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James Bond Wikipedia pages



List of James Bond vehicles
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Not to be confused with Bond Cars Ltd.



Aston Martin DB5, the most famous James Bond car
Throughout the James Bond series of films and novels, Q Branch has given Bond a wide variety of vehicles with which to battle his enemies. Among the most noteworthy gadgets, Bond has been equipped with various vehicles that have numerous modifications to include elaborate weapons and anti-pursuit systems, alternative transportation modes, and various other functions, but one car in particular has always been linked to Mr. Bond's luxurious collection, the Aston Martin DB5.



Contents  [hide]
1 Automobiles 1.1 Alfa Romeo
1.2 AMC
1.3 Aston Martin
1.4 Audi
1.5 AvtoVAZ
1.6 Bentley
1.7 BMW
1.8 British Leyland, Land Rover and Jaguar and MG
1.9 Ford Motor Company
1.10 General Motors
1.11 Lotus
1.12 Mercedes-Benz
1.13 Rolls-Royce
1.14 Saab
1.15 Other passenger cars
1.16 Other vehicles
2 Trains
3 Aircraft
4 Marine vehicles
5 See also
6 References
7 External links

Automobiles[edit]
Alfa Romeo[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Octopussy Alfa Romeo GTV6 Civilian Bond steals the parked car while its owner uses a pay phone booth and makes haste towards Octopussy's Circus, pursued by two Bavarian BMW police cars.[1]
Quantum of Solace Alfa Romeo 159 Villain[2] Shortly after capturing Mr. White, Bond is chased by two Alfas from Lake Garda to Siena, Italy. Despite sustaining heavy damage, Bond's Aston Martin DBS V12 manages to escape while both Alfas are destroyed.
Quantum of Solace Alfa Romeo 156 Police A Police Vehicle that honked at pedestrians to clear the way after Bond shot Mitchell.
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Moonraker Alfa Romeo Supercharged Straight-8[3] Unknown Just before the entrance to Leeds Castle in a Car chase from London to Dover
AMC[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
The Man With The Golden Gun AMC Hornet American Motors Car dealership Featured in The Man with the Golden Gun.[4] Bond steals this red 1974 hatchback from an AMC dealership in Bangkok, Thailand. He makes his exit by crashing through the showroom window.[5] unknowing that Sheriff J.W. Pepper was in it looking to test drive it. A Hornet was also used for the famous twisting corkscrew aerial jump that was captured in just one filming sequence.[6][7] A special modified car performed the stunt with a lower stance and larger wheel wells (just as the Astro Spiral Javelin stunt cars that performed that same jump in AMC sponsored thrill shows) compared to the stock Hornet X model in all of its other appearances in the movie. Seven tests were performed in advance before the one jump performed by an uncredited British stuntman "Bumps" Williard for the film with six (or 8, depending on the source) cameras simultaneously rolling.[8] Two frogmen were positioned in the water, as well as an emergency vehicle and a crane were ready, but not needed. An engineer[9] at the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory (CAL) used computer modeling to calculate the stunt and specified 1,460.06 kilograms (3,219 lb) for the weight of car and driver, the exact angles and the 15.86-metre (52 ft) distance between the ramps, as well as the 64.36-kilometre-per-hour (40 mph) launch speed.[10] This vehicle is on display at the National Motor Museum in Beaulieu, Hampshire.[11] The ramps are still in the possession of the Jay Milligan's stunt company, JM Productions in Hamburg, New York.
AMC Matador coupe Francisco Scaramanga and Nick Nack The featured car in The Man with the Golden Gun.[12] "Bond is foiled by perhaps the best trick a getaway car has ever performed; the Matador transforms into a plane."[13] Francisco Scaramanga and Nick Nack use this 1974 car to kidnap Mary Goodnight and make their escape. In the film, the Matador coupe is converted into a 'car plane' to fly from Bangkok to an island in the China Sea. With the flight tail unit, the complete machine was 9.15 metres (30 ft) long, 12.80 metres (42 ft) wide, and 3.08 metres (10 ft) high and the "flying AMC Matador" was exhibited at auto shows; however, it could only make a 500-metre (1,640 ft) flight so for the film's aerial sequences it was replaced by a meter-long (39-inch) remote controlled model.[10] Transformation of the AMC Matador into a light airplane occurred when wings and flight tail unit were attached to the actual car (that served as the fuselage and landing gear) and a stuntman drove the 'car plane' to a runway at which point the scene cut to the radio-controlled scale model built by John Stears.[8] See Aircraft section below.
AMC Matador sedan Bangkok Police The featured police car in The Man with the Golden Gun.[14] The 1974 Matador used in the chase is a left-hand drive model although Thailand operates with UK style left-hand traffic rules.
Moonraker AMC Concord Drax Industries A 1978 D/L station wagon is seen in Moonraker where Bond and Hugo Drax are pigeon hunting.[15]
Jeep Wagoneer  Bond is seen briefly driving the Jeep through some caves.[16]
A View to a Kill Jeep Cherokee (XJ) Stacey Sutton Featured in A View to a Kill where Stacey is seen driving home.[17]
Licence to Kill Jeep CJ-7 Henchman Perez A 1976 Renegade-II is seen in Licence to Kill.[18] It is used by Sanchez's henchman Perez, who fires a FIM-92 Stinger missile at a commandeered oil tanker where Bond does a wheelie (in this scene, Bond crushes the Jeep).
Tomorrow Never Dies Jeep Cherokee (XJ) Wai Lin A 1997 XJ Cherokee right-hand drive export model is seen in front of Wai Lin's hideout.[19]
Aston Martin[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Goldfinger Aston Martin DB5[20] James Bond Featured in six films (Goldfinger, Thunderball, GoldenEye, a small appearance in Tomorrow Never Dies, Casino Royale and Skyfall). In the novelisation of GoldenEye it is stated that Bond purchased the DB5 as his own personal vehicle, although the 2006 version of Casino Royale, which reboots Bond film continuity, shows Bond winning it in a game of poker in The Bahamas; as such the Casino Royale version of the vehicle is the only one that is not outfitted with special equipment (Brosnan's DB5 is shown to have special features in GoldenEye). The DB5 can also be used in the video games Agent Under Fire and From Russia with Love. The DB5 also made cameo appearances in the comedy film, The Cannonball Run, driven by Roger Moore's character, and in the TV-film The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E., George Lazenby, playing a Bond-like character referred to as "JB", drives a DB5 (with the licence plate "JB"). It also appears in numerous other films in association to Bond including a small cameo in Catch Me If You Can (2002) where the main character purchases one to be like Bond, Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle(2003) in which Bernie Mac's Bosley drives one and The Life and Death of Peter Sellers (2004) in which Geoffrey Rush, playing Peter Sellers, is shown driving one at the time of making Casino Royale, even though in real life that film did not feature the vehicle. A model is currently on display in the International Spy Museum in the Penn Quarter neighborhood of Washington, D.C.
The Goldfinger DB5 with gadgets was sold on October 27, 2010 for $4.6m (£2.9m) to the car collector Harry Yeaggy.[21][22] It features the pop out gun barrels behind the front indicators, the bullet shield behind the rear window and a 3-way revolving front number plate showing "GOLD FINGER" or "JB007" or "BMT216A".

On Her Majesty's Secret Service Aston Martin DBS[23] The car was seen in only four scenes, including the pre-credits teaser and as James and Tracy's wedding car. Nothing is known about what kind of gadgets were installed, except that it had a hiding place for a sniper rifle in the glovebox. Obviously — given what happens at the end of that movie — it was not fitted with bulletproof glass. The DBS is glimpsed in the subsequent film, Diamonds Are Forever, parked up in Q Branch back in London when Bond calls Q from Amsterdam. The car was actually cropped out of the frame on the "pan-and-scan version" of the film.
The Living Daylights Aston Martin V8 Vantage Volante A convertible, it is later "winterised" with a hardtop. It comes with all the usual refinements, including extending side outriggers, spike-producing tires, missiles, lasers (an update of the DB5's tyre-slashers), signal-intercepting smart radio, head-up display and rocket propulsion. It could also self-destruct when primed.
GoldenEye Aston Martin DB5 Driven in the opening scenes by Bond, whilst racing a Ferrari.
Tomorrow Never Dies Aston Martin DB5 Seen parked in front of Oxford University and driven by Bond in a transitional scene of Bond arriving at the Ministry of Defence
Die Another Day Aston Martin V12 Vanquish[24] The car is equipped with all the usual refinements, including front-firing rockets between two machine guns, hood-mounted target-seeking shotguns, spike-producing tires, again and a passenger ejector seat in homage to the original Aston Martin DB5, but used here in a clever bit of improvisation by 007 to right the car when its been flipped onto its roof. The Aston was also equipped with "adaptive camouflage" – a cloaking device that allowed it to become effectively invisible at the push of a button. This vehicle was also featured in the video games Nightfire (2002) and Everything or Nothing (2004).
Casino Royale Aston Martin DB5, Aston Martin DBS V12 Featured in the second Casino Royale.[25] No special gadget was visible on the DBS other than the secret compartments which housed Bond's Walther P99, and an emergency med kit which includes components of an emergency medical link to MI6 HQ, antidotes to various poisons and a small defibrillator. The DB5 is owned by a gambling villain in the Bahamas, which Bond acquires in a poker game. It has no special modifications.
Quantum of Solace Aston Martin DBS V12 A slightly darker coloured vehicle to that featured in Casino Royale is heavily damaged after a chase at the beginning of the film in Siena, Italy.
Skyfall Aston Martin DB5 Two gadgets are shown on this vehicle, the ejector seat (although not demonstrated) and two front firing machine guns. This is the first time the machine guns have been used in action since 1964s Goldfinger. This car is destroyed in the climactic battle scene. An Aston Martin DB5 appeared in 007 Blood Stone and shared a similar fate to the DB5 in Skyfall.
Bamford & Martin 1.5 litre Side Valve
The Bamford & Martin 1.5 litre Side Valve Short Chassis Tourer was James Bond's first car. He inherited it around Easter 1933 in the first Young Bond novel SilverFin from his uncle Max at the age of thirteen. Bond regularly drove the car, although he was underage, and stored it in a nearby garage while he attended Eton. The car was destroyed in the third Young Bond novel, Double or Die, in December 1933 leading Bond to replace it by purchasing the Bentley Mark IV shortly thereafter in the same novel.
Aston Martin DB Mark III
Bond drives an Aston Martin DB Mark III, which is referred to as a "DB III" in the novel Goldfinger. The "DB3" was a car designed specifically for racing and is unlikely that Bond would drive one. The DB Mark III is often called the DB III and is more comparable to its description in Fleming's novel. This car was the only gadget-laden vehicle to be mentioned in the original Bond novels, though Fleming generally avoided gadgetry in his books. It included switches to alter the type of color of the front and rear lights, reinforced steel bumpers, a Colt .45 pistol in a trick compartment under the driver's seat, and a homing device similar to the DB5 in the film.
Audi[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
The Living Daylights Audi 200 Avant Saunders 
Audi V8 Quattro British Intelligence 
Quantum of Solace Audi A6  
Skyfall Audi A5 Villain Driven by the villain in a car chase through Istanbul that precedes the film's opening titles. The car ends up flipped over and the villain continues his escape on a Honda motorbike.
AvtoVAZ[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
The Living Daylights VAZ-2106 Czechoslovakian Police Several are engaged in pursuit and are destroyed at the hands of Bond's Aston Martin, the first is cut in half by the Aston's laser tyre shredder, the second is sunk into a frozen lake after the Aston cuts a hole in the ice, whilst another plummets from a ramp and goes through a shed.
VAZ-2105 KGB Used by a KGB agent to tail Kara Milovy.
GoldenEye VAZ-2105 St. Petersburg Police Several go in pursuit of Bond in the stolen tank, but all are destroyed in various collisions.
The World Is Not Enough VAZ-2121 Sasha Davidov After killing Davidov, Bond uses the car whilst infiltrating Renard's operation.
Bentley[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
From Russia With Love 1935 Bentley 3.5 Litre drophead coupé Park Ward James Bond Brief appearance
Never Say Never Again 1937 Bentley 4½ Litre Gurney Nutting 3-Position-Drophead Coupé James Bond Brief appearance
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Casino Royale 1930 Bentley 4½ Litre James Bond Driven by Bond and badly damaged in a car chase.
Live and Let Die 1933 Bentley 4½ Litre James Bond Mentioned in flashback scene.
Moonraker 1933 Bentley 4½ Litre James Bond Destroyed in a car chase
1953 Bentley Mark VI James Bond Bought with winnings from a card game.
Thunderball Bentley R-Type Continental James Bond 
Role of Honour Bentley Mulsanne Turbo  
Bentley Mark IV
There has never been a Bentley model known as the "Mark IV": neither from the "old" W.O. Bentley firm, nor from Rolls-Royce after the takeover of Bentley Motors in 1931. The "Mark IV" appellation seems to have been created by Ian Fleming, and erroneously perpetuated since. In contradistinction to the films, James Bond's official car in the Ian Fleming novels was a grey 1933 Bentley convertible. The car featured a 4.5 L engine with the Amherst Villiers supercharger. In the novels, no gadgets were installed; this was Bond's personal vehicle that is mentioned in Casino Royale as being a hobby that Bond enjoys working on. Its only armament, in the novels, is a .45 Colt Army Special revolver Bond keeps in the glove compartment. The novel version of the Bentley Mark IV was destroyed during a chase sequence in Moonraker. The Bentley is also the very first Bond vehicle seen in the film series, although it was shown very briefly during Bond's first scene in From Russia with Love and mentioned only in passing in Goldfinger. In From Russia with Love, the only gadget known to be included was a car phone, which in 1963 was very uncommon. The film version of Goldfinger strongly implies that the Bentley was issued to Bond by Q-Branch, since he asks Q about the vehicle, only to be told that it had "had its day". He is given the Aston Martin instead.
In Casino Royale, Fleming writes that Bond bought the car "almost new" in 1933 and had it stored during the war, which is mentioned in the Young Bond novel Double or Die. In Live and Let Die Fleming states the automobile's year as 1933, however in Moonraker Fleming states it is from 1930. This earlier date is the correct one, as the Bentley 4½ Litre ceased production in 1930.
Bentley Mark VI
Made in 1953, Bond purchases his second Bentley towards the end of the novel, Moonraker. Like his previous Bentley, the Mark VI is grey with dark blue leather upholstery. After Moonraker this model is never mentioned again.
Bentley Mark II Continental
A Bentley Mark II Continental was featured in the novel Thunderball and is Bond's final Bentley. Bond, having purchased the car in a wrecked state, upgrades the engine from a 4.5 L engine to a 4.9 L and has a custom drophead body from Mulliners. The Mark II was also grey; however, the interior was black leather. The Mark II Continental is last seen in the novel On Her Majesty's Secret Service where Bond upgrades the vehicles once again with an Arnott supercharger controlled by a magnetic clutch, causing Rolls-Royce, worried about potential damage to the engine, to disown the car. He uses the car in a race with the Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo in her Lancia Flaminia Spyder towards the beginning of the book. Bond dubs the car "the locomotive".
Bentley Mulsanne Turbo
Bond purchases a Mulsanne Turbo in John Gardner's Role of Honour. The car is British racing green with magnolia interior. It is outfitted with a long-range telephone and a hidden weapon compartment.
BMW[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Octopussy BMW 518i West German police Two of these cars are seen in a short chase scene when Bond commandeers an Alfa Romeo GTV6 and makes haste towards Octopussy's circus. These two cars are in pursuit.
GoldenEye BMW Z3[26] British Secret Service Supposedly equipped with 'Stinger' missiles and other armaments, which are never seen or used except for a deployable parachute and auto-HUD. Car is left-hand drive. Total screen time less than two minutes.
Tomorrow Never Dies BMW 750iL[27] Loaned to Bond by Q at an Avis rental station in Germany, this car is equipped with missile launchers, caltrops, self-inflating tires and a near-impenetrable body. The BMW can be remotely controlled via a special Ericsson cell phone. During a chase inside a carpark, Bond exits the car and remotely drives it to the rooftop, sending it flying off the carpark before crash-landing into an Avis station across the street.
BMW R1200C motorcycle Stolen Driven by James Bond and Wai Lin with some Range Rovers in pursuit in Saigon, Vietnam.
The World Is Not Enough BMW Z8 British Secret Service Cut in half by chopper after firing one shot.
British Leyland, Land Rover and Jaguar and MG[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Diamonds Are Forever Triumph Stag Peter Franks Commandeered by Bond at the Port of Dover, after Franks is arrested.
The Man With The Golden Gun MGB Mary Goodnight This tan MGB is owned by Hong Kong's MI6 agent Mary Goodnight. She and Bond follow Andrea Anders in her dark green Rolls-Royce; they end up at the Peninsula Hotel where Bond discovers that they have a fleet of dark green Rolls-Royces.
The Spy Who Loved Me Leyland Sherpa van Jaws Used by Jaws posing as a telephone engineer. He subsequently tears it apart trying to thwart Bond and Anya's escape. The van's engine eventually overheats and seizes in the middle of the desert
Octopussy Range Rover Classic convertible James Bond Used to tow the horse box containing the Acrostar Jet
Austin FX4 taxi British Intelligence Used by Smithers to follow Kamal Khan from Sotheby's
The Living Daylights Land Rover Series III British SAS Crashes off the Rock of Gibraltar and explodes in the pre-credits sequence
Range Rover Classic British Government Appears outside the Blayden Safe House.
Rover 800 British Government Appears outside the Blayden Safe House, and in the emergency response convoy shortly after Necros' attack.
Land Rover Series III (Armoured) Red Army Used by Bond and Milovy in their escape from the C-130 Hercules shortly before it crashes.
Tomorrow Never Dies Daimler Limousine British Government 
Range Rover (P38A) Elliot Carver Used to pursue Bond through the streets of Saigon
Die Another Day Jaguar XKR Zao Equipped with front grille machine guns, door panel missiles, rear mounted gattling gun and boot mounted mortars. This vehicle is on display at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu.[28]
Casino Royale Range Rover Sport Ocean Club golfer Used by James Bond to ram parking lot rail and set off car alarms.
Skyfall Land Rover Defender British Intelligence Driven by Eve Moneypenny with James Bond in the passenger seat. Used in a car chase through Istanbul that precedes the film's opening titles.
Range Rover (L322) British Intelligence/Metropolitan Police Service Used as police cars and MI6 vehicles in multiple scenes in London.
Jaguar XJ (X351) British Intelligence M's official car, used in multiple scenes throughout the movie. Last seen driven by James Bond himself, chauffeuring M.
Land Rover Discovery 4 Metropolitan Police Service Used to transport Raoul Silva whilst disguised as a police officer, to proceed to the inquiry. It is then driven by Raoul Silva as an escape vehicle after the attack on the inquiry.
Ford Motor Company[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Goldfinger 1964 Lincoln Continental Auric Goldfinger Mobster shot in the backseat by Oddjob and crushed in a junkyard - Later in the film a pair (a sedan and a convertible) bring Bond to the airport on behalf of the U.S. Government.
Ford Country Squire Red 1964 Station Wagon
Ford Ranchero Driven by Oddjob to carry the crushed Lincoln back to the Goldfinger's Kentucky horsefarm.
Ford Thunderbird Felix Leiter White 1964 Convertible
Ford Mustang Convertible Tilly Masterton White over red 1964 convertible. (Called the T-5 in Europe) Tires and lower portion of the right side slashed by Bond's Aston Martin DB5.
Thunderball Fiona Volpe 
Ford Fairlane Skyliner Count Lippe As a punishment for failing to dispose of Bond, Lippe is killed in his Fairlane, which is blown up by villainess Fiona Volpe using rocket launchers mounted on her BSA motorbike.
Ford Thunderbird Emilio Largo 
Lincoln Continental James Bond (1965 convertible); Jacques Bouvoir (1964 Lehmann-Peterson limousine) 
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Mercury Cougar XR7 Contessa Teresa de Vicenzo (née: Tracy Draco, Tracy Bond) Red on Red 1969 Convertible, Driven by Tracy onto a Portuguese beach where she attempts suicide, later in a winter stock-car race on an ice-covered track to help Bond escape from Blofeld's henchmen and Irma Bund.
Diamonds Are Forever Ford Mustang Mach 1 Tiffany Case The highlight of the Las Vegas car chase is the Mustang balancing on two side wheels to drive through a narrow alley (and mysteriously comes out of the alley on the other two wheels!).
Ford Econoline Dr. Metz After Tiffany creates a diversion in the gas station, Bond sneaks into the back of the van to gain access to the Whyte Tectronics facility.
Ford Thunderbird Mister Wint and Mister Kidd Used to transport Bond from the basement of the Whyte House out to the Nevada desert to have him buried alive in an underground pipe.
Ford Custom 500 Las Vegas P.D. squads, Clark County Sheriff's Department, numerous Las Vegas taxicabs 
Ford Galaxie 500 sedan James Bond (copper-plated sedan 007 is sitting in where he meets with Felix where the CIA agents lose Tiffany) 
Ford LTD Whyte Tectronics security forces Several go in pursuit of Bond in the stolen moon buggy, and are destroyed or damaged in the ensuing chase through the desert.
The Spy Who Loved Me Ford Taunus 2.3 Ghia Jaws and Stromberg's henchmen The windscreen is sprayed with paint by Bond's Lotus Esprit, the driver loses control and the car careers off a mountainside and crashes through a barn roof. Jaws (as ever) walks away from the crash unscathed.
A View to a Kill Ford Bronco Chuck Lee 
Ford LTD James Bond Bond uses this car to pursue Stacy to Oakland.
Licence to Kill Mercury Grand Marquis stretched limousine Truman-Lodge 
Lincoln Mark VII LSC James Bond 
Tomorrow Never Dies Ford Scorpio Elliot Carver's henchmen 
Die Another Day Ford Thunderbird Giacinta Jinx Johnson 
Ford Fairlane James Bond Ford Fairlane briefly driven by Bond during his visit to Cuba in Die Another Day. A homage to Thunderball where villain Count Lippe drives a 1957 Ford Fairlane Skyliner.
Casino Royale Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor Miami Police 
Ford Mondeo 2.5 Litre ST James Bond This car is on display in the James Bond Experience[dead link] at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu
Quantum of Solace Ford Ka (Hydrogen Fuel Cell Model) Camille, when she picks up 007 
Ford Edge (Hydrogen Fuel Cell Model) Dominic Greene, later by James Bond 
Ford Bronco II Stolen by James Bond 
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Goldfinger Ford Popular Oddjob Oddjob uses this car for making the tour around Goldfinger's properties
For Your Eyes Only Ford Consul Major Gonzales and his henchmen (stolen) The trio uses a stolen car to get from Havelock's estate to Port Antonio
Thunderball Felix Leiter Leiter rents this car for the purpose of his mission
The Man With The Golden Gun Ford Thunderbird Francisco Scaramanga Bond follows this car to Thunderbird hotel
General Motors[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Dr. No LaSalle hearse Three Blind Mice Mysteriously turns into a Humber Super Snipe as it crashes over the cliff.
Chevrolet Bel Air convertible Dr No The first car driven by 007 in a Bond movie
Chevrolet Impala sedan CIA 
Vauxhall PA Cresta sedan Professor Dent Dent drives to the pier when catching the boat to Crab Key to warn Dr. No of Bond's investigation.
From Russia With Love Chevrolet C30 flatbed truck Rosa Klebb 
Diamonds Are Forever Cadillac hearse (Sovereign Landaulet by Superior Coach Corporation) Slumber, Inc. 
Live and Let Die Chevrolet Impala James Bond (1963 convertible while in San Monique) / Kananga's henchmen / J.W.Pepper / Louisiana State Police / New York City taxicab 
Chevrolet Chevelle Unmarked Louisiana State Police car 
Chevrolet Nova San Monique Police, Kananga's henchmen in New Orleans Two of these police cars are seen chasing Bond's stolen AEC Regent RT-type-double-decker bus with three motorcycles across San Monique. Also seen chasing Bond's stolen Cessna 172 Skyhawk around an airfield in New Orleans.
Chevrolet Corvette "Pimpmobile" Mr. Big 
Moonraker Chevrolet Veraneio ambulance Hugo Drax 
A View to a Kill Chevrolet Corvette C4 Pola Ivanova 
Cadillac Fleetwood 75 limousine Henchmen of Max Zorin 
The Living Daylights GMC Vandura Ambulance Government of Morocco Driven by Necros, this ambulance is only featured for a short time. During the short scene, Necros drives the ambulance from the airport terminal in Tangier across the tarmac to Koskov's plane, with the drugged Bond in the back.
Licence to Kill Chevrolet Caprice Fallon (MI6 agent seen after Bond's capture by Hong Kong Narcotics) 
Tomorrow Never Dies Vauxhall Omega British Government Are seen as part of the motorcade carrying M and Bond from the Ministry of Defence
Opel Senator Carver's Henchman Is destroyed by a rocket fired from Bond's BMW 750i in the chase through the multi-storey parking lot.
Lotus[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
The Spy Who Loved Me Lotus Esprit S1 James Bond Delivered to Bond by Q in Sardinia, this Lotus is capable of transforming into a submarine. In this mode, it is equipped with anti-aircraft missiles. This car is on display in the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu.[29] RM Auctions auctioned the white Lotus Esprit submarine in London on September 9, 2013 for £550,000 ($865,000).[30]
For Your Eyes Only Lotus Esprit Turbo Two Esprits are featured in this film. The first, a white model driven by Bond in Spain, is destroyed when a thug trips its self-destruct system by breaking the driver's side window. The second one is a bronze model driven by Bond at a ski resort in Northern Italy. Contrary to popular belief, these two were not repainted Essex-spec Turbo Esprits but specially commissioned cars.
Mercedes-Benz[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Goldfinger Mercedes-Benz 180 Goldfinger's henchmen 
rowspan="2" Mercedes-Benz 600 Blofeld  Mercedes 220S Blofeld's henchmen 
Mercedes-Benz 600 Blofeld Silver SWB - Irma Bundt was in the back and shot newlywed Tracy Bond in an attempt to kill James Bond while parked by the side of the road.
'Diamonds are forever
 Mercedes-Benz 600 Blofeld Sliver LWB - Blofeld leaves the casino dressed in drag and Tiffany Case is thrown into the back.
For Your Eyes Only Mercedes 450 SEL Emile Locque After the raid on Kristatos' base in Albania, Locque attempts to escape Bond in the car by driving to the top of a cliff, but is shot by Bond, who loses control with the car hanging perilously off the edge. Bond kicks the car off the cliff to finish off Locque.
Octopussy Mercedes 250SE General Orlov After the tires get torn off by a stinger device, Bond drives the car on the railway tracks in pursuit of the circus train. It was subsequently hit by a train coming down the opposite line and thrown into a river. It is later seen being recovered via crane and covered in seaweed.
The Living Daylights Mercedes-Benz W111 Pushkin's motorcade 
The Man With The Golden Gun Mercedes-Benz W115 James Bond 
GoldenEye Mercedes W140 French Navy 
Tomorrow Never Dies 2 Mercedes W126s Elliot Carver's henchmen 
Skyfall Mercedes S400 British government 
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Moonraker Mercedes-Benz 300S Hugo Drax Used in car chase to Dover
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Mercedes-Benz W112 saloon Blofeld's henchmen Upon arriving in Switzerland Bond is picked up with this car. Later they use it to pursue Bond and Tracy.
Rolls-Royce[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
From Russia with Love Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith[31] Kerim Bey 
Goldfinger 1937 Rolls-Royce Phantom III Auric Goldfinger chassis no. 3BU168; Barker sedanca de ville
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow[32] Marc-Ange Draco 
Moonraker Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith II Manuela 
For Your Eyes Only Aristotle Kristatos 
Octopussy Rolls-Royce Phantom III Kamal Khan 
The Man With The Golden Gun Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow Peninsula Hotel 
Licence to Kill Hotel de Isthmus 
The World Is Not Enough Valentin Zukovsky 
A View to a Kill Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud II Sir Godfrey Tibbet Tibbet and Bond are knocked unconscious in the car, which is pushed into a lake by May Day and Zorin for the pair to drown. (The car in the film was owned by producer Cubby Broccoli)
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
From Russia with Love Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Coupe-de-Ville Kerim Bey Bond is picked up with this car at Yesilkoy airport
Dr No Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith M Drives M to MI6 headquarters
Goldfinger Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Auric Goldfinger Goldfinger uses it to smuggle gold.
The Man With The Golden Gun Rolls-Royce Phantom M Referred to as "old, black Phantom Rolls", it takes M to SIS Headquarters after his lunch at Blades
Saab[edit]

Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
The Man from Barbarossa Saab 900 Turbo  Bond's vehicle of choice in many of the John Gardner Bond novels, beginning with Licence Renewed. Dubbed, "Silver Beast",[33] it is Bond's private vehicle modified by a real-life company "Communication Control Systems" (CCS) (now called Security Intelligence Technology Group[34]). He also rents a SAAB 9000 CD in Nobody Lives for Ever (1986) and No Deals, Mr. Bond (1987).
Never Send Flowers 
SeaFire 
Other passenger cars[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
From Russia With Love Citroën 11 Legere KGB Bulgarians 
For Your Eyes Only Citroën 2CV Melina Havelock A car belonging to Havelock. The car used in the movie was allegedly fitted with a Citroën GS 4-cylinder boxer engine (in place of the standard 2-cylinder boxer), to make it able to outrun the two Peugeot 504s in pursuit.[citation needed]
Licence to Kill Maserati Biturbo Franz Sanchez 
GoldenEye GAZ-31029 General Ourumov This car was used in the movie during the car/tank chase in St. Petersburg, when Bond was pursuing this car in a Russian T-95 tank.
GoldenEye VAZ-2106 St. Petersburg Police Used by the police during the car/tank chase scene.
GoldenEye ZAZ-965 Jack Wade Used by CIA agent Jack Wade to drive Bond from St Petersburg International Airport to Valentin Zukovsky's building complex.
You Only Live Twice Toyota 2000GT Aki Used by Bond's Japanese girlfriend, Aki during his time in Japan. It was fitted with a GPS system and a phone. This vehicle was unique as the 2000GT did not have an open-top version in its initial stages. Due to Sean Connery's height, he could not fit in the car. Alterations were thought to make the car into a Targa but it still did not work. Only way was to remove the top all together and Toyota achieved it within 2 weeks and sent two cars for the set.
Tomorrow Never Dies Daimler Limousine MI6 
Tomorrow Never Dies Opel Senator Carver's Henchmen 
The World Is Not Enough Lada Niva Russian Nuclear Department 
Casino Royale Daimler Limousine Hotel Splendide 
Casino Royale Jaguar XJ8 Le Chiffre 
Casino Royale Jaguar XJ8 Mr. White 
Octopussy Brown Range Rover Classic Convertible James Bond 
Quantum of Solace Jaguar XJ8 Dominic Greene 
Quantum of Solace Volvo S40 T5 Rental car agency in Bregenz, Austria 
Quantum of Solace Volkswagen Beetle Camille When she picks up Bond from the hotel after he escapes the MI6 agents. (Probably a Brazilian version. Most likely stolen.)
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Casino Royale Citroen Traction Avant Le Chiffre In the car chase scene this is the Citroen being pursued by Bond's Bentley
Goldfinger Chrysler Imperial Mr Du Pont This is the car that takes Bond from Miami Airport
O.H.M.S.S. Citroën 2CV Marc-Ange Draco's men They follow Bond from hotel Splendide to the beach in this car
The Living Daylights Opel Kapitän MI6 agent Uses car's engine noise to cover up Bond's shooting
Auto rickshaw—Featured in Octopussy. Two of these basic auto rickshaws are used in a chase sequence through the streets of Udaipur — Bond and fellow MI6 agent Vijay being in one, with Gobinda and his henchmen in the pursuing vehicle. It is insinuated that the auto rickshaw driven by Vijay has been modified by MI6 as the tone of the engine becomes more like a motorcycle and Vijay performs a wheelie, exclaiming, "This is a company car!"
Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire-In Ian Fleming's Diamonds Are Forever is the car that takes Bond to London airport at the start of the novel.
Cord Model 810 from 1939—In Ian Fleming's Live and Let Die, Bond takes the car from Felix Leiter after he is injured and drives it down to the docks to get into the wild shootout with the Robber.
Dodge Diplomat—Featured in A View To A Kill as a San Francisco Police Department patrol car. A few late 1970s Dodge Monacos were seen, along with a Plymouth Volaré seen outside San Francisco City Hall. Late 1980s Diplomats were also featured in Licence to Kill as the squad cars in Key West, Florida (some may have been identical Plymouth Gran Furys).
Dodge Polara—a 1964 model year seen in You Only Live Twice as a getaway vehicle after Henderson is stabbed by a hitman.
Dodge Ram 150 pickup truck from the late-1980s—Seen in Licence To Kill during the tanker pursuit scene.
Ferrari F355 GTS—Featured in GoldenEye. Xenia Onatopp playfully races James Bond in his Aston Martin DB5 by chance on the mountain roads behind Monte Carlo in this vehicle, which is later revealed to have false French registration plates, hinting that it may be stolen. Another 355 appears twice in Die Another Day during the opening sequence, and later on the AN-124 airplane. It is then pushed out of the plane along with the Lamborghini Diablo.
Ferrari 360 Modena—appears briefly in the opening sequence of Die Another Day.
Ford Five Hundred: Two can be briefly seen in the parking lot of the resort in Nassau in Casino Royale after Bond backs the Range Rover into another car
Humber Super Snipe Series II- Bond and Leiter take a brief tour in a car that belongs to the governor of the Bahamas in Ian Fleming's Thunderball
Lamborghini Diablo is seen in the opening sequence of Die Another Day (film) and is later being loaded onto the AN-124 Airplane. The Lamborghini is then pushed out of the plane and seen sticking nose first in the mud by Bond and Jinx as they fly over.[35]
Lancia Flaminia Zagato Spyder is driven by Tracy in Ian Fleming's O.H.M.S.S.. With her white model she overtakes, then races Bond in his Bentley near Royale-les-Eaux
Mazda Cosmo Sport 110S—This vehicle, Mazda's first rotary-powered car, was briefly seen in You Only Live Twice.
Mini Moke—Featured briefly in Live and Let Die and later in The Spy Who Loved Me. In Live and Let Die, Bond and Rosie use this vehicle to drive to the harbor to meet Quarrel Jr. In Spy, the crew of the Liparus supertanker uses a Mini Moke in their defense against a break out by the submarine crews. Also seen in Moonraker where Bond and Dr. Goodhead are hiding in a trailer (prior to boarding Moonraker 6 as pilots) after escaping from an air vent during Moonraker 5's launch.
Peugeot 504—Two Peugeot 504s featured in For Your Eyes Only, used by Hector Gonzales' henchmen to chase Bond and Melina driving with Citroën 2CV.
Peugeot 403—In short story From a View to a Kill Bond uses Marie Ann Russell's car while on assignment in France. In Ian Fleming's O.H.M.S.S. Bond is picked up by one of Draco's men who takes him to the helicopter hideout with this car.
Porsche 911 Turbo (993)—seen briefly in the opening sequence of Die Another Day. It is destroyed in an explosion.
Porsche Cayenne Turbo—A secondary vehicle for all-terrain conditions in the computer game James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing.
Range Rover Sport—Featured in Casino Royale, Bond purposely crashes it in a hotel parking lot to serve as a distraction. A black version of the Range Rover Vogue is one of the cars used by Le Chiffre's henchmen.
Renault 11 Taxi—Featured in A View to a Kill, Bond commandeers this car and takes it on a pursuit through Paris. During the pursuit the car has its roof chopped off and then later the entire back half of the car is ripped off.
Renault Fuego—used in A View to a Kill to transport of the Bond Girl.
Renault 5 Turbo 2—used by Fatima Blush in Never Say Never Again after killing Nicole, provoking James to take chase on motorcycle.
Simca Aronde- Bond rents this car for the purpose of following Tracy without being noticed in Ian Fleming's O.H.M.S.S.
Studillac—A custom black Studebaker convertible with a Cadillac engine, plus special transmission, brakes and rear axle, owned by Felix Leiter in the novel Diamonds Are Forever. The combination of the aerodynamic Raymond Loewy designed body with the powerful Cadillac engine made it into a remarkable sports car. Studillacs were not fictional, but actually built by a Long Island, NY company called Bill Frick Motors from 1953 Studebaker Starlight bodies.
Stutz Bearcat- Cameos as part of the Spectreville scenery in Diamonds Are Forever.
Sunbeam Alpine Series II Sports—Featured in Dr. No. Bond drives to Miss Taro's home in the Blue Mountains; he is pursued by Dr. No's thugs driving a LaSalle hearse. It is a Lake Blue example that was owned by a local resident in Jamaica where the scenes were filmed. In the novel Dr. No, Bond drives the car that formerly belonged to Commander Strangways, the murdered agent in Kingston. It is also driven by Quarrel. In The Man with the Golden Gun novel Mary Goodnight uses the car and she hands it to Bond so he can use it while he is on assignment.
Sunbeam-Talbot 90 Coupe—Featured in Live And Let Die novel. Commander Strangways gives this car to Bond.
Toyota 2000GT convertible—Featured in You Only Live Twice. Owned by Aki. Toyota built two convertibles especially for the film. One is displayed at Toyota's headquarters today while the location of the other is currently not known.[citation needed]
Toyota Celica GT—Briefly seen in The Man with the Golden Gun, Scaramanga and Nicknack get out and into his boat.
Toyota Crown—Osato's hitmen were seen in a Crown; this was the car that was picked up using an electromagnet on a CH-47 helicopter, later dumped into Tokyo Bay.
Triumph Stag—In Diamonds Are Forever, Connery is seen early in the movie driving a yellow Stag to Amsterdam, while posing as diamond smuggler Peter Franks.
Triumph TR3—Owned by Tilly Masterton in novel, she uses it to pursue Goldfinger across France. Bond later rams this car with his Aston Martin.
ZIL-41047—Featured briefly in the film The Living Daylights, two of these cars are seen driving across Tangier, with Bond in pursuit. One of the cars is carrying the Russian General Pushkin.
Other vehicles[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Live and Let Die AEC Regent RT-type double-decker bus Stolen by James Bond and Solitaire 
Diamonds Are Forever Dune buggy Whyte Industries Bond steals a buggy with a VW Beetle chassis and drives it through the Nevada terrain, throwing off the cars chasing him.
Honda ATC-90 all-terrain vehicle Whyte Industries Seen chasing the commandeered dune buggy. Another ATV is later stolen by Bond.
Thunderball BSA Lightning motorcycle  
The Spy Who Loved Me 1976 Leyland Sherpa Jaws 
Kawasaki Z900 Stromberg henchman 
For Your Eyes Only GP Beach Buggy Emile Locque Locque drives this buggy along a beach in Italy and hits Countess Lisl von Schlaf, leaving her dead.
Yamaha 500 XT Erich Kriegler 
Never Say Never Again Yamaha XJ650 Turbo Seca motorcycle James Bond Sent to Bond by Q. The XJ650 is Yamaha's only turbo-charged motorcycle.
A View to a Kill American LaFrance ladder truck San Francisco Fire Department 
The Living Daylights Panhard AML Soviet Air Force 
VAB AFV Colonel Feyador 
Rover 800-series British Government Seen parked outside the Blayden Safe House, and in the emergency response convoy shortly after Necros and Koskov escape in the helicopter.
Licence to Kill Kenworth W900B Franz Sanchez 
Willys MB 
GoldenEye T-55M5 Russian Reserve Army, Leningrad Military District 
Casino Royale New Holland tractor  
International 4900  
Skyfall Honda CRF250R motorcycle  
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
From a View to a Kill BSA M20 SHAPE, Bond, Soviet agent Serves a major role in the plot as Bond disguises himself as an despatch rider in order to get close to the enemy spy
Trains[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
From Russia With Love Orient Express (Istanbul - Venice) TCDD/SNCF 
You Only Live Twice Tanaka's underground train in Tokyo Tiger Tanaka 
From Russia With Love BOB ABDeh 4/4 (Interlaken – Zweilütschinen - Lauterbrunnen) BOB 
Live And Let Die Underground monorail on San Monique (fictional) Kananga 
Live And Let Die Silver Meteor with diesel locomotive from New York to Miami Unknown 
The Spy who Loved Me Unknown Passenger Train on Sardinia Trenitalia 
Octopussy Steam locomotive 62 015 at Octopussy's Circus Train DR/Octopussy filmed at the Nene Valley Railway.
A View to a Kill Mine Train Max Zorin 
The Living Daylights Tram Bratislava Transport Filmed at Wiener Linien
GoldenEye Armoured ICBM Train (intercontinental ballistic missile) - modified BR Class 20 Alec Trevelyan Sometimes nicknamed "The Haunting Face" due to its appearance, filmed at the Nene Valley Railway.
Casino Royale (2006) Pendolino CD-serie 680 České Dráhy (CD) 
Skyfall Work train with diesel locomotive type DE xx000 TCDD Second time Bond 'uses' a Turkish train. Filmed in Adana, Turkey.
Aircraft[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
Dr. No Boeing 707 Pan Am A Pan Am 707 lands in Seattle
From Russia With Love Hiller UH -12 "Raven" helicopter Rosa Klebb 
Goldfinger Lockheed JetStar[36] Auric Goldfinger 
Hiller 12E4 Auric Goldfinger (helicopter with atomic bomb) Still flying today in the UK (G-ASAZ)
Aviation Traders Carvair British United Air Ferries 
Thunderball Avro Vulcan[37] RAF 
SAR Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress CIA 
Bell 47J Ranger CIA 
You Only Live Twice 'Little Nellie'/Wallis WA-116 Agile Series 1 gyroplane[38] James Bond Little Nellie was flown, in the film, by its builder, Wing Commander Ken Wallis. Following the movie Ken Wallis toured airshows with G-ARZB. Trailered behind his Rolls Royce he put on an entertaining stunt show, usually involving the pursuit and shooting up of a scrap car containing his assistants, posing as villains. 'Little Nellie' was totally destroyed, at just such an airshow, in Newton Ardes on June 7, 1986. Ken Wallis walked away unhurt.
Space Capsule USSR, NASA 
Bird One SPECTRE Used by SPECTRE for intercept and capture of US and Russian spacecraft
Kawasaki KV-107II Tiger Tanaka 
Meyers 200 Helga Brandt 
Brantly B-2 SPECTRE (flying in and out of the volcano) 
Lockheed Hercules Japanese Navy (seen deploying life rafts after the SPECTRE lair is destroyed) 
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Bell 206/Bell 204
 Ernst Stavro Blofeld/Marc-Ange Draco 
Diamonds Are Forever Boeing 707 Lufthansa Bond and Tiffany Case (unknowingly being pursued by Wint and Kidd) fly from Amsterdam to Los Angeles with Peter Franks' corpse in the cargo hold being used to smuggle the diamonds.
Bell 204 Willard Whyte & CIA The fleet of helicopters used to stage the raid on Blofeld's oil rig base in Baja California
Live And Let Die Boeing 747-100 Pan Am Bond flies from London to New York Kennedy Airport to begin the mission.
Cessna 172 Bleaker Flying School Stolen by Bond escaping from Kananga's henchmen in a chase through Bleaker's hangar. Several other similar aircraft are destroyed in the chase.
The Man with the Golden Gun Republic RC-3 Seabee James Bond 
AMC Matador – Flying car Francisco Scaramanga 
Moonraker Handley Page Jetstream Jaws 
Space Shuttle Hugo Drax 
Lockheed L-188 Electra Hugo Drax/Drax Air Freight 
Concorde Air France Used by Bond to fly to Rio de Janerio
Rockwell OV-101 - Space Shuttle Enterprise NASA/United States Space Marine Force 
Boeing 747 - Space Shuttle Carrier NASA 
For Your Eyes Only Bell 206 JetRanger MI6 The Chaplain said sent by Universal Exports, but owned by Blofeld, as he states when remotely takes over the helicopter, "do not worry about the pilot he was one of my less useful people"
PZL Mi-2 General Gogol 
Octopussy Acrostar Jet[39] James Bond Bede BD5J kitbuilt mini-jet. Originally owned and flown by the Budweiser beer company, later crashed following an engine fire. The pilot, Bob Bishop, bailed out and survived unhurt. The folding wing model seen exiting the horse-box was a mock-up.
Beechcraft 'Twin Beech' Kamal Khan 
Hot Air Balloon MI6 - Q Branch 
A View To A Kill Blimp Max Zorin 
The Living Daylights Hawker Siddeley Nimrod RAF 
British Aerospace Harrier T.10 MI6 
Lockheed Hercules M 
Gen. Koskov 
Licence to Kill Cessna 172 Skyhawk Isthmus City Airport Stolen by Pam Bouvier, this plane was used by her to fly to Sanchez's Olympiatec Meditation Institute and later to fly Bond to one of the tankers during the climactic truck chase.
de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver Franz Sanchez 
Learjet 45 Franz Sanchez 
GoldenEye Cessna 172 Skyhawk Jack Wade (on loan from US DEA) Shot down by surface-to-air missile over Cuba
Eurocopter Tiger French Navy 
Mikoyan MiG-29 Russian Air Force 
Pilatus PC-6 Russian chemical producers 
Tomorrow Never Dies Aero L-39 Albatros Central Asian terrorists 
Die Another Day Switchblades - PHASST (Programmable High Altitude Single Soldier Transport)[40] US Military 
Boeing 747-400 British Airways Bond flies back to London whilst on the run after escaping to Hong Kong.
Antonov An-124 on the outside, Ilyushin Il-76 when they're in the plane North Korea 
Quantum of Solace Douglas DC-3 Unnamed Bolivian civilian Actually, two separate Dakotas were used in the filming. This short sequence demanded the use of two locations, so far apart that it was considered expedient to use two aircraft. Both were stripped back to bare aluminium and made to look identical, for continuity purposes.
Skyfall AgustaWestland AW101 Unnamed henchmen Appears and attacks the Skyfall Manor House in Scotland
Novel
Aircraft
Owner
Notes
Live and Let Die,Diamonds Are Forever, Goldfinger Boeing 377 Stratocruiser BOAC, Auric Goldfinger 007 takes Stratocruiser on his journeys to America. In Goldfinger the final battle is set on-board this plane.
Diamonds Are Forever English Electric Canberra RAF This is the plane that takes Bond to Sierra Leone
From Russia with Love
Ilyushin Il-12 N\A This is the plane that takes Red Grant from Crimea to Moscow
Vickers Viscount N\A This is the plane that takes Bond to Istanbul
Diamonds Are Forever, Dr No
Lockheed G Super Constellation TWA This is the plane that takes Bond and Tiffany from LA via Chicago to NYC
Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation N\A This is the plane that takes Bond to Jamaica
Goldfinger
Bristol Freighter N\A Transports Goldfinger's Rolls-Royce to France
Beechcraft Model 18 Goldfinger Goldfinger uses this plane for air surveillance of Fort Knox
For Your Eyes Only de Havilland Comet N\A Bond takes this plane to Canada instead of old Stratocruiser
Thunderball Grumman Amphibian Bond and Leiter The two use this plane in search of a missing bomber
On Her Majesty's Secret Service
Sud Aviation Caravelle Swissair This is the plane that takes Bond from London to Zurich
Aerospatiale Alouette III SPECTRE This is the helicopter that takes Bond to Piz Gloria
Dassault Mirage Swiss Air Force This is the plane that intercepts Helicopter bound to attack Piz Gloria
You Only Live Twice Douglas DC-8 Japan Airlines This is the plane that takes Bond to Tokyo
Bell Rocket Belt
Featured in Thunderball. A rocket pack based on the Bell Jet belt. Bell helicopters had previously been seen in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Diamonds Are Forever, Live and Let Die, The Spy Who Loved Me, and Moonraker.
Skyfleet S570
A "prototype" plane featured in Casino Royale, actually a Boeing 747-200 originally used by British Airways as "G-BDXJ". It was refitted with two mockup engines on each inner pylon and external fuel tanks on the outer pylons, somewhat anachronistically resembling a B-52 Stratofortress. This aircraft survives, permanently grounded and repainted plain white, at Dunsfold Aerodrome, England, where all the airfield action was filmed.[41]
Marine vehicles[edit]

Film
Vehicle
Owner
Notes
From Russia With Love Speedboat Red Grant (later James Bond and Tatiana Romanova) 
Thunderball Disco Volante Emilio Largo The name means "Flying Saucer" in Italian. Consists of two parts: a frontal hydrofoil craft, and a rear "cocoon" section equipped with weapons to slow and distract pursuers.
You Only Live Twice Ning Po Cargo Ship Osato Chemicals/SPECTRE 
Unidentified British Submarine Royal Navy/MI6 
HMS Tenby (F65) Royal Navy 
Diamonds Are Forever Mountbatten class (SR.N4) Hovercraft Seaspeed 
Bathosub Ernst Stavro Blofeld 
SS Canberra P&O Cruises 
Live and Let Die Glastron GT-150 Dr. Kananga Stolen by Bond from Dr. Kananga's "crocodile farm" drug factory
Glastron CV-19 Jet speedboat Deke Rodgers Stolen by Bond after the GT-150 is disabled by gunfire
Glastron V-156 Sportster Dr. Kananga henchmen One of these boats is disabled after crashing into a tree, another being simply outrun by Bond and Kananga henchman Adam
Glastron V-184 Crestflite Dr. Kananga henchmen This boat gets stuck in a wedding tent
Glastron V-162 Futura Dr. Kananga henchmen This boat is destroyed when it spears Sheriff J.W. Pepper's car while attempting to jump over an embankment
Glastron V-145 Fireflite Dr. Kananga henchmen This boat ended up in Deke Rodger's swimming pool
Glastron-Carlson CV21 Jet speedboat Louisiana wildlife park ranger Billy-Bob Stolen by Kananga henchman Adam and destroyed when driven into the back of a derelict ship and explodes.
The Spy Who Loved Me Speedboat Stromberg Shipping Lines 
SS Liparus Oil Tanker Stromberg Shipping Lines 
Lotus Esprit S1 – "Wet Nellie" submarine Q-Branch/James Bond 
Wetbike Q-Branch/James Bond 
Submarines Soviet, British, and American Governments HMS Ranger, "Potemkin", and USS Wayne
HMS Fearless Royal Navy 
Moonraker Gondola-hovercraft[42] Q-Branch/James Bond 
Glastron CV23HT "Hydrofoil" Boat Q-Branch/James Bond Used by Bond to locate Hugo Drax's Amazon river source for the deadly nerve gas
Glastron SSV-189 speedboats Drax Enterprises Used by Drax henchmen during the Amazon river chase
For Your Eyes Only HMS St. Georges MI6 Intelligence Surveillance Ship 
SS Colombina Milos Columbo 
Triano Timothy Havelock, later Melina Havelock 
Neptune Timothy Havelock, later Melina Havelock Used by Sir Timothy for underwater research
Octopussy Alligator Boat Q-Branch/James Bond 
A View To A Kill Iceberg MI6 
Glastron Carlson C-537 Max Zorin Used to retrieve Mayday on the Seine after the assassination of Achille Aubergine
Licence to Kill SS Wavekrest Milton Krest 
Sentinel Mini Sub Milton Krest 
GoldenEye La Fayette class frigate French Navy 
Tomorrow Never Dies Sea Shadow Elliot Carver 
HMS Devonshire Royal Navy 
HMS Bedford Royal Navy 
HMS Chester Royal Navy 
The World is Not Enough Q's Retirement Recreational Boat MI6 
Unidentified Russian Victor III class submarine Russian Navy 
Novel
Vehicle
Owner
Note
Live and Let Die Secatur Mr Big Luxurious black yacht with grey superstructure built in 1947 for a certain millionaire, later acquired by Mr Big who uses it for smuggling gold coins from Jamaica to the USA. 70 foot (21 m) long, powered by twin General Motor Diesels and capable of doing 20 knots. Bond destroys it with the limpet mine killing everyone aboard including Mr Big in the novel's climax.
Diamonds Are Forever RMS Queen Elizabeth Cunard Line Liner that takes Bond and Tiffany across the Atlantic
For Your Eyes Only Chris Craft Constellation Major Gonzales and his henchmen Described as a glittering 50 ton Chris Craft, it is used by the Gonzales and his men to sail from Jamaica to Cuba after murdering Havelocks. Judging by the weight spec mentioned in the story it is probably the Constellation model
Risico Colombina Enrico Colombo 200 tons former fishing vessel with a sail Colombo uses for his smuggling operations in the Adriatic. It's battle with the Kristatos's ship is the novel climax.
The Hildebrand Rarity Wawekrest Milton Krest Luxurious white yacht owned by an rude American millionaire Krest who uses it for his voyages around a world as well as for his hunt of rare fish specimens for his foundation. Built by Bronson Shipbuilding Corporation and designed by Rosenblatts. Specifications: Length 100 ft (30,48 m), Width 21 ft (6,4 m), Weight 200 t, Two 500 horsepower Superior diesel engines, double propellers, Top speed 14 knots. As Bond remarks after seeing it:"It was a real ship, built to cruise the world and not just Florida Keys"
SS Kampala British India Steam Navigation Company The ship that took Bond to Seychelles and the one he was waiting for to return him to Mombasa at the beginning of the story.
The Man with the Golden Gun Chris Craft Roamer Francisco Scaramanga 40 foot (12 m) boat that Scaramanga intends to use for deep-sea fishing in order to entertain his mobster guests
See also[edit]
Amphibious automobile
Flying car (aircraft)
Outline of James Bond
References[edit]
Inline
1.Jump up ^ "Alfa Romeo GTV6". jamesbondlifestyle.com. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
2.Jump up ^ Moore, Malcolm (28 April 2008). "James Bond filming suspended after third accident leaves stuntman in coma". Daily Telegraph (London). Retrieved 3 December 2013.
3.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian (2002). Moonraker. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-200206-3. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
4.Jump up ^ "1974 AMC Hornet X in The Man with the Golden Gun". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
5.Jump up ^ McGeer, Bonnie (17 November 2006). "Aston Martin DBS set for silver screen". Forbes Autos. Retrieved 3 December 2013. "Original page was titled: "Honorable Mentions - AMC Hornet", dated 9 November 2006 at www.forbesautos.com/advice/toptens/bond-cars/02-honorable-mentions/05-amc-hornet.html and was retrieved on 13 September 2008"
6.Jump up ^ "1974 AMC Hornet". National Motor Museum Trust - Museum in Beaulieu, UK. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
7.Jump up ^ "James Bond's AMC Hornet Located!". AMCHornet.com. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
8.^ Jump up to: a b "Trivia for The Man with the Golden Gun". The Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
9.Jump up ^ "m-hvosm - McHenry Highway Vehicle Object Simulation Model - Astro Spiral". McHenry Software. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
10.^ Jump up to: a b "A Chronological History of the James Bond Film Vehicles #6. Flying Cars in The Man with the Golden Gun". www.carenthusiast.com. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
11.Jump up ^ "Bond in Motion". National Motor Museum, Beaulieu. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
12.Jump up ^ "1974 AMC Matador Coupe in The Man with the Golden Gun". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
13.Jump up ^ Tannert, Chuck. "Top 10: getaway cars (AMC Matador in The Man with the Golden Gun)". MSN Autos. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
14.Jump up ^ "1974 AMC Matador Sedan in The Man with the Golden Gun". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
15.Jump up ^ "1978 AMC Concord D/L Wagon in Moonraker". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
16.Jump up ^ "Trivia for Moonraker (1979)". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
17.Jump up ^ "Jeep Cherokee in A View to a Kill". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
18.Jump up ^ "1976 AMC Jeep CJ-7 in Licence to Kill". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
19.Jump up ^ "Jeep Cherokee in Tomorrow Never Dies, Movie, 1997". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
20.Jump up ^ "UK | James Bond car sold for over £1m". BBC News. 21 January 2006. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
21.Jump up ^ "Specially Equipped Silver Aston Martin First Driven by Sean Connery Sells for $4.1M in London". Artdaily.org. 28 October 2010. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
22.Jump up ^ Hardiman, Paul (1 February 2011). "1964 Aston Martin DB5 James Bond". Sports Car Market. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
23.Jump up ^ "Aston Martin could make 007 return". BBC News. 19 July 2001. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
24.Jump up ^ "First Aston Martins to be made outside UK". Reuters. 4 March 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
25.Jump up ^ "The Company - News". Aston Martin. 2006-01-16. Retrieved 2009-06-20.[dead link]
26.Jump up ^ Barbara Broccoli, Pierce Brosnan, Martin Campbell, Chris Corbould, Famke Janssen, Peter Lamont, Izabella Scorupco, Michael G. Wilson (1994). GoldenEye: Building a Better Bond (Theatrical Teaser). MGM Home Entertainment.
27.Jump up ^ "Tomorrow Never Dies (Ultimate Edition)". DVD Times. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
28.Jump up ^ "Jaguar XKR convertible". National Motor Museum Trust - Museum in Beaulieu, UK. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
29.Jump up ^ "Lotus Esprit S1". National Motor Museum Trust - Museum in Beaulieu, UK. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
30.Jump up ^ "James Bond's 'Spy Who Loved me' submarine car sold in London". Reuters. Retrieved 10 September 2013.
31.Jump up ^ "Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith Limousine Park Ward [LELW21] in "From Russia with Love, 1963"". IMCDb.org. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
32.Jump up ^ "1967 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow I Two-Door Convertible Mulliner Park-Ward in "On Her Majesty's Secret Service, 1969"". IMCDb.org. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
33.Jump up ^ Cox, John (2004-03-08). "The Silver Beast". CommanderBond.net. Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
34.Jump up ^ "SpyZone Security, Surveillance, & Counter Surveillance". Spyzone.com. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
35.Jump up ^ "1992 Lamborghini Diablo". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 2013-01-11.
36.Jump up ^ Pfeiffer, Lee; Worrall, Dave (1999). The Essential Bond. Boxtree Ltd. pp. 33–43. ISBN 978-0-7522-2477-0.
37.Jump up ^ Laming, Tim (1993). The Vulcan Story. Arms and Armour. ISBN 978-1-85409-148-2.
38.Jump up ^ You Only Live Twice Ultimate Edition DVD (Media notes). 2006.
39.Jump up ^ "Episode 2". Main Hoon Bond. Season 1. Episode 2. 54 minutes in. Star Gold.
40.Jump up ^ "Bond Flies PHASST" (Press release). Kinetic Aerospace. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
41.Jump up ^ Swanson (2007-03-11). first=Molly "Boeing 747 in Casino Royale". Retrieved 3 December 2013.
42.Jump up ^ Hilditch, Nick (2001-07-27). "Films - review - Moonraker". BBC. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
General
 Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Bond vehicles.
Jackson, Murray. "James Bond's cars". Autos Canada. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
Greatest James Bond Films list of Vehicles, Gadgets, Love-making, etc., retrieved on January 5, 2008.
Bond in Motion at The National Motor Museum
James Bond 007 "The Films and the Vehicles" page supplied by BMW AG, retrieved on January 5, 2008.
IMCDb.org - Internet Movie Cars Database
The Complete Guide To James Bond's Cars (Video) November 30, 2011
Topgear, 50 years of Bond cars
Awesome collection of all James Bond Cars
External links[edit]
James Bond Marine Vehicles Infographic



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List of James Bond gadgets
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 This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2012)
This is a list of James Bond gadgets featured in the Bond films. The James Bond books and films have featured exotic equipment and vehicles, which often prove to be critically useful The original books and early adaptations had only relatively minimal pieces like the modified attache case in From Russia, with Love. However, the gadgets took on a more spectacular profile in the film version of Goldfinger, and its tremendous success encouraged the following films to have Bond supplied with still more equipment. For instance, it became an expected scene in each film where Q would present and demonstrate Bond's assigned tools for the mission, and it was a near guarantee that each and every piece would be invaluable to Bond in the field. In this sense, Bond gadgets became a prime example of the literary technique of Chekhov's gun.
Fans eventually complained that the use of gadgets became excessive in the Roger Moore films, particularly in Moonraker, and subsequent productions struggled to find a balance in which gadgets could have a place without giving the impression that the character unduly depended on them or using stories that arbitrarily included situations that exactly fit the use of the gadgets assigned.
This article concerns the gadgets James Bond typically carried on his person, along with additional gadgets used by others. For his gadget vehicles, see List of James Bond vehicles.



Contents  [hide]
1 Sean Connery era (1962-1967; 1971) 1.1 Dr. No
1.2 From Russia with Love
1.3 Goldfinger
1.4 Thunderball
1.5 You Only Live Twice
1.6 Diamonds Are Forever
1.7 Never Say Never Again (non-Eon; 1983)
2 David Niven era (1967) 2.1 Casino Royale (non-Eon; 1967)
3 George Lazenby era (1969) 3.1 On Her Majesty's Secret Service
4 Roger Moore era (1973-1985) 4.1 Live and Let Die
4.2 The Man With The Golden Gun
4.3 The Spy Who Loved Me
4.4 Moonraker
4.5 For Your Eyes Only
4.6 Octopussy
4.7 A View to a Kill
5 Timothy Dalton era (1987–1989) 5.1 The Living Daylights
5.2 Licence to Kill
6 Pierce Brosnan era (1995–2002) 6.1 GoldenEye
6.2 Tomorrow Never Dies
6.3 The World Is Not Enough
6.4 Die Another Day
7 Daniel Craig era (2006-present) 7.1 Casino Royale
7.2 Quantum of Solace
7.3 Skyfall
8 Standard signature items (most films)
9 See also
10 References
11 External links

Sean Connery era (1962-1967; 1971)[edit]
Dr. No[edit]
Geiger counter Bond has to request one from Britain before using it to determine the radioactivity of Crab Key, suggesting they were uncommon pieces of equipment.Self-destructor bag M tells Bond that the case notes will be sent to him at the airport in one of these.Rolex Submariner on plain leather strap.[1]Walther PPK 7.65mmThe first appearance of James Bond's signature firearm.
From Russia with Love[edit]
Issued in a special briefcase:
AR-7 .22 survival rifle with infrared telescope (stated incorrectly by Q as "point 25 caliber" in the movie, and when pointing at the "infrared telescopic sight" he is in fact pointing at the rifle breech)
50 Gold Sovereigns
Tear gas cartridge disguised as talcum powder, set to discharge when the briefcase is opened incorrectly.
Ammunition for the rifle
Throwing knife (saves Bond's life by disabling Red Grant, allowing Bond to strangle him)
Pager Bond had one to notify him if he ever needed to contact MI6. It is worth noting that Bond also had a radio phone installed in his car as well.Bug detector A small device that is designed to detect the presence of a phone tap device in a regular telephone.Tape recorder camera A small reel-to-reel tape recorder hidden within a camera, used to interrogate Tatiana.Dagger shoe A shoe with a poisoned blade concealed within worn by SPECTRE agents, including Rosa Klebb. The blade would pop out of the front of the shoe, making kicks extremely dangerous. One pair was used by Morzeny to kill Kronsteen after his plan failed. The gadget also makes a cameo scene in Die Another Day in Q's lab. The Dagger Shoe would also be referenced in the film The Punisher (1989) starring Dolph Lundgren (Venz from A View to a Kill). This shoe is both used by the Punisher and a member of the Yakuza (although their version had several daggers protruding from their shoes). This gadget makes several comedic appearances in the 1999 film Wild Wild West, starring Will Smith and Kevin Kline, the latter of which plays the character who invents said gadget. The dagger tipped shoe is also used by a government assassin in the film The Pink Panther Strikes Again, the Joker in the film The Dark Knight, as well as Orlov in the film "Salt" and an assassin in the film "Roadhouse".Periscope A gift from the Royal Navy installed below the Russian embassy. Used to spy on the Russian conference room.Garrote watch A wristwatch from which a wire garrote can be drawn. Used by Red Grant first to strangle a man dressed as Bond as part of a training exercise in the opening scene and later to attempt to strangle the actual Bond in the film's climax but was turned against Red Grant by Bond. Bond kept his watch as a souvenir as shown in the film On Her Majesty's Secret Service and is referenced in an episode of The Simpsons where President George H.W. Bush moves in across the street from the Simpson Residence and carries a watch identical to Grant's which was apparently issued by The CIA.Lektor Decoder Typewriter-sized decoding device used to decipher encrypted Russian messages. (This device resembles the Enigma cipher machines used for encryption and decryption by Germany in World War II.)
Goldfinger[edit]
Aston Martin DB5 This Q-Branch edition vehicle contains the following modificationsrevolving licence plates
spinner hubcaps that doubled as tire slashers
passenger ejector seat
rear bulletproof shield
forward machine guns concealed behind the headlights
rearward defences including smoke and oil slick sprayers
AR-7 .22 Survival Rifle With Scope Tilly Masterson, Jill's sister, used the AR-7 to try and kill Goldfinger.Gold plated Rolls Royce The method of which Goldfinger smuggles his gold in and out of Switzerland. His facilities there melt gold into the framework of these vehicles and then transport them only to be dis-assembled all over again.Homing beacons Bond is given two homing beacons from Q-branch. The first is larger and used when Bond tracks the villain, Auric Goldfinger, to his base. The second is smaller and allows MI6 to know where Bond is. Bond hides it in a secret compartment in the heel of his shoe. Later, Bond removes it from the shoe and attempts to send a message to headquarters by wrapping the note around the transmitter and slipping it into someone's pocket. The plan fails because the pocket's owner is killed and disposed of in a car crusher, which presumably destroys the device.Attaché case Reference is made to Bond having an attaché case (see also previous film) that Bond is told was damaged or possibly destroyed when examined by Goldfinger's personnel. Most likely it was opened improperly and then exploded during the examination.Bowler hat Oddjob, Goldfinger's henchman, uses a special bowler hat with a metal ring inside the brim as a throwing weapon. The hat is capable of slicing through stone and metal or break a person's neck when thrown hard enough.Rolex Submariner (6538)On a nylon strap with navy, olive and burgundy stripes.[2]Industrial Laser Used by Goldfinger trying to kill Bond. Powerful enough to put a laser dot on the moon, but at very close range able to cut through steel. This laser was later used to cut open the vault of Fort Knox. This film showcases the very first of its kind, as this weapon takes on various forms throughout the James Bond series.Peep Hole Bathroom Bathroom aboard Goldfinger's private jet with several peep holes in which members of his staff or Pussy Galore's flying circus would peep on suspicious guests.Gold Plated Gun While not the same one that Francisco Scaramanga uses, this is the pistol with which Goldfinger shoots out an airplane window, inadvertently killing himself.[clarification needed]Atomic Bomb Used to contaminate the Fort Knox gold supply utilizing optimum lethal radiation, but with as least amount of explosive force.Nerve Gas Canisters Outfitted to aircraft belonging to Pussy Galore's Flying Circus. Goldfinger intended to disperse Delta-9 nerve gas to kill the military personnel at Fort Knox ( though he lied to the mafia members it would anesthetise the soldiers for 24 hours, then kills the mobsters with it). Later Pussy Galore replaces the gas with an anesthetic that only lasts ~30 minutes.Electrical Cables Not Technically a gadget, but used as one when made available to Bond through Odd Job's hat throwing. Bond grabs these recently cut live wire cables and electrifies the bar gates in which Odd Job's Hat is stuck. Once Odd Jobb tries to pry off his hat stuck on the bars, Bond places the live wires on the gate electrocuting Odd Job to death.Goldfinger's Rec Room Comes complete with folding pool table and scale model of Fort Knox which appears from a retracting floor. Also modified with retractable gas canisters used to murder the mobsters within. Max Zorin would later use a similar retracting scale model of Silicon Valley in A View to a Kill.Wetsuit with rubber duck on top piece An almost comical attempt at stealth (for which Bond displays sharp disapproval in the manner by which he casts it aside). Bond uses this as a cover to infiltrate an enemy facility.
Thunderball[edit]
Aston Martin DB5 the same car used in Goldfinger with a slight modification; rearward spraying water jets.Homing Pill When Bond takes this pill, it emits a signal that can be detected only by a certain receiver.Remote Control Although not a significant piece of technology today, in those times it was new. Used by main villain Emilio Largo to open a secret panel which leads to the SPECTRE briefing room in Paris, France.Air supply A small device that can be carried on the person without notice and when in use, is held in the mouth to provide 4 minutes of air in emergencies when the user has to go underwater.Bell Rocket Belt Used to propel Bond into the air when escaping after killing Jaques Bouvar.BSA Lightning A65L A modified Motorcycle with forward firing rocket launchers. Used by Fiona Volpe under Spectre's orders to eliminate Count Lippe for failing to assassinate Bond and for bad judgement in hiring Palazzi with his greed. Ironically saving Bond the hassle of using his Aston Martin to take care of Lippe. Fiona later dumps this vehicle in a nearby pond.Underwater Jet Pack During the final undersea battle, Bond is equipped with a bulky scuba tank that not only propels him through the water faster than anyone can swim; it is equipped with two explosive-tipped spear guns. It also has a frontal headlight.Breitling 'Top Time' Diver Chronometer watch with built-in Geiger Counter.Underwater camera capable of taking eight shots in darkness using an infra-red film.A Geiger counter camera Given to Bond who then gives it to Domino to find the bombs on the yacht.Miniature flarea pocket-sized flare gun firing a red signalling beacon.Cassette recorder hidden in book Bond uses this to learn that Quist is hiding in his hotel room.Disco Volante Hydrofoil High speed escape boat complete with underwater hatch for the smuggling of nuclear bombs.Disco Volante CocoonUsed by Largo as a decoy device during his escape attempt from the American Navy. The cocoon forms the rear part of the Disco Volante; the front part can transform into a hydrofoil boat. Equipped with smoke screen emitter, at least two Browning machine guns, and a gun-shielded automatic cannon.Sharks The first of many uses of sharks throughout the Bond film series. In this particular case, Emilio Largo keeps them in his "pool" at his Palmyra Estate and disposes of henchmen that have failed his tasks by tossing them into the pool which feeds the sharks.Electrocution Staff Chair Blofeld uses this seat to 'punish' SPECTRE agents who have failed in their terrorist missions. With the press of a button, Blofeld electrocutes the staff member on the seat which he sits on, then the seat drops down into the floor and comes back up a clean new seat, disposing of the dead body which was sitting on it.Skyhook Comes as a grappling suspender attached to a weather balloon that Bond can attach to his utility harness. With the aid of a specialised aircraft (B-17) installed with specialised braces, Bond and Domino are hoisted up into the air and out of the area.
You Only Live Twice[edit]
Pull down "Murphy" Bed Not technically a gadget, as many small apartments have them. However, this bed was used as a gadget in Hong Kong by Ling and Bond to aid in faking his death.Personal Subway Tiger Tanaka's own personal subway car. Due to his status as head of the secret services there, this vehicle is used to ferry him discreetly around Tokyo via the underground.Toyota 2000GT Aki's vehicle which she uses to transport Bond around Tokyo. Equipped with a mini tv in the dashboard enabling her and Bond to video-chat with Tiger Tanaka.Mini-rocket Cigarette Tiger gives Bond a cigarette capable of shooting a rocket-powered projectile accurately up to 30 yards. Used in Blofeld's volcano to kill a technician standing by the entrance controls to enable his allies to storm the base.Waterproof Burial Body bag Used at Bond's own "Funeral", this bag is completely waterproof complete with a breathing mask enabling Bond to breathe while being dumped overboard. The bag is even waterproof enough to allow him to wear a complete uniform before his briefing with M.Safe cracker A small device that can easily be carried in a jacket pocket and works by attaching it to a safe the operator wants to open.Ninja Throwing Stars Not technically a gadget, as they were used by Ninjas historically. They are however effectively used by Tanaka and his forces, especially when disarming Blofeld while holding Bond at gunpoint.Automatic Wooden Hand Restraints Installed on Helga Brandt's own personal aircraft, they were used (unsuccessfully) to kill Bond as he managed to slip his right hand out of them and use a karate chop to destroy it.Gyrojet rocket guns Prototype guns using a small rocket-propelled projectile rather than conventional ammunition. A limited number were made in real life for trials by the US and British military forces, but the design never caught on, and the guns and ammunition are now very collectible (and therefore highly sought after and expensive).Boeing KV-107II with MagnetRequested by Aki to dispose of unwanted pursuers in a car chase.Wallis WA-116 Series 1 gyroplane (codename Little Nellie) Aircraft that can be assembled and disassembled to fit into several small cases. Comes with rocket launchers, air mines, machine guns, rear-mounted flamethrowers, and infrared-guided AA smart missiles.Japanese Prosthetics Used to make Bond appear as a Japanese Fisherman in order for him to blend in at a fishing village located near the suspected Volcano Base and observe it more effectively.X-Ray DeskUsed by Osato to identify any concealed firearms that his prospective 'clients' may have.Volcano Base Entire base of operations for SPECTRE organization concealed entirely within a dormant volcano. Base contains a retractable roof designed to resemble surface water much like a lake surface on a dormant volcano crater. Also featured are defensive sentry guns on the volcano walls as well as various gadgets inside. This base and its internal structure design have been parodied in various film and TV shows (most notably in the Austin Powers franchise).Trap Mini-Bridge Blofeld's trap door that he uses to dispose of failures to his organization and unwelcomed guests. Blofeld would push a button and the unsuspecting person(s) standing on the bridge of his mini garden would later take a plunge into the piranha-infested pond.Mini-Monorail System Used to transport various staff and recently captured astronauts inside the large volcano base.Self-Destruct Button Used by Blofeld to destroy his Volcano Base in a manner to make it appear as a volcanic eruption after his plan had failed.Poison-delivering string Used by a Japanese SPECTRE assassin to deliver a dose of poison from an attic by having it running along its length to land directly in the victim's mouth. Referenced or used several times in subsequent popular culture as well, such as in the gamebook series The Way of the Tiger.[3]Bo with retractable spear used by a spectre henchmen who infiltrated Tanaka's base in an attempt to assassinate Bond.Bird 1 SPECTRE's large spacecraft use to capture the US and SOVIET spacecraft from the orbit. Launch from the volcano base. The warhead's front part opens up use to catches the spacecraft and the astronauts. However Bond uses a self-destruct button in Blofeld's lair to destroy the Bird 1 spacecraft which catches other spacecraft.Submarine Torpedo Tube Not technically a gadget, but used in such a manner. The Forward Torpedo Tube aboard a submarine is used to shoot Bond discreetly into the Japanese coastline near Tokyo after he has faked his death.
Diamonds Are Forever[edit]
Cloning Facility Blofeld's cloning facility where he picked candidates to surgically alter to resemble him. The facility contained various gadgets and surgical tools to which Bond later uses against him (which is later revealed to be one of his clones).Biometric Fingerprint Scanner A projector-like device used by Tiffany Case in her Amsterdam apartment to identify her guests. One such example of how this device is used is when she takes the glass which Bond was using, then dusting the surface for a print and running it through the device and comparing it with a known fingerprint sample of her supposed guest.Pocket snap trap A small gadget hidden in a pocket to give a person performing an unwanted search on the wielder a painful surprise.Fake Fingerprint Bond uses a fake fingerprint that clings to his thumb to trick Tiffany Case into believing he is Peter Franks.Mountaineering PistolFires a grappling piton, complete with line; range about 10–15 meters. Also used as an improvised weapon against (a fake) Blofeld.Electro-Magnetic RPM Controller Q created a ring that, when used, ensures a jackpot at the slot machines every time.Grappling suspenders In the last leg of Bond's elevator-top ride to Willard Whyte's suite, Bond uses the grappling cord built into his suspenders. The gadget's design is similar to that of the belt in For Your Eyes Only and GoldenEye.Voice changer Blofield uses this to trick employees that he is Willard Whyte. Q puts together a makeshift one to fool Blofield, remarking that he made one for "the kids last Christmas."Trick Elevator Used by Blofeld in Willard Whyte's building to incapacitate Bond. A spray of white smoke is emitted from the ceiling of the elevator rendering the occupant unconscious. A version of this elevator is used by villain Karl Stromberg in his sea lair where the floor separates ejecting the occupant into the shark tank (from the film The Spy Who Loved Me).Water Sphere Used by Bond to "walk" on water when he is parachuted near Blofield's platform.Fake Muffler One of the smugglers in the Diamond smuggling ring used a fake motorcycle muffler, which was actually a storage compartment for the diamonds. This man was later killed by Mr. Wint.La Bombe Surprise "Cake" with an "explosive filling", actually a domed shell covered in cake icing covering a small explosive device with a timer. Used by Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd, and unsuccessfully deployed against Bond. The bomb ended up being tied to Mr. Wint's rear end and tossed overboard, with explosive results.Flaming Shiskabob Not a gadget, but used as one. When exposed by James Bond to be the assassins responsible for eliminating everyone in the diamond operation, Mr. Kidd then takes a pair of Shiskabobs and lights them on fire with the intent of using them as weapons.Moon Buggy Being tested in a Willard Whyte lab, probably built for NASA. Bond hotwires this vehicle and escapes the guards of the lab. It includes robotic arms which Bond uses against some of the security personnel of the facility.Mini-Sub An escape water vehicle hoisted by an industrial crane to lower it from the top of the oil rig to the water surface. This vehicle was intended for Blofeld's use in the case that his plan fails (and it does). However, he does not get the chance to use the little boat when Bond decides to use it as a wrecking ball on his facility. Blofeld still escapes, but he is shown crippled in the film For Your Eyes Only most likely due to Bond's use of his Mini-Sub as a wrecking ball, with him in it.World's Greatest Marching Band Cassette Tape Tape used to control the laser satellite's movements.Industrial Satellite Laser The final product of all the diamond smuggling throughout the movie. Built by light refraction expert Dr. Metz, this laser is activated by using several hundred diamonds to concentrate and amplify a laser beam strong enough to destroy ICBM facilities, submarines, and other strategic targets from outer space orbit. Blofeld uses this device to extort money from Washington DC. Similar devices appear in Goldeneye and in Die Another Day which are satellite weapons deployed from outer space. This device is also similar to most other laser devices throughout the Bond film series, with this one being the largest and most powerful laser to date.
Never Say Never Again (non-Eon; 1983)[edit]
Pen gun A fountain pen emblazoned with the Union Flag of the UK that can fire an explosive charge; it was used to kill Fatima Blush. A delay in the explosive made Bond quip the device still needed work.Rolex Wristwatch Equipped with a small laser beam cutting tool.Motion-sensing bomb Actually Bond's cigarette case, supposedly equipped with a gyroscope that would trigger the detonator when moved. Used to fool a henchman into letting 007 crash Largo's charity ball. This was the only time Bond improvised by inventing a fake gadget on the spot.
David Niven era (1967)[edit]
Casino Royale (non-Eon; 1967)[edit]
Cigarette gun Similar to the one used in the later Eon movie You Only Live Twice. Used by James Bond to kill the firing squad that tried to execute him in one scene.Sleeping pills. Although these are used in hospitals today, Miss Goodthighs tried to knock out Evelyn Tremble before he could play baccarat against Le Chriffe.Suit with various gadgets in the pockets Q tries to explain this to Evelyn Tremble, but he ignores him.Le Chriffe's torture room Le Chriffe uses this to torture Tremble to get the cheque to his winnings.SMERSH milk truck. Packed with explosives, used in a car chase and blown up when it accidentally hits a SMERSH agent's car.Bagpipe with hidden machine gun. Used by Vesper Lynd to kill Tremble.Minox B 8x11 Camera Used by Q.
George Lazenby era (1969)[edit]
On Her Majesty's Secret Service[edit]
Radioactive lint In the beginning of the movie, Q is showing M a homing device made out of regular lint. "Placed in an opponent's pocket, the location fix and anti-personnel uses should be obvious." M is more concerned with locating Bond, who is nowhere to be found.Safe cracker A device that consists of a flexible cable ending in a grapple that is meant to be fitted on a typical safe combination lock. The machine would then examine the lock, figure out its combination and open the safe. In addition, the device sports an Olivetti wet-type photocopier that could allow for easy copying of secret documents to minimise the chance of the owner learning of the break in by missing documents. Wet-type photocopiers are actually unsuitable for field missions because they must not be tilted lest the highly toxic transfer liquid spills out. Unlike the safe cracker used in You Only Live Twice, this device was quite slow, taking close to an hour to open the safe (in the film, Bond uses the device while the safe's owner is on a lunch break and barely completes the job before the man returns).Minox B 8x11 Camera Bond uses a small camera to take snap shots of a map that shows where the "Angels Of Death" are to release a biological agent.Improvised Gloves Basically the pocket lining of Bond's trousers. Bond rips them out and uses them to help him grip onto the ski lift cables and board a ski lift car from above it.
After Bond resigns from MI6, we see him cleaning out his desk, and gadgets from past films are shown, including Honey Ryder's knife from Dr. No, Red Grant's garotte watch from From Russia With Love and the miniature re-breather from Thunderball.
Roger Moore era (1973-1985)[edit]
Live and Let Die[edit]
Although Major Boothroyd/Q and Q Branch are not present in this film, this film remains the most gadget heavy in the series.
Rolex Submariner Given to Bond by Moneypenny, after being "repaired" by Q Branch. This specially modified Submariner has a powerful electromagnet that, in theory, can even deflect a bullet. It also featured a spinning bezel which acted as a rotating saw that enabled Bond to cut his rope restraints and escape a pool full of man-eating sharks and then go on and rescue Solitaire.Tarot Cards Not technically a gadget, as many fortune tellers use them, but were used both by Solitaire and Bond as gadgets. Solitaire used Tarot Cards to predict potential future events for Dr. Kananga, and Bond himself visited a Tarot Card Fortune Teller in San Monique to determine Rosie Carver's true intentions and to play the Tarot game with Solitaire herself.Bug Sweeper a hand-held device that can sweep a room for electronic microphones.Clothing Brush Communicator A radio hidden inside a clothing brush with a key, allowing it to transmit messages in morse code. This same prop later appeared (used in a similar manner) in the 1975 Doctor Who serial Revenge of the Cybermen.Shark gun Fires special pellets that expel highly pressurised air to make the target explode. Although it is designed for combating sharks, Bond is able to activate a pellet manually before forcing Dr. Kananga to swallow it.Shark Pool Similar to the one Emilio Largo used at his Palmyra Estate, Kananga also keeps a pet shark at his underground base.Alligators Used to guard Kananga's drug laboratory in New Orleans and as a front for a "Gator Farm." Bond was almost fed to the gators before finding a way to escape.The 'Felix Lighter' Radio transmitter/receiver disguised as a car cigarette lighter installed in a CIA vehicle, which Bond uses to contact his friend, Felix Leiter.Robo-Samedi for unknown reasons, this robotic replica of Baron Samedi pops out of the grave during the sacrificial voodoo scene of Solitaire. Bond quickly dispatches of this fake and the real Samedi appears.Glider This glider is equipped with a button which directly signals Quarrel to release the tether attaching the Glider to the boat.Flute Communicator Baron Samedi uses this device as a regular flute and as a direct radio transmission communicator to Dr. KanagaVoodoo Figures Found in the jungles of Dr. Kananga's island, they contain surveillance cameras as well as shoot poison darts at unwanted guests, as well as recently useless agents to Kanaga such as Rosie Carver.Trap Door Used in both the New Orleans location of Fillet of Soul restaurant and in "Voodooland" in San Monique to gain entrance to Mr. Big/Dr. Kananga's secret underground lair of operations.Bulletproof Glass in Taxi used by one of Kananga's henchmen to prevent Bond and the recently defected Solitaire from escaping.Trick Coffin Coffin like device with a false bottom that is used to pick up the recently deceased on the ground. Such was used on the murdered MI6 agent investigating a Fillet of Soul restaurant in New Orleans.1971 Cadillac EldoradoUsed by Kananga's henchmen in New York, it fires poisonous darts from its side mirror.Shoe Box Communicator Used by another one of Kananga's henchmen posting as a shoe shiner in a network of surveillance personnel.Revolving Dinner Table Installed at the Fillet of Soul location in New York, this revolving table brings both special and unexpected guests to the secret back room from where Mr. Big/Dr. Kananga operates.Quarrel's Boat This boat contains a secret panel with several unspecified buttons. This gadget is never used in the film.Mechanical Prosthetic Tee Hee's mechanical arm which contains a very strong claw capable of cutting through solid objects as well as bending the barrel of a gun such as Bond's Walther PPK. Tee Hee uses this arm as his own was eaten by an alligator, and eventually it is the cause of his (supposed) death as Bond cuts the joint wires that control his claw, and tosses him out of a very fast moving train.Magnetic Watch (see above) this is one of the rare occasions when a gadget actually fails to save Bond, when threatened by alligators. He does escape the peril, but by using a non-gadget solution.Flamethrower Spray Can In Bond's hotel room at San Monique, a snake appears. Bond quickly uses his Aftershave can with his cigar as a makeshift blowtorch to kill the snake. This is unusual as it was not a Q branch gadget.Trap Door Air Vent A trap door designed to look like air vent. This device actually employs a low tech solution to killing Bond, which is a poisonous snake. This was completely undetectable by Bond's Bug Sweeper (see above).Voodoo Hat Worn by Baron Samedi and placed as a warning to unwanted guests, this item actually does nothing but scare those who have a bad case of severe superstitious feelings about the item.Coffee maker An ordinary household item which makes M ask "Is that all it does?"
The Man With The Golden Gun[edit]
Nearly all gadgets in this film belong to the main villain, Francisco Scaramanga.
The Golden GunScaramanga assembles his Golden Gun using a pen (which acts as the barrel) screwed into a cigarette lighter (which acts as the firing chamber), a cigarette case (which acts as the handle), and a cuff link (which acts as the trigger). This gun however is limited to only one bullet.Gold Bullets Handcrafted by specialty munitions manufacturer Lazar, these are 4.2mm (an unusual size, slightly smaller than a .17 ACP) and made of 23-karat gold. The bullets flatten upon impact. This action, combined with Scaramanga's extraordinary marksmanship, expedites the rate of death of the victim 007 Gold Bullet and Bellydancing Trinket Gold Bullet Although not gadgets themselves, these pieces of evidence were used to track down Scaramanga. The first bullet, with Bond's Double-O registry etched into it is later revealed to be sent not by Scaramanga or any of his contractors with a hit on Bond, but by Andrea Anders Scaramanga's mistress herself as a way to lure Bond into killing her Lover/Employer Scaramanga and setting her free from his world. Sadly this does not work as she ends up accidentally exposing herself and becomes a victim of one of Scaramanga's gold bullets. The Bellydancing Bullet came from another one of Scaramanga's victims, that being Bill Fairbanks agent 002. Bond tracks down the dancer who used the bullet as a bellydancing stomach trinket that was lodged in the wall after it was used to murder Fairbanks.Fake Nipple Bond uses this as part of his disguiseSolex Agitator Device that enables the utilization of solar energy as a power source on an industrial scale.Industrial Laser Cannon A weapon that comes with the use of the solex agitator. Similar to the industrial lasers used by Auric Goldfinger and Blofeld, this weapon was used to destroy Bond's aircraft docked at Scaramanga's island.AMC Matador – Flying car Seemingly standard automobile, with the exception of the dashboard converting from speedometer to avionics panel and an interface for wings and jet attachments. Scaramanga uses this to escape from Bond.Tracking Device Used to track Scaramanga's flying carChinese Junk One of Scaramanga's vessels, it features a communication device used by MI6 to contact Bond and an autopilot.RMS Queen Elizabeth A ship that sank in 1972 under mysterious circumstances. This derelict actually houses MI6 operations in Hong Kong harbour.Scaramanga's Fun Palace Filled with replicas of historic figures significant to Scaramanga such as Al Capone as well as several moving mirrors and a Saloon. Also contains a replica of James Bond himself.007 Wax Dummy A near exact duplicate of James Bond, complete with a retractable railing that at a push of a button would either advance or retreat out of the shadows. Used by Scaramanga as both a tool of admiration and target practice. Bond would later impersonate the dummy and kill Scaramanga when he was not looking.
The Spy Who Loved Me[edit]
Jaws' Teeth Made of stainless steel, his razor sharp teeth are what he uses to dispose of his victims by biting into their jugular. The strength of these "dentures" are also shown when he is able to bite through the skin of a shark and thus killing it. Its weakness however, being that it is made of steel, is that it is vulnerable to industrial-sized super-magnets which are normally used in junkyards to lift vehicles.Lotus Esprit A Q-Branch customised vehicle with several gadgets. This is actually one of the few vehicles that survives one of Bond's typical missions.Cement Blaster used to impair enemy windshields on their vehicles or as an underwater smoke screen to elude enemy submarine craft (in licence plate).
machine guns concealed behind headlights
surface to air missiles
torpedoes (underwater mode)
landmines (also can be used underwater)
can convert from land use to underwater submarine use
Micro-Film Reader Assembled from two components: A cigarette case
A cigarette lighter
Ski Pole/Gun A special designed ski pole which is modified to fire .30 calibre rounds from a four shot magazine in the handle.Industrial Magnet Installed in Stromberg's aquarium for unknown reasons, this magnet was later used to put Jaws in it.Seiko Quartz watch Basically working like a pager, it had a built-in telex that allowed MI6 to send important messages to Bond, printing them out like a miniature teleprinter. The tape bore some resemblance to label maker tape.Stun Gas Cigarette The cigarette used by Soviet agent Triple X, could unleash a knockout blow of stun gas when blown through.MI6 Headquarters in Cairo Disguised to resemble an Egyptian Temple, this facility houses the offices of MI6 as well as Q Branch division. The following gadgets were all being tested at the Q Branch area of the temple, with only one of them actually being used by Bond in the film. A list of the gadgets being tested is listed below:Sharp Tea Tray
Hookah Machine Gun
Seats with booby trapped knives
Cement Blaster (later installed on The Lotus Espirit which Bond uses)
Sharp Tea Tray Although never used, it is shown tested in Q's lab, cutting off a mannequin's head. The tray, in conjunction with a magnetic levitation delivery system, was lethal.Nuclear ICBM Detonator Another Atomic or Nuclear based weapon of mass destruction featured in a Bond Film. This device is responsible for detonating a nuclear warhead in an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile. Equipped with a magnetic housing, Bond had to carefully remove the device which would have been rigged to explode if the Detonator came in contact with the magnetic areas of the housing.Submarine Tracking System and Microfilm The initial object of Bond and Amasova's original mission in Cairo. The tracking system was developed at Stromberg's Facility, but was leaked by one of the developers in order to make and extra profit out of it. Stromberg sent Jaws to retrieve the blueprints to avoid any possible link to his company. Jaws however was unsuccessful in retrieving the blueprints.SS Liparus oil tanker Not really an oil tanker, her massive size contains a launch bay in the fore section of the ship where 3 nuclear subs can be housed. Other high tech toys this ship conceals includes a mini monorail system from which the cars can be ejected out of a hatch on the side of the ship and convert into speedboats, a bulletproof control room with slots fitted for machine guns and flamethrowers for the Liparus crew to use against the submarine crews, nuclear ICBM missiles, and the submarine tracking and electrical interference system used to capture the Soviet, British and American submarines.Monorail Speedboat Due to the size of the SS Liparus, a mini monorail system with was installed to transport personnel around the ship. In the event of an emergency, the monorail cars can be shot out of the sides of a ship and transform into speedboats.Portable water craft A seemingly normal personal water craft, but comes in a bag and is assembled by Q himself.Atlantis The undersea headquarters and Marine Biology Research Station of Karl Stromberg located off the coast of Sardinia, Italy in the Mediterranean Sea. This entire facility has several different gadgets and features, including:a bay for arriving/departing helicopters
a submerging system that allows the entire facility to either sink or rise from the Ocean. Useful for receiving helicopters and ships when in surface mode, and conducting marine operations in underwater mode.
a trick elevator which could release occupants into a shark tank (which included a viewing window connected to Stromberg's meeting-room)
a dining table with a gun beneath aiming from Stromberg's chair to the chair opposite
side ports/hatches to launch scuba divers and mini-subs for the purposes of marine research or defensive measures against unwanted visitors
a diverse aquarium
an escape capsule completely stocked with wine and caviar.
and of course, a toy model of the SS Liparus
Motorcycle with Rocket Sidecar A seemingly ordinary-looking motorcycle with a passenger sidecar. However, the side car can separate while driving and use rocket boosters to increase its speed when in pursuit of another vehicle. This vehicle was used by Stromberg's henchmen.
Moonraker[edit]
Jaws's Teeth With the character of Jaws making a comeback appearance in this film due to his popularity, his trademark steel teeth came back as well. Although hardly used in this film, the strength of his teeth are shown when Jaws bites through a steel cable which runs an air suspended gondola ride.Wrist dart gun Can fire both cyanide-coated and armour-piercing darts. Bond uses these to save himself from a centrifuge and kill Hugo Drax.Secret Laboratory In Venice, the secret lab in which the nerve gas vials are constructed is hidden by a seemingly normal door on the outside. Accessible by punching in a code on the outside of the door that resembles the tune to Close Encounters of the Third Kind.Safe-cracking device X-ray safe cracking device that is concealed within a cigarette case.Seiko Wristwatch Contains a remote detonator and explosive charge and fuse inside the back compartment.Multi Purpose Coffin Used by Drax Henchmen in an attempt to assassinate Bond, this coffin comes with a lid mounted panel that offers assorted hand based knife weapons the assailant could use against Bond. It also fulfills its basic design as a coffin when Bond kills the assailant hiding inside and closes the lid with the assailant still inside of it. This coffin also proves unintentionally useful as it can also float.Camera A mini-camera imprinted with 007.Moonraker Laser gun A laser gun that can be shot in space. The gun is also used in the video game GoldenEye 007. A version of this gun is shown being tested to somewhat gruesome effect on a wax dummy during Bond's visit to the MI6 monastery. They were tested at Q-Branch, and used by United States Outer Space Marine Infantry and Drax Industries armaments.Exploding Bolas (seen tested in the MI6 monastery) Designed to entrap an object, such as a human, and explode when the bola balls hit each other.Mexican Machine gun (seen tested in MI6 monastery) A cleverly disguised machine gun which is contained in a mannequin of a Mexican taking a siesta. The mannequin splits open, revealing the gun.Gondola Hovercraft Enabled Bond to escape Drax henchmen in Venice by transforming into a land based hovercraft when necessary.Poison Pen One of CIA agent Holly Goodhead's toys. Bond uses this particular gadget to dispose of Drax's pet python.Perfume Flamethrower Another toy of Holly GoodheadNotebook A notebook that shoots a small dart, belonging to Holly GoodheadDrax Industries Space Shuttle Factory models come equipped with built in laser weapons and other armaments, and can fly without rocket assistance. Export models are unarmed and carry only basic scientific equipment.Transmitter A transmitter hidden in Holly Goodhead's purse.Hydrofoil Boat A boat equipped with explosive mines, torpedoes, a raisable bulletproof shield, and an escape gliderDrax Incan Temple Situated in the area of the Amazon River where a rare plant used in creating a certain kind of cyanide (fatal only to humans but not animals or plantlife) is located. This temple comes complete with the following gadgets:Trick Ledge
Garden water way with Anacondas
Space Shuttle control room, with operational Space Shuttle launch pads
Office Area/Shuttle Exhaust Area
Eifel Tower Not technically a gadget, and not seen in this film, The Eifel Tower was said to be owned by Drax himself. Bond later visits the tower in A View to a Kill
For Your Eyes Only[edit]
SS St. Georges A seemingly ordinary fishing vessel, yet underneath in the hold lies a command center built to house and operate the ATAC device.WW2 Mine Used to destroy the British spy ship/fishing vessel St. Georges. Several of these mines are seen in the warehouse of Aris Kristatos during a surprise raid (suggesting that the sinking of the St. Georges was not an accident).Seiko Wristwatch Receives digital message read-outs and contains a 2-way radio/transmitter for voice communications.Seaplane Regular seaplane piloted by hitman Hector Gonzales who used it to ferry Melina Havelock to her parents' houseboat. Also came equipped with hidden machine guns on the underside later used to assassinate the Havelocks (with the exception of Melina who did survive).ATAC The Automatic Targeting Attack Communicator, or ATAC, was lost when the British spy ship St. Georges was sunk. This device controls all of Britain's Polaris ICBM nuclear submarines and can render them either inoperative or co-ordinate the use of them against major western cities or against Britain herself. Later recovered by Bond, who at the end destroys it to prevent it from falling into enemy hands.Barnett Commando Crossbow Judy Havelock, who is there with her crossbow to avenge her parents’ death.Identigraph An early computer-like device to assemble a phantom photo of a person by selecting characteristics from a variety of lists including hair colour, hair style, nose form, style of eyeglasses etc. Located in MI6 headquarters and used by Bond and Q to put together an image of henchman Emile Leopold Locque. This device references the Identicast system referred to in the Ian Fleming novel Goldfinger.Grappling suspenders Similar to the ones used in Diamonds Are Forever, this is used to scale Kristatos' St. Cyril's monastery.Lotus EspritEquipped with an explosive anti-theft device which one henchman found out when he tried to break into it. Possibly contained other gadgets/weapons.Lotus Esprit replacementPossibly contained similar or more gadgets/weapons than the first one. However, it did not contain the explosive anti-theft device of the first as the person whom Bond tried to protect by keeping in the car was killed inside of it.Mini SubmarineContains an air pressure system to allow divers in and out while underwater.Remote Control HelicopterBlofeld rigged this helicopter to take Bond on a wild ride during the pre-opening credits sequence. It comes complete with electric shock wires to kill the current pilot. Bond however dismantles the remote control system and takes Blofeld on a ride into a chimney stack.
Octopussy[edit]
Seiko Wristwatch Contains a universal radio direction finder. This works in conjunction with listening device inside Bond's fountain pen. The watch is a Seiko G757-5020. This watch contains the following features:Live Video Feed used in conjunction with Q Branch surveillance cameras.
Homing Device tracker
Possibly other gadgets
Trick Backgammon Dice Used by Khan to ensure a victory every time, Bond then uses the dice against Khan breaking his "winning streak".Fake Horse Trailer An ordinary-looking horse trailer, however the rear end of the horse lifts up concealing a Mini-Jet Acrostar BD-5J (see below).Acrostar BD-5J Mini-Jet aircraft used by Bond to perform surveillance on and destroy an enemy nation's hangar containing possible new technology that could be a threat to the Western Nations.False Movie Poster Used to conceal the location of Q-Branch division in India. Bond and Vijay ride through the poster, and a new one comes up concealing the entrance to Q-Branch.Montblanc fountain pen Contains a mixture of Nitric and Hydrochloric acids. Contains an earpiece listening device that works in conjunction with Bond's wristwatch and the Fake Fabergé egg (see below).Fake Fabergé egg Contains a listening device and homing beacon which was used in conjunction with Bond's wristwatch.Attaché case Contains a false bottom which conceals a high explosive bomb.TV Watch Receives moving colour images over the air.[4] Bond uses this device towards apprehending Kahn later in the film.Yo-yo saw A rotating circular saw blade attached to a string so that it could be used in the same manner as a conventional yo-yo. Used by an assassin to kill MI6 agent Vijay, and later by the same assassin against Bond and Octopussy. An industrial sized version of this weapon that is used to trim trees along rights-of-way for pipelines and electrical transmission lines appears in the film The World Is Not Enough as it is mounted on a helicopter and used to saw Bond's BMW in half.Indian rope trick A high-tech version of the familiar magic trick tested in MI6, the rope could extend skyward when a button was pressed.The Crocodile a miniature motorboat disguised as a crocodile. Bond used this to get to Octopussy's island.Homing device a small tracker inserted into the Faberge egg that Bond steals during an auction. The device also contains a microphone that works with the listening device in the pen described above.Q-Branch Hot Air Balloon Equipped with surveillance cameras to track various enemy movements. This is used in conjunction with Bond's TV Watch in which he can receive video signals from the balloon.Sash Used by Magda as she masqueraded as a street dancer. While it is an ordinary-looking Sash, it can be used as a weapon.Mini-NukeA bomb fitted into the base of a circus cannon. Intended to blow the circus show, as well as an entire city in West Germany off the map with the intention of removing all US installations in Europe leaving it vulnerable to a Russian invasion. This is the seventh time in the James Bond film series where an atomic or nuclear based weapon of mass destruction is involved. These films are Dr. No, Goldfinger, Thunderball, Diamonds Are Forever The Spy Who Loved Me, and For Your Eyes Only.
A View to a Kill[edit]
Polarizing Sunglasses Allows the ability of seeing clearly through tinted glass.Ring Contains a miniature camera.Zorin identification Device Installed within the walls of Zorin's Paris Estate office, this computer integrated system allows Zorin to quickly identify any suspicious clients.Checkbook/Billfold Uses ultra-violet light to read previously written material by picking up the indentations of pen marks on paper.Zorin Desk Lamp Installed throughout the many quarters of his Paris estate. These lamps allow his surveillance team to monitor any conversations made by any of his guests.Electric Shaver Contains an electronic eavesdropping detector.Credit Card Has an electronic ability to open locks.SNOOPER One of Q Branch's surveillance inventions. A small, animal-like remote controlled camera unit that can transmit audio/video from the head of the unit to a receptacle for the signal. It was used as demonstration near the beginning of the movie and at the end to find Bond.Zorin Industries Skyship 6000 Large airship complete with briefing room and mini retractable map of The San Francisco Bay Area that comes out of the office table. Also available with this airship is a retractable staircase and trap door that would be used to dispose of recently un-welcomed business partners when in flight mode.Zorin dirigible Smaller compact version of the larger Zorin Airship. Conceals inside an outdoor office trailer, positioned for a quick getaway. The airship also stores explosives.Zorin Microchip Impervious to electromagnetic pulse (EMP) created from outer space. This microchip or similar reverse-engineered microchips are used on the prototype Eurocopter Tiger helicopter in GoldenEye which is impervious to EMP caused by the main weapon of that film.Zorin Walking Cane Contains an RC steroid injector used to improve the performance of his racing horses during a race. Also contains various controls for his racetrack and various other materials at his estate.Razor Sharp Butterflies Used by May Day to dispose of Bond's contact at the Eiffel Tower.Snowboard wrecked frontal sled piece of a snowmobile. Used by Bond as a snowboard when his skis are damaged.Bug Detector Just like the one used in From Russia With Love, this is a small device that is designed to detect the presence of a phone tap device in a regular telephone.Grappling Hook Used by Bond to dismount a Russian soldier from his snowmobile.Flare Gun Not technically a gadget, but used as one. Bond shoots this at a Russian helicopter effectively making it crash. Also signals his submarine.Iceberg Submarine Mini Submarine disguised as an iceberg. Comes complete with a retractable bed as well as champagne and caviar.Zorin's Stable/Property Comes complete with a lowering stable that leads to his hidden underground manufacturing plant. Racetrack also includes booby traps which Zorin can control with his walking cane. Also available is a surveillance room where Zorin can monitor all his guests.Car Tire Not technically a gadget, but improvised as one last minute. When submerged, Bond uses the air from the tire to breathe underwater to fool Zorin and May Day that he was dead.Improvised Gloves Just as in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, these "gloves" are basically the pocket lining of Bond's trousers. Bond rips them out and uses them to help him grip onto an Elevator's top hatch in order to help Stacey Sutton and himself out of a burning building set on fire by Zorin.Eifel Tower Not technically a gadget, but previously mentioned as property of Hugo Drax, who is already dead during the events of this film.
Timothy Dalton era (1987–1989)[edit]
The Living Daylights[edit]
Pipeline Cab Designed to smuggle a person through the gas pipelines. Russian General Georgi Koskov was the first ever person to successfully use the line during his "defect" to Britain. A similar vehicle is used in the film The World is Not EnoughPhilips KeychainContains capsule of stun gas (effective up to 5 feet) which is activated by a whistle combination. (Bond's was the first bars of "Rule, Britannia!". It is unclear if this is a standard setting.) The gas disorientates any normal person for up to 30 seconds. This explanation causes Bond to remark "You don't find too many normal people in this business, Q..."
Contains an explosive charge which is activated by a personalised whistle combination. (Bond's was a wolf whistle, something that Q commented was "most appropriate" for 007.)
Contains a lockpick which was claimed by Q to be able to "open 90% of the world's locks".
Miniature Binoculars Contained on normal-looking eye-glass frames.Ghetto Blaster While never used by James Bond, we see this gadget being tested in Q-Branch for the Americans. The "Ghetto Blaster" (a 1980s slang term for a portable stereo) is a boombox that can fire a rocket.Revolving Sofa Q is also testing a sofa that swallows whoever sits on it.Guard Wristwatch used by General Pushkin to alert the guards at Bond's appearanceAston Martin V8 Vantage Volante This vehicle from Q-Branch comes with an assortment of useful gadgets. Listed below are the gadgets that come with this vehicle. Although not technically a gadget that comes with this vehicle, the rims (once the tires were blown out) were used to cut a circle in the ice covering the frozen lake which successfully subdues the police chasing after Bond.Police band radio
Hubcap Laser
Forward missile launcher
Concealed Rocket Propulsion system
Outrigger Retractable skis
Retractable tire spikes
Self-destruct mechanism
Cello & Case Although not technically a gadget, the Cello Case was used as a sitting sled in a downhill snow chase and the Cello was used as a steering rudder and as a crude dummy for the guards to shoot at.Milk Bottle Bombs Disguised as a Milkman while infiltrating MI6 Headquarters, Necros employed Milk Bottle Bombs from his milk crate destroying some of MI6's internal facilities while trying to smuggle General Koskov out.Earpiece garrotte Not technically a device, but used as one. Necros, disguised as a Milkman, would use this item to strangle his victims much like Red Grant and his garrotte watch.General Whitaker's War Room A room containing a collection of military memorabilia and toys which Whitaker plays with in his spare time. This area can also be used against unwelcome guests as it conceals many high tech weapons.Trap Entrance Door Booby trapped by Necros to kill Agent Saunders. Otherwise a normally working automatic entry door, the trap entrance was rigged with a device that when triggered would deliver a fatal crushing blow to anyone stepping through the entryway of the automatic doors.Dummy Kara Milovy Basically a Cello Case dressed up to look like Kara Milovy in a phone booth. Intended to buy Bond and Milovy time to escape those who were pursuing them.
Licence to Kill[edit]
Dentonite Toothpaste Plastic explosives disguised as ordinary toothpaste. The receiver that picks up the signal from Bond to blow the explosives is disguised as a packet of cigarettes.Signature Camera Gun A camera that when put together became a sniper rifle that can be programmed to fire for only one person due to a scanner built into the grip.Laser Polaroid Camera When the flash is used on this camera, it shoots a laser. The pictures it takes are X-rayed.Exploding Alarm Clock Q carries it with him to Isthmus, but it is not used. "Guaranteed never to wake up anybody who uses it."Radio Transceiver Broom used by Q to communicate with Bond's companion while disguised as a grounds man. Interestingly Q throws this item away after using it.Genuine "Felix" Lighter A gift from Felix Leiter's wedding, an inscribed cigarette lighter that malfunctions, causing a huge flame to burst forth (although it could be that it is a mini-flamethrower). It is first and the final special device used in this film reminding the main villain Franz Sanchez why he destroyed his criminal empire to begin with.Manta Ray over-cover used to disguise Bond as a Manta Ray when infiltrating Krest's shipDecompression Chamber Used for deep sea divers to help them decompress after diving in deep waters, this device was also used as a weapon of execution by Sanchez. Milton Krest's ship, the Wavekrest, had one, and was used by Bond to frame Krest for stealing Sanchez' money. Krest found out the hard way how a Decompression chamber could be used as a weapon, as he was stuffed in it and Sanchez rapidly compressed and decompressed it. The resulting explosion inside were the remains of Krest's head.Petrol with Cocaine Disguised as Gasoline, Sanchez planned to sell his drugs to the orientals disguised as gasoline, but really containing the cocaine.Conveyor Belt & Shredder Used to break apart large blocks of cocaine into smaller pieces. Dario nearly kills Bond with the Shredder, however with Pam Bouvier's help, Bond tosses Dario into the Shredder.Shark Tank Stored in Milton Krest's warehouse, the Shark tank is used to dispose of adversaries to Krest and Sanchez, such as Felix Leighter (although he survives). Ed Killifer (the DEA agent bribed by Sanchez) also found out the hard way how the Shark Tank was used when Bond shoves Killfer's money into Killifer and thus pushing him into the Shark Tank.
Pierce Brosnan era (1995–2002)[edit]
GoldenEye[edit]
Russian Armored Train ICBM Transporter Formerly an ICBM Nuclear Missile carrier, this defunct train was modified to serve both as a living space for Trevelyan as well as his mobile base of operations due to it being impervious to tracking devices as well as its armor plating which gives it an added protection to most arms fire and bomb blasts.BMW Z3Supposedly equipped with 'Stinger' missiles and other armaments, which are never seen or used. An automatic HUD that tracks approaching vehicles is shown. Car is LHD. Total screen time less than two minutes.Aston Martin DB5Bond's signature car. Although not a main vehicle as such, it is evident that Bond's Aston Martin has been modified by Q-Branch. This particular vehicle is equipped with a built-in dashboard fax machine and a cellular voice communications system, with a refrigerated drinks holder containing a bottle of Bollinger champagne and a rose.Belt A size 34 leather belt. It conceals a piton hidden behind the buckle. It can fire out up to 75 feet (23 m) of high tensile wire designed to support the weight of an average person. Used by Bond to flee the Russian military archives building in St. Petersburg after Natalya is captured by General Ourumov and his men.Ballpoint Pen (Parker Jotter) Contains a class-four grenade. A 2-inch-long fuse is armed after three clicks in succession. Another three clicks disarms it. Used by Bond to escape his captors after Boris nervously clicks it.Wristwatch An Omega Seamaster Professional (the first of James Bond's non-Seiko/Rolex gadget watches) with built-in laser cutter and a remote detonator.Piton Gun Fires grappling hook (piton) and has a laser cutting attachment.Digital Binoculars Auto focus/zoom, digital camera, satellite uplink to send visual data.X-Ray Document Scanner Q has a document scanner disguised as a tea-tray.Phone Booth Trap Q Branch is testing a BT telephone box with a large airbag inside which expands, crushing anyone inside against the wall of the box.Wheelchair and Leg Cast missile Tested by Q Branch, this gadget was made to look like someone had broken their leg, when in fact, the leg hid a missile, which could be fired from the seated position.Door Decoder Small device that can be fitted onto keypad locked electronic doors that finds the combination and displays it on its screen. Used by 006 in the pre-credit sequence.Ejector Seat An ejector seat disguised as an ordinary office chair. Adjusting it will blast the chair across a distance. Is only seen whilst Q is telling Bond to bring everything back in pristine condition.Eurocopter Tiger Specially modified Tiger able to withstand electromagnetic pulse from outer space (caused by the Goldeneye EMP satellites). It is possible that this helicopter uses Zorin microchip technology which is mentioned by Q himself to be impervious to EMP radiation from outer space.Goldeneye Satellite An orbital satellite based weapon capable of delivering high powered electro-magnetic shock waves which can shut down any electronic operation on Earth. Alec Trevalyan controls the satellite in Cuba with the intention of using it on London, ruining its economy and thus causing chaos (only after he's robbed the entire Bank of England through his hacker employee Boris Grishenko).Trevelyan's Cuban Radar Dish Base A gigantic radar installation used by Trevelyan to control the movements of the Goldeneye satellite. The radar dish alone is so large that when submerged in water, it would resemble a small lake thus concealing its whereabouts. This facility comes complete with surface-to-air missiles that would destroy any unwelcomed visitors from the air while submerged. This is similar to Blofeld's Volcano base where the outer cover of the retractable roof is painted to resemble lake water.
Tomorrow Never Dies[edit]
Mobile Phone This was a concept phone designed by Ericsson. The phone had a variety of features, including: a stun gun, containing a 20,000 Volt shock to any unauthorised user, and is also handy at disabling a high tech door lock.
a fingerprint scanner/analyser/transmitter that can also be used for opening high-tech fingerprint-identification locks
Antennae lock pick, which detaches from the phone and when inserted into a keyhole, hitting a key on the phone can then open the lock.
"Flip-open" remote control for operating his BMW 750iL (Directional steering pad, LCD monitor for the front and rear view, controls to fire rocket launcher and operate the car's other defence mechanisms)
Much of the phone's style, including its "flip-open" design, was incorporated a few years later into the Ericsson R380, an early smartphone. The R380 combined a fully functional mobile phone, PDA-like tools and WAP services.Sea Shadow (IX-529) Carver's ship instrumental in creating false headlines. Employs stealth technology making it impervious to conventional radar. This ship also deploys the Sea-Vac Drill (see below).Omega Seamaster watch Taken by Bond from the Chinese safehouse, the watch had a small, detachable charge that could be detonated by turning the watch's dial. It was later used to remotely destroy a glass jar that had a grenade lodged inside.Walther P99 A gun Bond acquires from the Chinese safehouse in Saigon. It replaced Bond's Walther PPK, present for the first half of the film. Bond has used the P99 until going back with a PPK in "Quantum of Solace"Cigarette lighter A disguised timed explosive/grenade.Spike Fan Weapon developed by Wai Lin's counterpart division to Q Branch. Appears to be a Chinese fan, but when opened, several metal spikes with strings attached are thrown. Due to its brief appearance with no additional explanation, it is unclear whether the strings are for entanglement or a similar purpose like a taser, or to retract the spikes.Rickshaw Defence Mechanism This was used to knock out an enemy. A button is pressed, and an upper part of a bike-based rickshaw, which appears to be parked, ejects, knocking out the target.Dragon Flamethrower Bond commented on the fact that this device was "very novel." Although this appears to be a sculpture of a dragon's head, pulling back one of the horns emits a high yield flamethrower, which makes the sculpture look like a fire-breathing dragon.Wristband Grappling Hook A wristband that shoots a grappling hook that Wai Lin uses to escape a building in the beginningEarring Lock pick At least one of Wai Lin's earrings conceals a lock pick, which she uses to escape from a pair of handcuffs.Sea-Vac DrillUsed by Elliot Carver to destroy anything in his path—only to fall victim to it himself.BMW 750il Car used by 007 in Hamburg. Equipped with mobile phone to control the car's functions, front and rear view LCD monitor, rockets, high voltage security system, and secret compartment.
The World Is Not Enough[edit]
Fake P99 Actually an explosive, detonated on the banker's desk.Q Boat Built by Q for his retirement. This boat comes equipped with submersible capabilities, although it was never properly finished.Air Snow Machines Powered paragliders using snow mobiles with built in aircraft propellers similar to the use of Air Boats in the southern United States. The ram-airfoil can be detached to enable the machines to operate as snowmobiles.Omega Seamaster Wristwatch Contains a Grappling hook with fifty feet of high-tensile micro-filament and a high intensity lighted bezel.Multifunction Lock Pick Concealed in a normal-looking credit card with a removable strip that activates a spring-loaded multifunction lock pick.Eye-glasses (#1) Remotely detonates an explosive "flash-bang" charge. The explosive charge is actually housed in the pistol that is confiscated from Bond in the film's opening scene.Eye-glasses (#2) Enables X-ray vision for checking for concealed weapons.Ski Jacket Conceals an escape pod which inflates into a sealed sphere made of aluminium-coated plastic and Kevlar reinforcement. This feature appears to be based on the Zorb.Bagpipe Contains a flamethrower and a machine gun (was seen only in Q's testing lab).Nuclear Bomb Attempted to be detonated through the use of a submarine's nuclear reactor. This marks the eighth and final time in the James Bond film series (before the reboot with Daniel Craig) where an atomic or nuclear based weapon of mass destruction is involved. These films are Dr. No, Goldfinger, Thunderball, Diamonds Are Forever, The Spy Who Loved Me, and For Your Eyes Only, and OctopussyLocator Device Used by M when captured by Electra King by hooking up an alarm clock to a device which was able to get MI6 to triangulate the signal to the Lighthouse and get Bond to come to the rescueThermo Satellite Locator Used by MI6 and operated by R (Q's replacement) to locate Bond and Dr. Christmas Jones in Istanbul after Bond destroys the nuclear submarine. This device uses Satellite thermo-imaging on a large display screen to show heat signatures coming from various objects including people. MI6 staff was treated to a rather interesting surprise when they did finally find Bond and Dr. Jones on their Thermo-Locator.Industrial-sized circular saw Helicopter mounted circular saw assembly. Helicopters carrying these fly by and trim tree foliage. Two of these helicopters are sent to attack Bond and destroy his BMW.
This film marks the only one occasion in the Bond film series where Bond has expressed concern as to what Q will think when equipment is destroyed "Q's not gonna like this!" when his BMW Z8 is sawn in half. This takes place after Major Boothroyd's final appearance in the film series; Desmond Llewelyn was killed in a car accident before the next film began production.
Die Another Day[edit]
Single Digit Sonic Agitator A "standard issue" ring for the finger which is actually an "ultra high-frequency single digit sonic agitator unit" that can shatter bullet-proof glass (or any " 'unbreakable' glass", as commented by Q in the movie) or disable another person.Surfboard Contains a sliding panel with a hidden compartment containing communications equipment, explosives, detonators and a Walther P99 pistol.Omega Wristwatch Contains an explosive detonator and laser beam cutter. The new Q states that this watch is Bond's 20th, which is a reference to the fact that Die Another Day is the 20th James Bond film.Mini Air Supply Similar device as used in Thunderball, which provides a few minutes of oxygen.Virtual Combat Training SimulatorThis device allows the user to enter a virtual environment with the assistance of four computerised columns, a special pair of sunglasses, and a special weapon. This training simulator is tested by 007. One such program contains a scenario in which MI6 Headquarters is attacked and the user must eliminate all threats as they see fit. Miss Moneypenny makes some recreational use of another version of the program, where she is romancing with James Bond over a desk.Aston Martin VanquishA high-tech car that uses adaptive camouflage technology, and so is equipped with tiny cameras on both sides so that they reflect what they capture on the other side, making it invisible to the human eye. Other features consist of the following: bonnet-mounted target-seeking shotguns, front-firing torpedoes, traction spikes, a passenger ejector seat, dual machine guns concealed behind the front grille, a retractable sliding roof panel, radial thermal imaging (heat) display, a remote-control function, some sort of laser cutting tool (seen to be accessible via its respective button on the control panel, although never used) and grenades of some sort, presumably rearward ones (also present on the control panel, yet never used).
Because this film marks the 40th anniversary of James Bond films in addition to the film being the 20th in the franchise, there are multiple references to each previous official film. Some examples include:
Red Grant's garrotte wire wristwatch. (From Russia with Love)
Bell-Textron Jet Pack (Thunderball)
Snorkel with false bird on top (Goldfinger)
Laser piton gun (GoldenEye)
Attaché case (From Russia with Love) - although the blade comes out of the slot point first, which is backwards.
Bede Acrostar Jet (Octopussy)
One-man submarine (disguised as Crocodile) (Octopussy)
SNOOPER (A View to a Kill)
Little Nellie (You Only Live Twice)
Rosa Klebb's poison-tipped shoe knife (From Russia with Love).
Icarus satellite Another orbital satellite based weapon very much like the satellite featured in Diamonds Are Forever, Gustav Graves (the villain of this film) created this satellite with the intent of providing sunlight to areas of the world which lack it in order to promote agricultural development in cold climate countries. Like the satellite featured in Diamonds Are Forever, the satellite's power is focused by the diamonds contained within. However, this particular satellite uses solar energy instead of laser technology with the intentions still remaining the same as it did in Diamonds Are Forever, which is as a weapon. Graves had really intended this satellite to detonate mines placed along the De-Militarised Zone along the border of North Korea and South Korea with the intention of having the North invade the South, as well as destroying any ICBMs that threaten the satellite and their intentions. This is also the biggest laser-based weapons in the films.Sony Ericsson T68iSony Ericsson P800
Daniel Craig era (2006-present)[edit]
Since the reboot of the franchise with Casino Royale, the character of Q and his lab had been absent from the films until Skyfall.
Casino Royale[edit]
Aston Martin DBS V12 The car has a glove compartment filled with assorted tools and weaponry, including a high-tech first aid kit, antidotes to various poisons and portable defibrillator.Sony Ericsson K800 Mobile phone with sophisticated GPS and 3.2 megapixel digital camera, with the ability to take multiple pictures very rapidly.Sony Ericsson M600Microchip implant Bond is implanted with a microchip that helps MI6 keep track of Bond's whereabouts; it also monitors Bond's vital signs which are transmitted back to MI6 for analysis.Tracking device Similar to the implant in Bond's arm, this tracking device is placed in Le Chiffre's inhaler.Omega Seamaster wristwatchExplosive Keychain Originally used in the attempt to destroy a commercial airliner in Miami. Bond removes this from the fuel lorry and attaches it to a henchman's belt loop.
Quantum of Solace[edit]
Walther PPK The Walther PPK returns, after having been replaced at the end of Tomorrow Never Dies by the P99.Aston Martin DBS V12Sony Ericsson C902 This mobile phone has a built in identification imager, capable of compiling a composite facial image of a potential suspect even when the person being photographed is looking to the side. This phone can also receive information immediately regarding the suspect as it is also tied into the MI6 data mainframe.Omega Seamaster wristwatchMI6 Profile Touchscreen Similar to the Microsoft Surface, this tool used by MI6 gathers information regarding possible suspects in an investigation, and relays it back to Bond through his mobile phone.Quantum Earpiece A Q-shaped earpiece that 007 uses to listen in on Dominic Greene and his plots.
Skyfall[edit]
Walther PPK/S 9mm short A version equipped with a palm-print reader, only enabling the gun to fire when it detects Bond's palm-print.Radio transmitter A simple radio transmitter that allows MI6 to track Bond's location when activated. Bond expresses his disappointment at the poor selection of gadgets at his disposal from the new Q (Ben Whishaw), who explains that Q branch no longer go in for "exploding pens".Aston Martin DB5 The same DB5 that Bond had in Goldfinger, the car has since been equipped with familiar features from its first appearance in Goldfinger - Bond jokingly threatens M by exposing the gear lever-mounted ejector seat button while she is seated in the passenger seat, and its hidden machine guns are used during the climactic battle with Silva.
These vehicle gadgets were featured on the film:
2x 20 mm .30 Caliber Browning Machine Guns behind the front head lamps (as seen in the film Thunderball)
Ejector Seat (as seen previously in the film Goldfinger)
Armored bullet-proof chassis and windows able to withstand multiple machine guns with only dents, then rendered unusable by an RPG missile much to Bond's visible dismay, restarting the Bond trend of damaging his upgraded car in every movie (this feature is mentioned in, though seemingly upgraded from the film Goldfinger).
The control panel in the armrest of the car for the car's gadgets is featured for a flash of a second, and within it are enough controls to closely resemble the control panel seen in Goldfinger, Thunderball, and other films. This suggests the car may also likely have any of the original gadgets such as smoke screens, oil slicks, caltrops, retractable tire slashers in the hubcaps, retractable reinforced bumper rams, and possibly revolving licence plates and hidden firearm compartments in the interior of the car. However, a rear retractable bulletproof screen is less likely due to the strength of the armor seen in Skyfall where Bond anticipated the many machine guns to shoot at the car. It is possible there are features already installed in the car not yet explored in the films.
Sony Xperia TLightbulb Bombs Built by M herself, these self-made explosive devices contain a broken lightbulb inside a small plastic bag filled with kerosene and small bits of screws and other small bits of scrap metal. When attached to a light bulb socket and switched on by intruders, they explode sending large flames and bits of scrap metal flying everywhere.AW101 Helicopter Silva's helicopter, equipped with a Public address system in the undercarriage intended to play music very loud while hovering over its intended target zone. This device has no offensive, defensive, or any sort of tactical value what so ever, as it only serves to provide a "grand entrance" and is used as a tool of making a nuisance.
Standard signature items (most films)[edit]
Walther PPK / P99 / PPK/S Walther firearms have had a long and storied history with 007. First issued in the film Dr. No, this semi-automatic double action pistol was intended to replace Bond's .25 ACP Beretta pistol after it backfired and caused him injury to his chest. This pistol has an overall weight of 590 g (21 oz) and a calibre of 7.65mm (.32 ACP). Bond was threatened to be demoted to standard intelligence duties unless he accepts use of the pistol. Bond later upgrades to a Walther P99 9 mm semi-automatic pistol in the film Tomorrow Never Dies before exchanging it for the traditional PPK in the film Quantum of Solace . In Skyfall, Q issues a new weapon to Bond - a Walther PPK/S 9mm short with a built in optical palm reader exclusively encoded to 007's palm print, ensuring 007 is the only one that can fire the weapon, making the new Walther a true signature gun.Hanging Kick A standard martial arts maneuver employed frequently by 007, where he would grab onto anything above him (usually the top of a door frame) and would swing from it kicking at any of his adversaries who gets caught in the way.Rolex/Seiko/Omega Seamaster Wristwatch Standard wristwatch complete with several different gadgets ranging from lasers, communication devices, homing beacons, explosives, etc. Made standard to all 00 Agents and has aided and saved Bond in several dangerous situations. Former 00 Agent Alec Trevelyan also uses a watch similar to Bond's.Briefcase Made standard by Major Boothroyd in the film From Russia With Love. Contains several gadgets built in and is used by all MI6 personnel.Pager Used to contact Bond when needed for new assignments. It comes in many forms from a key chain to a wristwatch.Safe Cracker a pocket device used to open safes.Mini Camera used to take small reconnaissance photos of various blueprints and strategic locations.Homing Device Placed in various different locations on Bond's clothing and/or gadgetry.Aston Martin DB5Signature vehicle of James Bond, as seen in several films all containing various Q Branch gadgetry.Laser Technology A number of Bond films have portrayed MI6 and their opponents to experiment with Laser Technology. Laser gadgets could be small enough to fit on one of Bond's many Q-Branch watches to industrial sizes being fitted on various types vehicles and air/spacecraft.Bug Detector Used to identify and possibly remove or utilize hidden listening or other surveillance devices within a potentially hostile suite.Animals Used mainly by Villains in several bond films, they utilize animals as weapons or as tools against Bond, his allies, or against those who have failed in the Villain's organization or are otherwise considered their adversaries. There are however a few cases where animals were helpful. A listing of these animals include the following:Sharks (Thunderball, Live and Let Die, The Spy Who Loved Me, Licence to Kill)
Snakes (Live and Let Die, Moonraker, Never Say Never Again, Octopussy)
Alligators/Crocodiles (Live and Let Die, Octopussy)
Dogs (On Her Majesty's Secret Service [as an ally], Moonraker)
Piranhas (You Only Live Twice, Moonraker)
Tigers (Octopussy)
Elephants (Octopussy)
Octopus (Octopussy [as a weapon Bond uses against Kamal's Henchmen])
Horses (Goldfinger [non threatening], A View to a Kill, The Living Daylights [as standard mounts for the allies])
Leeches (Octopussy)
Tarantula (Dr. No, Octopussy)
Aquarium Fish [as a display, and not a weapon or instrument] (Dr. No, From Russia With Love, Thunderball, The Spy Who Loved Me, For Your Eyes Only, Octopussy, Licence to Kill, The World is Not Enough, Skyfall)
Parrot (For Your Eyes Only [as an ally])
Komodo Dragon (Skyfall)
So far, Sharks are the most commonly used animal as a weapon with Snakes coming in second place. The film Live And Let Die uses the most common animals while Octopussy uses the most variety of animals.
Aircraft/Spacecraft Standard in nearly all Bond films, as most are outfitted with various gadgetry and/or above average equipment. Since Bond himself is a licenced aircraft pilot (among other talents), he is frequently seen piloting such aircraft in films. Below is a listing of Aircraft/Spacecraft with and without modifications.Commercial Airliners (Most Films)
Private Jet or Propeller Liners (Goldfinger, Moonraker, Octopussy)
Small Propeller Aircraft (Goldfinger, You Only Live Twice, The Man with the Golden Gun, Live and Let Die, The Living Daylights, Licence to Kill, Goldeneye, Quantum of Solace)
Transports (Moonraker, The Living Daylights, Tomorrow Never Dies, Die Another Day)
Jet Bombers (Thunderball, You Only Live Twice)
Jet Fighter/Ground Attack/Other Attack Aircraft (You Only Live Twice, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, The Man With The Golden Gun, Octopussy, The Living Daylights, Tomorrow Never Dies, Quantum of Solace)
Spacecraft (You Only Live Twice, Moonraker)
Helicopters with no modifications (Most Films)
Helicopters with above average modifications (You Only Live Twice, For Your Eyes Only, GoldenEye, The World is Not Enough, Skyfall)
Portable Gyrocopter aka "Little Nellie" (You Only Live Twice)
Portable Jetpack (Thunderball, Never Say Never Again)
Flying Propeller Snow Mobiles (The World is Not Enough)
Hot Air Balloon (A View to a Kill)
Flying Car (The Man with the Golden Gun)
Gliders (Live and Let Die, Moonraker)
See also[edit]
Outline of James Bond
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ "James Bond's Rolex Submariner". mitteleuropa. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
2.Jump up ^ http://rolexblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/real-james-bond-watchstrap-comes-to.html
3.Jump up ^ The Way of the Tiger book 1: Avenger, entry 229. By Mark Smith and Jamie Thomson.
4.Jump up ^ http://pocketcalculatorshow.com/nerdwatch/fun.html
External links[edit]
James Bond Gadget Watch History
Review of the "Bond" Omega Seamaster Professional
BondMovies.com: Q Branch
James Bond multimedia | James Bond gadgets



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List of James Bond firearms
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 The Walther PPK is the most famous of James Bond's handguns
The following is a list of firearms used by Agent 007, Bond girls, Bond allies, and Bond villains in the James Bond novel, film, and video game adventures.



Contents  [hide]
1 Novels 1.1 Ian Fleming
1.2 Kingsley Amis
1.3 John Gardner
1.4 Raymond Benson
1.5 Young Bond/Charlie Higson
1.6 Sebastian Faulks
1.7 Jeffery Deaver
2 Films 2.1 Eon Productions films
2.2 Non-Eon films
3 Video games
4 See also
5 References
6 External links

Novels[edit]
Ian Fleming[edit]
When Ian Fleming wrote the first of the James Bond novels, Casino Royale, he had no idea in which direction the stories would go, least of all how many he would eventually write. When he introduced Bond as using a .25 ACP caliber Beretta in a flat chamois leather holster, he is commonly believed to have given little thought to it. Fleming had been issued a .25 ACP Baby Browning during the Second World War when he was in Naval Intelligence and felt it was an appropriate side arm for an intelligence officer on an undercover mission.
In an interview published posthumously in the December 1964 issue of Playboy Magazine, Fleming admitted that he was not an expert in the field of firearms, and "Quite honestly, the whole question of expertise in these matters bores me. Obviously, I want to know the facts. If a Gaylord holster is better than a Berns-Martin, I want to know about it, but there is where my interest rather ends." The reference would be to the holsters of Chic Gaylord, a well-known holster maker of the period who in fact DID make shoulder holsters to suit Fleming's choice of pistol for Bond, the Walther PPK.[1]
Shortly before the publication of From Russia, With Love in 1956, Fleming received a fan letter from an author and gun collector, Geoffrey Boothroyd. He told Fleming that he admired the Bond novels apart from the hero's choice of weapon. Boothroyd felt the Beretta was "a lady's gun" with no real stopping power.[2] He also objected to the choice of holster. Boothroyd proposed that Bond should use a revolver like the Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight. It had no external hammer, so it would not catch on Bond's clothes. The Smith & Wesson could be kept in a Berns-Martin triple draw holster held in place with a spring clip which would decrease Bond's draw time. Boothroyd also said the suppressors Bond occasionally used were rarely silent and actually reduced the gun's stopping power.
Fleming thanked Boothroyd for his letter and made a few points of his own in his reply. He felt that Bond ought to have an automatic instead of a revolver. Fleming agreed that the Beretta lacked power, but pointed out that Bond had used more powerful weapons when necessary, such as the Colt M1911 .45 cal auto pistol he uses in Moonraker. Fleming also said that he had seen a silenced Sten gun during the war and the weapon had hardly made a whisper.
Ultimately Boothroyd recommended the Walther PPK 7.65 mm as being the best choice for an automatic of that size, with its ammunition available everywhere. He suggested, however, that 007 ought to have a revolver for long-range shooting. Fleming asked Boothroyd if he could lend his illustrator, Richard Chopping, one of his guns to be painted for the cover of From Russia, With Love. Boothroyd lent Chopping a Smith & Wesson .38 revolver that had the trigger guard removed for faster firing.
Fleming had Bond's Beretta caught in his trousers at the end of From Russia, With Love, an event that almost costs the secret agent his life. In the next novel, Dr. No, a Major Boothroyd recommends that Bond switch guns. Major Boothroyd chose the Walther PPK 7.65mm after testing the Walther PPK, the Japanese M-14, the Russian Tokarev, and the Sauer M-38.
Bond keeps his Walther PPK automatic in a Berns-Martin triple-draw shoulder holster, which was a split-front spring-retention holster adaptable only to revolvers.[3] The design of the holster was centered around the cylinder of a revolver, where the spring clip would "grip" the pistol.[4] This mistake was possibly due to an error in Fleming's notes, transposing the Walther PPK for the Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight to which the Berns-Martin holster was suited.[citation needed] Fleming lore says that Fleming had bought such a holster and had it sent to Jamaica.[citation needed] It has been argued over the years that Q-branch could have modified this legendary holster to accommodate automatics,[citation needed] but the company's brochures of the period were marked "no shoulder holster made for automatics."[5]

Novel
Year
Firearms
Casino Royale 1953 .25 Beretta automatic with a skeleton grip, Bond's issued sidearm.
Colt Police Positive .38 with sawn barrel. Bond keeps one under his pillow while he sleeps.
long-barreled Colt Army Special .45 probably referring to the Colt New Service revolver,[original research?] which Bond keeps under his Bentley's dashboard.
.35 calibre gun carried by the SMERSH gunmen.

Live And Let Die 1954 Beretta .25 with skeleton grip, Bond's issued sidearm.
Colt Detective Special. Bond takes this off Tee-Hee's corpse and uses it to kill two more of Mr. Big's men in the car park.
Remington Model 30 carried by "The Robber," a minion of Mr Big.
Champion speargun. Bond uses this to fend off an octopus during his swim to Mr. Big's island.

Moonraker 1955 .38 Colt Detective Special, Bond's gun he uses when training at the Services Shooting Gallery.
.25 Beretta, Bond's issued sidearm.
long-barrelled .45 Colt Army Special which Bond keeps under his Bentley's dashboard.
Luger, Hugo Drax's sidearm.

Diamonds Are Forever 1956 .25 Beretta automatic with skeleton grip, Bond's issued sidearm.
.38 Colt Police Positive carried by Wint. Other henchman, Kidd, also has one while in Spectreville.
.45 Colt, carried by Kidd. Actually a Colt New Service, as the Army Special was not chambered in .45" caliber.
Two long-barrelled revolvers with ivory butts, carried by Seraffimo Spang in Spectreville.
Jeep mounted Bofors 40 mm gun.

From Russia, With Love 1957 .25 Beretta automatic, Bond's issued sidearm.
Darko Kerim's 88 Winchester sniper rifle concealed in a walking stick. Used to assassinate Krilencu.
Red Grant's .25 electric gun hidden inside a hollowed-out copy of War and Peace.

Dr. No 1958 Walther PPK, Bond's new issued sidearm.
.25 Beretta. James Bond is forced to hand this gun over to Admiral Sir Miles "M" Messervy, his superior.
Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight for "long-range work." Bond decides to take this to Crab Key island instead of the PPK as there will be no time for close encounters.
Spandau. This weapon is on the boat that went in search of Bond, Quarrel, and Honeychile Rider.
Smith & Wesson .38. Bond finds this gun on Crab Key and uses it to kill three of Doctor No's men.
US Army Remington Carbine 300, the gun Bond finds on Doctor No's men.

Goldfinger 1959 Bond carries his Walther PPK in a hollowed-out copy of "The Bible to be Read as Literature."
long-barrelled Colt .45 which Bond keeps in a trick compartment under the driver's seat in his Aston Martin.
Bazooka used by US forces.
Bond finds a Colt .25 and a Luger belonging to Goldfinger and one of his guards on the plane.

For Your Eyes Only 1960 
"From a View to a Kill"  long-barrel .45 Colt Bond's issued sidearm as he hunts for a Russian spy.
Luger, Russian spy sidearm.
22 Target Pistol, Mary Ann Russell's sidearm.

"For Your Eyes Only"  Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm
Savage 99F. Bond is given the gun by Colonel Johns, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police Colonel: "Never send a man when you can send a bullet."
Tommy Guns carried by Gonzales men.
Crossbow carried by Judy Havelock.

"Quantum of Solace"  No gun is mentioned or used.

"Risico"  Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Spearguns. Carried by Columbo's men.
Luger, The side arm carried by Columbo's men.
Unknown Light machine gun being used by one of Kristatos's men.

"The Hildebrand Rarity"  Champion speargun. Bond used this to kill a Stingray in the Seychelles.

Thunderball 1961 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Colt .25. Sidearm of Emilio Largo.

The Spy Who Loved Me 1962 As this book is told from the point of view of the "Bond girl," Bond's gun is not identified.
Colt Police Positive. Bond gives this gun to Vivienne Michel "in case she needs it."
Submachine gun. Bond mentions in an anecdote that he used a submachine gun on his last mission in Canada, and that he fired from the hip which is "the correct way to fire" an automatic weapon.
Bond keeps a gun under his pillow as he sleeps, but this gun is never identified.

On Her Majesty's Secret Service 1963 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
German Schmeisser. This is used by the Unione Corse in the assault on the Piz Gloria.

You Only Live Twice 1964 Walther PPK, which Bond is not allowed to take with him when he faces Dr. Guntram Shatterhand.
Japanese M-14 carried by a Japanese policeman.

The Man With The Golden Gun 1965 A cyanide gun with which a brainwashed Bond almost assassinates Admiral Sir Miles "M" Messervy, his superior.
Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Scaramanga's gold-plated single-action Colt .45 that fired silver-jacketed, 24-ct gold dum-dum bullets.
Scaramanga's gold-plated Derringer that fired venom-coated bullets.

Octopussy and The Living Daylights 1966 
"Octopussy"  Dexter Smythe recounts an incident after World War II where a Webley Revolver is used.

"The Property of a Lady"  No gun is mentioned or used, though the cyanide water pistol from The Man With The Golden Gun is mentioned.

"The Living Daylights"  AK-47, used by the KGB assassin Trigger. Bond identifies it as a "Kalashnikov," but incorrectly as a "submachine gun"; the AK is an assault/automatic rifle. Bond quips that it would turn the target into "strawberry jam." In fact this error treating was quite common these times. For example Polish Army when obtained firsts, used the same naming which is official designation for copy produced locally 1958 – 1962, when the next more popular, were properly named.[6]

"007 in New York"  No gun is mentioned or used.

Kingsley Amis[edit]

Novel
Year
Firearms
Colonel Sun 1968 4000 model rocket launcher
9x19mm Parabellum Luger, silenced version used by thugs.
Beretta M 1934, Lee-Enfield rifle, Thompson, and Mills Bombs, all used by Listas.
Stokes Mortar, used by Col. Sun's gang.
Sawn-off Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight, carried by De Graaf.

John Gardner[edit]
On 20 March 1974 an attempt was made to kidnap HRH The Princess Anne. The Walther PPK of the police officer protecting her jammed and was subsequently withdrawn from service. When John Gardner was asked to write a new series of James Bond continuation novels, one of the first things he decided was to update Bond's trusty Walther PPK. Gardner devoted two pages in his first James Bond novel Licence Renewed to the debate over whether to use a revolver or an automatic, and what make and model, before finally settling on an older FN M1903 in 9 mm Browning Long (9x20mmSR). Even Bond himself admits that it is an old gun. The original hardback cover illustration by Richard Chopping shows the FN pistol.
After criticism from fans for choosing an old gun, Gardner replaced the gun three more times, eventually sticking to the ASP 9 mm for the rest of the series. As he intended to downplay the gadgets in his books, Gardner compensated by bringing to the series a colorful arsenal of weapons from around the world.

Novel
Year
Firearms
Licence Renewed 1981 FN M1903 9 mm. Bond chooses this to replace his Walther PPK, which is now banned by the service.
Ruger Super Blackhawk .44 Magnum. Bond keeps one of these (illegally) in his Saab 900 Turbo, and uses it during a car chase, firing it through his car's gunports.
Antique dueling pistol.
Colt Python .357 Magnum. Bond uses this briefly in an airborne shootout with Murik's men.
MBA Gyrojet.

For Special Services 1982 Heckler & Koch VP70 9 mm. After criticism from fans over the choice of an old gun, Gardner replaced Bond's FN M1903 with a more modern DAO 9 mm polymer pistol.

Icebreaker 1983 Heckler & Koch P7 9 mm becomes Bond's issued sidearm in this adventure.

Role of Honour 1984 ASP 9 mm. Gardner finally settled on the ASP as Bond's issued sidearm .

Nobody Lives Forever 1986 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm .

No Deals, Mr. Bond 1987 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm .

Scorpius 1988 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm .
Browning Compact 9 mm

Win, Lose or Die 1989 Browning 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.
Beretta 93R, called 93A in novel.

Licence to Kill 1989 Walther P38K, Bond's issued sidearm.

Brokenclaw 1990 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

The Man from Barbarossa 1991 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

Death is Forever 1992 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

Never Send Flowers 1993 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

SeaFire 1994 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

GoldenEye 1995 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm. This was used in place of the PPK (which is used in the movie) to better fit Gardner's continuity, AK-74, Browning BDA, Uzi.

COLD 1996 ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

Raymond Benson[edit]



Walther P99 used in the later Brosnan and early Craig films
When James Bond expert Raymond Benson was asked to take over writing the series, he briefly gave Bond back his Walther PPK. Benson also brought the series in line with the films and concurrently replaced Bond's PPK with the Walther P99 in the film novelization Tomorrow Never Dies. However, in some following books Bond would use both weapons: the PPK for concealment, and the P99 for situations that did not require a concealed weapon.

Novel
Year
Firearms
Notes
Blast from the Past (short story) 1997 Walther PPK; Browning 9mm Cheryl Haven's weapon; Uzi carried by Adolf. 
Zero Minus Ten 1997 Walther PPK 
Tomorrow Never Dies 1997 Walther PPK
Walther P99 Unlike the film, where Bond finds the gun in the field, Bond is officially issued the P99 by Q-Branch.
The Facts of Death 1998 Walther PPK
Walther P99 Bond uses both, dependent on the situation. This would be the case for the remainder of the Benson novels.
"Midsummer Night's Doom" (short story) 1999 Walther P99 
"Live at Five" (short story) 1999 Walther P99 
The World Is Not Enough 1999 Walther PPK Bond does not use the P99 in this novel, despite being his weapon of choice in the movie.
High Time to Kill 1999 Walther PPK
Walther P99 
Doubleshot 2000 Walther PPK
Walther P99 
Never Dream of Dying 2001 Walther PPK
Walther P99 
The Man with the Red Tattoo 2002 Walther PPK
Walther P99 
Die Another Day 2002 Walther P99 
Young Bond/Charlie Higson[edit]

Novel
Year
Firearms
SilverFin 2005 .22 Browning Rifle, used by Bond in a school shooting competition.
Derringer, sidearm of 'Meatpacker'.
Hunting Rifle and Shotgun, used by the Hellebores and MacSawney.

Blood Fever 2006 9mm Beretta, sidearm of Zoltan the Magyar
Unknown rifle, picked up by Bond during a firefight but not fired as it wasn't loaded.
Thompson submachine gun, supplied to Ugo Carnifex by Zoltan the Magyar.

Double or Die 2007 Apache[Note 1], used by the Smith brothers on numerous occasions.
Also unnamed pistols picked up from the sailors

Hurricane Gold 2007 MP 28, used by El Huracan's men.
Unknown revolver, used by Bond who picked it up from a dead Mexican police officer.
Unknown rifle, used by Mexican soldiers and Mrs Glass henchmans.

By Royal Command 2008 Tokarev TT-33, used by Cristo Orabessa.
Enfield revolver, used by Bond while escaping Baron von Schlicks castle.
Luger P08 pistol, favored weapon of Vladimir Wrangel.

1.Jump up ^ The Apache is a combination of a revolver, knife, and a knuckle duster that was used by the Apache gang in 19th century Paris.
Sebastian Faulks[edit]

Novel
Year
Firearms
Devil May Care 2008 Walther PPK, Bond's main gun.
Jeffery Deaver[edit]
Carte Blanche is the first Bond novel to have a contemporary setting since The Man With the Red Tattoo in 2002.In the novel, Bond is with a new, secret agency called the Overseas Development Group, who protect the Realm by any means. Bond is issued with a Walther PPS in .40 S&W.

Novel
Year
Firearms
Carte Blanche 2011 Walther PPS .40 S&W Bond's main gun.
9mm Beretta, used by Niall Dunne.
Winchester .270 rifle, used by Bond.
Colt 1911 .45 ACP, used by Gregory Lamb.
Colt Python .357 Magnum, used by Bond.
Bushmaster ACR .233 Rem assault rifle, used by Green Way guards.

Films[edit]
Eon Productions films[edit]
The scene from the novel Dr. No is replayed more-or-less verbatim in the 1962 film, ensuring the Walther PPK a place in cultural history. Bond shows a great deal more fidelity to his side arm in the films than in the novels, even going so far as to take on an international arms dealer and hi-tech arms enthusiastic Brad Whitaker armed only with an eight-shot, 7.65 mm semi-automatic. One notable difference between the novels and the films in relation to the PPK, is the lack of the "spur" on the magazine. The spur provides better grip on the weapon. In some of the films, the magazine used is a non-spur magazine. The PPK in the novels was noted to possess the spur, and never noted otherwise.
During the 1963 production of From Russia with Love, photographer David Hurn was commissioned to photograph the actors of the film in their costume. When the theatrical property Walther PPK did not turn up for the shoot, Hurn volunteered his own Walther LP 53 air pistol and said he would airbrush out the long barrel; the airbrushed stills appearing in a US "JAMES BOND IS BACK" poster. However, Renato Fratini a film poster artist saw the original stills of the weapon and used it in his U.K. posters with the weapon appearing in several more film posters up to The Man With the Golden Gun. On 14 February 2001, Hurn had his LP 53 (serial number 054159) in its original presentation case and letter of provenance auctioned off at Christie's where the weapon fetched in excess of US$435,000.[8][9]
A link to the Internet Movie Firearms Database's category that shows all of the guns used in every James Bond film to date is found here. http://www.imfdb.org/index.php/James_Bond
From Tomorrow Never Dies to Casino Royale, Bond used a Walther P99. However, in Quantum of Solace he reverted back to his Walther PPK (possibly a tribute to the classic Bond films). In Skyfall, Bond starts the film out with the PPK, but he is later issued an upgrade by Q in the form of a Walther PPK/S 9mm Short with an optical palm reader coded to Bond's palmprint so only he can fire the weapon.



Film Title
Year
Firearms
Dr. No 1962 Beretta Model 1934, Bond handed this to Q when he was forced to use a Walther PPK. This prop, in .380 ACP, was used to represent the .25 ACP Beretta from the novel.[10]
Walther PP, although it is called a Walther PPK, Bond is seen with the longer barreled PP in Dr. No.[11]
FN Model 1910 with suppressor. (This pistol was apparently used because there was no PPK in the prop department that could be fitted with a suppressor at the time.)
Colt M1911A1 pistol, suppressed version used by the Three Blind Mice assassins and Professor R.J. Dent, though Bond calls it a "Smith and Wesson" in the film. In the scene where Bond is firing at Dr. No's 'Dragon' he begins firing the PP then the gun switches mid scene to an M1911A1 pistol (with an incorrectly functioning slide).
Walther P38, used by one of the Three Blind Mice assassins.
Colt Police Positive, used by Quarrel
Smith & Wesson Model 10, used by Dr. No's guards
Sten Gun, used by Dr. No's men during Quarrel's death and the decontamination scenes
Lee-Enfield No.4 bolt-action rifle, seen in the hands of Royal Navy sailors towards the end of the film.
L4A2, used by Dr. No's men on the high powered boat when Bond meets Honey Ryder.

From Russia with Love 1963 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm. Also used by Kerim Bey, head of MI-6's "Station T" in Turkey, and by some Soviet agents on the train, perhaps because Makarov PM's weren't available for the film.
AR-7 "sniper" rifle, kept in his attache case. Chambered in .22 Long Rifle. Q identifies it as ".25 caliber."
MP40, Carried by SPECTRE guards on Blofeld's boat. Also seen in the hand of a SPECTRE assassin sent to kill Bond via helicopter and later by the assassins sent to kill Bond via boats.
Mauser C96, Used by Red Grant in the gypsy bazaar to protect Bond from Krilencu's men.
Walther P38, Soviet guard at the Russian consulate fires one during Bond's attack.
Llama Model XVIII, Grant pulls this pistol from an ankle holster and uses it to intimidate Bond on the Orient Express. Rosa Klebb also draws one, with pearl grips, during her last-ditch attempt to steal the Lektor from Bond's hotel room.
Very Flare Gun, used as a weapon in the boat scenes to ignite gasoline in the water. This gun can be seen at Planet Hollywood, Orlando, Florida, where it is incorrectly labeled as being used in Thunderball. He used a pen flare from Q in that movie.
Beretta Model 418, When Tatiana Romanova picks up Rosa Klebb's dropped gun it has become a Beretta, she uses it to kill Klebb.

Goldfinger 1964 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Walther P38, used by several guards and Bond himself.
MP40, used by Goldfinger's guards in the gunfights in Switzerland and in Kentucky
Mauser Karbiner 98K rifle, used by Goldfinger's men during the Fort Knox raid and gunfight.
Smith & Wesson Model 22, carried by Pussy Galore while inside the air plane she and Bond are flying to Goldfinger's ranch in Kentucky.
M14, seen carried by US Army soldiers during the gas attack.
Thompson M1A1 submachine gun used by US Army soldiers in the Fort Knox gunfight.
Gold-plated Colt Official Police used by Goldfinger.

Thunderball 1965 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Speargun, Used to kill Vargas and during the underwater battle. Compressed-air powered, it might be a Technisub Jaguar, or one of the Nemrod Commando range. Domino uses this to shoot Largo at the film's climax.
Browning Auto 5, Used by Bond on Palmyra, he states it's a gun more suited for women, and shoots a clay pigeon from the hip.
Colt Detective Special. Largo almost shot Bond with this one, but Domino harpooned him before he got to fire a shot.

You Only Live Twice 1967 Walther PPK, Bond's main gun.
Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun, used to "kill" Bond at the start of the film.
Lee-Enfield No.4 bolt-action rifle, used by a Royal Navy honour guard at Bond's "funeral" in Hong Kong.
Lee-Enfield No.5 Jungle Carbine, seen in the hands of one of Blofeld's guards.
Cigarette rocket, used to kill one of Blofeld's guards.
MBAssociates Gyrojet Rifle, used by Tiger Tanaka and his ninja commandos on the raid on Blofeld's base.
MP40, Used by several of Blofeld's guards and briefly seen in the hands of Tiger Tanaka during the volcano battle.
Smith & Wesson Model 36 .38 caliber revolver, used when killing an assassin
Webley Mk IV dropped by Blofeld, which Bond uses in the assault on the control room

On Her Majesty's Secret Service 1969 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun, used during the assault on Piz Gloria.
SIG 510 battle rifle, used by Blofeld's forces at Piz Gloria through the entire film.
Browning Hi-Power, used by Blofeld himself.

Diamonds Are Forever 1971 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
M16 rifle used by Blofeld's guards in the opening sequence.
Thompson submachine gun, used by Felix Leiter's men when rescuing Willard White.
Madsen M-50, used by Blofeld's guards in the oil rig battle.
Short-barreled Smith & Wesson Bodyguard. Used by Blofeld. Peter Franks uses this one as well.

Live and Let Die 1973 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Smith & Wesson Model 29 .44 Magnum revolver, used during the rescue of Solitaire.
Smith & Wesson Model 36 .38 Special revolver, used by Kananga's henchmen and by Rosie Carver.
Ingram M10, used by Kananga's henchmen on the Voodoo island.
Shark gun used by Kananga, Bond manually activates one bullet and shoves it down Kananga's throat,that inflates him,killing him.

The Man with the Golden Gun 1974 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
"Triggerless" rifle, made by the Portuguese gunsmith Lazar for an assassin with only three fingers. It was fired by squeezing a recessed trigger in the butt. Because it was designed to be fired with only three fingers, a person with a full hand would cause it to hit below where he was aiming, something which Bond made use of in threatening Lazar.
M16 rifle, seen carried by Hai Fat's guards.
2-barreled Remington derringer, carried by Nick Nack.
Francisco Scaramanga's golden gun, a custom made, gold-plated single-shot handgun chambered in 4.2 mm caliber. The gun can be disassembled to avoid detection into a gold cigarette lighter, a gold cigarette case, a gold cuff link, and a gold pen. Bond does not actually use this gun.

The Spy Who Loved Me 1977 Armalite AR-18, used by skiing KGB assassins in pretitle sequence.
Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Beretta Model 1951, used by Sandor on the rooftop in Cairo.
Beretta Model 70, used by Bond when he investigates the pyramids.
Beretta Model 950 (also known as the Jetfire), used by Anya Amasova throughout the movie.
Astra 357 (modified with compensator), used by Jaws when chasing Bond and Anya in a car in Sardinia.
Astra Model 902 (Spanish copy of the Mauser C96 with fixed internal twenty-round magazine), also used by Jaws when chasing Bond and Anya.
Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun, used by the British sailors during the battle on board the Liparus supertanker
MGC M16 rifle (Japanese model gun replica), used by the American sailors during the battle on board the Liparus supertanker.

Moonraker 1979 Smith & Wesson Model 38 Bodyguard carried by the Flight attendant in pretitle sequence.
German MP40 used by thug during the Venice boat chase.
Wrist-Dart gun, used by Bond on two occasions.
Holland & Holland Royal side by side shotgun.
Moonraker Laser – A laser gun that can be shot in space, used by the astronauts.
Ingram M10, Used by Jaws when chasing Bond in a speedboat in South America.
MGC M16 rifle (Japanese model gun replica), Used by Hugo Drax's henchmen in the Aztec Temple Base/Launch Site.
Moonraker is the only Bond film where Bond is not seen wielding a Walther handgun of any model at any time during the film's plot.

For Your Eyes Only 1981 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm. Also used by Loque in Cortina and on the beach after he's killed Lisl with his GP Buggy.
Sa vz. 58 (metal folding stock version), used by a guard at Hector Gonzales' house.
Smith & Wesson Model 39, used by some of the men at Gonzales' house, and by one of Columbo's men.
MAT 49, used by two guard's at Hector Gonzale's house.
Barnett Commando Crossbow, used by Melina to kill Gonzales.
Uzi submachine gun, used by one of Hector Gonzales' men trying to break into Bond's car, and by one of Loque's men in the boat scene. Also used by General Gogol's guard in the helicopter.
Biathlon rifle, used by Erich Kriegler.
Beretta Model 1951, used by motorcyle assassins in Cortina.
Luger P08, used by Claus at the beach. Loque briefly has one that is kicked out of his hand and commandeered by Columbo and one of his men. Apostis is seen attempting to detach Bond's climbing ropes from a cliff, using the butt of the pistol as a hammer.
Tokagypt 58, used by some men at Gonzales' house and by Milos Columbo and one of his men.
Ingram M10, used by two of Loque's warehouse guards.
Vis wz. 35, used by some of Milos Columbo's henchemen at the warehouse.
Armalite AR-18 (Short carbine version), used by Loque and one of his warehouse guards and by some of Kristatos' henchmen at the monastery.
Barnett Wildcat Crossbow, picked out by Melina in Cortina and used by her at St. Cyrils.
Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun, seen in the hands of Milos Columbo's henchmen when assaulting Kristatos' monastery-hideout.

Octopussy 1983 Walther P5, Bond's issued sidearm. He is clearly wielding a P5 in the taxi chase, but later tells Q "I appear to have misplaced my PPK.". This confusion is most likely a script issue. It would appear that Walther asked the producers to have Bond use the new P5, which Walther was trying to market to German police agencies at the time. However, no one changed the script. This same gun is used by Connery in the competing "Never Say Never Again" released the same year.
MGC M16 rifle (Japanese model gun replica), used by the South American soldiers at the start of the movie.
Astra Cub (Spanish copy of the Colt Junior pocket pistol), Sidearm of Octopussy and seen in the title-sequence.
SKS, Carried by marching soldiers and by guards outside Kremlin Art Depository. Also used by some of Kamal Khan's men at his palace in India.
BSA Scorpion Air Pistol (used as a dart firing tranquilliser gun), carried by Octopussy's women.
Lee-Enfield bolt-action rifle (No. 4 Mk I), used by Kamal Khan's men at his palace in India.
M22 assault rifle, used by soldiers accompanying General Orlov to India in helicopter. Also used by some of the soldiers, and the boarderguards in GDR.
Adler Jäger AP 80 (replica of the Soviet AK assault rifle), carried by most of the soldiers in GDR.
Steyr AUG, wielded by General Orlov's men during the train yard battle.
Sa vz. 58 (both standard fixed stock and metal folding stock versions), carried by a few soldiers in GDR, both standard fixed stock and metal folding stock versions are seen. Metal folding stock versions are seen carried by some of Kamal Khan's men at his palace in India. Bond takes this gun off one of Kamal's men and fires it while sliding down a banister.
Smith & Wesson Model 36, used by Octopussy to blow the lock off the base of the circus cannon, revealing the atomic bomb inside.

A View to a Kill 1985 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
M22 assault rifle, carried by the Soviet commander of the skiing troops in Siberia. Also used by two troopers firing at Bond while he's searching the body of 003.
AK assault rifle (rubber prop guns), used by the Soviet troops who is chasing Bond in Siberia.
Sa vz. 58 (metal folding stock version), used by the Soviet soldier in the helicopter.
TT pistol, used by one of the henchmen interrupting Bond and Sir Godfrey Tibett while they investigate Zorin's laboratory under his stable in France.
Smith & Wesson Model 19, wielded first by May Day driving Bond's Rolce Royce after the horse race and later by Zorin and her, again, when they break in and set fire to San Francisco City Hall
Tokagypt 58, wielded by Scarpine after the horse race and later used to knock Bob Conley unconscious in the mine.
Colt Pocket Model Hammerless, drawn by Venz (Dolph Lundgren) in his acting debut.
Remington Model 31 shotgun with a hunting barrel and loaded with (non-lethal) rock salt which Bond uses to send off some of Max Zorin's hired goons.
Heckler & Koch P9S, wielded by some of Zorin'z hired goons at Stacey's house.
Uzi submachine gun, used by both Zorin and Scarpine when the mine workers are massacred.
Smith & Wesson Model 36, used by Hans Mortner to fire at Bond and Stacey at the Golden Gate Bridge.

The Living Daylights 1987 Heckler & Koch MP5 paintball markers, used by SAS guards during the mock Gibraltar operation.
Suppressed Heckler & Koch P9S carried by the Imposter during the mock Gibraltar operation.
Walther WA2000 sniper rifle. Bond uses this to shoot the rifle out of Kara Milovy's hands.
Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Smith & Wesson Model 36, carried by butler at the MI6 safehouse and taken by Necros.
Ingram M10, carried by a man at the MI6 safehouse.
Star Model B carried by a Czechoslovakian policeman chasing Bond near the Austrian boarder.
Walther MPK carried by Czechoslovakian police.
AKMS assault rifle (both Hungarian and Soviet variants), used with RPG attachments by pursuing Czechoslovakian military near the Austrian boarder. And without by Soviet soldiers in Afghanistan. Bond takes this gun off a Russian soldier and uses it during the airfield battle.
CZ 83, Necros (used to assassinate Pushkin) and Koskov's second-in-command in Afghanistan.
Beretta PM12S carried by police forces in Tangier.
AK assault rifle (both standard fixed stock and metal folding stock versions), both variants carried by some of Kamran Shah's Mujahideen fighters. Kamran Shah carries a folding stock variant. Some are also carried by Soviet guards at the Afghan airfield.
Karabiner 98K, carried and used by several Mujahideen fighters and by the Chief of Snow Leopard Brotherhood while fitted with a scope.
RPD, carried by a Mujahideen fighter.
Short Magazine Lee-Enfield (SMLE), carried and used by many of the Mujahideen fighters.
RPG-7 wielded by Mujahideen in the airfield battle
Colt Model 733 (fitted with a transparent bullet-proof shield), used by Brad Whittaker.
Suppressed Sa vz. 61 Skorpion, used by Pushkin's men to break into Brad Whittaker's lair.

Licence to Kill 1989 Taurus PT92 9 mm pistol (a Brazilian copy of the Beretta Model 92FS 9 mm pistol, as per the film's armorer in "The Making of Licence to Kill" by Sally Hibin), given to Bond by Felix Leiter during the opening sequence when Bond does not have a gun on him. Sidearm of Milton Krest who fires this weapon at Bond, unsuccessfully, when he jumps into the water after killing the deck guard
CAR-15 rifle, seen briefly being used by Felix Leiter and the DEA agents chasing Sanchez in the pre-title sequence.
Heckler & Koch P9S seen used by one Sanchez's henchmen, Braun.
Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm. (with wooden grips)
Heckler & Koch MP5 (actually chopped and converted Heckler & Koch HK94A3), used by Dario in the pre-credits sequence and later by a guard at Milton Krest's warehouse. Also used by Krest's men on his boat, and by one of Sanchez' guards at his house.
Micro Uzi. used by one of Sanchesz' men, Perez. Sanchez uses this when he tries to shoot Bond off of the tanker trucks during the final battle.
Ruger Security Six, Ed Killifer draws this gun at Krest's warehouse.
Speargun. Bond uses this to kill a guard on the Wavekrest.
Smith & Wesson Model 66, Dario grabs this gun from one of his henchemen and uses it to fire at Bond and Pam as they get away on the boat.
"Signature gun", .220 (sic)(probably .220 Swift) sniper's rifle that is disguised as pieces of a Hasselblad camera, and only responds to his palm print. Bond uses this gun in an attempt to kill Franz Sanchez, but is thwarted by a ninja. When a ninja tries to use the gun himself, it won't fire. The .220 is also tongue in cheek at the 220 roll film the gun can take when a camera.
Beretta Model 950 (also known as the Jetfire), carried by Pam Bouvier in a concealed leg holster, and used by Bond for his "family reunion" with Q.
Walther P5 seen used by Dario in the climax.
FIM-92 Stinger man-portable SAM, used several times during the tanker chase.

GoldenEye 1995 Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
AKS-74U assault rifle. Bond uses this gun on two separate occasions. Xenia uses it to massacre the Severnaya facility.
AK-74 assault rifle. Bond takes this from a Russian soldier in Cuba. Xenia has one strapped to her back before Bond indirectly uses it to kill her. Trevalyan wields one in the final battle with Bond. Most AK-74s and AKS-74s that were seen in GoldenEye were Chinese-made Norinco 56S and 56-1S rifles that were fitted with AK-74 muzzle breaks and with Russian-made, AKM magazines made of red bakelite.
Browning BDA. Used by Trevelyan during the chemical facility shootout.
CZ 52. Used by Zukovsky when Bond visits his bar.
Makarov pistol. Used by a Russian pilot from the chemical facility, General Ourumov and Natalya.
D-10T 100 mm rifled gun. Fired from the T-55 tank at Trevalyn's train.

Tomorrow Never Dies 1997 Heavily modified Sterling Armalite AR-18 rifle. Bond uses this during the opening sequence.
Browning BDA, Used by terrorist pilot during the opening sequence.
Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
Sig Sauer P229 Used by Carver.
Glock 17, Used by guards, and Carver in the last scene.
Calico M950 Submachine gun 9mm. Bond uses this gun to escape from Carver's Media Headquarters in Saigon.
Walther P99 9 mm. Bond takes this gun from the Chinese safehouse before he joins Wai Lin in searching for the stealth boat. (It became Bond's new sidearm for the next three films.)
Heckler & Koch MP5. Used by Carver's men, and by Wai Lin.
Heckler & Koch MP5K. Also used by Carver's men—most notably in a failed attempt to break into Bond's car. Bond uses this submachine gun during the final battle.
Heckler & Koch P7. Dr. Kaufman uses one to hold up Bond in his hotel room and to kill Paris. Bond later kills him with it after he is stunned by his phone's taser.
M60E4. Used by Stamper to gun down Devonshire survivors loaded with the ammunition used by the Chinese Air Force.
M16 rifle variants used by Carver's men. Stamper uses an M4 Carbine fitted with an M203 grenade launcher in the final battle. A henchman in the parking garage car chase also uses one, and one of the weapons that shatters the BMW's windshield.
Armsel Striker. One of the many weapons wielded by Carver's men in the parking garage chase.
Makarov pistol. Weapon carried by General Chang's man.

The World Is Not Enough 1999 Walther P99. Bond's issued sidearm.
Colt M1911 pistol, used by Swiss bankers and taken by Bond during the precredits sequence.
Heckler & Koch MP5K. Used by Renard's men.
Heckler & Koch G36. Used by Giulietta da Vinci at the start of the film
Steyr TMP. Used by Parahawks, Bullion, and Renard's men.
FN P90. Bond briefly uses this submachine gun during the shootout in the nuclear test facility. Renard wields this as well.
Heckler & Koch MP5K. Renard uses this one when he escapes the nuclear test facility.
Colt's Mk IV/Series 70 Government Model pistol, used by Elektra King and taken by Bond during the final battle.
Auto-Ordnance 1911SE, used by Bond on the submarine.
SIG-Sauer P228, used by Renard on the submarine to order his men to keep the sub at level.
Cane Gun. Zukovsky can convert his walking cane into a single shot rifle. He uses it to free Bond from Elektra King.

Die Another Day 2002 Walther P99, Bond's issued sidearm.
Norinco 56-1S rifle, Used by North Korean Army at the start of the film.
AKM assault rifle, Used by North Korean Army at the start of the film, dressed up as AKS-74s.
Stechkin machine pistol, Used by Zao.
Heckler & Koch G36K dressed up as an OICW, Used briefly by Colonel Moon in the DMZ sequence.
Ingram M10. Bond only uses this machine pistol during the hovercraft chase.
Makarov pistol, Used by Colonel Moon during the hovercraft chase and General Moon in the climax.
AKMS assault rifle, Used by Cuban clinic guards.
Smith & Wesson Model 10, Bond borrowed the revolver from a fellow agent while in Cuba.
Heckler & Koch MP5K. Used by Gustav Graves men in Iceland with suppressors.
Heckler & Koch G36. Used by one of Gustave Graves men in Iceland.
Accuracy International AW sniper rifle, used by Bond when he and Jinx infiltrated North Korea, though they never get to fire it.
Browning Hi-Power, FM model, in the sailboat scenes.
Beretta Model 84FS (also known as the Cheetah), Jinx's gun used at the Isla Los Organos clinic and when onboard Gustav Graves' plane.
Beretta Model 3032 (also known as the Tomcat), Jinx's gun used at the ice palace in Iceland.

Casino Royale 2006 Walther P99, Bond's issued sidearm (in 9x19mm a.k.a. 9mm Parabellum).
Heckler & Koch USP Compact, Used by Mollaka, and bathroom henchman.
Browning Hi-Power, used by Bond in the embassy in Madagascar, taken from a local diplomat.
Walther PPK was featured in promotional photos. Also used by Bond during the fight with Fisher completing his first kill and commence Craig's first prologue in the gunbarrel sequence. Also used by a Steven Obanno's thug in the Splendid Hotel.
AKM assault rifle, used by some of the Ugandan "freedom fighters".
Norinco 56-1S rifle, used by some Ugandan "freedom fighters".
AK assault rifle, used by Ugandan "freedom fighters".
WASR 3, used by the embassy guards in Madagascar.
Glock 17, Carlos steals this gun from a Police holster in an equipment room at the Miami Airport.
Colt Law Enforcement Carbine, Used by the Miami-Dade Police at the Miami International Airport.
Sig-Sauer P226, Suppressed versions used by Venice henchmen.
Heckler & Koch UMP, two UMP45 .45 Caliber models with suppressor used during the Venice scene leading to the drowning death of Vesper Lynd. A suppressed UMP9 9mm model used by Bond to maim Mr. White.
Jericho 941, Used by Gettler.
Nailgun, Used by Gettler and Bond in the Venice scene.

Quantum of Solace 2008 Heckler & Koch UMP. This gun was pictured in promotional shots for the movie as well as the movie's trailer. It was fitted with a suppressor. An unsuppressed version was used by Bond in the opening car chase.
M249 SAW, used by villains in car chase scene.
Walther PPK, Bond's main sidearm.
SIG-Sauer P226, used by Mr. White's sleeper agent Craig Mitchell. Bond also uses this gun in climax scene. Removed from guard in elevator during his escape.
Rohrbaugh R9, Camille's pistol.
Uzi, used by dock guards in Haiti.
Heckler & Koch G36, Some of General Medrano's men use this 5.56mm assault rifle in the boat chase.
Heckler & Koch MP5K-PDW with UMP-style stocks, used by General Medrano's guard on the yacht. Also used by CIA officers in a bar in Bolivia, when they try to arrest Bond.
Heckler & Koch MP5, used by CIA officers in a bar in Bolivia, when they try to arrest Bond.
Colt Model 933, used by some CIA men in Bolivia.
SG 540, used by one of General Merdrano's henchmen in the boat chase in Haiti.
SIG P210, Bond acquires the SIG P210 with gold inlaid engraving from General Medrano's room when he tries to rescue Camille. Bond uses it to aid their escape when he sees a hydrogen fuel cell that he blows up to create a route out. He later uses it to threaten Greene before leaving him in the desert.

Skyfall 2012 Walther PPK/S, Bond's newly issued sidearm. This time in 9mm Short (.380 ACP) rather than the usual 7.65 mm (.32 ACP). Q provides Bond with a signature version that only his palm print can activate to shoot.
Walther PPK. Bond uses this in the pre-titles sequence, but throws it away when it doesn't have any more ammo.
Glock 18. Patrice's gun that fires depleted uranium shells.
Olympic Arms K23B Tactical assault rifle. This is Eve Moneypenny's gun in the pre-titles sequence.
Custom sniper rifle. Patrice uses this one before he falls to his death.
Bond's father's hunting rifle was provided for the film by Anderson-Wheeler gun makers. The rifle was a double barreled 500 Nitro.[12]
Heckler & Koch HK416. 10.4 inch barrel variant used by Silva's men during the attack on Skyfall and used by Bond after retrieving it from one of their bodies.
John Rigby Dueling pistol. Silva and Bond use one to when Silva invites Bond to shoot a glass off Severine's head.

Non-Eon films[edit]

Title
Year
Firearms
Never Say Never Again 1983 CZ Model 25. Bond uses this submachine gun in the opening sequence.
Walther P5, Bond's main gun. Coincidentally, Roger Moore used the same make of gun in Octopussy, also released in 1983. Connery's gun can be seen in Planet Hollywood in London, where it is inaccurately labeled as a Walther PPK.
Mauser HSc. Used by Bond while engaging in target practice at the Service firing range. Equipped with a suppressor.
Ingram M10. Used by Bond and Felix Leiter in the final battle.

Casino Royale 1967 1903 Springfield. Used in a failed attempt to execute James Bond.
Backwards-firing Walther PPK. Used by George Raft who accidentally shot himself with this one.
Sten Gun Mark 5. Used by Dr. Noah's guards.
Submachine gun used by Vesper Lynd To kill Evelyn Tremble.
Colt M1911 with silencer. Used by SMERSH agents to kill Le Chriffe.

Video games[edit]
Note: The names of several firearms have been changed in the video games. In Quantum of Solace, most firearms are named after Bond films, for example, the FRWL is named after From Russia with Love and the V-TAK 31 is named after A View to a Kill.

Game Title
Year
Firearms
Goldeneye 007 1997 Walther PPK (called PP7, playable with suppressor or unsuppressed)
Ruger Redhawk (called Cougar Magnum)
Tokarev TT-33 (called DD44 Dostovei)
Golden Gun
Skorpion (called Klobb)
Micro Uzi (called ZMG 9MM)
Spectre M4 (called Phantom)
Heckler & Koch MP5K (called D5K Deutsche, playable with suppressor or unsuppressed)
FN P90 (called RC-P90)
AKS-74 (called KF7 Soviet)
M16A2 (called AR33 Assault Rifle)
KSVK 12.7 (called Sniper Rifle)
Remington 870 (folding stock) (called Shotgun)
SPAS-12 (called Automatic Shotgun)
Defense Technology Penn Arms 40mm launcher (called Grenade Launcher)
Type 69 RPG (called Rocket Launcher)
Moonraker Laser
Grenades
Timed Mines
Remote Mines
Proximity Mines

The World Is Not Enough 2000 Walther P99 (called Wolfram P2K or PK99 in the cancelled PS2 version,[13] playable with suppressor or unsuppressed)
Colt Anaconda (called Mustang .44 in game has a scope)
Desert Eagle (called Raptor Magnum in the N64 version or IAC Defender in the PSX version)
Heckler & Koch MP5 (called Deutsche MS9 in the N64 version or the Koffler KS5 in the PSX version)
Ingram MAC-10 (called Ingalls Type 20)
Steyr TMP (called Meyer TMP)
FN P90 (called Munitions Belgique PDW90 or the Belgique PS100 in the PSX version)
Heckler & Koch UMP (called Deutsche M45)
AK-47 (called Soviet KA-57 in the N64 version, the Kazakovich KA-57 in the PSX version, and possibly named the BGK-74 in the cancelled PS2 version [13])
Colt M4 (called Mustang MAR-4) with an M203 grenade launcher attachment on a prototype
Steyr AUG (called Meyer Bullpup)
Heckler & Koch MSG90 (called Deutsche SA90)
SPAS-12 (called Frinesi Special 12)
SIG-Sauer SSG 3000 (called Suisse SSR 4000)
M79 grenade launcher (Called GL 40)
RPG-22 (called RL-22)
M202A1 FLASH (called AT-420 Sentinel)
Heckler & Koch G36 (appeared as a designated marksman variant only in the PSX version)
Pancor Jackhammer (called the Frinesi Auto and appeared only in the PSX version)

Agent Under Fire 2001 Smith & Wesson SW99 (called Wolfram P2K, playable with suppressor or unsuppressed) *Although the firearm Bond uses in the films at this point is the Walther P99, In Agent Under Fire, the producers renditioned the gun to resemble the P99 counterpart, the Smith & Wesson SW99.
Colt Anaconda (called Windsor Viper)
Desert Eagle (called Iac Defender)
Golden Gun
Heckler & Koch MP5 (called Koffler & Stock KS7)
Ingram MAC-10 (called Ingalls Type 20)
Calico M960 (called Calypso P-750)
FN P90 (called Munitions Belgique PS100)
AK-47 (called Kazakovich KA-57)
M4 rifle (called Windsor FSU-4) with an M203 grenade launcher attachment
Steyr AUG (called Meyer-Westlicher UGW)
Heckler & Koch G11 (called Koffler & Stock D17)
SPAS-12 (called Frinesi Special 12)
SIG-Sauer SSG 3000 (called SWZ SSR4000)
Grenades
Shoulder-Launched Multipurpose Assault Weapon (called MRL-22)
CH-6
RCH-1

Nightfire 2002 Walther PPK (called Wolfram PP7, playable with suppressor or unsuppressed) Consoles only.
Walther P99 (called Wolfram P2K, playable with suppressor or unsuppressed)
Glock 18 Two Glock 18s are seen in the game. One is the Kowloon Type 40 which has a semi auto function as well as a three round burst, and the other is the Kowloon Type 80 which is always on a Full auto mode. Full-auto one is on the console version, only.
Desert Eagle (called Raptor Magnum .50/.357)
Heckler & Koch MP5K (called Deutsche M9K) Consoles only.
Ruger MP9 (called Storm M32)
Sig 552 (called SG5 Commando)
P90
AIMS-20 (Advanced Individual Munitions System)
L96 sniper rifle (called Tactical Sniper and Covert Sniper)
Milkor MGL(called Militek Mark 6 Multi Grenade Launcher)
AT-420 Sentinel
AT-600 Scorpion
Korsakov K5 Dart gun
SPAS-12 (called Frinesi Automatic 12)
Delta Repeater Crossbow
Fictional "Phoenix Samurai Laser Rifle"

Everything or Nothing 2004 Walther P99 (playable with suppressor or unsuppressed)
Desert Eagle
Golden Gun
Platinum Gun
Sleeper dart gun
SPAS-12
Heckler & Koch MP5K
AK-74
SIG 552
Dragunov Sniper Rifle
AT-420

GoldenEye: Rogue Agent 2004 Walther P99 (called SPEC 9)
Heckler & Koch USP Match This is the SPEC 9 pistol only in the Nintendo DS version.
FN P90 (called HS-90)
Desert Eagle ( called Jackal .357)
Heckler & Koch 416 ( called AR4 Commando)

From Russia with Love 2005 Walther PPK (called Wolfram PP7, suppressed)
Wright Magnum
Serum gun
Golden gun
Platinum gun
Carl Gustav M/45 (called a Kronen SMG)
AK-47
Bazooka
Bosch Shotgun
Sniper rifle
Armor piercing rifle
Radioactive gun
Minigun

Quantum of Solace 2008 Walther P99 (playable with suppressor or unsuppressed)
Glock 18 (called GF 18 A, the GF most likely named after "Goldfinger")
M1911 (called CR-1911, the CR most likely named for "Casino Royale")
MAC-11 (called Mantis)
Smith & Wesson Model 500 (called LTK Super Magnum, the LTK most likely named for "Licence to Kill")
Glock 17 (called GF 17, GF is most likely named after "Goldfinger")
Nail Gun
AKS-74U (called FRWL, FRWL most likely named for "From Russia with Love")
Heckler & Koch MP5A4 (called SAF 9mm)
Steyr AUG (called A3 Raker, Raker most likely named for "Moonraker")
Colt M4 (called TND-16, TND most likely named for "Tomorrow Never Dies")
M14 rifle
Calico M960 (called TLD-22, TLD most likely named for "The Living Daylights")
Heckler & Koch UMP (called SAF .45)
FN SCAR (called Mk3 LLD, LLD named for "Live and Let Die")
M12 (called R-63)
Dragunov SVD (called V-TAK 31, V-TAK named for "A View To A Kill")
Beretta Cx4 Storm (called VKP-08)
M60 (called 8-CAT, most likely named for "Octopussy")
Walther WA 2000
Benelli M3 (called Hutchinson A3)
SPAS-12 (called Hutchinson A4)
Minigun
Milkor MGL (called D.A.D. System, D.A.D. standing for "Die Another Day")

GoldenEye 007 2010 Walther P99
Golden Gun
AK-47
Heckler & Koch MP5A3 (called Sigmus 9)
Heckler & Koch MP5K (called Sigmus)
Franchi SPAS-12 (called Drumhead Type-12)
Heckler & Koch USP (called Hawksman M5A)
Walther WA2000
Beretta 93R (called Kunara V)
Remington 870 (called SEGS 550)
SVD Dragunov (called Pavlov ASR)
Heckler & Koch G36C (called Anova DP3)
M4 Carbine (called Terralite III)
FN P90 (called Vargen FH-7)
TDI Vector (called Strata SV-400)
IMI Tavor TAR-21 (called Ivana Spec-R)
Mk 12 Special Purpose Rifle (called AS15 Mk 12, only in the Reloaded version of the game)
L96 (called Gambit CP-208)
Heckler & Koch SL8 (called Talon HL-450)
FN SCAR-L (called Kallos-TT9)
Heckler & Koch MP7 (called Stauger UA-1)
Daewoo USAS-12 (called Masterton M557)
Pw wz. 33 (called Torka T3)
Smith and Wesson Model 29 (called Wolfe .44)
FN Tactical Police Shotgun (called PT-9 Interdictus)
RPG-7 (called MJR-409)
SIG SG 550 (called Toros AV-400)

Blood Stone 007 2010 Walther P99 (Use both silenced and unsilenced)
M9
USP
Stun Gun
Serbu Super-Shorty (Called the 12 Gauge)
M1
M3T
MP5
UMP
MP7
G36
AK-74
FN SCAR-L (Called the Combat A.R.)
GM-94 (Called the Grenade Launcher)
M82
M24
DSR-1 with 30 rounds magazine.

See also[edit]
Outline of James Bond
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Gaylord, Chic (1960). Handgunner's Guide. New York: Bramhall House. p. 176. LCCN 60009121.
2.Jump up ^ 'Bond's unsung heroes' The Sunday Telegraph, Seven (supplement) 18 May 2008 retrieved 2008-05-19
3.Jump up ^ Cooper, Jeff (1961). The Complete Book of Modern Handgunning. New York: Prentice-Hall, Inc. p. 262. LCCN 61015332.
4.Jump up ^ Berns-Martin. holster catalogue. Elberton, Georgia: Berns-Martin. p. 4.
5.Jump up ^ Berns-Martin (1966). 1966 price list. Elberton, Georgia: Berns-Martin.
6.Jump up ^ http://www.militarniwroclaw.pl/pl/strony/1030.html
7.Jump up ^ http://www.spybusters.com
8.Jump up ^ The Side Arms of James Bond, 007: From The Walther PPK to the P99 : The Original Prop Blog – Jason DeBord's TV and Movie Prop Memorabilia Resource
9.Jump up ^ Dr. No - imfdb :. guns in movies :. movie guns :. the internet movie firearms database
10.Jump up ^ Dr. No - imfdb :. guns in movies :. movie guns :. the internet movie firearms database
11.Jump up ^ Fieldsports Britain. "Fieldsports Britain - Bowhunting, bucks and James Bond's rifle". fieldsportschannel.tv. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
12.^ Jump up to: a b "The World Is Not Enough - IGN". Ps2.ign.com. 2001-04-27. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/jamesbond/5320024/Bonds-unsung-heroes-Geoffrey-Boothroyd-the-real-Q.html
http://www.imfdb.org/index.php/Dr._No#Beretta_M1934
External links[edit]
Sean Connery's main guns
Roger Moore's main gun
Timothy Dalton's main gun
Pierce Brosnan's main guns
Detailed movie firearms wiki that includes all the guns featured in the Bond films



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List of henchmen of James Bond villains
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from List of James Bond henchmen)
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 This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2012)
The James Bond novels and films are notable for their memorable villains and henchmen. Each Bond villain has numerous henchmen to do their bidding.
In particular, there is usually a privileged member who is a formidable physical threat to Bond and must be defeated by Bond to get the employer, from simply adept and tough fighters like Red Grant to ones whose physical characteristics are seemingly superhuman like Jaws.



Contents  [hide]
1 Eon Productions henchmen 1.1 Sean Connery era (1962–67, 1971) 1.1.1 Dr. No
1.1.2 From Russia with Love
1.1.3 Goldfinger
1.1.4 Thunderball
1.1.5 You Only Live Twice
1.1.6 Diamonds Are Forever
1.2 George Lazenby era (1969) 1.2.1 On Her Majesty's Secret Service
1.3 Roger Moore era (1973–85) 1.3.1 Live and Let Die
1.3.2 The Man with the Golden Gun
1.3.3 The Spy Who Loved Me
1.3.4 Moonraker
1.3.5 For Your Eyes Only
1.3.6 Octopussy
1.3.7 A View to a Kill
1.4 Timothy Dalton era (1987–89) 1.4.1 The Living Daylights
1.4.2 Licence to Kill
1.5 Pierce Brosnan era (1995–2002) 1.5.1 GoldenEye
1.5.2 Tomorrow Never Dies
1.5.3 The World Is Not Enough
1.5.4 Die Another Day
1.6 Daniel Craig era (2006-present) 1.6.1 Casino Royale
1.6.2 Quantum of Solace
1.6.3 Skyfall

2 Non-Eon henchmen 2.1 Casino Royale (1953 TV special)
2.2 A Spy's Holiday (1964 short film)
2.3 Casino Royale (1967)
2.4 Never Say Never Again
3 Novel henchmen 3.1 Casino Royale
3.2 Live and Let Die
3.3 Moonraker
3.4 Diamonds Are Forever
4 Video game henchmen 4.1 007: Agent Under Fire
4.2 007: Nightfire
4.3 007: Everything or Nothing
4.4 GoldenEye: Rogue Agent
4.5 007: From Russia with Love
4.6 James Bond 007: Blood Stone
5 See also
6 References

Eon Productions henchmen[edit]
Sean Connery era (1962–67, 1971)[edit]
Dr. No[edit]
Miss Taro (Zena Marshall)—Arrested
Professor R. J. Dent (Anthony Dawson)—Shot by Bond
Annabel Chung (Marguerite LeWars)—Survives
Mr. Jones (Reginald Carter)—Poisons self with cyanide capsule
Three Blind Mice (Eric Coverly, Charles Edghill and Henry Lopez)—Die in car crash
Sister Lily (Yvonne Shima)—Dies When Headquarters Blows up
Sister Rose (Michel Mok)—Dies when Headquarters Blows up
From Russia with Love[edit]
Donald "Red" Grant (Robert Shaw)—Garroted by Bond
Kronsteen (Vladek Sheybal)—Stabbed by Morzeny
Morzeny (Walter Gotell)—Incinerated by Bond (Gotell played General Gogol in later Bond films.)
Krilencu (Fred Haggerty)—Shot by Kerim Bey
Red Grant's Masseuse (Jan Williams)—Unknown
Tatiana Romanova (Daniela Bianchi)—Changes sides; survives.
Goldfinger[edit]
Bonita (Nadja Regin)—Unknown
Jill Masterson (Shirley Eaton)—Suffocated by gold paint
Capungo (Alf Joint)—Electrocuted by Bond
Jack Strap (Hal Galili)—Gassed by Goldfinger
Kisch (Michael Mellinger)—Thrown over rail by Oddjob
Martin Solo (Martin Benson)—Shot by Oddjob and his corpse disposed of in a scrap metal compactor
Mei-Lei (Mai Ling)—Unknown
Midnight (Bill Nagy)—Gassed by Goldfinger
Oddjob (Harold Sakata)—Electrocuted by Bond
Pussy Galore (Honor Blackman)—Changes sides; survives
Pussy Galore's Flying Circus Pilots (Caron Gardiner, Lesley Hill & Aleta Morrison)—Unknown
Thunderball[edit]
Fiona Volpe (Luciana Paluzzi)—Shot by her own henchman
Vargas (Philip Locke)—Harpooned by Bond
Count Lippe (Guy Doleman)—Blown up by Fiona
Colonel Jacques Bouvar (Rose Alba and Bob Simmons)—Strangled with fireplace poker by Bond
Dr. Ladislav Kutze (George Pravda)—Unknown; changes sides by helping Domino to escape and renders the atomic bomb on board the Disco Volante useless
Angelo Palazzi (Paul Stassino)—Drowns, courtesy of Largo
Quist (Bill Cummings)—Fed to sharks by Largo
SPECTRE Agent No. 9 (Clive Cazes)—Electrocuted by Blofeld after being found guilty of embezzlement
SPECTRE Agent No. 11 (Cecil Cheng)—Survives
Janni (Michael Brennan)—Dies when the Disco Volante crashes
You Only Live Twice[edit]
Mr. Osato (Teru Shimada)—Shot by Blofeld
Helga Brandt (Karin Dor)—Fed to piranhas by Blofeld
Hans (Ronald Rich)—Fed to piranhas by Bond
Bedroom Assassin (David Toguri)—Shot by Bond
SPECTRE Agent No. 3 (Burt Kwouk)—Killed through unknown means
SPECTRE Agent No. 4 (Michael Chow)—Unknown
Diamonds Are Forever[edit]
Mr. Wint (Bruce Glover)—Blown up
Mr. Kidd (Putter Smith)—Set ablaze
Shady Tree (Leonard Barr)—Shot by Wint and Kidd
Peter Franks (Joe Robinson)—Thrown over banister by Bond
Tiffany Case (Jill St. John)—Change sides, survives
Bert Saxby (Bruce Cabot)—Shot by CIA agents
Bambi (Lola Larson)—Arrested
Thumper (Trina Parks)—Arrested
Morton Slumber (David Bauer)—Unknown
Prof. Dr. Metz (Joseph Furst)—Unknown
Mrs. Whistler (Margaret Lacey)—Drowned by Wint and Kidd
Marie (Denise Perrier)—Survives
Blofeld Double #1—boiled alive in a pit of super-heated mud by Bond
Blofeld Double #2—shot in the head with a piton gun by Bond
Blofeld Double #3 (Max Latimer)—drowned in mud bath by Bond
Rodney "Fingers" McGraw-Boss of the Spangled Mob (Marc Lawrence)—Unknown, could possibly be the same character who gets shot in the forehead by Francisco Scaramanga in the pre-title sequence of The Man with the Golden Gun
Man in Fez (Frank Olegario)— Survives
Blofeld's Plastic Surgeons (David de Keyser, Gerald Paris, Charles Rayford and Anthony Snell)—Survive
Casino Croupier (Vincent Wong)—Survives
Slumber Inc. Attendants (Sid Haig and Michael Valente)—Survive
George Lazenby era (1969)[edit]
On Her Majesty's Secret Service[edit]
Irma Bunt (Ilse Steppat)—Survives
Gumbold (James Bree)—Survives
Grunther (Yuri Borienko)—Impaled on spike bed by Tracy
Ruby Bartlett (Angela Scoular)—Survives
Nancy (Catherina von Schell)—Survives
Helen (Julie Ege)—Survives
Blofeld's Angels of Death—Survives
SPECTRE Skier (George Leech)—Strangled then thrown off cliff by Bond
Roger Moore era (1973–85)[edit]
Live and Let Die[edit]
Tee Hee (Julius W. Harris)—Thrown out train window by Bond
Whisper (Earl Jolly Brown)—Unknown, last seen trapped in an airtight container
Baron Samedi (Geoffrey Holder)—First shot, then thrown into a coffin full of venomous snakes by Bond; later revealed to have survived
Adam (Tommy Lane)—Blown up in boat crash by Bond
Cab Driver (Arnold Williams)—Unknown
Rosie Carver (Gloria Hendry)—Shot by gun hidden in mouth of Kananga's scarecrows
Sales Girl (Kubi Chaza)—Survives
Dambala (Michael Ebbin)—Shot by Bond
Casual Assassin (Alvin Alcorn)—Unknown
Solitaire (Jane Seymour)— Changes sides, survives
Singer (Brenda Arnau)—Survives
Grieving woman (Sylvia Kuumba Williams)—Unknown
The Man with the Golden Gun[edit]
Nick Nack (Hervé Villechaize)—Arrested
Hai Fat (Richard Loo)—Shot by Scaramanga
Andrea Anders (Maud Adams)—Changes sides; shot by Scaramanga
Kra (Sonny Caldinez)—Knocked into a liquid helium vat by Mary Goodnight
Chula (Chan Yiu Lam)—Survives
Lazar (Marne Maitland)—Survives
The Spy Who Loved Me[edit]
Jaws (Richard Kiel)—Survives
Naomi (Caroline Munro)—Dies when helicopter is shot down by Bond
Sandor (Milton Reid)—Thrown off roof by Bond
Log Cabin Girl (Sue Vanner)—Survives
Felicca (Olga Bisera)—Shot by Sandor
Sergei Barsov (Michael Billington)—Shot with ski-pole gun by Bond
Fekkesh (Nadim Sawalha)—Bitten by Jaws
Max Kalba (Vernon Dobtcheff)—Bitten by Jaws
Stromberg's Assistant (Marilyn Galsworthy)—Dies when Stromberg drops her into a shark tank and is eaten
Dr. Bechmann (Cyril Shaps)—Dies when Stromberg blows up helicopter with him in it
Prof. Markovitz (Milo Sperber)—Dies when Stromberg blows up helicopter with him in it
Liparus Captain (Sidney Tafler)—Killed in explosion
Moonraker[edit]
Apollo Jet Pilot (Jean-Pierre Castaldi) - Parachute removed by Bond, falls to his death
Apollo Jet Hostess (Leila Shenna)—Unknown, possibly dies when plane crashes
Jaws (Richard Kiel)—Changes sides and survives
Chang (Toshiro Suga)—Thrown through clock face into piano by Bond
Lady Victoria Devon (Francoise Gayat)—Deceased; Unknown
Countess Labinsky (Catherine Serre)—Lasered by Goodhead
La Signorina del Mateo (Chichinou Kaeppler)—Lasered by MI6 agents
Mademoiselle Deladier (Beatrice Libert)—Dies when Space Station blows up
Blonde Beauty (Irka Bonchenco)—dies when Space station blows up
Drax's Girl (Niciase Jean Louis)—Dies when Space Station blows up
Tree assassin (Guy Delorme)—Killed by Bond with a "missed" shot while pheasant hunting
Corinne Dufour (Corinne Clery)—Eaten by dogs
For Your Eyes Only[edit]
Erich Kriegler (John Wyman)—Thrown through window and off a cliff by Bond
Emile Leopold Locque (Michael Gothard)—Shot in shoulder and kicked off cliff in car by Bond
Hector Gonzales (Stefan Kalipha)—Shot with crossbow by Melina
Apostis (Jack Klaff)—Knocked off cliff by Bond
Claus (Charles Dance)—Harpooned by Columbo's men
Lisl von Schlaf (Cassandra Harris)—Ran over by Locque.
Octopussy[edit]
Magda (Kristina Wayborn)—Changes sides; Survives
Gobinda (Kabir Bedi)—Knocked off plane by Bond
Mischka (David Meyer)—Bludgeoned with cannon by Bond
Grischka (Anthony Meyer)—Stabbed by Bond
Lenkin (Peter Porteous)—Arrested by the KGB
Hired thugs (William Derrick, R.J. Bell, and Ravinder Singh Reyett)—One killed by octopus (either poisoned or suffocated); one shot in neck by (possibly poisoned) dart; one eaten by crocodile
Colonel Toro (Ken Norris)—Killed in explosion
A View to a Kill[edit]
May Day (Grace Jones)—Changes sides; dies when bomb explodes
Scarpine (Patrick Bauchau)—Dies when bomb explodes
Dr. Carl Mortner (Willoughby Gray)—Dies when bomb explodes
Jenny Flex (Alison Doody)—Drowns
Pan Ho (Papillon Soo Soo)—Drowns
Bob Conley (Manning Redwood)—Drowns
W.G. Howe (Daniel Benzali)—Shot by Zorin
Timothy Dalton era (1987–89)[edit]
The Living Daylights[edit]
Kara Milovy (Maryam D'Abo)—Changes sides; Survives
Colonel Feyador (John Bowe)—Killed by grenade
Imposter 00 (Carl Rigg)—Killed in exploding car
Necros (Andreas Wisniewski)—Falls from rear of a cargo plane whilst having a mid-air fight on a dangling cargo net with Bond
Sergeant Stagg (Derek Hoxby)—Shot by Pushkin
Licence to Kill[edit]
Dario (Benicio del Toro)—Shot in shoulder by Pam, thrown into pulveriser by Bond
Milton Krest (Anthony Zerbe)—Exploded in a hyperbaric chamber by Sanchez, after being framed by Bond
Ed Killifer (Everett McGill)—Fed to sharks by Bond
Colonel Heller (Don Stroud)—Impaled on forklift by Braun on Sanchez' orders
Truman-Lodge (Anthony Starke)—Shot by Sanchez
Prof. Joe Butcher (Wayne Newton)—Survives
Braun (Guy De Saint Cyr)—Falls off cliff in burning truck
Hector Lopez (Pedro Armendáriz Jr.)—Ends up with Lupe
Perez (Alejandro Bracho)—Falls off cliff in burning truck
Clive (Eddie Edenfield)—Harpooned by Bond
Lupe Lamora (Talisa Soto)—Changes sides; Survives
Pierce Brosnan era (1995–2002)[edit]
GoldenEye[edit]
Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen)—Crushed by safety harness
General Arkady Grigorovich Ourumov (Gottfried John)—Shot by Bond
Boris Grishenko (Alan Cumming)—Frozen by liquid nitrogen
Tomorrow Never Dies[edit]
Mr. Stamper (Götz Otto)—Blown up
Henry Gupta (Ricky Jay)—Shot by Carver
Dr. Kaufman (Vincent Schiavelli)—Shot by Bond
General Chang (Philip Kwok)—Unknown
Captain Scott (Mark Spalding)—Shot by Bond
The World Is Not Enough[edit]
Gabor (John Seru)—Shot by Bond
Sasha Davidov (Ulrich Thomsen)—Shot by Bond
Mr. Bullion (Goldie)—Shot by Zukovsky
Dr. Mikhail Arkov (Jeff Nuttall)—Shot by Renard's henchman
Giulietta da Vinci (Cigar Girl) (Maria Grazia Cucinotta)—Blows self up
Lachaise (Patrick Malahide)—Knifed in the back of the neck by Cigar Girl
Die Another Day[edit]
Zao (Rick Yune)—Impaled by falling chandelier
Mr. Kil (Lawrence Makoare)—Lasered by Jinx
Miranda Frost (Rosamund Pike)—Stabbed by Jinx
Vladimir Popov (Mikhail Gorevoy)—Sucked out of broken plane window
Dr. Alvarez (Simon Andreu)—Shot by Jinx
Daniel Craig era (2006-present)[edit]
Casino Royale[edit]
Alex Dimitrios (Simon Abkarian)—Stabbed by Bond
Kratt (Clemens Schick)—Killed offscreen by Mr. White
Valenka (Ivana Miličević)—Killed offscreen by Mr. White
Mollaka (Sébastien Foucan)—Shot by Bond
Carlos (Claudio Santamaria)—Blown up by Bond
Adolph Gettler (Richard Sammel)—Shot with nail gun by Bond
Steven Obanno (Isaach De Bankolé)—Strangled by Bond
Leo (Emmanuel Avena)—Arrested
Dryden (Malcolm Sinclair)—Shot by Bond
Fisher (Daud Shah)—Drowned, then shot by Bond
Tall Man (Leos Stransky)—Crushed by elevator
Obanno's Lieutenant (Michael Offei)—Thrown off stairwell by Bond
Vesper Lynd (Eva Green)—Drowned
Quantum of Solace[edit]
Elvis (Anatole Taubman[1])—Incinerated
General Medrano (Joaquin Cosío[2])—Shot by Camille
Edmund Slate (Neil Jackson)—Stabbed in neck with scissors by Bond
Gregory Beam (David Harbour)—Fired from CIA
Yusef Kabira (Simon Kassianides)—Arrested by MI6
Craig Mitchell (Glenn Foster)—Shot by Bond
Guy Haines (Paul Ritter)—Survives
Gregor Karakov (Gustavo Nanez)—Survives
Moishe Soref (Tsedor Gyalzur)—Survives
Gift Bag Man (Christian Heller)—Knocked unconscious by Bond
Greene's Driver (Carl Von Malaise)—Shot by Bond
Carlos (Fernando Guillen Cuervo)—Shot by Bond
Mr. White's girlfriend (Elizabeth Arciniega)—Unknown
Skyfall[edit]
Patrice (Ola Rapace)—Falls from a skyscraper in Shanghai
Sévérine (Bérénice Marlohe)—Shot by Silva
Sévérine's Bodyguard (Tank Dong)—Attacked and eaten by Komodo Dragons
Sévérine's Bodyguard (Roger Yuan)—Knocked unconscious by Eve
Sévérine's Bodyguard (Liang Yang)—Knocked unconscious by Bond
Silva's mercenary (Jens Hultén)—Drowned by Bond in a frozen lake
Silva's mercenary (Adebayo Bolaji)—Shot by Bond
Boat Captain (Milorad Kapor)—Shot by Bond
Non-Eon henchmen[edit]
Casino Royale (1953 TV special)[edit]
Basil (Gene Roth)—Shot by Bond
Zoltan (Kurt Katch)—Survives
Drive-by assassin (Unknown actor)—Survives
A Spy's Holiday (1964 short film)[edit]
Disguised assassin waiter (Leslie Crawford)— Punched off balcony by Bond
Casino Royale (1967)[edit]
Agent Mimi (Deborah Kerr)—Switched sides; became a nun who gives Bond information; survives
Vesper Lynd (Ursula Andress)—Presumed killed in ending atomic explosion
Miss Goodthighs (Jacqueline Bisset)—Killed by Vesper
Frau Hoffner (Anna Quayle)—Shot by deceased WWI soldier
Polo (Ronnie Corbett)—Short-circuited by Mata Bond
Le Chiffre's Representative (Vladek Sheybal)—Blown up in telephone booth by Le Chiffre
Casino Clerk (Actor Unknown)—Shot by Bond and Vesper
Never Say Never Again[edit]
Fatima Blush (Barbara Carrera)—Blown up by pen bomb gun used by Bond
Lippe (Pat Roach)—Killed by Bond in fight at health clinic, in which he is impaled on broken beakers
Kovacs (Milow Kirek)
Novel henchmen[edit]
Casino Royale[edit]
Vesper Lynd—Commits suicide
Basil
Kratt
Live and Let Die[edit]
The Whisper
Tee-Hee Johnson
Solitaire—Unknown
MoThing
Sam Miami
The Flannel
The Robber
Blabbermouth Foley
Moonraker[edit]
Krebs
Dr. Walter
Diamonds Are Forever[edit]
Tiffany Case
Video game henchmen[edit]
007: Agent Under Fire[edit]
Main article: 007: Agent Under Fire
Nigel Bloch (J. B. Blanc, voice)—Shot with rocket launcher by Bond
Carla the Jackal (Roxana Orteg, voice)—Knocked into fan by Bond
Reginald Griffin's clone (Michael Ensign, voice)—Unknown
007: Nightfire[edit]
Main article: James Bond 007: Nightfire
Armitage Rook (Richard Whiten, voice)—Knocked into fan by Bond (PC version)/shot by Bond (console version)
Makiko "Kiko" Hayashi (Tamlyn Tomita, voice)—Incinerated by Bond in missile silo
007: Everything or Nothing[edit]
Main article: James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing
Katya Nadanova (Heidi Klum)—Blown up by Bond, dies in plane crash
Jean Le Rouge (Marc Graue)—Shot by Bond
Jaws—likeness (Richard Kiel)—Unknown
Arkady Yayakov—Crushed by sphere
GoldenEye: Rogue Agent[edit]
Main article: GoldenEye: Rogue Agent
Oddjob—Thrown over rail by GoldenEye
Pussy Galore—Survives
Xenia Onatopp—Thrown off Hoover Dam by GoldenEye
Francisco Scaramanga—Survives
007: From Russia with Love[edit]
Main article: 007: From Russia with Love
Eva (Maria Menounos)—Dies when plane crashes into door in OCTOPUS base
OCTOPUS Commando Team—Leader shot down from jet-pack by Bond; Assassin shot by Bond; Bearded Assassin crashed into Big Ben
James Bond 007: Blood Stone[edit]
Main article: James Bond 007: Blood Stone
Greco (Luis Soto, voice)—Unknown
Bernin (Ramon Tikaram, voice)—Falls to his death after Bond kicks him off a ledge
See also[edit]
List of James Bond villains
Outline of James Bond
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ "Anatole Taubman Is Bond 22 Henchman". MI6.co.uk. 2007-12-11. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
2.Jump up ^ "Mexican actor Joaquin Cosío joins the ranks of Bond 22 villains, Bolivia confirmed as location". MI6.co.uk. 2007-12-18. Retrieved 2007-12-20.



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List of James Bond villains
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The James Bond novels and film series feature a number of villainous characters who serve as primary antagonists. Each story normally features a main villain bent on world domination or destruction who seeks to defeat or kill Bond, often with the assistance of secondary characters. Bond typically confronts the villain during the story's climax and exposes the evil plot.



Contents  [hide]
1 Main villains 1.1 Novel villains by author 1.1.1 Ian Fleming
1.1.2 Kingsley Amis (writing as Robert Markham)
1.1.3 Christopher Wood
1.1.4 John Gardner
1.1.5 Raymond Benson
1.1.6 Sebastian Faulks
1.1.7 Jeffery Deaver
1.1.8 Young Bond series 1.1.8.1 Charlie Higson

1.2 Film villains by production 1.2.1 Eon Productions
1.2.2 Non-Eon works
1.3 Video game villains
2 Villainous organisations
3 Henchmen
4 See also
5 References

Main villains[edit]
Novel villains by author[edit]
Ian Fleming[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
Casino Royale Le Chiffre Pay off his embarrassing debts to his SMERSH masters by winning the money at Casino Royale's baccarat table. Bond beats Le Chiffre at baccarat. Shot between the eyes by a SMERSH hitman.
Live and Let Die Mr. Big (Buonaparte Ignace Gallia) Smuggle and sell ancient gold coins to finance SMERSH operations. Bond kills Mr Big. Eaten by sharks and barracuda after he falls into the water when Bond blows up his boat.
Moonraker Sir Hugo Drax (Graf Hugo von der Drache) Destroy London with a nuclear missile, the eponymous Moonraker. Bond alters the rocket's target coordinates. Rocket crashes into the water directly in the path of Drax's submarine, the blast killing Drax and all of his men.
Diamonds Are Forever Jack Spang Smuggle a large cache of diamonds worth millions of dollars from Africa to America to fund organisation. Smuggling operation is dismantled when all operatives are assassinated. Killed when Bond shoots down his helicopter.
Seraffimo Spang Bond shoots him in the leg while he is driving the train, causing the train to derail and crash.
From Russia, with Love Rosa Klebb Kill Bond in a humiliating sex scandal, kill MI6 cryptanalysts with a boobytrapped cipher machine. KGB killer Grant fails to kill Bond, as does Klebb. Captured by the Deuxieme Bureau and later dies.
General Grubozaboyschikov Survives.
Dr. No Dr. Julius No Disrupt U.S.-guided missile tests. Dr. No is killed and the project is dismantled. Buried under a pile of guano by Bond.
Goldfinger Auric Goldfinger Steal the U.S. gold supply from Fort Knox to finance SMERSH. U.S. authorities are alerted by Bond. Strangled by Bond after hijacking an aeroplane.
"From a View to a Kill" (short story) GRU agents Kill dispatch-riders of SHAPE to steal information from the British Secret Service. The riders are killed but the information is recovered by Bond. Shot by Bond and Mary Ann Russell.
"For Your Eyes Only" (short story) Colonel von Hammerstein Acquire the Havelock Estate in Jamaica to use as a headquarters for a drug running operation. Obtains the estate, but both are later killed. Killed by Judy Havelock with an arrow.
Hector Gonzales Shot by Bond in firefight.
"Risico" (short story) Aristotle Kristatos Smuggle drugs, aid Soviet missile development, and trick Bond into killing rival. Bond discovers the truth. Shot by Bond while driving his car, and the car rolls off into the fog.
"The Hildebrand Rarity" (short story) Milton Krest Catch the Hildebrand Rarity by any means necessary. Succeeds, but dies. Chokes to death on the rare fish, possibly murdered by his battered wife. Bond throws the body overboard.
Thunderball Emilio Largo Blackmail the western world with two stolen atomic bombs. Bond discovers the location of the bombs. Shot in the neck with a speargun by his mistress, Domino.
Ernst Stavro Blofeld Survives.
The Spy Who Loved Me Mr. Sanguinetti Have his motel burnt down, and have Vivienne Michel assassinated to claim the property and life insurances. His assassins fail to kill Vivienne and set the place on fire. Arrested by the U.S. Border Patrol.
Sol "Horror" Horowitz and "Sluggsy" Morant Assassinate Vivienne Michel under orders of Mr. Sanguinetti and torch the motel owned by Sanguinetti. They fail to kill Vivienne and are killed themselves. Both are shot to death by Bond.
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Ernst Stavro Blofeld Develop a deadly virus to destroy British livestock and cereals. The virus and their headquarters are destroyed by Bond and MI6 agents. Survives.
You Only Live Twice Ernst Stavro Blofeld (a.k.a. Dr. Guntram Shatterhand) He creates a "garden of death" and entices depressed Japanese to suicide. He charges for the suicides to refinance the SPECTRE organisation. His lair is destroyed and his henchmen killed by Bond. Strangled by Bond.
The Man with the Golden Gun Francisco (Paco) "Pistols" Scaramanga Expand his international crime organisation into the Caribbean and organise smuggling operations to finance. His allies are killed in the explosion of his mansion and he is killed by Bond. Shot through the heart by Bond.
"Octopussy" (short story) Major Dexter Smythe Live off looted Nazi gold. Discovered by Bond, he is faced with the choice between prosecution and suicide. Accidentally stung by scorpionfish, then partially eaten by an octopus.
"The Property of a Lady" (short story) Maria Freudenstein and her Soviet contact Receive secret payment for double agent services. Succeeds. Survives, but her contact is deported.
"The Living Daylights" (short story) Trigger, KGB assassin. Assassinate defector. Her gun is shot out of her hand before she can kill the defector. Wounded by Bond, she survives and escapes.
"007 in New York" (short story) KGB double-agent Blackmail MI6 using a female employee. Employee is tipped off by Bond. Arrested by the CIA.
Kingsley Amis (writing as Robert Markham)[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
Colonel Sun Colonel Sun Liang-tan Sabotage USSR summit conference, frame Great Britain. Operatives are killed, and summit conference members are alerted. Stabbed in the back and heart by Bond.
Christopher Wood[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
James Bond, The Spy Who Loved Me Karl Stromberg Use stolen submarines to provoke a nuclear war between the U.S. and the Soviets, then rebuild humanity under the ocean. Bond destroys his base and blows up the submarines. Shot twice in the groin and twice in the chest by Bond.
James Bond and Moonraker Hugo Drax Fire a nerve agent from space to kill the entire population of earth, then create a new civilisation in space. Bond destroys his space station and, with it, the globes containing the nerve agent. Shot with a poison dart by Bond before being pushed out of an airlock and blown into the vacuum of space.
John Gardner[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
Licence Renewed Dr. Anton Murik Hold nuclear power plants hostage in exchange for $50 billion to build a safe reactor. Bond gives the abort order to the henchmen. Shot by Bond with Gyrojet pistol.
For Special Services SPECTRE — Nena Bismaquer (Blofeld) Use Bond to take control of NORAD. Nena's husband, Markus, breaks her hypnotic spell on Bond before the plan succeeds. Crushed by her own pythons.
Icebreaker Count Konrad von Glöda
 (also known as "Aarne Tudeer") Bring back Nazism by wiping out Communists. Bond defeats him with the aid of a Mossad agent and a member of the CIA. Shot by Bond.
Role of Honour Jay Autem Holy Disarm U.S. and Soviet nuclear weaponry through a computerised scheme to create world peace. Bond's "defection" to SPECTRE is actually a ruse, and he ruins them. Shot and killed by Rahani.
Tamil Rahani (SPECTRE) Disarm the U.S. nuclear weaponry to give the USSR an advantage in the Cold War. Escapes.
Nobody Lives for Ever Tamil Rahani (SPECTRE) Put a large bounty on Bond's head to have him assassinated. Bond kills him. Blown up by bed bomb, courtesy of Bond.
No Deals, Mr. Bond General Konstantin Nikolaevich Chernov
 (also known as "Blackfriar") Kill all participants in a defunct espionage operation. Bond saves them. Arrested.
Scorpius Vladimir Scorpius
 (also known as "Father Valentine") Carry out assassinations with a cult of suicide bombers, ultimately kill the U.S. president and British prime minister. The cult is raided and disbanded, and the president and prime minister are saved. Bitten by water moccasins.
Win, Lose or Die BAST–Bassam Baradj Capture aircraft carrier with U.S., U.K., and USSR leaders on board and hold them for ransom. Bond overtakes the ship. Shot by Bond's ally.
Licence to Kill (novelisation) Franz Sanchez Smuggle drugs. Bond destroys the factory. Set on fire by Bond.
Brokenclaw "Brokenclaw" Lee Fu-Chu Sell secret plans for underwater defence system to Red China, and crash the world stock market with a computerised scheme. Chinese agents captured and impersonated by Bond and ally, and their base is blown up. Shot by Bond with bow and arrow.
The Man from Barbarossa General Yevgeny Yuskovich Supply Iraq with nuclear weapons.  
Death is Forever Wolfgang Weisen Assassinate all members of British-American CABAL, and destabilise Western Europe by blowing up train containing several world leaders.  Electrocuted.
Never Send Flowers David Dragonpol Assassinate Princess Diana and her sons at Euro Disney. The Royal Family is prevented from arriving at Euro Disney. Blown up by his own bomb.
SeaFire Sir Maxwell Tarn Start oil spill fire during demonstration with U-boat. Bond destroys the submarine. Burns to death when Bond shoots him with a flare.
GoldenEye adaption Janus-Alec Trevelyan (006) Ruin London's economy. His base is destroyed. Crushed by falling debris.
COLD General Brutus Clay Replace government with Puritan society. Bond discovers his plan and notifies his superiors to bomb the base. Bond shoots him off a boat and he drowns in the water.
Raymond Benson[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
"Blast from the Past" (short story) Irma Bunt Kill James Bond by shaving him with a razor soaked in Japanese fish poison and "accidentally" nicking him. Bond is rescued by his girlfriend. Shot by Bond.
Zero Minus Ten Guy Thackeray Destroy Hong Kong with a nuclear bomb. The location of the bomb is discovered, and the bomb is neutralised. Drowned by Bond.
Tomorrow Never Dies (Novelization) Elliot Carver Initiate a war between the United Kingdom and China by destroying Beijing to boost ratings. Bond and Wai-Lin destroy the bomb and Carver's base. Forced into the path of the Sea-Vac drill, controlled by Bond, and killed.
General Chang Stage a coup in China by gathering the government in Beijing before Carver destroys it, allowing him to take over. Bond destroys Carver's base and alerts the Chinese authorities. Arrested.
The Facts of Death Konstantine Romanos Instigate war between Greece and Turkey by firing nuclear missile into Turkey. Killed by fellow Decada member Hera Volopoulos. Killed by Hera.
Hera Volopoulos Release virus onto the world and profit from treatment. Stopped with assistance from Greek military. Blown up, then drowned by Bond.
"Midsummer Night's Doom" (short story) Anton Redenius (a likely reference to Doug Redenius of the Ian Fleming Foundation) Sell Ministry of Defence secrets to Russian mafia. After being identified as the culprit, the microfilm is retrieved by Bond. Arrested.
High Time to Kill Roland Marquis Retrieve Skin 17 microdot from corpse on Kangchenjunga mountain before Bond does and sell it to the Russian mafia. Marquis gives Bond the microdot in exchange for oxygen. Chased by Bond to the mountain's peak and dies of oxygen deprivation.
Le Gérant, The Union Retrieve the microdot and sell it to the Chinese government. Survives.
The World Is Not Enough (Novelization) Elektra King Kill her father to take over his oil business and then destroy Istanbul to monopolise the oil market. Renard's submarine is sunk by Bond. Shot in the chest by Bond.
Victor Zokas/Renard Assassinate Elektra's father and then use a nuclear submarine to blow up İstanbul so that Elektra can take over the oil industry. Bond kills him and sinks the submarine. Impaled by his own plutonium rod shot out of the reactor by Bond.
"Live at Five" (short story) KGB (Natalia's coach) Prevent Russian ice skater Natalia Lustokov's defection to the West. Bond helps the skater defect on live television. The KGB is embarrassed in public.
Doubleshot Domingo Espada Overthrow Gibraltar's government with a series of assassinations, then frame James Bond by using a lookalike as assassin and install Espada as the new governor. Bond kills his double and takes his place, foiling the coup. Shot through cheek by Bond and chokes to death on his own blood.
Le Gérant, The Union Survives.
Never Dream of Dying Le Gérant, The Union Make a political statement about Western decadence by blowing up the Cannes Film Festival with CL-20 explosives. Bond discovers the location of the bomb, prevents remote detonation by telephone call, and informs the authorities. Blown up in an escape helicopter by Bond's grenade launcher.
Goro Yoshida Survives.
The Man with the Red Tattoo Goro Yoshida Release a deadly mutant strain of the West Nile virus via mosquitoes on the Western world. The virus is destroyed. Commits seppuku before he can be captured by Bond.
Die Another Day (Novelization) Colonel Moon/Gustav Graves Smuggle diamonds and use the Icarus satellite to attack South Korea before invading it. Bond dismantles the diamond smuggling operation and the Icarus controls are destroyed. His escape vehicle is driven over a cliff, then his parachute is opened by Bond next to the torn fuselage, sucking him out into the plane engine.
Sebastian Faulks[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
Devil May Care Dr. Julius Gorner Import opium into England, and force Bond to pilot an airliner into Soviet territory and bomb it, making it appear to be England's doing. Bond gains control of the airliner and crashes it into a mountainside. Shot by Bond, he jumps into a river to escape, where he is torn apart by a boat's paddles.
Jeffery Deaver[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
Carte Blanche Severan Hydt Use a prototype Serbian weapon known as a "Cutter" to destroy a university in York, killing a cancer researcher who could ruin his employer, a pharmaceutical corporation. Bond is able to warn British authorities about the Cutter before it detonates. Shot by an associate, Niall Dunne.
Felicity Willing Uses her position as head of the International Organisation Against Hunger to strategically distribute food aid across northern Africa, giving the government of the Sudan a pretext to go to war with the south. She is tricked into confessing to the scheme by Bond and Bheka Jordaan. Extradited to a secret location after evidence is planted to suggest she was embezzling money from her Chinese backers.
Niall Dunne He assists Hydt in his operation, then betrays and kills him while working for Felicity Willing. Bond captures Felicity and kills Dunne. Shot by Bond and Bheka Jordaan.
Young Bond series[edit]
Charlie Higson[edit]

Novel
Villain
Objective
Outcome
Fate
SilverFin Lord Randolph Hellebore Create a new breed of superhuman soldiers, made from eels and humans, and conquer Europe with an army of his superhuman soldiers. Bond and Hellborne's son destroy his lab. Falls into a lake and is eaten alive by savage eels.
Blood Fever Count Ugo Carnifex Revive the secret society Millenaria and steal priceless works of art. His benefactor floods his palace for his failure. Hit by his seaplane after it is swept away by a wave of water.
Double or Die Irina Sedova "Babushka" Build Russia a new decoder device. Bond destroys the machine. Survives.
Hurricane Gold Mrs. Glass Sell important American documents to the Japanese. She succeeds. Imprisoned.
El Huracán Punish all guests on his island who break his rules. Bond beats his obstacle course and escapes. Spared by Bond.
By Royal Command Dr. Perseus Friend Help the Nazi cause by masterminding the assassination of King George, and get revenge on Bond for destroying his work in Silverfin. Bond saves the king, destroys Friend's operation and forces Sedova to kill Friend. Shot in the face by Colonel Sedova.
Irina Sedova "Babushka" Find and kill Friend after King George is dead. Shot by Bond, but survives because of her bulletproof jacket.
"A Hard Man to Kill" (Short story) Emil Lefebrve Help General Caiboche escape. Succeeds. 
Caiboche Escape from custody. Succeeds. Survives.
Film villains by production[edit]
Eon Productions[edit]

Film
Villain
Portrayed by
Objective
Outcome
Fate
Dr. No Dr. Julius No Joseph Wiseman Sabotage American missile tests by "toppling," using directed radio waves to interfere with a missile's guidance system and send it off course. Bond overloads the nuclear reactor in No's base, causing the toppling device used to sabotage the tests to overload and disable. Lowered into his own reactor coolant and boiled to death. He was unable to escape because of his metal hands.
From Russia With Love Rosa Klebb Lotte Lenya Humiliate MI6 for the death of Dr. Julius No by using Russian agent Tatiana Romanova and a Soviet decoding device as bait to lure Bond into a trap, killing him and leaking compromising photos of Bond and Tatiana to the press before capturing the decoder. Bond acquires the device for MI6 and England, kills their assassin Donald "Red" Grant, and survives Klebb's attempt to kill him. Shot in the chest by Tatiana Romanova.
Ernst Stavro Blofeld Anthony Dawson (body), Eric Pohlmann (voice) Survives (no contact between him and Bond).
Goldfinger Auric Goldfinger Gert Fröbe Detonate an atomic bomb in vault at Fort Knox, irradiating the bullion stored there to make it worthless, thereby increasing the value of his own gold. Goldfinger manages to place the bomb inside the Fort Knox vault, but it is disabled by CIA operatives led there by Bond after discovering Goldfinger's plot. Blown out of a depressurising plane through a shattered window.
Mr Ling Burt Kwouk Provide Goldfinger with the atomic device to gain economic chaos in the west. Shot by Goldfinger.
Thunderball Emilio Largo Adolfo Celi Use stolen nuclear warheads to extort money from NATO. Before the ransom is paid, Bond and the U.S. Coast Guard recover one of the warheads from Largo's men, while the other is sabotaged by Dr. Ladislav Kutze after he changes sides–it is presumed destroyed with the Disco Volante after it crashes into the rocks and explodes. Shot in the back with a harpoon from a speargun by his mistress, Domino.
Fiona Volpe Luciana Paluzzi Bond turns around at her and got shot by her own henchman.
Ernst Stavro Blofeld Anthony Dawson (body), Eric Pohlmann (voice) Survives (no contact between him and Bond).
You Only Live Twice Ernst Stavro Blofeld Donald Pleasence Capture Soviet and United States spacecraft from orbit to provoke war between the superpowers on behalf of an undisclosed Asian country. Bond uses a self-destruct button in Blofeld's lair to destroy the "Bird-1" spacecraft used to capture manned space capsules from orbit. Survives.
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Ernst Stavro Blofeld Telly Savalas Extort the world with viruses that render crops and livestock totally infertile. Bond, with the help of Marc-Ange Draco, destroys the laboratory where the viruses are being developed before they can be released. Survives.
Diamonds Are Forever Ernst Stavro Blofeld Charles Gray Create an industrial laser attached to satellite and magnified by diamonds, which is capable of destroying nuclear targets anywhere on Earth, use it to extort money from nuclear superpowers with supremacy going to the highest bidder. Bond smashes Blofeld's mini-sub against the control room of his lair several times like a wrecking ball, disabling the satellite before dropping the submarine into the ocean. Survives but severely injured as his oil rig blows up
Live and Let Die Dr. Kananga (also called Mr. Big) Yaphet Kotto Distribute world's largest cache of heroin into the United States, free of charge, to drive all the other drug cartels out of business, which will increase the number of addicts, and give Kananga a monopoly on the heroin market. Quarrel Jr. destroys his poppy fields with a series of explosives. Inflates and explodes after Bond forces a compressed-gas capsule down his throat.
The Man with the Golden Gun Francisco Scaramanga Christopher Lee Acquire the Solex Agitator, a vital component for solar power plants, and sell it to the highest bidder, then kill Bond, the one man he considers his equal. Bond retrieves the Agitator for MI6. Shot in the heart by Bond in the Hall of Mirrors when Bond pretends to be a statue of himself.
The Spy Who Loved Me Karl Stromberg Curt Jürgens Destroy the world by using hijacked British and Soviet submarines to fire nuclear missiles on New York and Moscow, provoking the superpowers into a nuclear war, then rebuild civilisation under the sea once the war is over. Bond redirects the missiles' coordinates so that the missile fired by each sub hits the other. Shot four times by Bond.
Moonraker Hugo Drax Michael Lonsdale Destroy all human life on Earth by releasing a nerve agent from a space station, before rebuilding humanity with carefully chosen breeding stock in accordance with his vision. The space station containing the poisonous globes is destroyed by U.S. Marines, and the three globes that are launched are destroyed by Bond and Holly Goodhead before they can release their payload. Shot with poison dart gun and ejected into outer space by Bond.
Jaws Richard Kiel Kill Bond presumably for the death of Karl Stromberg by becoming Hugo Drax's bodyguard. Changes sides Survives
For Your Eyes Only Aristotle Kristatos Julian Glover Acquire ATAC device, which would enable hijacking of British Polaris missiles, and sell it to the Soviet Union, and to misinform Bond into killing Milos Columbo, his former friend turned nemesis. Colombo reveals Kristatos true identity as a KGB spy and his intentions. Bond throws the ATAC device off a cliff and destroys it. Killed with a knife thrown by Milos Columbo.
Villain in a wheelchair (presumably Blofeld) John Hollis (body), Robert Rietty (voice) To kill Bond as revenge by remotely piloting helicopter and making it crash. Bond disconnects the remote control device used to control the helicopter. Dies after Bond regains control of the helicopter and drops him down an industrial chimney.
Octopussy General Orlov Steven Berkoff Detonate a nuclear bomb on a U.S. Army base in West Germany, forcing NATO to withdraw, and allowing the Soviet Union to invade Germany. Bond disarms the bomb. While attempting to jump on Octopussy's circus train, he is shot by three border guards who mistakenly believe him to be defecting.
Kamal Khan Louis Jourdan To aid General Orlov in his plan, for which Orlov pays Khan with jewels stolen from the Moscow Kremlin. The jewels are confiscated by the KGB. Dies when his plane crashes into a mountain.
A View to a Kill Max Zorin Christopher Walken Trigger a massive earthquake that will destroy Silicon Valley to monopolise the microchip market. His former henchwoman and lover, May Day, switches sides and removes a bomb necessary for Zorin's plan to succeed, after which she dies in the explosion, which causes no other damage. Plummets from the top of the Golden Gate Bridge.
The Living Daylights General Georgi Koskov Jeroen Krabbé Mislead MI6 into believing the KGB under General Pushkin has reactivated an assassination program targeting spies. Bond will be assigned to eliminate Pushkin, who is investigating Koskov for embezzlement. With Pushkin dead, Koskov will be free to continue supporting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Bond and Pushkin fake the latter's assassination, fooling Koskov into believing he is free to act. Arrested; presumed to be executed by Pushkin's government offscreen.
Brad Whitaker Joe Don Baker Use Koskov's embezzled KGB funds to buy opium from the Afghan mujahideen, then use the money to cover up the theft and the profits to continue funding the Soviet war in Afghanistan. Bond steals the C-130 Hercules cargo plane carrying the opium, then crashes it, ruining the deal. Bond activates a bomb disguised as a keyring finder from a wolf whistle, dropping a bust of Wellington onto Whitaker, crushing him.
Licence to Kill Franz Sanchez Robert Davi Create an international drug cartel from South America to Asia, smuggling cocaine dissolved in petrol. Bond destroys the drug processing factory, along with the first shipment of merchandise being transported in tanker lorries. Soaked in petrol after his tanker is rammed off the road, he is set on fire by Bond by Bond's cigarette lighter given by Felix and Della Leiter for being their best man at their wedding.
GoldenEye Alec Trevelyan/Janus/006 Sean Bean Take control of the "GoldenEye" satellite weapons, detonating a nuclear device over London as revenge for a perceived betrayal during World War II. The electromagnetic pulse from the weapon will devastate London, covering up the electronic theft of millions of pounds through the Bank of England's computer systems. Natalya Simonova destroys the GoldenEye by sabotaging the ground transmitter, sending the satellite off-course and causing it to burn up on re-entry. Dropped by Bond from radar dish, then crushed by the collapsing radar array.
Xenia Onatopp Famke Janssen Kill Bond so she can satisfy her erotophonophilia. Killed in a one-on-one fight with Bond Her chest is crushed between her harness and a tree when Bond shoots down the helicopter she is attached to.
Tomorrow Never Dies Elliot Carver Jonathan Pryce Provoke a war between the United Kingdom and China by leading a British warship into Chinese territorial waters before sinking it. This would then be followed by a plan to fire a nuclear missile on Beijing to bring about a regime change in China. As a result, Carver will be permitted to expand his media franchise into China for the next century. Bond compromises Carver's stealth boat technology, allowing the British Navy to target and destroy both the boat and the missile still in the cargo bay. Bond forces Carver into the path of a remote-controlled drill the size of a jet engine.
General Chang Philip Kwok Stage a coup in China by supplying Carver with the means to develop a stealth vessel.When China and the United Kingdom declare war on one another, Chang will convene a meeting of China's leadership in Beijing when the missile hits, after which he will take control of the country and broker a cease-fire with the United Kingdom, securing his position as the new leader of China. Bond and Chinese intelligence agent Wai Lin discover the theft of stealth materials and Chang's role in the scheme and alert Beijing. Arrested
The World Is Not Enough Elektra King Sophie Marceau Kill her father to seize his oil business, which she sees as rightfully hers and later monopolise the oil market with the help of Renard's attack. Succeeds in killing her father, but is killed by Bond before Renard's plan can be fulfilled. Shot by Bond.
Renard/Viktor Zokas Robert Carlyle Destroy İstanbul by detonating a nuclear submarine in the Bosphorus, allowing Elektra to monopolise the oil market. Bond prevents him from triggering a meltdown of the reactor core by flooding the submarine, then blowing it up before Renard can fulfil his plan. Impaled by a plutonium rod shot out of the sub's core at high speed by Bond.
Die Another Day Colonel Tan-Sun Moon (Disguised as Gustav Graves) Will Yun Lee (Toby Stephens) Invade South Korea with the help of "Icarus," an orbital weapons platform that fires a concentrated burst of the sun's energy. Icarus is rendered harmless when Bond destroys the control device. Bond pulls the cord on his parachute, sucking him (and the control device) into a plane engine.
Miranda Frost Rosamund Pike MI6 double-agent who also works for Graves. Betrays Bond during a mission by alerting Graves (as his alter ego Colonel Moon) when Bond arrives in North Korea. Lured Bond into having sex with her, after which she sabotaged his Walther P99's magazine. After Bond confronted Graves, she attempted to kill him, but he escaped by using his sonar impulse ring. Stabbed in the heart with a dagger by Giacinta "Jinx" Johnson during a sword fight in Graves' cargo plane.
Casino Royale Le Chiffre Mads Mikkelsen He plans to make his clients, a guerrilla group, wealthy by shorting airline stocks and then destroying a prototype jetliner. He later attempts to regain his clients' lost money by playing in, and winning, a Texas Hold 'em tournament. Bond prevents the terrorist plot from being carried out by killing the bomber before he can destroy the jetliner, after which he bankrupts Le Chiffre in an attempt to convince him to surrender to MI6 custody. Shot in the head by Mr. White.
Mr. White Jesper Christensen Regain money lost by Le Chiffre and protect the integrity of his organisation. Succeeds, but is captured by Bond. Shot in the left knee and captured by Bond, but survives.
Quantum of Solace Dominic Greene Mathieu Amalric Create a drought by damming aquifers in Bolivia, then staging a coup d'état and selling water supplies back to the new government at grossly-inflated prices. Bond intercepts Greene before he can carry out the coup. Abandoned by Bond in the middle of the Atacama Desert, and later found dead (offscreen) with two bullets in the back of his head.
General Medrano Joaquin Cosio Become president of Bolivia with the support of Dominic Greene and the Quantum organisation. Shot and killed by Camille Montes, thereby preventing Greene from being able to carry out his coup.
Mr. White Jesper Christensen Escape from MI6 custody. Succeeds. Remains at large.
Skyfall Raoul Silva
 (born Tiago Rodriguez) Javier Bardem Humiliate M in front of the government by causing a scandal that damages MI6 and forces her resignation, then kill her as revenge for betraying him when he worked for the Secret Service. He indirectly succeeds: M is mortally wounded when Silva's forces attack her, but Silva himself is killed before she dies. Bond throws a hunting knife into his back.
Patrice Ola Rapace Kill MI6 agents in Istanbul to retrieve a hard drive containing agents embedded in terrorist organizations, and assassinate a man in Shanghai. Succeeds, but kills himself in a fight with Bond. Commits suicide by letting go of Bond's hand over a skyscraper.
Non-Eon works[edit]

Film
Villain
Portrayed by
Objective
Outcome
Fate
Casino Royale (1954 TV episode) Le Chiffre Peter Lorre Escape bankruptcy with baccarat game. Loses to Bond. Shot by a SMERSH agent.
Casino Royale (1967 film) Dr. Noah/Jimmy Bond Woody Allen Use biological warfare to make all women beautiful, then wipe out all men bigger than him to make him get the girls. Poisoned by The Detainer with his own atomic pill. Blown up by pill.
Le Chiffre Orson Welles Recover embezzled SMERSH funds in baccarat game. Loses game to Evelyn Tremble. Shot by SMERSH agents.
Never Say Never Again Maximillian Largo Klaus Maria Brandauer Hold world powers for ransom with nuclear weapons. The weapons are retrieved by Bond. Shot in the back with harpoon by Domino.
Ernst Stavro Blofeld Max von Sydow Survives. No contact with Bond.
Video game villains[edit]
Following is a list of original main villains in James Bond computer and video games.

Game
Villain
Portrayed by
Objective
Outcome
Fate
GoldenEye 007 Alec Trevelyan Sean Bean Use Goldeneye to rob and destroy London. Bond destroys Goldeneye's controls. Falls to his death after Bond shoots him.
Tomorrow Never Dies Elliot Carver Andrew Burt Fire a nuclear missile at Beijing, eliminating the current Chinese government in favour of politicians who will grant him exclusive broadcasting rights in China. Bond aborts the missile launch. Shot and killed by Bond.
James Bond 007 General Golgov N/A Use a nuclear holocaust to emerge as the ruler of the world. Bond destroys Golgov's robot with a bazooka. Dies in the explosion.
The World is Not Enough Elektra King Sophie Marceau Kill her father to take over his oil business, and then destroy İstanbul in a nuclear explosion to monopolise the oil market. Succeeds in killing her father; however, Bond escapes captivity at Maiden's Tower and boards the nuclear submarine. Shot and killed by Bond.
Renard Robert Carlyle Overload the reactor of a nuclear submarine to generate a nuclear explosion, destroying İstanbul and increasing the value of Elektra's oil. Bond stops Renard from blowing up the nuclear submarine. Impaled by a plutonium rod shot out of the sub's core at high speed by Bond.
007 Racing Dr. Hammond Litte Tim Bentinck Smuggle stolen NATO warheads to terrorists via his automobile line, then later commit genocide using a deadly virus. His smuggling operation is dissolved by Bond, and the plane carrying the virus is destroyed. Presumably killed when Bond blows up his plane.
Agent Under Fire Adrian Malprave Eve Karpf Kidnap the World Trade Leaders, create clones, kill the G8, then force the clones to give her control of the world. Bond destroys her cloning lab and kills the clones. Dies when headquarters explodes.
Nightfire Rafael Drake Michael Ensign Destroy NATO forces in a massive air strike from space. Bond disables the missiles' targeting systems, sending them off course. Shot with a laser by Bond.
Everything or Nothing Nikolai Diavolo Willem Dafoe Take over Russia and the world by using a metal-eating nanobot army, then get revenge on Bond for the death of his mentor Max Zorin. Bond destroys the nanobots. Falls into a missile silo after Bond shoots Diavolo's control tower with a rocket launcher.
GoldenEye: Rogue Agent Auric Goldfinger Gert Fröbe (likeness) Enn Reitel (voice). Use the OMEN virus to take over the world. Goldeneye uses the virus against Goldfinger's forces. Destroyed by OMEN virus set off by Goldeneye.
Dr. Julius No Joseph Wiseman (likeness) Carlos Alazraqui (voice). Electrocuted in his own reactor.
Number 1 Donald Pleasence (likeness) Gideon Emery (voice). Manipulate Goldeneye into killing off his two liabilites, Dr. No and Goldfinger. Succeeds. Survives, no contact with Goldeneye.
From Russia with Love Rosa Klebb Lotte Lenya (likeness) Karly Rothenberg (voice) Kill Bond and obtain the Lektor. Bond survives and gets the Lektor to MI6. Shot in the chest by Tatiana Romanova.
Red Grant Robert Shaw (likeness) Brian McCole (voice) Bond shoots him with a Wright Magnum. OCTOPUS is believed to have fallen apart afterwards.
Quantum of Solace Dominic Greene Mathieu Amalric Stage a coup d'état in Bolivia, to gain control of a piece of land rich in resources. Camille kills General Medrano (Greene's associate who will execute the plan), and Bill Tanner, using hacking, bankrupts Greene, nullifying all of his efforts. Killed in the gunfight by Bond.
GoldenEye 007 (2010 Remake) Alec Trevelyan Elliot Cowan Use Goldeneye to rob and destroy London. Bond destroys Goldeneye's controls. Falls to his death after Bond shoots him.
Blood Stone Stefan Pomerov Laurentio Passa Weaponise an antidote for smallpox and anthrax then release it upon the world. Bond blows up his factory, then prevents his plane from releasing the toxin. Blown out of his plane after Bond shoots the door open.
Rak James Goode Aid in the kidnaping of scientists and sell their research. Killed by Bond. Shot by Bond, causing him to fire a rocket at the plane on which he is standing, causing it to explode with him on it.
Nicole Hunter Joss Stone Organise the kidnapping of scientists. Bond discovers her connection with the kidnapping plot. Shot by an unmanned drone controlled by her "boss".
007: Legends Auric Goldfinger Gert Fröbe (likeness) Timothy Watson (voice) Irradiate the gold supply of Fort Knox with a bomb. The bomb is disabled. Blown out of plane window.
Ernst Stavro Blofeld Glenn Wrage Blackmail the UN with the threat of a deadly virus that will wipe out all livestock and cereals. The base is destroyed by Bond. Thrown out of cable car by Bond and presumed dead.
Franz Sanchez Robert Davi (likeness) Rob David (voice) Smuggle drugs. The shipment is attacked by Bond. Set on fire by Bond and burns to death.
Gustav Graves Toby Stephens Invade South Korea using the Icarus. Icarus is disabled. Sucked into plane engine.
Hugo Drax Michael Lonsdale Kill the entire human race, then rebuild in outer space. The space station is destroyed by Bond. Blown out of airlock and suffocated.
Patrice Ola Rapace Kill MI6 agents in İstanbul, and assassinate a man in Shanghai. Succeeds, but is killed by Bond. Dropped off of a skyscraper by Bond.
Villainous organisations[edit]
SMERSH — SMiERt SHpionam, "Death to Spies," Bond's original nemesis in the novels, though only briefly mentioned in the films (apparently disbanded 20 years before the events of The Living Daylights). The Soviet agency is in charge of assassination, loosely based on the real-life SMERSH.
SPECTRE — Special Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion, first appeared in the novel Thunderball and replaced SMERSH as Bond's nemesis in the films. The independent terrorist organisation is headed by Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
The Spangled Mob – Bond's enemy in the novel Diamonds Are Forever, which also appears in Goldfinger and The Man with the Golden Gun. The mob is an American Mafia family based in Las Vegas.
Drax Metals – Hugo Drax's company.
Stromberg Shipping Line – Karl Stromberg's organisation.
Entreprises Auric A.G. — Auric Goldfinger's organisation.
KGB — Soviet intelligence agency.
Janus Syndicate – Alec Trevelyan's vehemently anti-British terrorist organisation in the Bond film GoldenEye.
CMGN - Carver Media Group Network, Elliot Carver's self-made media empire.
The Scales of Justice – a movement in John Gardner's The Man from Barbarossa.
Yakuza — Japanese crime gang in the novel The Man with the Red Tattoo.
COLD – The Children of Last Days, a terrorist organisation that Bond faces in the novel COLD.
The Union — a villainous organisation in Raymond Benson's novels High Time to Kill, Doubleshot, and Never Dream of Dying.
OCTOPUS – Replaces SPECTRE in the video game From Russia with Love for copyright reasons.
BAST – Brotherhood of Anarchy and Secret Terrorism, featured in the novel Win, Lose or Die.
Quantum – a shadowy criminal organisation seen in Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace.[1] The organisation is strictly apolitical—but with considerable political influence of their own—and will deal with anyone whose interests converge with their own. Known members of the organisation include an extensive network of current and former politicians, business people and intelligence agents. One of their leading members, Dominic Greene, leads a cover organisation called Greene Planet.[2]
SCUM – Stands for "Saboteurs and Criminals United in Mayhem," the main villainous organisation in the James Bond Jr. series.
Henchmen[edit]
Main article: List of James Bond henchmen
See also[edit]
Outline of James Bond
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ "Seeking Solace on the Bond set". USA Today. 3 April 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
2.Jump up ^ Olly Richards (24 January 2008). "Bond 22 Plot Details". Empire. Retrieved 26 January 2008.



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Bond girl
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A Bond girl is a character (or the actress portraying a character) who is a love interest of James Bond in a film, novel, or video game. Bond girls occasionally have names that are double entendres or puns, such as Pussy Galore, Plenty O'Toole, Xenia Onatopp, or Holly Goodhead, and are considered "ubiquitous symbol[s] of glamour and sophistication."[1]
There is no set rule on what kind of person a Bond girl will be or what role she will play. She may be an ally or an enemy of Bond, pivotal to the mission or simply eye candy. There are female characters such as Judi Dench's M, who are not romantic interests of Bond, and hence not strictly Bond girls.[2][3][4] This apparently extends to Moneypenny's appearance in Skyfall, which re-introduces the character in a fashion much more in line with a Bond girl than her normal characterisation.



Contents  [hide]
1 In novels 1.1 Inspiration
2 On film 2.1 Roles and impact
2.2 Effect on career
2.3 Multiple appearances
3 List of Bond girls 3.1 Ian Fleming
3.2 Eon Productions films
3.3 Non-Eon films
3.4 Video games
4 Documentary
5 Critical studies
6 See also
7 References
8 Bibliography

In novels[edit]
Nearly all of Ian Fleming's Bond novels and short stories include one or more female characters who can be said to qualify as Bond girls, most of whom have been adapted for the screen. While Fleming's Bond girls have some individual traits (at least in their literary forms), they also have a great many characteristics in common.[5] One of these is age: The typical Bond girl is in her early to mid-twenties, roughly ten years younger than Bond, who seems to be perennially in his mid-thirties.[6] Examples include Solitaire (25),[7] Tatiana Romanova (24),[8] Vivienne "Viv" Michel (23),[9] and Kissy Suzuki (23).[10] The youngest Bond girl (though she and Bond do not sleep together) may be Gala Brand; she is named for the cruiser in which her father is serving at the time of her birth.[11] If Fleming had in mind the Arethusa-class Galatea launched in 1934, then he may have intended Gala to be as young as 18, and certainly no older than 20, when she meets Bond. (If on the other hand the Galatea in question is the cruiser sold for scrap in 1921, that would make Gala instead the oldest of the Bond girls—in her mid- to late-30s or even as old as 40. Since there are other indications in the novel that Gala is very young, however, it is unlikely that Fleming had the older ship in mind or meant to create a 40-year-old Bond girl.) Bond's youngest sexual partner in the books is Mariko Ichiban, an 18-year-old masseuse in You Only Live Twice. The eldest Bond girls are Pussy Galore, whom Bond speculates is in her early 30s, and 29-year-old Domino Vitali.
Bond girls conform to a fairly well-defined standard of beauty. They possess splendid figures and tend to dress in a slightly masculine, assertive fashion, wear little jewellery—and that in a masculine cut—wide leather belts, and square-toed leather shoes. (There is some variation in dress, though: Bond girls have made their initial appearances in evening wear, in bra and panties and, on occasion, naked.) Nearly all of them are white; they often sport light though noticeable suntans (although a few, such as Solitaire, Tatiana Romanova, and Pussy Galore, are not only tanless but remarkably pale[7][12][13]), and they generally use little or no makeup and no nail polish, also wearing their nails short.[14] Their hair may be any colour ranging from blonde (Mary Goodnight)[15] to auburn (Gala Brand) to brown (Tatiana Romanova)[12] to blue-black (Solitaire)[16] to black (Vesper Lynd),[17] though they typically wear it in a natural or casual cut that falls heavily to their shoulders. Their features, especially their eyes and mouths, are often widely spaced (e.g. Vesper Lynd, Gala Brand, Tiffany Case, Tatiana Romanova, Honey Ryder, Viv Michel, Mary Goodnight).[18] Their eyes are usually blue (e.g. Vesper Lynd, Gala Brand, Tatiana Romanova, Honey Ryder, Tracy Bond, Mary Goodnight),[19] and sometimes this is true to an unusual and striking degree: Tiffany Case's eyes are chatoyant, varying with the light from grey to grey-blue,[20] while Pussy Galore has deep violet eyes, the only truly violet eyes that Bond had ever seen.[13] The first description of a Bond girl, Casino Royale's Vesper Lynd, is almost a template for the typical dress as well as the general appearance of later Bond girls; she sports nearly all of the features discussed above.[17] In contrast, Dominetta "Domino" Vitali arguably departs to the greatest degree from the template, dressing in white leather doeskin sandals, appearing more tanned, sporting a soft Brigitte Bardot haircut, and giving no indication of widely spaced features.[21] (The departure may be due to the unusual circumstances behind the writing of the novel Thunderball, in which Domino appears.) Even Domino, however, wears rather masculine jewellery.
The best-known characteristic of Bond girls apart from their uniform beauty is their pattern of sexually suggestive names (the most risqué and famous being Pussy Galore). Names with less obvious meanings are sometimes explained in the novels. While Solitaire's real name is Simone Latrelle, she is known as Solitaire because she excludes men from her life;[16] Gala Brand, as noted above, is named for her father's cruiser, HMS Galatea; and Tiffany Case received her name from her father, who was so angry that she was not a boy that he gave her mother a thousand dollars and a compact from Tiffany's and then walked out on her.[22] Fleming's penchant for double-entendre names began with the first Bond novel Casino Royale. Conjecture is widespread that the name of the Bond girl in that novel, "Vesper Lynd," was intended to be a pun on "West Berlin," signifying Vesper's divided loyalties as a double agent under Soviet control. Several Bond girls, however, have normal names (e.g. Tatiana Romanova, Mary Ann Russell, Judy Havelock, Viv Michel, Tracy Bond [née Teresa Draco, aka Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo]).
Most Bond girls are apparently (and sometimes expressly) sexually experienced by the time they meet Bond (although there is evidence that Solitaire is a virgin). Quite often those previous experiences have not been positive, and many Bond girls have had sexual violence inflicted on them in the past which has caused them to feel alienated from all men—until Bond comes along. (This dark theme is notably absent from the early films.) Tiffany Case was gang-raped as a teenager;[23] Honey Ryder, too, was beaten and raped as a teenager by a drunken acquaintance.[24] Pussy Galore was sexually abused at age 12 by her uncle.[25] While there is no such clear-cut trauma in Solitaire's early life, there are suggestions that she, too, avoids men because of their unwanted sexual advances in her past. Kissy Suzuki reports to Bond that during her brief career in Hollywood, when she was 17, "They thought that because I am Japanese I am some sort of an animal and that my body is for everyone."[26] The implication is often that these violent episodes have turned the Bond girls in question against men, though upon encountering Bond they overcome their earlier antipathy and sleep with him not only willingly but eagerly. The cliché reaches its most extreme (perhaps absurd) level in Goldfinger. In this novel Pussy Galore is portrayed as a practising lesbian when she first meets Bond, but at the end of the novel she sleeps with him. When, in bed, he says to her, "They told me you only liked women," she replies, "I never met a man before."[25]
In Fleming's novels, many Bond girls have some sort of independent job or even career, often one that was considered inappropriate for women in the 1950s. Vesper Lynd, Gala Brand, Tatiana Romanova, Mary Ann Russell, and Mary Goodnight are in intelligence or law-enforcement work. Those who are criminals, such as Tiffany Case and Pussy Galore, tend to be similarly independent-minded in how they approach their work—the latter even running her own syndicate. Even those Bond girls who have more conventional or glamorous jobs show themselves to be invested in having an independent outlook on life. While the Bond girls are clearly intended as sex objects, they are nevertheless portrayed in the novels as having a degree of independence that the Bond films, in contrast, tended to dispense with until nearly 1980.
Most of the novels focus on one particular romance, as some of them do not begin until well into the novel (Casino Royale is a good example). However, several exceptions have been made: In Goldfinger, the Masterton sisters are considered Bond girls (although Tilly is supposedly a lesbian), and after their deaths, Pussy Galore (also supposedly a lesbian) becomes the primary Bond girl. In Thunderball, Bond romances first Patricia Fearing, then later Domino Vitali. In On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Bond enters into a relationship and an eventual marriage with Teresa 'Tracy' di Vicenzo, and sleeps with Ruby Windsor, a patient he meets in Blofeld's hideout while posing as a genealogist. In You Only Live Twice, Bond mainly has a relationship with Kissy Suzuki, but also romances Mariko Ichiban, as well as another a girl who is too insignificant for Fleming to give her a name.
Several Bond girls have obvious signs of inner turmoil (Vesper Lynd or Vivienne Michel), and others have traumatic pasts. Most Bond girls whose characters are allowed to develop in the course of the story are flawed, and several have unhappy sexual backgrounds (Honey Ryder, Pussy Galore, Tiffany Case, Vivienne Michel, and Kissy Suzuki, among others). It is perhaps this vulnerability that draws them to Bond, aside from Bond himself being irresistible to women.
Inspiration[edit]
The inspiration for all of Fleming's Bond girls may be his onetime lover Muriel Wright, who

has a claim to be the fons et origo of the species: pliant and undemanding, beautiful but innocent, outdoorsy, physically tough, implicitly vulnerable and uncomplaining, and then tragically dead, before or soon after marriage.[27]
Wright was 26 and "exceptionally beautiful" when she and Fleming met in 1935. A talented rider, skier, and polo player, Wright was independently wealthy and a model. She was devoted to Fleming, despite his repeated unfaithfulness. She died in an air raid in 1944, devastating Fleming, who called Wright "too good to be true".[27]
On film[edit]
Ursula Andress as "Honey Ryder" in Dr. No (1962) is often considered the quintessential Bond girl. She was preceded by Eunice Gayson as "Sylvia Trench" and Zena Marshall as "Miss Taro" in the same film.
There have been many attempts to break down the numerous Bond girls into a top 10 list for the entire series; characters who often appear in these lists include Anya Amasova, Pussy Galore, Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo and Honey Ryder, who is often at Number 1 on the list.[28][29]
Entertainment Weekly put "Bond bathing suits" on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "And you thought spies were supposed to be inconspicuous! Halle Berry's orange bikini in Die Another Day (2002) and Daniel Craig's supersnug powder blue trunks in Casino Royale (2006) suggest that neither 007 star can keep a secret."[30]
Roles and impact[edit]
In several of the Bond films, the Bond girl is revealed, after her tryst with Bond, to be a villainess. Examples are Fatima Blush (Barbara Carrera) in Never Say Never Again (1983), Elektra King (Sophie Marceau) in The World Is Not Enough (1999), and Miranda Frost (Rosamund Pike) in Die Another Day (2002).
As of 2013 there have been only two films in which James Bond falls in love with the Bond girl. The first was On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), in which Countessa Tracy di Vicenzo (Diana Rigg) marries Bond but is shot dead by Irma Bunt and Ernst Stavro Blofeld at the story's end. (It was originally intended that she would instead die at the beginning of Diamonds Are Forever (1971); but that idea was dropped during the filming of On Her Majesty's Secret Service when George Lazenby announced that he would not play the James Bond role in future films. One critic has opined that, although the theme of Bond in love is not overtly explored in Diamonds Are Forever, that film's pre-title sequence, in which James Bond vigorously pursues Blofeld, demonstrates "an effort to avenge Tracy's murder".)[31] The second was Vesper Lynd (Eva Green) in Casino Royale (2006). Bond confesses his love to her and resigns from MI6 so that they can have a normal life together. He later learns that she had been a double agent working for his enemies. The enemy organisation Quantum had kidnapped her former lover and had been blackmailing her to secure her co-operation. She ends up actually falling in love with Bond, but dies, as Quantum is closing in on her, by drowning in a lift in a building under renovation in Venice.
With the exception of these two doomed Bond girls, it is never explained why Bond's love interest in one film is gone by the next, and is never mentioned or even alluded to again. This is not always the case in the novels, which do sometimes make references to the Bond girls who have appeared in previous books. Tiffany Case and Honey Ryder are revealed to have married other men (in From Russia With Love and The Man With the Golden Gun respectively), and in Doctor No, Bond briefly wonders about Solitaire. A unique case is Mary Goodnight, who appears in the novels, On Her Majesty's Secret Service and You Only Live Twice as Bond's secretary, before becoming a full-fledged Bond girl in The Man With the Golden Gun.
Effect on career[edit]
The role of a Bond girl, as it has evolved in the films, is typically a high-profile part that can sometimes give a major boost to the career of unestablished actresses, although a number of Bond girls were well-established beforehand. For instance, Diana Rigg and Honor Blackman were both cast as Bond girls after they had already become stars in England for their roles in the television series, The Avengers (in an unusual twist, an unknown Joanna Lumley played "The English Girl" in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, and went on to play the lead in the television series The New Avengers). In addition, Halle Berry won an Academy Award in 2002—the award was presented to her while she was filming Die Another Day. Teri Hatcher was already famous for her role as Lois Lane in the television series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman—and for a photograph in which she is wrapped in nothing but a cape, which became an internet sensation—before she was cast in Tomorrow Never Dies. A few years after playing a Bond girl, she became one of the most highly paid actresses on television, starring in Desperate Housewives. Kim Basinger had perhaps the most successful post-Bond career. After her break-out role in Never Say Never Again, Basinger went on to win an Academy Award for her performance in L.A. Confidential and to star in the blockbuster films Batman and 8 Mile.
At one time it was said that appearing as a Bond girl would damage an actress's career. Lois Chiles is often cited as a case in point, even though her career did not suffer because of her portrayal of Holly Goodhead, but rather because, after she lost her younger brother to Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, she decided to take a three-year break from acting, from which her career never recovered. Notable exceptions to the so-called "curse" (actresses who went on to have successful careers) include Jane Seymour, Famke Janssen, Teri Hatcher, Halle Berry, Diana Rigg, and Kim Basinger. Casting for the female lead in Casino Royale was hindered by potential actresses' concerns about the effect that playing the role might have on their careers.[32] At that point, some thought that the Bond series had become stale and would therefore be a less desirable vehicle for young actresses. Nevertheless, the up-and-coming actress Eva Green agreed to play the role of Vesper Lynd, and showed those fears to be unfounded when she won BAFTA's Rising Star Award for her performance. Two actresses, who appeared in the Bond films but not as Bond's romantic interests, also later became successes. One is Minnie Driver from Golden Eye (1995), who later earned an Academy Award nomination for Good Will Hunting, and the other is Stana Katic from Quantum of Solace (2008), who a year later landed the female lead in the long-running television show Castle.
Multiple appearances[edit]
The character of Sylvia Trench is the only Bond girl character who recurs in a film (Dr. No (1962) and From Russia with Love (1963)). She was meant to be Bond's regular girlfriend, but was dropped after her appearance in the second film.
In the series of films, six actresses have made reappearances as different Bond girls: Martine Beswick and Nadja Regin both first appeared in From Russia with Love, and then appeared in Thunderball and Goldfinger respectively. Maud Adams played Andrea Anders in The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) and the title character in Octopussy (1983); she also is an extra in A View to a Kill (1985). Tsai Chin also appeared in two small roles, first as the Chinese/British agent "Ling" in You Only Live Twice and later as one of the poker players, Madame Wu, in Casino Royale (2006). Mary Stavin was one of Octopussy's girls in Octopussy and reappeared as "Kimberly Jones" in A View to a Kill. Finally, Diane Hartford also appeared in two small roles: Bond's pick-up dance partner at the Kiss Kiss Club in Thunderball and as a card player in the Bahamas in Casino Royale (2006).
If the "unofficial" James Bond films, Casino Royale and Never Say Never Again, are included, several actresses have also been a Bond girl more than once: Ursula Andress in Dr. No (1962) and Casino Royale; Angela Scoular, in On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969) and Casino Royale; Valerie Leon in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and Never Say Never Again.
List of Bond girls[edit]
Ian Fleming[edit]

Novel (publication date)
Bond girl
Casino Royale (1953) Vesper Lynd
Live and Let Die (1954) Solitaire
Moonraker (1955) Gala Brand
Diamonds Are Forever (1956) Tiffany Case
From Russia, with Love (1957) Tatiana Romanova
Dr. No (1958) Honey Rider
Goldfinger (1959) Pussy Galore
 Jill Masterton
 Tilly Masterton
"From a View to a Kill" (1960) Mary Ann Russell
"For Your Eyes Only" (1960) Judy Havelock
"Quantum of Solace" (1960) 
"Risico" (1960) Lisl Baum
"The Hildebrand Rarity" (1960) Liz Krest
Thunderball (1961) Dominetta "Domino" Vitali
 Patricia Fearing
The Spy Who Loved Me (1962) Vivienne Michel
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1963) Teresa di Vicenzo
 Ruby Windsor
You Only Live Twice (1964) Kissy Suzuki (main girl)
 Mariko Ichiban
 unnamed girl
The Man with the Golden Gun (1965, posthumously) Mary Goodnight
"The Living Daylights" (1966, posth.) Trigger
"The Property of a Lady" (1966, posth.) Maria Freudenstein
"Octopussy" (1966, posth.) 
"007 in New York" (1966, posth.) Solange
"Devil May Care" (2008 by Sebastian Faulks) Scarlett Papava
Mary Goodnight was a supporting character in several Bond novels before graduating to full Bond girl in The Man with the Golden Gun. Several short stories, such as "Quantum of Solace", "The Hildebrand Rarity", "The Living Daylights", and "The Property of a Lady" feature female characters in prominent roles, but none of these women interact with Bond in a romantic way.
Eon Productions films[edit]
The most prominent Bond girl is featured first, followed by the rest in order of appearance. (* denotes first overall)

Film
Bond girl
Actress
Actress' nationality
Dr. No Honey Ryder
 Sylvia Trench
 Miss Taro Ursula Andress
Eunice Gayson
Zena Marshall Swiss
 British
 British
From Russia with Love Tatiana Romanova
 Sylvia Trench
 Zora
 Vida Daniela Bianchi
Eunice Gayson
Martine Beswick
Aliza Gur Italian
 British
 British
Israeli
Goldfinger Pussy Galore
 Jill Masterson
 Tilly Masterson
 Dink
 Bonita Honor Blackman
Shirley Eaton
Tania Mallet
Margaret Nolan
Nadja Regin English
 British
 British
 British
Serbian
Thunderball Domino Derval
 Fiona Volpe
 Patricia "Pat" Fearing
 Paula Caplan
 Mlle. La Porte Claudine Auger
Luciana Paluzzi
Molly Peters
Martine Beswick
Maryse Mitsouko French
 Italian
 British
 British
 French/Eurasian
You Only Live Twice Kissy Suzuki
Aki
 Ling
 Helga Brandt Mie Hama
Akiko Wakabayashi
Tsai Chin
Karin Dor Japanese
 Japanese
 Chinese/British
 German
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Teresa di Vicenzo
 Nancy
 Ruby Bartlett Diana Rigg
Catherine Schell
Angela Scoular English
Hungarian
 British
Diamonds Are Forever Tiffany Case
 Marie
 Plenty O'Toole
 Bambi
 Thumper Jill St. John
Denise Perrier
Lana Wood
 Lola Larson
Trina Parks American
 French
 Russian/American
 American
 American
Live and Let Die Solitaire
 Rosie Carver
 Miss Caruso Jane Seymour
Gloria Hendry
Madeline Smith English
 American
 English
The Man with the Golden Gun Mary Goodnight
 Andrea Anders
 Saida
 Chew Mee Britt Ekland
Maud Adams
Carmen du Sautoy
 Francoise Therry Swedish
 Swedish
 English
 French
The Spy Who Loved Me Anya Amasova
 Harem Tent Girl
 Log Cabin Girl
 Naomi
 Felicca Barbara Bach
 Felicity York
 Sue Vanner
Caroline Munro
Olga Bisera American

English
 English
Bosnian
Moonraker Holly Goodhead
 Corinne Dufour
 Manuela
 Dolly
 Hostess Private Jet Lois Chiles
Corinne Cléry
Emily Bolton
Blanche Ravalec
Leila Shenna American
 French
 Brazilian
 French
Moroccan
For Your Eyes Only Melina Havelock
 Countess Lisl von Schlaf
 Bibi Dahl Carole Bouquet
Cassandra Harris
Lynn-Holly Johnson French
 Australian
 American
Octopussy Octopussy
 Magda
 Penelope Smallbone
 Bianca Maud Adams
Kristina Wayborn
Michaela Clavell
 Tina Hudson Swedish
 Swedish
 English
 English
A View to a Kill Stacey Sutton
 Kimberley Jones
 May Day
 Pola Ivanova
 Jenny Flex
 Pan Ho Tanya Roberts
Mary Stävin
Grace Jones
Fiona Fullerton
Alison Doody
Papillon Soo Soo American
 Swedish
 Jamaican/American
 Nigerian/British
 Irish
 British
The Living Daylights Kara Milovy
 Rosika Miklos
 Linda
 Rubavitch Maryam d'Abo
Julie T. Wallace
 Kell Tyler
Virginia Hey Dutch/Georgian
 English
 American
 Australian
Licence to Kill Pam Bouvier
 Lupe Lamora
 Loti
 Della Churchill Leiter Carey Lowell
Talisa Soto
Diana Lee-Hsu
Priscilla Barnes American
 American
 American
 American
GoldenEye Natalya Simonova
Xenia Onatopp
 Caroline Izabella Scorupco
Famke Janssen
Serena Gordon Polish/Swedish
Dutch
 English
Tomorrow Never Dies Wai Lin
 Paris Carver
 Prof. Inga Bergstrøm Michelle Yeoh
Teri Hatcher
Cecilie Thomsen Malaysian
 American
Danish
The World Is Not Enough Dr. Christmas Jones
 Elektra King
 Dr. Molly Warmflash
 Giulietta da Vinci Denise Richards
Sophie Marceau
Serena Scott Thomas
Maria Grazia Cucinotta American
 French
 English
 Italian
Die Another Day Giacinta "Jinx" Johnson
 Miranda Frost
 Peaceful Fountains of Desire
 Halle Berry
Rosamund Pike
Rachel Grant
 American
 English
 Filipino/British
Casino Royale Vesper Lynd
 Solange Dimitrios
 Valenka Eva Green
Caterina Murino
Ivana Miličević French
 Italian
 American/Croatian
Quantum of Solace Camille Montes
 Strawberry Fields Olga Kurylenko
Gemma Arterton French/Ukrainian
 English
Skyfall Sévérine
 Bond's Lover
 Bérénice Marlohe
Tonia Sotiropoulou
 French
Greek

Non-Eon films[edit]
In addition to the Eon Productions films, there have been two Bond films produced by independent studios and one television production.

Film
Bond girl
Actress
Actress' nationality
Casino Royale
 (1954 television production) Valerie Mathis Linda Christian Mexican
Casino Royale
 1967 film Vesper Lynd
 Miss Goodthighs
 Miss Moneypenny
 Agent Mimi/Lady Fiona McTarry
 The Detainer
 Mata Bond
 Buttercup Ursula Andress
Jacqueline Bisset
Barbara Bouchet
Deborah Kerr
Daliah Lavi
Joanna Pettet
Angela Scoular Swiss
 English/French
 German/American
Scottish
 Israeli
 English/Canadian
 English
Never Say Never Again
 1983 film Domino Petachi
 Fatima Blush
 Patricia Fearing
 Lady in Bahamas
 Nicole Kim Basinger
Barbara Carrera
Prunella Gee
Valerie Leon
 Saskia Cohen Tanugi American
Nicaraguan/American
 English
 English
 French
Video games[edit]

Game
Bond girl
Actress (if applicable)
Agent Under Fire Zoe Nightshade
 Adrian Malprave
 Dr. Natalya Damescu Caron Pascoe (voice)
 Eve Karpf (voice)
 Beatie Edney (voice)
Nightfire Dominique Paradis
 Zoe Nightshade
 Alura McCall
 Makiko Hayashi Lena Reno (voice)
Jeanne Mori (voice)
Kimberley Davies (voice)
Tamlyn Tomita (voice)
Everything or Nothing Serena St. Germaine
 Dr. Katya Nadanova
 Miss Nagai
 Mya Starling Shannon Elizabeth
Heidi Klum
Misaki Ito
Mýa
GoldenEye: Rogue Agent Pussy Galore
 Xenia Onatopp Jeannie Elias (voice)
Jenya Lano (voice)
From Russia with Love Tatiana Romanova
 Eva Adara
 Elizabeth Stark Daniela Bianchi (likeness)
Kari Wahlgren (voice)
Maria Menounos
Natasha Bedingfield
Blood Stone Nicole Hunter Joss Stone (likeness and voice)
GoldenEye 007 Xenia Onatopp
 Natalya Simonova Kate Magowan (likeness and voice)
Kirsty Mitchell (likeness and voice)
007 Legends Holly Goodhead
 Tracy Draco
 Pam Bouvier
 Jinx
 Pussy Galore Jane Perry
Diana Rigg (likeness), Nicola Walker (voice)
Carey Lowell
Gabriela Montaraz (likeness), Madalena Alberto (voice)
Honor Blackman (likeness), Natasha Little (voice)
Documentary[edit]
In 2002 former Bond girl Maryam d'Abo co-wrote the book Bond Girls Are Forever: The Women of James Bond. This book later became a DVD exclusive documentary featuring d'Abo and other Bond girls, including Ursula Andress. In some locations, the documentary was released as a gift with the purchase of Die Another Day on DVD. The featurette was included on the DVD release of Casino Royale (2006) with an updated segment referencing the newest film.
Critical studies[edit]
Robert A. Caplen's 2001 work, Shaken and Stirred: The Feminism of James Bond, 1962–1979, discussed the cultural impact of the Bond girl within the context of the feminist and Women's Liberation movements.[33] In 2003, scholarly critiques of Pussy Galore and Miss Moneypenny, authored by Professors Elizabeth Ladenson and Tara Brabazon, respectively, were published in The James Bond Phenomenon: A Critical Reader.[34] In 2009, researchers at Cleveland State University and Kent State University published an article, Shaken and Stirred: A Content Analysis of Women's Portrayals in James Bond Films, which provided a quantitative content analysis of 195 female characters appearing in twenty James Bond films.[35]
See also[edit]
Outline of James Bond
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Caplen, Robert A., Shaken & Stirred: The Feminism of James Bond (Xlibris, 2010), pref.
2.Jump up ^ Jütting 2007, p. 65.
3.Jump up ^ Lipp 2006, p. 34.
4.Jump up ^ Comentale, Watt & Willman 2005, p. 134.
5.Jump up ^ For a general discussion of the characteristics of the Fleming Bond girl, see the relevant chapters of O. F. Snelling, 007 James Bond: A Report (Signet, 1965).
6.Jump up ^ James Bond (literary character)#Background
7.^ Jump up to: a b Fleming, Ian, Live and Let Die (MacMillan, 1954), ch. 10.
8.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, From Russia, With Love (MacMillan, 1957), ch. 9.
9.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, The Spy Who Loved Me (Glidrose, 1962), ch. 2.
10.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, You Only Live Twice (Glidrose, 1964), ch. 12.
11.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Moonraker (MacMillan, 1955), ch. 16.
12.^ Jump up to: a b From Russia, With Love, ch. 8
13.^ Jump up to: a b Fleming, Ian, Goldfinger (Glidrose, 1959), ch. 17.
14.Jump up ^ Snelling, 007 James Bond: A Report.
15.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, The Man with the Golden Gun (Glidrose, 1965), ch. 4
16.^ Jump up to: a b Fleming, Ian, Live and Let Die (MacMillan, 1954), ch. 7.
17.^ Jump up to: a b Fleming, Ian, Casino Royale (Glidrose, 1953), ch. 5.
18.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Casino Royale (Glidrose, 1953), ch. 5; ibid., Moonraker (MacMillan, 1955), ch. 11; ibid., Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 5; ibid., From Russia, With Love (MacMillan, 1957), ch. 8; ibid., Doctor No (Glidrose, 1958), ch. 8; ibid., The Spy Who Loved Me (Glidrose, 1962), ch. 2; ibid., The Man with the Golden Gun (Glidrose, 1965), ch. 4.
19.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Casino Royale (Glidrose, 1953), ch. 5; ibid., Live and Let Die (MacMillan, 1954), ch. 7; ibid., Moonraker (MacMillan, 1955), ch. 11; ibid., From Russia, With Love (MacMillan, 1957), ch. 8; ibid., Doctor No (Glidrose, 1958), ch. 8; ibid., The Spy Who Loved Me (Glidrose, 1962), ch. 2; ibid., On Her Majesty's Secret Service (Glidrose, 1963), ch. 3; ibid., The Man with the Golden Gun (Glidrose, 1965), ch. 4.
20.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 5.
21.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Thunderball (Glidrose, 1961), ch. 11
22.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 22.
23.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 8.
24.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, Doctor No (Glidrose, 1958), ch. 11.
25.^ Jump up to: a b Fleming, Ian, Goldfinger (Glidrose, 1959), ch. 23.
26.Jump up ^ Fleming, Ian, You Only Live Twice (Glidrose, 1964), ch. 14.
27.^ Jump up to: a b Macintyre, Ben (5 April 2008). "Was Ian Fleming the real 007?". The Times (London). Retrieved 8 March 2011.
28.Jump up ^ "The 10 Best Bond Girls – EW.com". Entertainment Weekly.
29.Jump up ^ [1][dead link]
30.Jump up ^ Geier, Thom; Jensen, Jeff; Jordan, Tina; Lyons, Margaret; Markovitz, Adam; Nashawaty, Chris; Pastorek, Whitney; Rice, Lynette; Rottenberg, Josh; Schwartz, Missy; Slezak, Michael; Snierson, Dan; Stack, Tim; Stroup, Kate; Tucker, Ken; Vary, Adam B.; Vozick-Levinson, Simon; Ward, Kate (11 December 2009), "The 100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows, Albums, Books, Characters, Scenes, Episodes, Songs, Dresses, Music Videos, and Trends That Entertained Us Over the Past 10 Years". Entertainment Weekly. (1079/1080):74-84
31.Jump up ^ Caplen, Robert A., Shaken & Stirred: The Feminism of James Bond (Xlibris, 2010), ch. 0011.
32.Jump up ^ "Curse of the Bond Girl". Cinema.com. 25 April 2001. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
33.Jump up ^ http://cocatalog.loc.gov, Registration No. TXu001060400. The work was later published as Shaken & Stirred: The Feminism of James Bond.
34.Jump up ^ Lindner, Christoph, ed., The James Bond Phenomenon: A Critical Reader (Manchester University, 2003), chs. 11–12.
35.Jump up ^ "SpringerLink – Sex Roles, Volume 62, Numbers 11–12". Springerlink.com. doi:10.1007/s11199-009-9644-2. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
Bibliography[edit]
Comentale, Edward P; Watt, Stephen; Willman, Skip (2005). Ian Fleming & James Bond: the cultural politics of 007. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-21743-1.
Jütting, Kerstin (2007). "Grow Up, 007!": James Bond Over the Decades: Formula Vs. Innovation. GRIN Verlag. ISBN 978-3-638-85372-9.
Lipp, Deborah (2006). The Ultimate James Bond Fan Book. New York: Sterling & Ross Publishers. ISBN 978-0-9766372-8-8.



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List of James Bond allies
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Following is a list of recurring and notable allies of James Bond who appear throughout the film series and novels.



Contents  [hide]
1 MI6 1.1 M
1.2 Miss Moneypenny
1.3 Q
1.4 Bill Tanner
1.5 Mary Goodnight
1.6 Loelia Ponsonby
1.7 Charles Robinson
1.8 Smithers
1.9 00 agents
2 Recurring allies 2.1 Felix Leiter
2.2 General Gogol
2.3 Sir Frederick Gray
2.4 Marc-Ange Draco
2.5 René Mathis
2.6 May Maxwell
2.7 Sir James Moloney
2.8 Sheriff J.W. Pepper
2.9 Quarrel
2.10 John Strangways
2.11 Tiger Tanaka
2.12 Ronnie Vallance
2.13 Jack Wade
2.14 Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky
3 Film-specific allies 3.1 Additional allies
4 See also
5 References
6 External links

MI6[edit]
M[edit]
Main article: M
M is the Head of the Secret Intelligence Service. Fleming based the character on a number of people he knew who commanded sections of British intelligence. M has appeared in the novels by Fleming and seven continuation authors, as well as 24 films. M has been portrayed by Bernard Lee, Robert Brown, Judi Dench, Ralph Fiennes, John Huston and Edward Fox.
Miss Moneypenny[edit]
Main article: Miss Moneypenny
Miss Moneypenny is the secretary to M. The films depict her as having a reserved romantic interest in Bond, although Fleming's novels do not imply such a relationship while the John Gardner and Raymond Benson novels emphasize it more. In the film series, Moneypenny has been portrayed by Lois Maxwell, Barbara Bouchet, Pamela Salem, Caroline Bliss, Samantha Bond and Naomie Harris.
Q[edit]
Main article: Q
Q (standing for Quartermaster), like M, is the head of Q Branch (or later Q Division), the fictional research and development division of the British Secret Service. He has appeared in 20 of 23 Eon Bond films; all except Live and Let Die, Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace. The character was also featured in the non-Eon Bond films Casino Royale (1967) and Never Say Never Again. He has been portrayed by Desmond Llewelyn for most of the films, but has also been portrayed by Peter Burton, Geoffrey Bayldon, Alec McCowen, John Cleese (who is credited as R), and Ben Whishaw.
Bill Tanner[edit]
Main article: Bill Tanner
Bill Tanner is MI6's Chief of Staff. Tanner is a Bond ally appearing regularly in the novels of Ian Fleming and John Gardner, as well as in Kingsley Amis' Colonel Sun, but he has never been a regular cinematic character. His biggest cinematic role was in For Your Eyes Only (1981), in which Tanner was given a bigger role while M was "on leave," due to Bernard Lee's death that prevented him from reprising his role as M in the film.
In 1965, Amis wrote the authorised spin-off The Book of Bond, or Every Man His Own 007, a tongue-in-cheek guide to being a spy. The book is not credited to Amis, but rather to Lt. Col. William "Bill" Tanner.
Michael Goodliffe (1974) (uncredited)
James Villiers (1981)
Michael Kitchen (1995–1999)
Rory Kinnear (2008–present)
Mary Goodnight[edit]
Mary Goodnight is Bond's second personal secretary. She first appears in the novel On Her Majesty's Secret Service, then again in You Only Live Twice. By the time of her appearance in The Man with the Golden Gun, she has been assigned to the Kingston station of the service, although she has a much larger role. She appears later in the Jeffery Deaver novel Carte Blanche.
She appears in the film The Man with the Golden Gun as a Bond girl, played by Britt Ekland.
Loelia Ponsonby[edit]
Loelia Ponsonby is Bond's shared personal secretary in many of the Bond novels. She is also the secretary for 008 and 0011, both of whom share an office with Bond. She retires and is replaced in On Her Majesty's Secret Service by Mary Goodnight after she marries a member of the Baltic Exchange. For the films, her flirtatious relationship with Bond is transferred to and replaced by Miss Moneypenny. Loelia nearly made her onscreen debut in GoldenEye, but she was removed from the final draft. The name of the character may be based on the Duchess of Westminster of the same name.[1]
Charles Robinson[edit]
Charles Robinson is the Deputy Chief of Staff at MI6 in the Pierce Brosnan Bond films. He first appears in Tomorrow Never Dies, then later in The World Is Not Enough, and Die Another Day. Played by Colin Salmon, Robinson appears to be M's right-hand man and is often seen at her side. When Bond reports in with MI6, he often does so to Robinson.
Smithers[edit]
One of Q's assistants, Smithers makes two film appearances: in For Your Eyes Only and Octopussy. He is played by Jeremy Bulloch and Richard Vernon.
00 agents[edit]
Main article: 00 Agent
The 00 Section of MI6 is considered the elite of the Secret Service. Agents with the 00 prefix have proven themselves capable enough in the field to be entrusted with the licence to kill: the authorisation to, at their own discretion, commit acts of assassination and other controversial activities in order to complete their missions, without having to first seek permission from headquarters.
The following 00 agents have been referenced onscreen in the James Bond films. Additional 00 agents, ranging from 001 to 0012, have been referenced in literature and in comic strips.
002 – Mentioned in The Man with the Golden Gun, named Bill Fairbanks and killed by Francisco Scaramanga. A different 002 (name not revealed) dies during the opening sequence of The Living Daylights.
003 – Body found in a snowbank at the start of A View to a Kill.
004 – Killed during the opening sequence of The Living Daylights.
005 – Seen attending a meeting during Thunderball.
006 – Named Alec Trevelyan, a one-time ally and friend of Bond who is presumed dead for nine years; he is the primary antagonist in GoldenEye.
007 – James Bond (the only-known holder of the number).
008 – Mentioned by M in Goldfinger as a potential replacement for Bond if his mission fails. Bond also mentions this to Goldfinger himself. 008 is also mentioned in The Living Daylights as an alternate choice to assassinate General Pushkin if Bond refuses to do so.
009 – Seen early in Octopussy, killed by twins working for General Orlov. However, 009 still manages to complete his mission by returning the real Fabergé egg and Bond later avenges his death. 009 is also mentioned in the film The World Is Not Enough, as the agent who initially shoots Renard.
Additional unidentified 00 agents are seen briefly in Thunderball and The World is Not Enough. In the latter, one of the agents is revealed to be female.
Recurring allies[edit]
Felix Leiter[edit]
Main article: Felix Leiter
Jack Lord (1962)
Cec Linder (1964)
Rik Van Nutter (1965)
Norman Burton (1971)
David Hedison (1973 & 1989)
Bernie Casey (1983)
John Terry (1987)
Jeffrey Wright (2006 & 2008)
A revised version of the character of Felix Leiter appears in the 1954 television adaptation of Casino Royale. In that version, Leiter is a British agent named Clarence Leiter and is played by Michael Pate.
General Gogol[edit]
General Gogol is the head of the KGB in the films The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker, For Your Eyes Only, Octopussy, and A View to a Kill. In his final appearance, in The Living Daylights, the character has become a post-Glasnost envoy in the Foreign Service and is succeeded as head of the KGB by General Pushkin. In the end credits of the film, his first name is listed as "Anatol", although in The Spy Who Loved Me, M referred to him as Alexis. Gogol is played by Walter Gotell (who also played a S.P.E.C.T.R.E. henchman in From Russia with Love). With the KGB, Gogol often allies himself with Bond to stave off the possibility of war with the West, an ideal that is not always shared with his comrades—such as when he argues against Soviet General Orlov's reckless proposal of military conquest in Octopussy. Only in For Your Eyes Only and A View to a Kill does Gogol act as an enemy but, even then, his actions are more those of a respectful competitor. He particularly opposes the methods of the villain Max Zorin in A View to a Kill. General Gogol has a secretary named Miss Rublevitch.
Sir Frederick Gray[edit]
Sir Frederick Gray is the Minister of Defence (the Secretary of State for Defence) in the films The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker, For Your Eyes Only, Octopussy, A View to a Kill, and The Living Daylights). He is played by Geoffrey Keen.
In The Spy Who Loved Me, after being briefed on his forthcoming mission to Egypt, Bond holds a private discussion with Gray, to whom he refers as "Freddie". It is never revealed how they know each other well enough for Bond to be so informal. In the next few films, Bond calls Gray "Minister," since most of their scenes include other officials.
Marc-Ange Draco[edit]
Draco appears in the novels On Her Majesty's Secret Service, working as an ally of Bond and Never Dream of Dying, where 007's former father-in-law turns out to be linked to the villain of the Union. He also appears in the film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, portrayed by Gabriele Ferzetti.
René Mathis[edit]
Mathis is a longtime friend of Bond and an agent of the French secret service DGSE. He is a main character in Casino Royale and a supporting character in From Russia, with Love, Never Dream of Dying and Devil May Care. It is Mathis who captures the SMERSH villain Rosa Klebb, and he is the one who uses CPR to keep Bond alive until a doctor arrives after Bond is poisoned by Klebb.
In Casino Royale, it is revealed that he originally met Bond on assignment in Monte Carlo prior to World War II, when Bond was trying to crack down on a group of Romanians cheating at a local casino with the use of invisible ink. Mathis is reassigned to work with Bond at the time of the events in Casino Royale, where he poses as a radio salesman, assisting Bond and introducing him to Vesper Lynd.
In the novel Thunderball, Bill Tanner asks Moneypenny to send a copy of SPECTRE's ransom demand letter to Mathis at the Deuxième Bureau. In Never Dream of Dying, he is captured by the head of the Union Le Gérant and is blinded with lasers. Bond later saves him from imprisonment. A younger version of Mathis appears in the "Young Bond" short story A Hard Man to Kill. This may have been the first time the two met.
The characters of Mathis and Felix Leiter are combined to form Clarance Leiter in the original 1954 Climax! production of "Casino Royale". Mathis first appears onscreen in the 1967 film Casino Royale, played by Duncan Macrae, and is featured in the 2006 adaptation of Casino Royale. In this film, Mathis is an MI6 agent, played by Giancarlo Giannini. He reprises the role in Quantum of Solace, where he is murdered. Bond later avenges his death.
May Maxwell[edit]
May Maxwell is Bond's loyal and elderly Scottish housekeeper, who is often mentioned in numerous novels by Ian Fleming. She also appears in several John Gardner novels, as well making a cameo appearance in the first "Young James Bond" novel, SilverFin. She has yet to make an appearance in any of the Bond films. May is named after the housekeeper of Ivar Bryce, a friend of Fleming.
Sir James Moloney[edit]
A noted neurologist whose expertise is frequently employed by M and the Secret Services, Moloney appears in the novels Dr No, Thunderball, You Only Live Twice, and The Man with the Golden Gun.
Sheriff J.W. Pepper[edit]
Sheriff J.W. Pepper is a parish sheriff in Louisiana. He appears in the films Live and Let Die and The Man with the Golden Gun. Played by Clifton James, he is mostly used as comic relief, especially and memorably for his somewhat bigoted attitudes and his tendency to speak loudly about whatever is on his mind.
Quarrel[edit]
Quarrel is a Cayman Islander living in Jamaica. He first appears in the novel Live and Let Die as Bond's guide while 007 is investigating Mr. Big. Quarrel later appears in the novel Dr. No to help Bond infiltrate Dr. Julius No's island, Crab Key. The only Bond film in which Quarrel appears is the 1962 film Dr. No, played by John Kitzmiller where, as in the novel, he is killed by Dr. No's mythical "dragon". For the film adaptation of Live and Let Die, Bond teams up with Quarrel's son, Quarrel Jr., played by Roy Stewart.
John Strangways[edit]
John Strangways is a former Lieutenant Commander in the special branch of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. He makes his first appearance in the novel Live and Let Die as the chief Secret Service agent in the Caribbean. Strangways is roughly 35 years old and wears a black patch over one eye. He later appears in the novel Dr. No, where he and his Number 2, Mary Trueblood (a former Chief Officer in the Women's Royal Naval Service), are assassinated for prying into Dr. Julius No's business.
In the films, Strangways makes his first and only appearance in Dr. No where, as in the novel, he is killed for investigating Dr. No. Contrary to the novel, however, Strangways does not wear an eye patch in film. He is portrayed by Timothy Moxon and voiced by Robert Rietty (who would later voice villains Emilio Largo in Thunderball and Ernst Stavro Blofeld in For Your Eyes Only).
Tiger Tanaka[edit]
Tiger Tanaka is an ally to Bond in the film You Only Live Twice. A member of the Japanese secret service, he supplies an army of ninjas to attack Ernst Stavro Blofeld. Tanaka helps Bond disguise himself to look Japanese so that Blofeld will not recognise him. Tanaka arranges for Bond to marry a girl native to the land in order to provide extra cover. Kissy Suzuki is Bond's new wife and, together, Bond, Suzuki, and Tanaka succeed in attacking Blofeld's volcano base, even though Blofeld survived. Tanaka is portrayed by Tetsurō Tamba.[2] He also appears in the 007 novels You Only Live Twice and The Man with the Red Tattoo.
Ronnie Vallance[edit]
Vallance appears in four of the Bond novels: Moonraker, Diamonds Are Forever, Colonel Sun and On Her Majesty's Secret Service, as well as two of the short stories: "The Property of a Lady" and "Risico", . He is the head of Special Branch, with the Metropolitan Police rank of Assistant Commissioner, and the boss of Gala Brand.
Jack Wade[edit]
Jack Wade is an American CIA agent that appears in the films GoldenEye and Tomorrow Never Dies. He is played by Joe Don Baker, who also appears in The Living Daylights as Brad Whittaker, a mercenary and international arms dealer, who is one of the two main villains in that film.
Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky[edit]
Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky is an ex-KGB agent-turned-Russian mafia head who runs a bar, a casino, and a caviar factory. When he was younger (and a KGB agent), a conflict with Bond ended with Bond shooting Zukovsky in the leg, causing him to walk with a limp. However, after leaving the KGB, Zukovsky does not hold a grudge towards Bond, especially when dealing with Bond means turning a profit. Played by Robbie Coltrane, Zukovsky makes two appearances in the films, his first being in GoldenEye before being shot and mortally wounded by Elektra King in The World Is Not Enough. He lives long enough after being shot to execute a trick shot using a gun hidden within his cane, enabling Bond to escape King's trap.
Film-specific allies[edit]
This section lists allies who each appear in only one film.

Film
Character
Actor / Actress
Affiliation
Status
Dr. No Honey Rider Ursula Andress  Active
Quarrel John Kitzmiller CIA Deceased
Pleydell-Smith Louis Blaazer  Active
Puss Feller Lester Prendergast (uncredited) CIA Active
From Russia with Love Tatiana Romanova Daniela Bianchi SMERSH Active
Kerim Bey Pedro Armendáriz British Intelligence Deceased
Goldfinger Pussy Galore Honor Blackman Auric Industries Active
Jill Masterson Shirley Eaton Auric Industries Deceased
Tilly Masterson Tania Mallet None Deceased
Colonel Smithers Richard Vernon Bank of England Active
Thunderball Dominique "Domino" Derval Claudine Auger  Active
Patricia Fearing Molly Peters Shrublands Spa Active
Paula Caplan Martine Beswick British Intelligence Deceased
You Only Live Twice Tiger Tanaka Tetsurō Tamba Japanese Secret Service Active
Aki Akiko Wakabayashi Japanese Secret Service Deceased
Kissy Suzuki Mie Hama Japanese Secret Service Active
Dikko Henderson Charles Gray British Intelligence Deceased
Ling Tsai Chin British Intelligence Active
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Tracy Bond Diana Rigg  Deceased
Marc-Ange Draco Gabriele Ferzetti Union Corse Active
Campbell Bernard Horsfall British Intelligence Deceased
Sir Hilary Bray George Baker Royal College of Arms Active
Diamonds Are Forever Tiffany Case Jill St. John Unnamed syndicate Active
Sir Donald Munger Laurence Naismith  Active
Willard Whyte Jimmy Dean  Active
Plenty O'Toole Lana Wood  Deceased
Live and Let Die Solitaire Jane Seymour Dr. Kananga Active
Harold Strutter Lon Satton CIA Deceased
Quarrel Jr. Roy Stewart CIA Active
Rosie Gloria Hendry CIA/Dr. Kananga Deceased
The Man with the Golden Gun Colthorpe James Cossins British Intelligence Active
Mary Goodnight Britt Ekland British Intelligence Active
Lieutenant Hip Soon-Tek Oh MI6 Active
Andrea Anders Maud Adams Fransico Scaramanga Deceased
The Spy Who Loved Me Anya Amasova Barbara Bach Soviet Army/KGB Active
Admiral Hargreaves Robert Brown Royal Navy Active
Commander Carter Shane Rimmer U.S. Navy Active
Sheikh Hosein Edward De Souza British Intelligence Active
Moonraker Holly Goodhead Lois Chiles CIA Active
Corinne Dufour Corinne Cléry Drax Industries Deceased
Manuela Emily Bolton British Intelligence Active
Jaws (changes sides) Richard Kiel Hugo Drax Active
Dolly Blanche Ravalec Jaws Active
For Your Eyes Only Melina Havelock Carole Bouquet  Active
Milos Columbo Chaim Topol Self-employed Active
Luigi Ferrara John Moreno British Intelligence Deceased
Octopussy Octopussy Maud Adams Self-employed/Kamal Khan Active
Magda Kristina Wayborn Octopussy/Kamal Khan Active
Penelope Smallbone Michaela Clavell British Intelligence Active
Jim Fanning Douglas Wilmer British Intelligence Active
Vijay Vijay Amritraj British Intelligence Deceased
Bianca Tina Hudson British Intelligence Active
A View to a Kill Stacey Sutton Tanya Roberts  Active
Kimberley Jones Mary Stävin British Intelligence Active
Achille Aubergine Jean Rougerie Sûreté Deceased
Sir Godfrey Tibbett Patrick Macnee British Intelligence Deceased
Pola Ivanova Fiona Fullerton KGB Active
Chuck Lee David Yip CIA Deceased
May Day Grace Jones Max Zorin Deceased
The Living Daylights Kara Milovy Maryam d'Abo  Active
Saunders Thomas Wheatley British Intelligence Deceased
General Leonid Pushkin John Rhys-Davies KGB Active
Kamran Shah Art Malik Mujahideen Active
Licence to Kill Pam Bouvier Carey Lowell CIA Active
Lupe Lamora Talisa Soto Franz Sanchez Active
Sharkey Frank McRae CIA Deceased
Heller Don Stroud Franz Sanchez Deceased
Kwang Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa British Intelligence Deceased
GoldenEye Natalya Fyodorovna Simonova Izabella Scorupco Russian government Active
Caroline Serena Gordon British Intelligence Active
Tomorrow Never Dies Wai Lin Michelle Yeoh Chinese Intelligence Active
Paris Carver Teri Hatcher Elliot Carver Deceased
Admiral Roebuck Geoffrey Palmer British Navy Active
The World Is Not Enough Sir Robert King David Calder  Deceased
Dr. Christmas Jones Denise Richards Elektra King Active
Dr. Molly Warmflash Serena Scott Thomas British Intelligence Active
Die Another Day Jinx Halle Berry NSA Active
Raoul Emilio Echevarría  Active
Damian Falco Michael Madsen NSA Active
Mr. Chang Ho Yi Chinese Intelligence Active
General Moon Kenneth Tsang Korean People's Army Deceased
Casino Royale Vesper Lynd Eva Green HM Treasury/British Intelligence Deceased
Carter Joseph Millson British Intelligence Active
Mendel Ludger Pistor  Active
Villers Tobias Menzies British Intelligence Active
Solange Caterina Murino Alex Dimitrios Deceased
Quantum of Solace Camille Olga Kurylenko Dominic Greene Active
Strawberry Fields Gemma Arterton British Intelligence Deceased
Gregg Beam David Harbour CIA Retired
Foreign Secretary Tim Pigott-Smith  Active
Skyfall Severine Bérénice Marlohe Mr. Silva Deceased
Kincade Albert Finney Skyfall estate Active
Ronson Bill Buckhurst British Intelligence Deceased
Additional allies[edit]
Thunderball:
Major François Derval (played by Paul Stassino)
Foreign Secretary (played by Roland Culver)
Sir John (played by Edward Underdown)
Kenniston (played by Reginald Beckwith)
Ladislav Kutze (played by George Pravda)
Group Captain Pritchard (played by Leonard Sachs)
Casino Royale (1967 version):
Mata Bond (played by Joanna Pettet)
Sir James Bond's Butler (played by Erik Chitty)
Captain Carlton-Towers (played by Bernard Cribbins)
Chinese General (played by Burt Kwouk)
Cooper (played by Terence Cooper)
"The Detainer" (played by Daliah Lavi)
French Legionnaire (played by Jean-Paul Belmondo)
Le Grand (played by Charles Boyer)
Lady Fiona McTarry (played by Deborah Kerr)
Ransome (played by William Holden)
Mr. Slymington-Jones (played by Colin Gordon)
Smernov (played by Kurt Kasznar)
Evelyn Tremble (played by Peter Sellers)
Never Say Never Again:
Nigel Small-Fawcett (played by Rowan Atkinson)
Lord Ambrose (played by Anthony Sharp)
Gen. Miler (played by Manning Redwood)
Nicole (played by Saskia Cohen Tanugi)
Capt. Pederson (played by Billy J. Mitchell)
See also[edit]

Portal icon James Bond portal
Outline of James Bond
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Singh, Anita (22 October 2008). "James Bond author Ian Fleming's letters to the real Miss Moneypenny". The Daily Telegraph (London). Retrieved 7 January 2013.
2.Jump up ^ "James Bond multimedia". Jamesbondmm.co.uk. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
External links[edit]
James Bond multimedia | Bond allies



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