We're Nearly Out of Bond!
With Moonraker, the latest James Bond movie, due for release next year film producers will soon have to look beyond the books of author Ian Fleming for further adventures of 007.
Fleming, an old Etonian and newspaper-man who died in 1964, produced 12 Bond novels and two books of JB short stories, beginning with Casino Royale.
The movie industry began its Bond run in 1962 with Doctor No and with Moonraker had used all of Fleming's material except for the short story collections, Octopussy and For Your Eyes Only.
No doubt there will be no shortage of screen writers ready to dream up new dangerous assignments for Bond, perhaps expanding the Fleming short stories into full-scale epics. But will they be the same?
On past performances and estimated total of 1000 million admissions to Bond pictures world-wide Moonraker is likely to be one of the major box-office attractions of 1979.
Cameras began turning in Paris on August 14 and the five-month shooting schedule is to be completed next month.
In addition to France, sets for Moonraker include the canals of Venice, the jungles of Central America, Rio de Janeiro, the falls of Brazil and (created in Britain's Pinewood Studios) an outer space set.
For Roger Moore who, incidentally, will be appearing on TV next year in his Saint guise, Moonraker will be his fourth 007 stint, following his successes in Live and Let Die, The Man With The Golden Gun and, last year, The Spy Who Loved Me.
In keeping with Fleming tradition Moore, and Sean Connery before him, have had a different playmate for each movie. The line-up has included Ursula Andress (in Doctor No), Honor Blackman (Pussy Galore in Goldfinger), Diana Rigg, Jill St John, Britt Ekland and most recently, Barbara Bach as Major Anya Amasova.
Theatre-goers have an opportunity to size up Moonraker co-star Lois Chiles. The Texas-born actress, who once modelled for Elle magazine covers, is appearing as Linnet in the Agatha Christie story Death on the Nile. Previously she appeared in The Way We Were, The Great Gatsby and Coma.
No other book character has made a greater impact on the motion picture business than James Bond, but there is no mystery about it.
Fleming, who had an honest commercial approach to the 007 books, once wrote: "The target of my books lies somewhere between the solar plexus and the upper thigh. "I write for warm-blooded heterosexuals in railway trains, aeroplanes and beds."
- 'Talking pictures with John Berry', NZ Truth, 9 January 1979, p.24
[To date there have been 14 Bond movies since Moonraker]