The lion roars and the familiar brazzy theme blares out at us. The white dots track across and a be-hatted Sean Connery does the walk-on for the first time.* He spins on his left foot and drops down to give us the usual warm welcome. Down comes the blood and the film opens on a coffin, draped in a monogrammed shroud. Ominously, the monogram is 'JB'. We see the priest waking round with the censer and the grieving widow, a blonde woman in hat and veil. A chorister sings mournfully. From a gallery above, Madame LaPorte (of the French station of the Secret Service) watches with a dispassionate James Bond. She has noticed the initials and he remarks at this moment 'Rather him than me.' She notices a hint of regret and wonders if Bond would rather have killed Colonel Jacques Bouvar himself; he does, Bouvar murdered two of Bond's colleagues.
The mourners file
out watched by the spies. Madame Bouvar opens the door of her
limousine and the driver takes her away. At the Bouvar estate, a
grand, palatial affair, Madame is admitted by her footman. She walks
upstairs to a Grande Salon. James
Bond rises from a chair and offers his sincere condolences. With a
right cross. 'My Dear Colonel Bouvar, I don't think you should have
opened that car door by yourself.' It is indeed, the 'late' Jacques
Bouvar in drag**.
A vicious fight ensues, Bouvar smashing a chair
into Bond and following it with a knife throw.
The furniture flies and the fists flie, with a touch of ju-jitsu for good measure. Bouvar grabs a poker from the fire and lashes out in desperation. Bond takes two blows before kicking his adversary into the fireplace and strangling him with the poker, breaking his neck with a hideous finality. The Colonel's men are banging on the locked door and its time to go, but not before throwing some flowers onto the recently departed.
The furniture flies and the fists flie, with a touch of ju-jitsu for good measure. Bouvar grabs a poker from the fire and lashes out in desperation. Bond takes two blows before kicking his adversary into the fireplace and strangling him with the poker, breaking his neck with a hideous finality. The Colonel's men are banging on the locked door and its time to go, but not before throwing some flowers onto the recently departed.
*Thunderball was the
first Bond shot in Panavision, so the famous sequence had to be
re-shot. As any Bond fan knows, the previous films featured stuntman
Bob Simmons performing the spin-shoot. Much as I'm a fan of Simmons,
you can't deny Connery does this with more panache...
**It's actually Bob
Simmons, whose legs are distinctly more un-feminine than those of
actress Rose Alba that we saw at the funeral. Out on a roof
terrace, one of the most famous scenes from the Bond films; Donning a
helmet and jetpack, Bond blasts off, a few futile shots not finding
their mark as he soars into the air. Across the road, Madame LaPorte
waits with 007's Aston Martin DB5. Helping Bond divest himself of the
bulky jetpack, they stow it into the DB5's boot*.
The real thing; piloted by either Gordon R. Yaeger or Bill Suitor. |
Faking it in the studio. |
As the bullets flie, the two clamber into the Aston and Bond deploys the bullet screen, giving the pursuers a drenching with two high-pressure water hoses concealed in the exhausts**.
*Almost; look
closely and you see the Jetpack (A Bell Rocket Belt) doesn't actually
fit.
** For a
split-second you can see thick red rubber fire hoses connected to the
exhaust pipes; just where all this water comes from is a mystery, but
my guess is a fire pump off-screen.
The screen goes a
rich, lustrous velvet blue, with bubbles rising as Maurice Binder's
unrivalled credit sequence plays. A silhouette of a woman, apparently
underwater appears as Tom Jones sings the score, backed by Bond
legend John Barry. Thunderball features the Tomosaurus at his
mid-sixties best, his power vocal matching the titles and giving
viewers a genuine thrill.
He always runs while others walk
He acts while other men just talk
He looks at this world and wants it all
So, he strikes, like Thunderball
He acts while other men just talk
He looks at this world and wants it all
So, he strikes, like Thunderball
He knows the meaning of success
His needs are more so he gives less
They call him the winner who takes all
And he strikes, like Thunderball
His needs are more so he gives less
They call him the winner who takes all
And he strikes, like Thunderball
Any women he wants, he'll get
He will break any heart without regret
His days of asking are all gone
His fight goes on and on and on
But he thinks that the fight is worth it all
So he strikes, like Thunder-BAAAAALLLLLL!
He will break any heart without regret
His days of asking are all gone
His fight goes on and on and on
But he thinks that the fight is worth it all
So he strikes, like Thunder-BAAAAALLLLLL!
Songwriters
Barry, John
Barry, John
Published by
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Swimming off, the
naked figure is menaced by a speargun, which fires after her, a
frogman finning into view after it. More girls swim, more divers
follow, the background changing colour as the credits play and Tom
reaches a fever pitch. As he reaches the final note, the first
warning of trouble comes with the text; 'Based on the original story
by KEVIN McLORY, JACK WHITTINGHAM and IAN FLEMING.' And Ian
Fleming?. More of this
later – poor Tom's about to black out from that protracted last
belter of a note... (Jones
did, in fact faint after singing the last note, coming to to find the
sound booth was spinning.)
Paris
and a Thunderbird rolls to a stop, the driver alighting to be told
'No parking 'ere' by a Gendarme. When the officer sees the identity
of the driver, however he salutes and apologises. A distinguished, if
somewhat malevolent figure, this is Emilio Largo. His left eye is
covered by a patch, his camel-hair coat worn as a cloak over his
suit. Striding across to a building, he enters; a brass plaque
proclaiming this to be the Centre International
D'Assistance aux Personnes Déplacées.
Inside, a friendly voice assures anxious clients the International
Brotherhood for the Assistance of Stateless Persons is
purely philanthropic, not interested in politics, only
rehabilitation. Largo strides through a reception room containing
the needy refugees of various nations into the office where the
reassuring employee is offering his clients a visa and funds, with no
need for repayment – they have private
funds from certain individuals who share their aims. Largo enters a
deserted corridor with a look over his shoulder, producing a
cigarette case which opens to reveal a remote control for the
cupboard facing him to slide back, revealing a hidden doorway.
Perhaps its a philanthropic hidden doorway.
Adolfo Celi is Emilio Largo, the villanous Number Two of S.P.E.C.T.R.E. |
Silly
me!; as the steel door opens, a massive concrete and steel conference
room is visible, into which the new arrival steps confidently. At the
centre, a line of chairs either
side of a low steel table at
which are seated various men. At one end of the room, a clerk of some
kind sits beneath a partially lowered steel shutter, behind which a
man sits stroking a fluffy white cat, his identity obscured by the
blind. (The man, not the cat; this is clearly Volcano Cat in an early
role...) Greeting Largo as 'Number Two' the mysterious cat-fancier
bids him to take his seat, adding 'We will discuss your N.A.T.O.
project later.' Bowing Number Two goes to his seat as the curiously
disembodied voice of Number
One informs the assemblage of
the untimely death of S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Number Six. Colonel Jacques
Bouvar was killed by an 'Unknown assassin.' His services will be
greatly missed. On to business; cash accounts. Flipping a switch
reveals a huge illuminated map of the World (Hooray!), Japan
highlighted in blue. Number Seven – a Japanese, gives his report.
Blackmail of the Double Agent Matsu Fujowa, unfortunately only
¥14,000,000
– all he had. Number Ten (A Frenchman); assassination of Pirange,
the French Anti-matter specialist who defected to Russia. 3,000,000
Francs from the Quai
d'Orsay.
Englishman Number Five next – 'Our consultation for the British
train robbery, £250,000.' * Number Eleven's turn now. Distribution
of Red China narcotics in the USA, $2,300,000, collected by Number
Nine and himself. The voice is unimpressed. Number Eleven blames
competition from Latin America depressing prices, but the voice had
anticipated this. Is Number Eleven quite sure all funds have been
accounted for?. He says yes, but to the contrary Number One has
satisfied himself one of the two is clearly guilty of embezzlement.
Criminal!. As Number Eleven sweats, Number One states S.P.E.C.T.R.E.
is a fraternity whose strength lies in the absolute integrity of it's
members. Number Nine sits impassively as One continues; the identity
of the transgressor is known.
A click of a switch and Number Nine is electrocuted by his chair, a further button sending the smoking corpse descending into the floor, the somewhat charred chair reappearing empty of its grisly occupant. All the S.P.E.C.T.R.E. operatives seem nervous and unsettled by this – (Can't think why.) except Largo, Number Two remaining the model of calm.
A click of a switch and Number Nine is electrocuted by his chair, a further button sending the smoking corpse descending into the floor, the somewhat charred chair reappearing empty of its grisly occupant. All the S.P.E.C.T.R.E. operatives seem nervous and unsettled by this – (Can't think why.) except Largo, Number Two remaining the model of calm.
*Not
the first time the series used a contemporary crime; in Dr.No
Goya's
Portrait of the
Duke of Wellington is
pride of place in the villain's lair, stolen in 1961 from the
National Gallery. The Great Train Robbery, as it is known, netted a
gang of villains the equivalent of £49.1 Million when a Glasgow to
London Royal Mail train was robbed in 1963.
We
proceed to business arising; Number Two's N.A.T.O. project. Largo
takes the floor. Intending to demand a ransom from the North Atlantic
Treaty powers, of $280,000,000 or £100,000,000. Number Two has sent
S.P.E.C.T.R.E agent Count Lippe to the South of England, where he's
making the necessary preparations. He is at a Health clinic,
conveniently near to a N.A.T.O. airbase...
Shrublands
(In the book, located at Washington, Sussex, no more than a few miles
from where I write.) is a stately home-cum Health Spa for the rich,
the line of Rolls Royces incongruously ending in a rather familiar
Aston Martin. Count Lippe enters the room where James Bond is having
a massage from Patricia Fearing. Introduced, the two men shake hands,
an avuncular Bond making light talk, until he spots the tattoo on
Lippe's forearm, a red square with a spike through it. Catching
Bond's interest, the Count covers the tattoo. We just get a glimpse
of a gold ring with a black octopus design before
he saunters off. After some chat about Bond's poker bruises, he goes
off to a pay-phone to call Moneypenny and relay the details of
Lippe's curious tattoo. Bond is sure it's a Tong sign; the Red Dragon
from Macau. As no-one from Records is in, the request will have to be
filed, which prompts Bond to threaten Moneypenny with a spanking. 'On
yoghurt and lemon juice?, I can hardly wait.'
Lippe
leaves with Patricia in a Ford Fairlane Skyliner and 007 decides to
snoop around his room. Picking
the lock, he goes around to a briefcase. Suddenly, a creak and the
light beneath an adjoining door warns Bond of trouble, he hides
behind the door as it opens. A curious figure in pyjamas, his face
swathed in bandages stands there examining the room, until a
telephone rings in his own room and he leaves. So does Bond, but not
before helping himself to a cheeky grape from a bunch on the
sideboard. As 007 relocks and leaves the room, the mummy watches him
go.
Later,
Bond arrives for his therapy with Patricia Fearing. He starts getting
fruity and throws his arms around her, forcing a kiss onto her. (In
1965 this was probably acceptable, but to a modern audience it's
cringeworthy.) Outraged, she puts him on a motorised traction table,
known to some as 'The Rack'. James asks her about the man next door
to Count Lippe. A Mr.Angelo, he is here with a private physician,
recuperating from a bad car smash. Setting the contraption off, she
leaves, promising to look in in fifteen minutes. Held in by the
straps, Bond is pulled to and fro, settling in to the experience, the
'speedo' dial comfortably below the red level. He looks up to see the
time on a clock*. Suddenly, Lippe's tattooed arm appears and ratchets
the device up to maximum, the dial spinning into the red. 'Nice to
have met you, Mister Bond.'
Bond shouts, but to no avail, his body fighting to stop being torn apart. He fades out, only to come to with a horrified Patricia unstrapping him. She recommends a few minutes in the steam room, to relax him and to shrink him back to size. Bond gallantly uses this incident to blackmail the poor girl, who is scared of losing her job. He backs her into the steam room and we just get a glimpse of her clothes coming off...
Bond shouts, but to no avail, his body fighting to stop being torn apart. He fades out, only to come to with a horrified Patricia unstrapping him. She recommends a few minutes in the steam room, to relax him and to shrink him back to size. Bond gallantly uses this incident to blackmail the poor girl, who is scared of losing her job. He backs her into the steam room and we just get a glimpse of her clothes coming off...
*The
very same spyhole clock from From
Russia with Love and
featured in Goldfinger.
Afterwards,
Bond strolls into the massage suite to find Lippe sat in a 'Sitz
Bath' steam cabinet. A broom-handle through the handles and a twist
of the dial and Bond tells a livid Lippe not to worry; he'll tell the
chef. That night, Bond makes love to Patricia Fearing, using a mink
glove to make her purr.
Molly Peters plays Patricia Fearing. |
Luciana Paluzzi is Fiona Volpe. |
At
the air base, 'Major Derval's' car stops at the Guardhouse. The
airman on duty checks the Major's id and salutes him in. In the
briefing room, a senior officer runs through the details. A normal
training sortie, the aircraft crew will be accompanied by a N.A.T.O.
representative, Commandante
Derval.
At
45,000 feet, the Vulcan bomber will be armed with two atomic weapons,
MOS type. The crew, along with the ersatz Derval climb the ladder up
into the cockpit. Several
of the mighty Delta-wing
bombers taxi to the runway. 'Derval's' plane goes for take off, black
smoke from the water injectors spraying behind as the sky is filled
with the roar of the Rolls Royce Olympus engines.
Amazingly,
Bond is still working on Patricia with the mink glove – as the
aircraft take off she complains about the noise. Bond goes to shut
out the noise, spotting Lippe racing to the back of an ambulance as
it pulls up. Dressing quickly, Bond gives her a kiss, remarking he's
going out for some exercise. 'You must be joking!.' is her
incredulous reply. Lippe and two stooges are bringing in Major
Derval's body when the sight of Bond's shadow coming down the stairs
alerts them and they stash the stretcher. Bond goes into the room
where he was so nearly pulled apart, to find the body. Lippe is
lurking, screwing a silencer onto his pistol as Bond unwraps the
bandages to reveal the dead aviator. Going to the telephone, he spots
a shadow outside. Suddenly he cracks the handset down onto the
knife-hand as it thrusts towards him from outside, pulling the man
through the glass and winding the phone cord around his neck for good
measure. (The
stuntman sustained an eye injury from the glass, but played dead
until the take was over.) Casually, Bond elbows the fire alarm and
the hallway fills with patients. A furious Fearing arrives and Bond
takes her off for more exercise...
At
altitude, the Vulcan sails through the ice-cold air above the clouds.
The crew sets the warbird on auto-pilot and the Pilot invites the
'Commandante' up to the cockpit to change places with the Co-Pilot,
to get a better view. The two change places in the claustrophobic
flight deck, 'Derval' climbing up to the Co-Pilot's seat and buckling
in. Casually, he pulls the canister of gas from his flightsuit, the
Pilot too engrossed in flight plans to notice. He then changes over
to the breathing device and screws the canister into the aircraft's
oxygen supply, turning the control to release it into the other men's
masks. In seconds, five men are dead. Murdered. Taking control,
Angelo pulls out his own flight plan. Banking sharply to starboard,
he takes her into a long, shallow dive, ignoring control's radio
request for a position report.
Back
at base, the Air Vice Marshal arrives, demanding to know what the
flap is all about. Group Captain Dawson informs him that the training
flight has broken contact. Radar
can't scan below 300 feet and she may have gone down. The Vice
Marshal orders a full search, inform the Admiralty; he'll contact
Washington.
Sure
enough, the Vulcan is cruising at low altitude above the waves, below
radar cover. A yacht of
unusal design,
the Disco
Volante
sits in the water, awaiting rendezvous with the aircraft. Largo
watches as the bomber roars overhead and around. Entering the bridge,
he orders the underwater landing lights switched on. Angelo sees the
twin rows of lights beneath the waves and brings the Vulcan down,
dropping her tail-first onto the water. A risky manouvre, but the
bomber settles on the surface in one piece. Angelo
lowers the undercarriage and
opens the bomb-bay doors as
the big Delta-wing begins to sink to the sea floor, water flooding
the cockpit and it's lone survivor, who continues to breathe through
his supply. Largo and his men gear up for a dive, exiting through an
underwater hatch. Following his instructions, Angelo jettisons the
canopy and then finds his harness has jammed. Largo arrives and
Angelo indicates his predicament. Largo nods, drawing his knife –
and cuts Angelo's air hose, leaving him to drown next to the body of
the Pilot he murdered.* He
takes a box containing the arming devices for the bombs from the
cockpit.
*As both pilot's
seats on this aircraft have ejector seats, you wonder why he didn't
try to eject – even if the weight of the column of water above
risked breaking his neck, it might have given him a chance.
An
unusually designed and
large
electrically-powered sled drops from the yacht's hatch, several
divers hanging on as it approaches the Vulcan. Beneath the open
bomb-bay, Largo looks up at the two ominous atomic bombs hanging
there. Bringing
the sled beneath the bay, the pilot is handed the
vital
case by Largo and the first bomb is winched down to rest in a shallow
cradle on one side of the sled. The other goes into the cradle on the
other side. Several swimmers use smaller tow
sleds to draw a huge camouflage net over the bomber. No sooner has
the large sled departed with the bombs than the Vulcan is concealed
from view. Using
hammers and pegs the divers secure the netting, departing as the
first of the sharks begins to take an interest.
Aboard the Disco
Volante, Vargas, Largo's right hand man barks orders in
preparation to receive the sled. A rather oily little man in a cheap
suit is aboard. This is Kutze, a Polish nuclear physicist working for
Largo. His job is to oversee the handling and use of the atomic
weapons. Kutze watches in excitement as Largo emerges with the fuse
case. The physicist examines one of the devices, noting it is a new
kind of safety fuse, before supervising loading of the bombs into
purpose-built tubes.
The Volante is
underway, slicing effortlessly through the Carribean seas when Largo
gets a message from Paris. Number One on the scrambler. Largo –
Number Two, reports; Phase Two is complete.
Back
at S.P.E.C.T.R.E HQ, Number One advises his subordinate numbers that
whilst Number Two has done well, Count Lippe's use of the mercurial
Angelo has jeopardised the whole project. A message is to be sent to
the Execution Branch.
At
Shrublands, Lippe loiters as James Bond checks out, leaving a smitten
Patricia behind. A flap at the office, he tells her. Just then,
'Mr.Angelo' is brought out – a heart attack in the night the
official line. Bond takes to the road, his DB5 trailed by Lippe's
Fairlane. Soon, on a deserted stretch of country road – any
resemblance to Silverstone race track is purely intentional – Lippe
pulls up and, rather hilariously, tries to pop Bond with a revolver.
One of these cars is an old 'Yank-tank' and one is the most
heavily-armed vehicle since Ben-Hur decided on those spiky
wheel-hubs... Predictably, Bond flips open the control panel and is
just wondering which switch to hit when a BSA Lightning
thrums up from astern and
fires it's fairing-mounted rockets, blowing the rear end off the Ford
and sending Lippe to a fiery death. Bond watches as the powerful
machine roars off. (Although
his DB5 is actually faster.) The rider takes the Lightning to a
quarry and – upsettingly – pushes it into the water, before
removing her helmet. Her? - yes, it's Fiona Volpe.
A semi-circle of chairbacks face us, nine in total. The seventh is the only unoccupied seat. The hemisphere faces a table across the expanse of marble at the focal point of the room, above which an ornate chandelier the size of a liner's anchor hangs. Bond strolls in, to the evident irritation of 'M', who sits flanked by ministers and air force top brass. The Home Secretary stands and takes the floor; the tape they are about to hear was delivered to Ten Downing Street this morning. The voice of Number One comes over the speaker, tinny, hollow.
'My Dear Prime Minister.
Two Atomic Bombs, numbers 456 and 457, which were aboard NATO
flight 759, are now in the possession of S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Unless within
the next seven days your government pays to us £100,000,000
Sterling, in a manner to be designated by us, we shall destroy a
major city in England or the United States of America. Please signal
your acceptance of our terms by arranging for Big Ben to strike seven
times at six pm tomorrow.'
M
shuts off the recording for the Home Secretary to continue. The PM
and the US President have spoken on the hotline and agree that,
unless the bombs are recovered, payment will have to be made. There
will be a press blackout and total secrecy. The Home Secretary then
informs M his department is in charge of the operation. The Air Vice
Marshal next; a flunky appears and at a pull of a rope, a massive
tapestry rises to reveal a map of the area of operations. A circle
radiates out from an initial point in the Atlantic West of Spain,
with
a radius of some 5214 odd miles, much of it sea. There have been no
sightings, nor reports from any airfield large enough to take a
Vulcan. Withdrawing, the Home Secretary and his man take their leave.
A proper Bond moment now as the Double-O's are told to open the folders in front of them, 007 using his hand as a knife-edge to break the seal. M gives the codename for the job; Thunderball. There's little to go on, but as Bond leafs through his folder he comes across black and whites of Derval and same on a beach with a pretty girl. The back of the photo reveals it was taken in Nassau and names the late Francois and his sister Dominique. M wraps up the briefing by telling the section they will work with N.A.T.O., the C.I.A. and Allied intelligence units.
A proper Bond moment now as the Double-O's are told to open the folders in front of them, 007 using his hand as a knife-edge to break the seal. M gives the codename for the job; Thunderball. There's little to go on, but as Bond leafs through his folder he comes across black and whites of Derval and same on a beach with a pretty girl. The back of the photo reveals it was taken in Nassau and names the late Francois and his sister Dominique. M wraps up the briefing by telling the section they will work with N.A.T.O., the C.I.A. and Allied intelligence units.
In
M's office, Bond is told his assignment will be to Station 'C' in
Canada. The
Group Captain present will be his Air Force liason. Respectfully,
Bond asks to be re-assigned to Nassau. He shows M the beach photo,
adding he saw Derval last night and he was quite dead. The RAF man
claims this is impossible, that he was seen boarding the Vulcan.
Shrewdly, M trusts his man's judgement and grants his wish. 007
leaves for the usual banter with Moneypenny, who virtually accuses
him of chasing a pretty girl. Was there ever a man more
misunderstood?. He might be able to con the Old Man... cue M who asks
a chastened Moneypenny not to refer to him as 'The Old Man.' 007
makes a hasty exit, but Moneypenny hands him the photo; how else will
he recognise the girl?. He can't miss – she has two moles on her
left thigh...
The glorious
spectacle that is the marine world of the Bahamas. Exotic fish of
every colour and shape fly through the warm waters in their
respective shoals. Commuters of an undersea city. A pretty girl
hitches a ride with a sea turtle, while James Bond dives down to the
coral to observe. Dominique Derval is stunning, a beautiful graceful
swimmer and Bond is clearly enjoying the surveillance. Suddenly, the
dangers of the reef; her finned foot becomes trapped in a fissure and
it's JB to the rescue. Freeing her, the pair fin to the surface where
her boat waits. Introducing himself, Bond is met with amusement at
his forwardness. As she climbs aboard Bond spots her moles and
comments that he was right – couldn't miss. Waiting for Bond is
Paula Caplan, a Secret Service girl. She's to tell London he's made
contact and he simulates a fault with the motor, giving him an excuse
to ask Dominique for a ride. Their boat leaves, watched from the
shore by a man with binoculars.
Claudine Auger is Dominique Derval, known as'Domino'; her clothes are usually black or black and white. |
Dominique-So,
what sharp little eyes you've got.
Bond-Wait
till you get to my teeth.
Evening and the beautiful people are out for the night, James Bond
among them. In black tie, he passes the throng of holidaymakers who
dance and chatter gaily as he heads to the Casino. Exchanging £500
(The best part of £7,000 today), he heads for the Baccarat tables,
as a shark is drawn to blood in the water.
At the table, Largo is
playing, a nervous, but beautiful Domino beside him, Vargas at the
seat opposite. Bond's call of 'Banco' energises the room and
Domino only just prevents herself from saying something that might
betray her. Bond wins and Largo comments that someone has to lose.
Bond rejoins with a quip about a 'Spectre' at Largo's shoulder.
Raising the stakes to £500 is too rich for some at the table and
Bond takes the shoe.
On learning the name, Largo recalls an
'associate' telling him about the Englishman. 007 pushes things a bit
far with a 'Your Spectre against mine.' line and Largo menaces Bond
with the old Mafia gesture of using forefinger and little
finger as a spear.
Does the hex work?, as Bond calls a seven, Largo a six perhaps not. Largo continues and gets an eight – the Octopus ring prominent on his right hand. Of course, James Bond has nine. Domino reminds her Guardian he promised her a drink, at which Bond sees an opportunity, asking if he may buy the drink. Largo acquiesces and Bond passes the shoe. As the pair leave for that drink, they are watched by the man in the suit from earlier.
Does the hex work?, as Bond calls a seven, Largo a six perhaps not. Largo continues and gets an eight – the Octopus ring prominent on his right hand. Of course, James Bond has nine. Domino reminds her Guardian he promised her a drink, at which Bond sees an opportunity, asking if he may buy the drink. Largo acquiesces and Bond passes the shoe. As the pair leave for that drink, they are watched by the man in the suit from earlier.
Crucial to any Connery Bond film, the Casino scene is authentic and full of tension beneath the surface. |
Once more by the pool, Bond orders Beluga Caviar and a Dom Perignon
'55. More questions; Domino tells him she met Largo on Capri. She
found him attractive – then. He has a house on the island, but must
they talk about him?. She'd much rather dance, as would Bond. Her
brother?; he's in England, with the N.A.T.O. forces there. Largo
joins Vargas, who has been watching the couple. Bond continues the
gentle interrogation. How long are they staying in Nassau? - they
leave the day after tomorrow. As Largo arrives, Bond compliments him
on his niece's dancing. Generously, Largo offers lunch at his house,
Palmyra. As he leads Domino back to the tender, Largo wants to know
what was said. Once again, Beach-Suit man is behind Bond. Who is
this guy?.
At his hotel, Bond asks for his room key and goes up, but rather than
stop at 304, he walks along to 306, Paula's suite and quickly picks
the lock. Finding no sign of her, he goes through the connecting
doors to his own suite. At the telephone table, he opens a thick book
to reveal a portable tape recorder whirring away quietly. Rewinding,
he is able to clearly hear the door being unlocked and footsteps
across to... the bathroom. Cautiously, 007 recovers his Walther PPK
and silencer from their hiding place beneath a table and he saunters
across to the bathroom screwing in the silencer.
Opening the door with a foot, he goes in, but a knock at the door – it's Mystery-Beach-Suit – stops him going any further. The man enters, but his 'Well, Hello Double-O S...' is cut off by a quick slug to the guts, with a 'Sssh' for afters. Back in the bathroom, Bond stands beside the shower curtain and turns on the hot water, scalding Largo's Binocular stooge who followed him on the beach earlier.
Opening the door with a foot, he goes in, but a knock at the door – it's Mystery-Beach-Suit – stops him going any further. The man enters, but his 'Well, Hello Double-O S...' is cut off by a quick slug to the guts, with a 'Sssh' for afters. Back in the bathroom, Bond stands beside the shower curtain and turns on the hot water, scalding Largo's Binocular stooge who followed him on the beach earlier.
Knocking the minion out, 007 retrieves his gun as an aggrieved Felix
Leiter – of course, complains at his welcome. Who else, but the CIA
wears a suit on a Caribbean beach?. Bond explains he was just about
to say 'Double-O Seven', so had to wind him. Contemptuously, Bond
throws the man out with an instruction to report back to his
superiors. Leiter throws the man his empty pistol as Bond pours them a stiff drink.
Rik Van Nutter - yes, seriously, plays Felix Leiter. |
Driving up to the armed guards at the gate of Palmyra, the goon
unwisely asks to see Mr. Largo. The man himself is strolling around a
shark-filled pool as the gatehouse rings up. Guess where this is
going... The henchman, named as Quist is thrown into the pool for his
failure.*
Finally, James and Felix have caught up with Paula, as well as Pinder, 'our man here.' Pinder leads the party to a marine store, down some stairs to where a radio operator sits playing solitaire as he monitors the airwaves. The Overseas Service of the BBC announces that, due to a mechanical fault, Big Ben did actually strike an extra chime at six pm.
A door opens to admit the irascible 'Q',
who is as pleased to see Bond as Bond isn't pleased to see
him. The Quartermaster issues Bond with a Geiger counter, disguised
as a watch. Next is an underwater camera which takes eight rapid
frames at a press of the button, in total darkness. Bond idly plays
with a marine 'jetpack' device that has both a headlamp and a
propellor, much to Q's irritation. A miniature Verey flare pistol is
added to Bond's inventory, followed by a miniature breathing device
which allows four minute's oxygen. This fits into a cigar tube. Q
hands 007 a harmless radioactive pill, which can be used to track his
location after swallowing. Afterwards, Leiter drives Bond around the
Volante's lying-up area and they agree a rendezvous point for
later.
Finally, James and Felix have caught up with Paula, as well as Pinder, 'our man here.' Pinder leads the party to a marine store, down some stairs to where a radio operator sits playing solitaire as he monitors the airwaves. The Overseas Service of the BBC announces that, due to a mechanical fault, Big Ben did actually strike an extra chime at six pm.
Earl Cameron (Left) portrays Pinder and was the first choice to have played Quarrel in Dr.No. |
*Longtime Bond Stuntman/Actor Bill Cummings plays Quist. For the
shark pool stunt he demanded – and got a $450 bonus. (Over £2,300
in today's money.)
The next S.P.E.C.T.R.E tape is played in the Conference room. A
container will be dropped off the Burmese coast, in the Megui
peninsular. It will hold blue-white flawless diamonds of between 3
and 8 carats, to the value of not less than £100,000,000. on
receipt, a radio message with the location of the atomic bombs will
be sent. The Home Secretary orders a subordinate to get onto De Beers
at once. Things look bleak, but then Moneypenny reminds M that 007 is
onto something in Nassau... He's into something as well; a
wetsuit. Pinder arrives with the news the yacht hasn't moved. The
deadline is just fifty-five hours distant and Bond is going in.
Felix and Pinder row a rubber dinghy to the drop-off point and Bond
goes over the side. Approaching the Disco Volante underwater,
he rises up for an 'observe', before going in for the approach.
Reaching the stern, he goes from prop for'ard, checking his geiger
counter as he goes.
The Hull survey is going well, until a clearance
diver spots the intruder and aims his speargun. He misses Bond by
inches and an alarm sounds on the bridge. Largo orders the underwater
lights turned on as, below, the two divers fight for their lives, the
S.P.E.C.T.R.E man drawing his dive knife. The yacht has underwater TV
closed circuit, which shows the life and death struggle.
007 disarms the opposition, then cuts his air-hose with his own knife. Watching this, Largo orders grenades. 007 takes his snaps, watches himself by the invisible electric eye of the TV camera. Vargas drops the grenades into Bond's bubble trail, the first nearly deafening him. Another – and the concussion is unbearable, sending the spy reeling. Another salvo is followed by a speed boat, 007 making it to the catamaran agreed as rendezvous point with Felix. Spotting the diver, the boat rushes him, returning to find his scuba tanks and faceplate bobbing on the surface. Taking these, they return to tell Largo, presuming they hit Bond with their prop.
A colorized lobby card showing 007 checking his geiger counter as he surveys the hull of the Disco Volante. |
007 disarms the opposition, then cuts his air-hose with his own knife. Watching this, Largo orders grenades. 007 takes his snaps, watches himself by the invisible electric eye of the TV camera. Vargas drops the grenades into Bond's bubble trail, the first nearly deafening him. Another – and the concussion is unbearable, sending the spy reeling. Another salvo is followed by a speed boat, 007 making it to the catamaran agreed as rendezvous point with Felix. Spotting the diver, the boat rushes him, returning to find his scuba tanks and faceplate bobbing on the surface. Taking these, they return to tell Largo, presuming they hit Bond with their prop.
Very much un-hit, James Bond tosses his fins away on the beach
and divests himself of wetsuit. He walks out onto the beach road the
very second a pale blue Mustang screeches up, Fiona Volpe at the
wheel. (Even by Bond standards a co-incidence too far, shurely?) He
gives her a line about capsizing and swimming ashore. She tells him
to buckle up as she puts her foot down, taking the Mustang past
sixty. Exchanging names takes them up to ninety. Bond is clearly
uncomfortable, but keeps his cool, noting the Octopus ring she wears.
They must be all the rage this year. By now, she's driving like a
demon and ignores Bond's quip about not wishing to be capsized twice
in one night. She's pushing the Mustang past the ton now, it's a
wonder the back projection can't keep up. Thankfully they arrive at
their hotel – she's staying there too as it happens.
At Pinder's place, Bond develops the negatives from his recce. One
shot clearly shows the underwater doors. Obviously, the whole
operation was conducted underwater, so that's where Bond proposes to
look for the Vulcan. Paula will drop the prints to him at the hotel
when they've dried.
Next morning, Felix pilots a sea-float helicopter over the island.
They discuss the radius of search; the United States Air Force
covered a two hundred and fifty mile radius, but the Volante was
only out six hours on the day, giving a radius of ninety. Bond sweeps
the area with his binoculars, but agrees they need more fuel to
continue the aerial search, passing by Palmyra on the way. Largo and
Fiona indulge in some clay pigeon shooting, the former scornful of
the obvious surveillance. She observes he wants Bond dead. Because he
wants to make love to his woman?. No, because he is Bond and an enemy
of S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Pragmatically, the Execution Branch specialist
observes that had Largo killed Bond last night, it would only have
alerted his government. When the time is right, she will kill
him.
Bond drives up to Palmyra, noting Fiona's Mustang parked in the
driveway. He's shown in by a servant and finds Domino taking a swim
in the pool. Largo appears and plays mein host, affecting not
to know what Bond means by his comment about perhaps having another
visitor. Largo swings around and, as if by accident the barrel of his
skeet gun is pointing at Bond, who affects to notice it, taking it
smoothly from Largo and commenting it looks more fitting for a woman.
Largo – 'Do you know much about guns, Meester Bond?.
Bond – 'No. I know a little about women.'
Largo introduces Vargas and Janni, another stooge and a waiter serves
some Rum Collins. Bond checks his Geiger counter casually, but no
indication of radiation. Oddly, Largo torments Vargas with the offer
of a drink – but Vargas does not drink, does not smoke, does not
make love. What do you do, Vargas? Asks Largo, cruelly before asking
what Bond's passions are. He responds he's not really a passionate
man, but his lingering glance at Domino in her swim suit tells a
different story. She goes to change and Largo offers to show Bond
around, starting with a few clay pigeons.
007 is still pretending not
to know a thing about firearms, but when his host calls one for him,
he can't resist shooting from the hip and blasting both the clay and
the illusion of incompetence. Largo is not fooled. Next comes the
shark tank, Largo explaining that he collects big game fish for
marine institutions. These are the notorious Golden Grotto sharks,
savage and dangerous. The spy can't believe his luck next, when in a
display of Largo largesse (Sorry) the S.P.E.C.T.R.E. man offers a
tour of the Disco Volante. Inexplicably, meanwhile Domino has
changed from a sexy and revealing one-piece to a bikini. Lunch is
ready, but Largo has had a thought; as he will be busy this evening,
perhaps Mr. Bond would be kind enough to take her to the Junkanoo,
the local Mardi Gras.
The door to Paula Caplan's hotel suite opens and Fiona Volpe lets
herself in, surprising Paula. She tells her Mr. Bond has a date with
her too tonight. A knock at Bond's door and Paula excuses
herself to answer, opening the door to Jannis and Vargas, who subdue
her noisily. Clearly in charge, Volpe orders them to use the
chloroform as she recovers 007's underwater prints.
Junkanoo!. Clad in their costumed finery, the revellers from the
different societies dance to the rhythmic sounds of cow-bells,
goat-skin drums and whistles. The themes this year vary from the
United Nations to floats with Beauty Queens and everything in
between. There's even what looks to be a Scottish-themed society –
in honour of Mr.Connery?. On a balcony, Bond wonders where Largo is.
Domino tells him not to worry as Leiter waves his jacket to get his
attention. Going down, Bond is told Paula's disappeared and tells
Felix to watch Domino. He goes to Pinder's place and prepares for a
reconnaissance of Palmyra, Pinder having arranged a power-cut first
with the Governor's office.
Dressed in black, 007 goes in under cover of night, stealing around
the perimeter past the guards. One of the patrolling guards suddenly
has his feet pulled from under him and is finished with a karate chop
to the neck. Largo is dressing when Janni enters to inform him Paula
isn't talking. Suddenly, the lights go out. Going outside, Largo asks
a henchman if it's a power cut. It is – and all over the island.
They will switch over to the emergency generator. Bond sneaks into a
basement area through a hatchway, ducking aside as Kutze the Nuclear
Specialist appears. Kutze goes past an illuminated fish tank to an
electric door, which opens to reveal Vargas standing over Paula's
body. He didn't kill her – she must have taken poison. A klaxon
sounds and the two men rush outside. Bond takes a look at his
colleague, his face falling then hardening with resolve as he leaves
by the hatch. Largo's men fan out to find the intruder who attacked
one of their number. Cleverly, 007 shoots one way then the other,
sparking a brief, but lively firefight between the guards.
Jumping up to a low, sloping roof, Bond fumbles it and drops his PPK,
which fires, giving his position away. Going over the roof like a
cat, he drops down near the swimming pool. A stooge appears and
attacks, the two combatants falling into the pool. Arriving on the
scene, Largo stops a henchman unzipping the pair with his MP-40,
throwing the switch for the electric pool covers instead. Trapped
beneath, both men are surely doomed. Coldly, Largo gives the order
for the tunnel hatch to be opened to let the sharks into this pool.
Beneath the water, 007 draws an ankle knife and stabs the goon, who
falls back to die, blood billowing out into the water. The hatch is
drawn up and the sharks enter the connecting tunnel. Meanwhile, Bond
has got his mini-breather in place and with only four minutes' air,
has to find a way out – fast. Spotting the tiled hatch in the side
of the pool, he opens it, just in time to admit the first diner, the
Golden Grotto shark finning in towards the dead minion. Ducking past
another shark, he enters the tunnel, even though more of the deadly
creatures are on the way. He makes it to the shark pool, climbing out
just as a shark makes a beeline for him.* Largo and his men stand
over the closed shutters, convinced of Bond's demise.
*This was, apparently a dead shark towed by a thin cable.
Pinder drops Bond off at his hotel with the instruction to tell
Leiter to stay with the girl and to tell him Paula's dead. In Bond's
suite, he's surprised to see some luggage and hear the sound of water
flowing in the bathroom. Fiona Volpe is taking a bath. She asks for
something to put on, to be handed her shoes.
Brazenly, Bond sits to enjoy the show, but she outwits him by unfurling the towel over her hair to cover her modesty. She claims to have been moved to this room. Smiling like a Golden Grotto shark, Bond goes along with it. He spots the Octopus ring again and she diverts him by suggesting he gets out of those wet things. They make love, after which Bond is keen to get back to the Junkanoo. Volpe tells him the music will go on all night, enough to drive him wild. She's like a wild-cat herself, and Bond tells her she should be caged, before making love with her once more.
Brazenly, Bond sits to enjoy the show, but she outwits him by unfurling the towel over her hair to cover her modesty. She claims to have been moved to this room. Smiling like a Golden Grotto shark, Bond goes along with it. He spots the Octopus ring again and she diverts him by suggesting he gets out of those wet things. They make love, after which Bond is keen to get back to the Junkanoo. Volpe tells him the music will go on all night, enough to drive him wild. She's like a wild-cat herself, and Bond tells her she should be caged, before making love with her once more.
Also inexhaustible are the festivities, the Junkanoo in full swing.
Dressed and groomed, Bond and Fiona prepare to attend, but as he
opens the door the goons are waiting. Slamming the door, he turns to
find Fiona is holding her own gun on him. Knowing the game's up, Bond
opens the door to Vargas, Janni and another thug, Vargas pulling the
Walther from Bond's shoulder holster.
There's a bit of interplay
about her having the same ring as Largo and vanity. Bond declares
what he did tonight was for 'King and Country'. She didn't think it
gave him any pleasure?. Stung, she retaliates; she had forgotten his
ego, James Bond, who only has to make love to a woman to make her
repent and return to the side of virtue. But not her... she leads the
way out to the front of the Hotel, Vargas and Janni following Bond,
guns in pocket.
The festival continues, unabated. In a convoy of two cars, Bond is
taken to Palmyra, but their passage is blocked by the lively
procession. One of the goons phones ahead from a car-phone, while a
friendly local offers some rum. Fiona lights up a cigarette and Bond
seizes the chance for a fiery escape, setting the henchman in front
of him on fire. As Bond bolts, he gets a bullet in the right calf.
Pursued by Largo's men, Bond makes himself scarce among the
revellers. Volpe takes charge, following his blood trail. (Somewhat
bizarrely, a group is briefly visible wearing '007' head-dresses,
while a dog ostentatiously raises a leg to urinate in the street just
behind two of the henchmen.) By now, the pace of the chase and the
frenetic atmosphere is becoming overwhelming. A wounded man cannot
expect to outpace healthy pursuers – inevitably Bond must be
caught. Spotting his chance, he slips into the back of a passing
float, which baffles the opposition until Fiona spots his blood on
the side of the float. 007 manages to slip away through the crowd,
making for the relative safety of the 'Kiss-Kiss Club'.
A fire-walker goes through her routine as Bond enters the club, going
to the Gents to bandage his left calf. He emerges to find
himself surrounded by the unsmiling faces of Largo's men. Snatching a
pretty girl from the bar under the pretence of her asking him for a
dance, he takes her to the floor – in vain as Fiona Volpe cuts in.
Deadly, but beautiful.
They talk the odds over as they dance, as the drummer* reaches a crescendo on his congas. Ever had a crescendo on the congas?... me neither. Just as Bond is refusing to be cowed, insisting he enjoys dancing, a gun-barrel rises from the curtain behind the band. Somewhat incredibly, Bond anticipates the impending shot, whirling his partner round for the shot to hit her mid-spine. Covering the bullet-wound with his hands, Bond dances Volpe's corpse over to a table and seats her with the line; 'Do you mind if my friend sits this one out?. She's just dead!.'
They talk the odds over as they dance, as the drummer* reaches a crescendo on his congas. Ever had a crescendo on the congas?... me neither. Just as Bond is refusing to be cowed, insisting he enjoys dancing, a gun-barrel rises from the curtain behind the band. Somewhat incredibly, Bond anticipates the impending shot, whirling his partner round for the shot to hit her mid-spine. Covering the bullet-wound with his hands, Bond dances Volpe's corpse over to a table and seats her with the line; 'Do you mind if my friend sits this one out?. She's just dead!.'
*This is the incomparable King Errisson, whose percussion has shaped
the sound of artists as diverse as Barry White, Michael Jackson and
Neil Diamond. And you've never heard of him.
In a Royal Air Force briefing room, a crew is getting their final
instructions. They are to land at Aden to refuel and then proceed to
the Megui archipelago to make the drop. The briefing is relayed on
CCTV to the Secret Service Conference room on a big screen, watched
by the assembled brass. In barely suppressed fury, M declares he
hates the business. The Home Secretary prepares to leave, deriding
007 for not coming up with the goods. Hackles up, M defends his man,
as befits an old sea-dog, but is cut down acidly. There's fourteen
hours and fifty minutes before they have to pay.
Meanwhile, back at the ranch... Leiter flies the chopper with Bond
spotting, their hopes seeming more wishful thinking than any real
prospect of success. Island to island, reef to reef they scour the
area, until they've covered every last outcrop of rock, every last
patch of deserted water. Bond looks down on some sharks and Felix
remarks there's nothing to be found here – this is the Golden
Grotto. Hang on... James wants a closer look – and quick!. Through
the binoculars he can just make out an indistinct... something, an
area of darkness with an oddly un-natural line to it. Felix settles
the chopper on it's floats and, using a glass-bottomed bucket, Bond
sees he's hit the jackpot; the camouflage netting clearly visible
beneath the water. Leiter shoots a shark to keep the others busy as
Bond gears up to dive.
Finning powerfully down to the Vulcan, James Bond has to dodge
curious sharks and the huge netting covering the stricken bomber.
Cautiously, he examines the empty bomb-bay, seeing a hatch through to
the crew compartment.* Going forwards to the cockpit, he finds the
dead pilot and, still in the co-pilot's seat, Angelo, a ringer for
Major Derval even in death. Taking his dog-tags and watch, he cuts
his way through the netting and fins back up to the helicopter. The
bombs are gone, but Bond knows who to ask, toying with the dog-tags
thoughtfully.
*On the real bomber no such hatch exists.
Back in the underwater kingdom once more, Domino is enjoying the
spectacle that is nature as she scuba-dives through the last place
touched by mankind. Of course, James appears and the two swim
together and embrace, descending behind a rock. Suddenly, a spray of
bubbles betrays their underwater kiss as they remove their
regulators.
Back on the beach Bond expresses his hope they didn't frighten the fish, but Domino steps on an urchin spine – poisonous and painful at the same time. Taking her ashore, Bond bites the spine out.
He's the only man to make her cry – except for her brother Francois when they were children. Bond must hurt her again, she thinks he means he's leaving, but he shows her her brother's effects and she realizes he is dead. He begins to tell her the details as Vargas comes up to spy on them. Bond needs her help and she's hurt at the thought that that's his only interest in her. Gripping her arm, he tells her Largo had Francois killed, that thousands – hundreds of thousands of people will die and very soon, unless she helps him.
Back on the beach Bond expresses his hope they didn't frighten the fish, but Domino steps on an urchin spine – poisonous and painful at the same time. Taking her ashore, Bond bites the spine out.
He's the only man to make her cry – except for her brother Francois when they were children. Bond must hurt her again, she thinks he means he's leaving, but he shows her her brother's effects and she realizes he is dead. He begins to tell her the details as Vargas comes up to spy on them. Bond needs her help and she's hurt at the thought that that's his only interest in her. Gripping her arm, he tells her Largo had Francois killed, that thousands – hundreds of thousands of people will die and very soon, unless she helps him.
Vargas prepares to shoot Bond, as he explains he needs to know the
loading schedule for the bombs; when and where they will be loaded
aboard the Disco Volante. Domino agrees to help and Bond shows
her a geiger counter disguised as a camera. If it starts clicking,
the bombs are aboard and she should go on deck. As the yacht will be
under surveillance she'll be spotted. She spots Vargas and, smoothly,
Bond shoots him with his spear-gun in a one-handed shot.
Bond - 'I think he got the point.'
Domino – 'It should have been Largo.'
James tells her to get back before she's missed, he'll take care of
Vargas. Domino is only doing this for her brother. She gets James to
promise he will kill Largo, whatever happens. He replies with a kiss.
Handily, as she goes she remembers a convenient flight of concrete
steps near Palmyra... which we then see Bond using to infiltrate
Largo's place. The place is a hive of activity, S.P.E.C.T.R.E men
rushing to prepare for something big. As they depart in a small
truck, Bond goes over to find several wetsuits and SCUBA sets laid
out ready for use. Taking out his radioactive tracker, he swallows
it.
It is night. Aboard the Disco Volante, Kutze waits nervously
as Domino comes aboard, the geiger-camera in her bag. Steeling her
resolve, she goes to her fate. At the same moment, Largo and his
divers assemble outside Palmyra, watched by 007 from cover. Attacking
the last diver, Bond renders him unconscious and nonchalantly dons
his gear. At Pinder's shop, Felix is beside himself; if the girl's
been spotted aboard the yacht, where's 007?. Jumping in after the
rest, that's where. Largo leads the dive team out to the Volante,
the underwater hatch opening at their approach. With no choice,
but to risk exposure, 007 comes aboard with the rest, making a show
of removing his gear while going as slow as he can without being
noticed. Largo orders 'Weigh anchor' and they set off towards the
hiding place of the A-bombs. Once they pick them up, the target area;
Miami!.
Reaching the spot, the bomb-sled and divers emerge from the hatch
and, lighting a flare, Largo swims across to a large rock. Pushing at
the stone, a cleverly-concealed hatch is revealed. Opening this
exposes a wheel, which he turns to open two large
hydraulically-operated doors, the sled entering to where the bombs
sit on rails, filled with a silent menace somehow amplified by the
eerie setting. Manouvering the sled around the team loads the bombs,
the purpose-built rails-and-rams system making light of the heavy
loads. Looking around, Largo suddenly notices Bond and signals his
men to attack. Bond makes a break for it, but is cornered at the back
of the cave, his pursuer trying to stab a magnesium flare at him.
Largo's men complete the load and the sled screws spin up, taking the
bombs out of there. Twisting around desperately, 007 manages to
thrust the flare into his attacker's face, but turns to see the
hydraulic doors closing, trapping him. Popping a flare, he retrieves
his spear gun and takes a look around for a way out before his air
runs out.
The Volante is underway and making good speed. In her cabin,
Domino retrieves the geiger counter and presses the button; it begins
clicking. Going to the gangway, the clicks become much faster –
clearly the bombs are aboard. She's interrupted by the arrival of
Largo, who reminds her she was not to leave her cabin. He spots the
camera and makes a lunge for it, the casing breaking open to reveal
the artifice. Throwing her onto her bed, Largo tells her there is no
escape. Bond, however has found a way out from the watery confines of
the cave, an aperture above leading to a grotto, a chimney of rock
proving impossible to climb. Bond is trapped. Largo has Domino bound
hand and foot; unless she tells how much Bond knows, he will cause
her great pain. He menaces her with a cigar and a handful of
ice-cubes – heat and cold, applied scientifically. Ripping at her
top, he begins, but is interrupted by Kutze, with the news they are
activating the bombs. Leaving Domino helpless, Largo tells her there
is no-one to help her.
Disconsolately, James Bond sits beneath the chimney of rock, quite
helpless for once. Felix Leiter, however, has not given up. From the
cockpit of a US Coastguard search and rescue helicopter he directs
the crew towards 007's radioactive homing device, using a small
hand-held tracking device. From where he sits, Bond can hear the
approaching aircraft, so he fires his mini-flare. Felix spots the
signal and winches Bond up. Over the roar of the engines Bond tells
Felix to get a signal to Orlando Beach; warn them the target is
Miami. The bomb is being transferred from the yacht onto a wreck off
Fowey Point. As he speaks, the sled brings its cargo of death ever
closer to the US mainland, Largo's black-suited men in a tight
phalanx, some using smaller electrically-powered sleds armed with
double spear-guns. Aboard the Disco, Kutze comes on deck to
see a stick of elite Navy frogmen parachuting from the back of a
plane, highly visible in their orange wetsuits. The platoon splashes
down, each man cutting away his canopy and readying his speargun for
the impending assault.
Largo and his men see the incoming frogmen and battle is joined, the
sleds firing their lethal barbs into the front rank of advancing Navy
men. Two are mortally wounded in that first hail of steel, but the
Navy men haven't come to die; they fire their own spears, killing at
least two of the S.P.E.C.T.R.E team. A fatal exchange is played out
in the gentle-light and quiet world beneath the sea, men killing and
dying in the remoteness of their suits. Within seconds, the battle
has become a confused melee, small groups struggling for survival. A
sled fires, transfixing a Navy diver; Largo cuts a man's air hose.
Above, the Coastguard helicopter hovers, Felix helping James gear up
to join the fray, Q's bulky underwater 'jetpack' over the already
bulky SCUBA tanks. Leiter wishes Bond good luck, getting a sharp look
of disbelief in return. Bond jumps clear into the water.
The underwater propulsion unit propels 007 through the water like a
torpedo, the bright fluorescent yellow marker dye streaming from it
doubtless Q's idea of a recognition signal. With his arms against his
sides for minimum drag, Bond hurtles towards the battle at
frightening speed. By now, the fight has largely come down to knives,
re-loading of spearguns impractical at such close quarters. Suddenly,
Largo sees a fantastic sight; the hated British Spy James Bond flashing past,
reaching down to snatch a villain's mask off as he whirs overhead.
The action spreads out to where an old Landing-Craft, Tank barge sits
forlornly on the bottom.
Bond sees an orange-suit struggling for dear
life against two black-suits and goes in, cutting both their
air-hoses, only to see a knife sticking into the Navy man's chest. A
SP.E.C.T.R.E. man takes aim at 007 with his spear-gun, but Bond ducks
and reaches back to the fire control on his aquatic-jetpack – an
explosive bolt slamming into the goon, killing him instantly. Another
Navy man is cornered by two Largo-men who aim their spear-guns at
him. Spotting a heavy hull-plate hanging above them by a piece of
rope, Bond fires again, the bolt blasting the plate free and taking
both men out of the fight. Bond exchanges 'OK's with the grateful
Navy man.
Inevitably, attention has shifted to the new arrival; a group of
Largo-men chase after 007, who squeezes down through a hatch into the
old barge. Divesting himself of his bulky tanks and jetpack, 007 goes
over to the mini-breather, grabbing a small explosive charge from the
pack. His gear sends a stream of bubbles erupting up from the hatch
and the black-suits follow, gathering around 007's abandoned kit in
confusion – while he ducks out through a porthole to toss in the
charge from above. CHOOM! A solitary swim-fin floating
up from the hatch tells it's own tale. A genuinely funny moment.
Another Navy man is in trouble, losing his mask he takes a kicking;
Bond returns the favour and then ambushes one of the sled-drivers as
he passes, ripping the man's hose and leaving him to drown. A
black-suit swims out from the barge, to be ambushed by one of the
good guys, who flips him over using his own speargun as a lever,
stabbing the weapon through his faceplate. Still the battle rages;
Bond chopping at an arm to force a S.P.E.C.T.R.E diver to drop his
knife, the odd view of exotic marine life, splendidly indifferent to
the murder and mayhem all around.
Battle, like the sea, has tides. Imperceptibly at first, Largo's men
begin to falter; a well-aimed spear hits a man's first stage, sending
him up to the surface in an explosion of air bubbles. Another takes a
barb through the arm. He rises to the surface in agony, a shark
investigating the appetising taste in the water. 007 makes the
difference to a dozen individual skirmishes; disarming here, ripping
masks off there. The blood begins to form clouds and the sharks are
circling as Largo despatches a man with his blade. Sharks...
suddenly the inhabitants of land have a common enemy. One man
fires his speargun, scoring a direct hit before the gills.
Shockingly, the spear bounces off the thick skin, without causing as
much as a scratch. Everywhere, men abandon their hostilities to fend
off nature's greatest predators. One truly magnificent shark, bigger
than the rest glides towards a duo, who seconds earlier had been
mortal enemies. The S.P.E.C.T.R.E man fires his spear-gun at
point-blank, the steel shaft lancing through the shark's body to send
it swerving away sharply, as if merely stung.* Suddenly, Largo's men
have had enough; surrounded by the Navy men, they surrender. The
S.P.E.C.T.R.E. number two, however, fins off to the bomb-sled,
followed by two of his men, 007 in pursuit.
*Frame by frame, you can see this poor creature is actually shot
through. Animal welfare standards have changed, though and in the
1960's this would not have been seen as cruel.
Knife in hand, Largo waits for Bond, hatred in his one eye. Grabbing
a dead man's spear-gun, Bond shoots one of the goons and closes for
the kill with the man behind all this. After a tussle, Largo snatches
the spy's mask off and Bond quickly replaces it with another from a
fallen diver. Largo uses the seconds this buys to make his escape on
a sled, while Bond calls in the Navy men to secure the bomb-sled with
it's single deadly cargo. Using another of the sleds, 007 gives chase
to the man whose plans he has thwarted.. The hatch beneath the Disco
Volante closes before Bond can get inside, so he abandons the
sled and swims over to what looks like a hydrofoil spar. It is a
hydrofoil spar!. As Bond hangs on, the high speed propellor spins and
the yacht begins to gain speed, pursued by a Royal Navy frigate and
Coastguard*.
*The frigate you see on screen was HMS Rothesay, Pennant Number F107.
During filming, Sean Connery and Claudine Auger came aboard to meet
the crew, who, with typical British humour covered the '1' on her
side with a large canvas '0' to make her '007'.
Emilio Largo is not finished yet; he orders the Captain to make smoke
and a thick, black smoke-screen begins billowing from the stern. The
first shells begin hitting, warning shots first, but the frigate is,
of course, merely finding the range. Largo orders the Captain to
stand by for conversion. Conversion?. 'Jettison cocoon!.' At
this command, the Disco breaks into two halves, a fast, light
hydrofoil and a gun-platform left behind to delay pursuit. The yacht
rises on her planes as the thousand-plus horsepower powerplant opens
her up. On the cocoon, the stay-behind party carries on firing,
blasting away with heavy machine guns at the oncoming pursuit force.
The frigate's shells are closer with each shot, however and some of
the men go over the side just as she scores a direct hit, a great
gout of flame and smoke signalling the end of these men's resistance.
The next shell rips the gun-platform apart. By now, the forward
section of the Disco is on-step, riding high at thirty knots.
Eager to escape, Largo comments they still have one of the bombs on
board. Kutze, however, has had enough of this madness, working to
free Domino from her bondage. Rather feebly, the recreant urges her
to put in a good word for him; along the lines of he was only doing
what he had to. That old chestnut...
Bond is making his way up the top of one of the vanes (Watch for the
conveniently-placed rope the stuntman is using to climb up with), as
inside Kutze explains to a stunned and burned Domino that he threw
the arming device into the sea. The bomb cannot be detonated without
it. Bond opens the hatch up to the bridge, to see Largo at the wheel,
with two crewmen and the Captain. 007 goes in, the Captain spotting
the movement and drawing his revolver, which Bond kicks from his
hand. A karate chop finishes him, but Bond gets a slug to the jaw
from a crewman. Kicking him back, Bond grabs him and physically hurls
him onto the captain, both tumbling down below decks. Largo turns to
confront his nemesis, getting a vicious back-hander.
Bond uses a piece of dive gear as a golf-club on the crew before wrenching Largo away from the controls. Incongruously, a crewman is bringing up some champagne. Does S.P.E.C.T.R.E. celebrate defeat?. Bond snatches at the throttles, sending the yacht surging ahead and the drinks flying.
Bond uses a piece of dive gear as a golf-club on the crew before wrenching Largo away from the controls. Incongruously, a crewman is bringing up some champagne. Does S.P.E.C.T.R.E. celebrate defeat?. Bond snatches at the throttles, sending the yacht surging ahead and the drinks flying.
With no-one at the helm, the Disco careers wildly through the
seas, only missing some rocks when Bond grabs for the wheel. He's got
his hands full as the crew aren't finished yet. Leaving Largo for the
moment, he lays into them, battering one with a hatch and butting him
over the side. Largo is wrestling for control, frantically whipping
the wheel around to miss a projection of coral by feet. You don't get
to be Number Two for nothing; the Roman was a veteran of many fights.
His over-sized fists slam into Bond again and again, each blow
telling. Now its the Double-O man's turn at the wheel, until a
crewman grabs him from behind, Largo's fists going to work on his
jaw; left-right!. 007 twists to throw the goon over his
shoulder into his boss, snapping the latter's head back with a
vicious right. A chair ripped from its mounting makes a handy weapon
with which to finish off the crewman. Inevitably, one spar clips a
reef and the antagonists are thrown to the floor, Largo rising in
triumph, the Captain's revolver in his hand. Bond can only watch his
own death...
Largo's body contorts in mute agony as the spear Domino fired into
his back ends his life. With some last, primeval effort of will, he
turns to face his killer, before slumping across the wheel.
Domino – 'I'm glad I killed him.'
Bond – (In disbelief)
'You're glad?.'
Kutze comes up and Domino mentions his help. The rocks!; the Volante
is headed straight for destruction. Largo's body has jammed the
controls and Bond leads the two outside, ignoring Kutze's protests
about never having learned to swim and handing him a life-belt before
sending him over, following with Domino. James and Domino duck under
to avoid the blast as the doomed yacht hits land, exploding into a
million fragments, among which is whatever's left of an atomic bomb.
Felix has arranged help for the two, in the shape of a Boeing B-17
with an unusual addition; a large mettalic 'V' extending from the
nose. As she passes, the B-17 drops a package near the swimmers,
which inflates to become a raft.
The film has it's problems; the underwater battle seems too long, too slow; water slows everything down and here Barry's normally pacey score doesn't help, the music making it seem even longer. The continuity throws up some shockers; Bond is shot in the right calf, only to bandage his left. The next day he dives without so much as a scratch on his leg. Dive masks change colour mid-scene and Domino steps on an egg-spine with her right foot - which Bond removes from her left. There is a lot of unsynchronised audio; actor's mouths move, but the words don't match. Further, a fair few shots are reversed, which isn't so obvious on first viewing, but oddly unsettling on repeated screenings.
So, why the 'Real Q'?. Russhon had links with special operations forces and used his contacts to obtain unheard-of access and favours. Filming at Fort Knox for Goldfinger was only possible through his influence*, as he was a friend of President Kennedy's Press Secretary, but it was his work on Thunderball that shines. The frogmen that parachute into the sea?; the USAF para-rescue team. The explosion when the Disco Volante crashes?; experimental rocket fuel supplied by a Russhon contact. Also, Colonel Russhon sourced the Bell-Textron Jet Belt and the Fulton Skyhook 'STARS' system and plane from the CIA. This alone would surely secure the title of 'Q', but Colonel Russhon also acted as location scout for Live and Let Die, as well as providing military liaison for You Only Live Twice. Lt.Col Charles J.Russhon died at home in New York in 1982. A fitting tribute is his cameo; here at far-right.
Once aboard, Bond sets to work, watched by a curious Domino as he
snaps linkages together and inflates what turns out to be a balloon,
rather like a small blimp or barrage balloon. Snapping the line from
this to a harness beneath his wetsuit, Bond waits for the plane to
return, wrapping his arm round Domino.
The B-17 executes a flawless run, the line from 007's balloon running
between the forks and snapping into the 'sky anchor', the
spring-loaded mechanism to secure it. As the line pays out, the pair
are hoisted aloft into the air, flying behind the aircraft as the end
credits roll...
The legal battles surrounding this film are legendary, Kevin McClory secured the rights to the film and teamed up with Cubby Broccoli and Harry Saltzmann. The story was written by McCLory with Ian Fleming and Jack Whittingham, yet when Fleming published the book of the same name, there was no mention of either of his co-writers. They sued. The strain caused by all this is widely believed to have accelerated Fleming's early death and the outcome caused repercussions until McCLory's death in 2006. The film took over $140,000,000 - adjusted for inflation that made it the biggest Bond film until 2012's Skyfall. So, the biggest Bond?; yes, I think I can back that up. The film is iconic; Connery is still magnificent, although clearly he was tiring of the media intrusion at the time. The gadgets are unrivalled; the DB5 is back from Goldfinger and amongst various other gizmos Q-Branch have come up with the ultimate escape gimmick with the Bell-Textron Jet Belt. Original Director Terence Young returns, for the last time, John Barry's score stands the test of time and Tom Jones' belter of a theme - he fainted performing the final note - is ballsy, brassy and instantly recognisable. (Dionne Warwick had recorded a song called 'Mr.Kiss-Kiss Bang-Bang, but it was dropped in favour of Jones' number.) Ken Adams pulls his usual tricks with some memorable sets.
Above: The original trailer for Thunderball.
The film has it's problems; the underwater battle seems too long, too slow; water slows everything down and here Barry's normally pacey score doesn't help, the music making it seem even longer. The continuity throws up some shockers; Bond is shot in the right calf, only to bandage his left. The next day he dives without so much as a scratch on his leg. Dive masks change colour mid-scene and Domino steps on an egg-spine with her right foot - which Bond removes from her left. There is a lot of unsynchronised audio; actor's mouths move, but the words don't match. Further, a fair few shots are reversed, which isn't so obvious on first viewing, but oddly unsettling on repeated screenings.
Other goofs are less obvious, mentioned here only because of my oft-stated love of spotting them. When Bond hits Leiter in the stomach to stop him revealing he is 007, he then says '007' himself, right next to the man he was concealing his code-number from. The Secret Service conference room, though magnificent, features a floor-to-ceiling window overlooked by other buildings, hardly secure.
Rather wonderfully, during the Junkanoo scene, a dog stands in the middle of the road relieving itself; as if this wasn't bizarre enough, a group from 'Sidney Shoe Repairers' are seen dancing along with '007' headgear - presumably locals keen to get in on the act. Cameos include Dana Broccoli as a dancer at the Cafe Martinique, Henry Ford II and Kevin McCLory show up in the Casino scene. One piece of trivia that caught my eye was the origin of the name of Count Lippe; Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands (Full name Bernhard von Lippe Biesterfeld) was a wartime friend of Ian Fleming.
Rather wonderfully, during the Junkanoo scene, a dog stands in the middle of the road relieving itself; as if this wasn't bizarre enough, a group from 'Sidney Shoe Repairers' are seen dancing along with '007' headgear - presumably locals keen to get in on the act. Cameos include Dana Broccoli as a dancer at the Cafe Martinique, Henry Ford II and Kevin McCLory show up in the Casino scene. One piece of trivia that caught my eye was the origin of the name of Count Lippe; Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands (Full name Bernhard von Lippe Biesterfeld) was a wartime friend of Ian Fleming.
The Bell-Textron Jet Belt. |
Bill Suitor pilots a jet-pack at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. |
Production drawing of a dummy jet-pack to be used by Connery in the pre-title sequence. |
The B-17G Flying Fortress featured in Thunderball. This plane was used by the CIA in Tawain to drop Agents into China, before being sold to various CIA-front companies such as Evergreen and Intermountain. Rigged with the Fulton Skyhook, she was a vital part of Project Coldfeet before gaining immortality as the aircraft rescuing Bond, before being converted for fire-fighting duties. She sits, restored to her original spec, in Evergreen's museum. For more on this wonderfully historic aircraft, visit https://evergreenmuseum.wordpress.com/ |
Above and Below; two CIA instruction cards for personnel using the Fulton STARS system. |
Above; an illustration of the Thunderball aircraft, N809Z in her role recovering personnel during Project Coldfeet. This highly-classified mission was to recover intelligence from an abandoned Soviet ice station. For more on this incredible Cold-War mission, visit https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/kent-csi/vol38no5/html/v38i5a11p.htm |
Adolfo Celi plays Emilio Largo, S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Number Two |
Luciana Paluzzi plays Fiona Volpe. Here sharing a moment with Celi. |
Volpe is from the Execution Branch of S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Here she poses with the BSA Lightning she uses to execute Counte Lippe. |
Martine Beswick plays Paula Caplan. Beswick was one of the fighting Gypsy girls featured in From Russia With Love. |
Claudine Auger is Dominique 'Domino' Derval. A Former Miss France winner, Auger is one of the most beautiful of the Bond women. |
Beswick, Paluzzi and Auger on-set. |
Above, Below; Promotional shots featuring Sean Connery with the Bond girls. Molly Peters appears in the Above shot. |
The Pre-Title Scene; smoke is pumped from off-screen to give the carpenter's lifting rig credibility. |
Sean
Connery poses with the Bell-Textron Rocket Belt. The carpet at bottom
is part of the rig. Studio filming; the rear-projection washed out by the camera flash. |
A cigarette between takes. |
A shared moment with Claudine Auger. |
An underwater moment... |
Above and Below; filming the scene where Fiona Volpe seduces Bond... |
...Or is it the other way round?. |
A light-hearted moment on set. |
A deleted scene in which Bond is shown aboard the Disco Volante. |
Terence Young, whose mannerisms and suave style were copied by Connery to create the cinematic Bond. |
Rehearsal; note the eye-patch. |
Work, work, work. |
Rigging for dive. |
A rather intriguing shot of Connery with Lois Maxwell, for many the Miss Moneypenny |
The tank at Pinewood doubles for the Caribbean. |
Promoting the film; Auger and Connery go before the Press. |
August 1965 and Connery greets the Press. |
Luciana Paluzzi speaks to the BBC while Sean Connery looks on. |
No privacy on-set. The Press were admitted to Pinewood to see the hotel set. |
The Gala Charity booklet from the even on December 29th 1965. |
Above, below; some of the posters. |
(Above) an unused poster from Frank McCarthy. That this didn't make it as an 'official' poster defies belief. |
Italian Lobby 'fotobusta' cards http://lobbycards.tumblr.com/bond |
The merchandising included this Song Album... |
And the paperback, which included a novelty; a letter from Domino to James Bond. |
The first edition. |
Russhon worked on Bond films from From Russia With Love to Live and Let Die. His fondness for ice-cream gave his friend Milton Caniff the inspiration for his 'Charlie Vanilla' character. |
Claire, Russhon's wife posing in the famous DB5. |
*Watch the scene; the 'Welcome to Fort Knox' sign gives him a namecheck.
Finally, I wish to dedicate this article to the memory of George Thomas Thornby, my Wife's late Father. A wonderful family man who served his country, George's favourite James Bond film was Thunderball.
Finally, I wish to dedicate this article to the memory of George Thomas Thornby, my Wife's late Father. A wonderful family man who served his country, George's favourite James Bond film was Thunderball.
No comments:
Post a Comment