Bond’s longtime nemesis and the head of SPECTRE, the enormous international crime syndicate introduced in Ian Fleming’s novel “Thunderball”. The novel was actually based on a film treatment by Fleming, screenwriter Jack Whittingham, and producer Kevin McClory, an early attempt to get a James Bond film adaptation off the ground.
The amount of Thai currency that James Bond (ROGER MOORE) offers a beggar boy, in The Man with the Golden Gun, if he can make his motor pan go faster. The boy turns on the right switch, but Bond reneges,
A Kananga (YAPHET KOTTO) front in Live and Let Die. Located at 33 East 65th Street in New York City, it's one block from the headquarters of Kananga's San Monique diplomatic mission. It's where James Bond (ROGER MOORE) finds
Chinese girlfriend of James Bond (Sean Connery) portrayed by Tsai Chin in You Only Live Twice. After she gives 007 “very best duck,” she pushes a button that swings her hide-a-bed, along with Bond, into the wall, and then allows two machine-gunning thugs into her apartment.
American film and television actress who portrayed Paris Carver, the doomed wife of a megalomaniac media mogul in Tomorrow Never Dies. It’s also revealed that she’s a former lover of James Bond (Pierce Brosnan). The role’s practically a cameo for the sultry actress
James Bond's (ROGER MOORE) command to a ferocious Bengal tiger he meets during his escape from Kamal Khan's (LOUIS JOURDAN) Monsoon Palace in Octopussy. It's actually a reference to the famous animal training techniques
License plate of James Bond's (PIERCE BROSNAN) trick BMW 750 in Tomorrow Never Dies.
The no-nonsense armorer, played by Peter Burton, who supplies James Bond (Sean Connery) with his new Walther PPK pistol in the first Bond film, Dr. No. When Burton was unable to return in the second film, From Russia with Love, he was replaced
The brand of golf ball used by Goldfinger (Gert Fröbe) during a high-stakes challenge match with James Bond (Sean Connery) in Goldfinger.
License plate on the explosive laden, remote control Wright's Dairies milk truck that chases Sir James Bond (DAVID NIVEN) in Casino Royale.
The brand of skis used by James Bond (ROGER MOORE) during his escape from KGB agent Eric Kriegler (JOHN WYMAN) and his men in For Your Eyes Only.
The brand of golf ball found by James Bond (Sean Connery) during a golf match with Goldfinger (Gert Fröbe) in Goldfinger.
The amount of drug loot stolen by James Bond (TIMOTHY DALTON) from one of drug runner Franz Sanchez's (ROBERT DAVI) seaplanes in Licence to Kill. The cash had just been loaded
A country club in Buckinghamshire, England, where director Guy Hamilton filmed the golf match between James Bond (Sean Connery) and the titular villain (Gert Fröbe) in Goldfinger.
The amount of weight that James Bond (SEAN CONNERY) actually loses at the Shrublands health clinic in Never Say Never Again. Whether it's from a low-fat
The principal murder weapon of SPECTRE assassin Donald Grant (Robert Shaw) in From Russia with Love. The watch stem hides a retractable garrote wire that Grant uses to dispose of the phony James Bond in the pre-credits teaser and nearly kill the real 007 (Sean Connery) on the Orient Express, until Bond turns the watch on its keeper.
The Las Vegas mortuary run by Morton Slumber (David Bauer) in Diamonds Are Forever. It’s actually a cover for an international diamond smuggling syndicate. When James Bond (Sean Connery) arrives in Los Angeles carrying a fifty-thousand-carat diamond cache
American film producer who devoted himself almost exclusively to making James Bond films from 1962 until his death in 1996. Originally partnered with Harry Saltzman in the first nine films in the series, Broccoli later shared producing chores with his stepson, Michael G. Wilson.
James Bond's (ROGER MOORE) airline flight from Madrid to Athens after his escapade in Spain with revenge-seeking Melina Havelock (CAROLE BOUQUET) in For Your Eyes Only.
Assistant aerial stunt coordinator and engineer who worked closely with aerial stunt supervisor Corkey Fornof on Licence to Kill. One of Champagne’s key sequences was the stunt where CIA pilot Pam Bouvier (Carey Lowell) maneuvers her Piper Cub crop-dusting plane so that James Bond (Timothy Dalton) can jump onto a moving tanker-trailer truck.
The sixth James Bond film produced by Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman. US release: December 18, 1969. Budget: $8 million. WW box office gross: $82.0 million
Large passenger vessel that takes James Bond (Sean Connery) across the English Channel to Holland in Diamonds Are Forever, riding above the water on a current of air. In the real world, the last hovercraft to ply the channel was retired from service in October 2000
Amount of gaming funds given to James Bond (BARRY NELSON) by British Secret Service agent Clarence Leiter (MICHAEL PATE) in the TV film "Casino Royale." It's to be used in a Monte Carlo baccarat game against Russian masterspy Le Chiffre (PETER LORRE).
Alma mater of James Bond (Sean Connery), who mentions in You Only Live Twice that he “took a first in oriental languages” there.
The bank at the baccarat table in the TV film "Casino Royale" when James Bond (BARRY NELSON) wins his first hand with a nine versus the bank's "baccarat," or zero. It's also the bank when
KGB chief and former labor camp inspector portrayed by Kurt Kasznar in Casino Royale. Smirnov accompanies M (JOHN HUSTON), Ransome (WILLIAM HOLDEN), and Le Grand (CHARLES BOYER) to an English country manor house to persuade Sir James Bond (DAVID NIVEN) to accept one last dangerous assignment.
The dowry offered to James Bond (GEORGE LAZENBY) by Marc Ange Draco (GABRIELEFERZETTI) if he will marry his daughter, Tracy (DIANA RIGG), in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. When 007 ties the knot a
The country chosen by Largo (KLAUS MARIA BRANDAUER) to demonstrate the Domination video game to James Bond (SEAN CONNERY) in Never Say Never Again. During this game
On the centrifuge trainer in Moonraker, it's equivalent to the takeoff pressure on the space shuttle. Explaining the system to James Bond (ROGER MOORE), astrophysicist Dr. Holly Goodhead (LOIS CHILES) says that a 70-year-old man can take 3 Gs.
The amount of time it takes James Bond (SEAN CONNERY) to complete an unusually realistic training mission in the South American jungle in Never Say Never Again. To top it off,