Stewart Granger film and realizing how he resembled Fleming in appearance, I pictured him in the novels as I read them rather Connery. It was with extreme irony when I learned later that Fleming had suggested that Granger could play Bond (though at that time he was called James Stewart- which erroneously led me to believe Fleming must have been drunk at suggesting that the star of Vertigo play Bond).
So, Fleming was already ill when I saw the first films and passed away when I had already been in grammar school, all the adults were thrilled by Fleming's work, most literate males owned at the very least some of his paperback editions (or like my father, all of them) and almost everyone from my generation and his were amazed at how his work took popular culture by storm (like the Beatles) then grew into an international typhoon. I certainly remember how everyone in film and television around the planet tried cashing in on it through all the copycat (including Fleming's Man From Uncle) versions (even the Looney Tunes came up with the Daffy Duck short "The Spy Swatters" in '67). I believe the whole phenomenon fizzled out when Connery left. Though OHMSS brought Bond back, by that time the party was already over and the world of Bond never was the same. Since then it has become a huge part of 20th century media history and a cultural icon and generations since have embraced the different versions of Bond, but they will never know what it was to be a part of it's birth and celebration. The closest I've seen was when SF came out and it was the 50th anniversary and we had the Olympics in London and the Queen herself engaging with the icon and there was Bond and Skyfall everywhere, but then it fades away into a DVD memory for most. For those of us who were there at the beginning before reruns on the tele and VCR's, it became a late 50's - 60's cultural event we haven't seen since.
Dalton - the weak and weepy Bond!
I've actually been around longer than that, but I lie about my age! )
By George, that explains it! )
I had seen GF at the cinema and this being the 60s Connery was Bond, full stop. His image was everywhere, on toys, sweets, magazines etc. I read the books seeing his face and hearing hish voish... er, his voice. I caught the Bond films on double-bills and watched the new ones as they appeared- except CR67 which I first saw on TV years later.
The music had a deep and lasting attraction to me, and I began buying the OSTs then other John Barry albums.
To be into the Books before or at the beginning of the films. -{
Pretty similar to my own history with Bond. My dad had CR, FRWL and DN in Pan paperbacks, along with Sherlock Holmes and other books, and I read anything I could get my hands on. After reading my dads Bond boks I borrowed the rest from the local library (after getting permission as I had children's tickets and these were "adult" books). I didn't become aware of the films until Goldfinger, and then gum cards, Lone Star guns and Corgi and Airfix cars then became part of my collection (along with newspaper cuttings), as well as OSTs a little later.
Unlike Barbel I did go to see CR when it came out, already knowing that it wasn't a "real" Bond film, and enjoyed it. I'd been prepared for the change of face in OHMSS by newspaper reports and I had seen the Big Fry adverts on telly so wasn't disappointed in the change.
'Just because nobody complains doesn't mean all parachutes are perfect.'- Benny Hill (1924-1992)
It wasn't until many years later that I became aware of the books. Casino Royale was my first (and, I'm sure, the first one I was aware of, as well).
Roger Moore 1927-2017