Posted on 09/21/2014 11:16:30 AM PDT by DogByte6RER
The 007 Movie Villains Disconnect with Reality
During a recent visit to the Imperial War Museum in London, as I examined the Secret Service exhibits, I could not help but notice the sharp contrast between the villains depicted in James Bond 007 films and the real enemies of the Realm.
KGB Infiltrators
Although MI5 and MI6 were riddled with high level KGB infiltrators, Kim Philby, Guy Burgess, Harry Houghton, John Cairncross, George Blake, Donald Maclean, Geoffrey Prime, Anthony Blunt and Sir Roger Hollis, no 007 film has really tackled that reality. That M, at the time of the early Bond films, was a Soviet agent would make an explosive plot but is never dealt with.
Nuclear Traitors
British physicist Dr. Alan Nunn May was arrested in 1946 for betraying Nuclear bomb technology to the Soviets. Klaus Fuchs was also found to have betrayed atomic secrets to the Soviets.
IRA Bombers
The Irish Republican Army (IRA) terrorists targeted members of the Royal family and the government of Great Britain repeatedly. The IRA murdered the Queens cousin, Lord Mountbatten, in 1979, and bombed the Conservative Party caucus in Brighton, narrowly missing Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1984. The IRA bombed the Old Bailey Courthouse in 1973, Londons Stock Exchange in 1992, and Household Cavalry in Hyde Park in 1982. There was the IRA attack in Gibraltar, 1988, etc. However, I cannot recall even one of the twenty three 007 films that have ever tackled the IRA terrorist threat.
The Falklands War
The 1982 war with Argentina over their invasion of the Falkland Islands never was the theme of any Bond films either.
Muslim Jihadists
Despite Muslim Jihadists targeting commuters in London in the co-ordinated 7/7/2005 bombings, and numerous other outrages, I am not aware of any James Bond film that has recognised Islamic Jihadists as a threat to the Realm worthy of the attention of MI6.
Why would this be?
The Villains of Fiction
In Dr. No, the villain was Dr. Julius No, a rogue scientist. From Russia with Love, the villain was Rosa Clebb, a KGB agent. In Goldfinger, Aurick Goldfinger, a businessman, was the villain. In Thunderball, Emilio Largo and Ernst Blofeld of SPECTRE (A fictitious crime syndicate).
In You Only Live Twice, again SPECTRE are the villains.
In Her Majestys Secret Service, Ernst Stavro Blofeld is the eccentric villain.
In Diamonds Are Forever, the fictitious SPECTRE and Blofeld again appear as the villains.
In Live and Let Die, it is the Caribbean drug lord Mr Big and President Karanga who are the villains.
In The Man with the Golden Gun, Scaramanga, an assassin, is the villain.
In The Spy Who Loved Me, Carl Stromberg, a businessman is the villain (and the KGB are allies of 007).
In Moonraker, it is Sir Hugo Drax, a businessman, who is the villain.
In For Your Eyes Only, it is Aris Kristotos, a smuggler and a thief who is the villain. The KGB make a showing, but more as competitors, than the real enemy.
In Octupussy, it is Kamal Khan, an Indian businessman, and General Orlov, a rogue Russian general, who are the villains.
In The Living Daylights, it is General Georgi Koskov, a rogue KGB agent and Brad Whitaker (an American mercenary), who are the villains. (Here in
The Living Daylights, the Muslim Mujahedeen appear, but as heroes and allies in the fight against the Soviets.)
In Licence to Kill the villain is Panama drug lord Franz Sanchez.
In Goldeneye it is an ex-MI6 agent Alec (006) and Xenia Onatopp (a rogue Russian agent), who are the villains.
In Tomorrow Never Dies, media mongol, Elliott Carvar and General Chang (a rouge Chinese officer), who are the villains.
In The World is Not Enough, it is Renard Zokas and Electra King (a businesswomen), who are the villains.
Die Another Day, it is a rogue North Korean Colonel Tan-Sun Moon and MI6 double agent Miranda Frost, who are the villains.
In Casino Royale, it is le Chiffre and the sinister Mr White, who are the villains.
In Quantum of Solace, it is Dominic Green and General Medrano of Bolivia who are the villains.
In Skyfall it is Raoul Silva, an ex-MI6 agent, who is the villain.
Distorting Reality
So, according to the British filmmakers, the real enemies of the Realm are not the IRA, Muslim Jihadists, or even the KGB. Only in From Russia with Love, are the KGB directly the enemy. In most other 007 films where the KGB appears they are as much victims as the British and frequently uneasy allies in combatting the real threat, which appears to be SPECTRE, Drax Metals, Stromberg Shipping and other assorted capitalists and journalists! Even when dealing with North Korea, it is not the North Korean dictatorship which is the enemy, but a rogue colonel.
Cowardice
It is hard to avoid the conclusion that the filmmakers were afraid to alienate any potential audience and therefore shied away from the real enemies of the Realm, such as the IRA, so as to not offend the sensibilities of Roman Catholic sympathisers of the IRA; and Muslim Jihadists, so as not to upset potential Muslim investors and audience members.
Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil; who put darkness for light, and light for darkness; who put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! Isaiah 5:20
I’m rather fond of James Coburn’s Derek Flint films.
In Like Flint. Coburn was cool.
It’s fantasy. Lighten up.
What was the last movie made that featured Muzzie terrorists as the villian(s)?
True Lies(1994)?
In a way I understand this. The 007 producers were themselves capitalist businessmen who just wanted to maximize their box office profits by making their films appealing to as broad an audience as possible while audiences came to these films to escape reality and forget about the real problems of the world for a couple of hours.
What’s sadder is the failure for either them or someone else to make more serious and realistic espionage films outside of the 007 world with politically incorrect villains.
Executive Decision(1996).
Indeed.
Check out this link-
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3078426/posts
“An actor as president?”
Movies since 9/11 in which the bad guys are not Islamists
http://markhumphrys.com/cinema.bad.guys.html
Hollywoods Muslim Lies
http://www.frontpagemag.com/2014/dgreenfield/hollywoods-muslim-lies/
Is that “odd job” or “Random task”?
LOL
CC
Interesting story about that movie!
The man who played the villain, an aspiring young actor who was athletic and handsome, was also a muslim. When he went to Hollywood to pursue a career in movies, he naturally sought out a local mosque where he could attend services.
Within weeks, there were attempts to recruit him and send him to a “madrassa” in then Taliban Controlled Afghanistan to “train” for Jihad. He was not interested because he wanted to be a movie actor, and left the mosque because he was feeling pressured to take his “studies further”.
His portrayal in “True Lies” caused such a vicious outcry from islamists in America, that we haven’t seen much of him since.
This was years before 9/11/01.
If you take jihad out of Islam you don’t have Islam anymore!
Great story!
Granted, but the fact remains it’s a fiction series written by Fleming or based on his works.
I don’t understand why someone would get upset by works of fiction because the villains in real life are different ones. Again, what part of ‘fiction’ is difficult to understand? Are fiction authors (or movie makers) subject to the writer’s demand that their villains are based on real people? How presumptious! He should write his own material then!
Once James Bond turned gay, I was done. No more of those movies for me.
The movies are only rarely related to the books to be quite honest. Now admittedly Fleming did use Spectre as a villain fairly often, but a lot of the books and movies that share names really have about nothing in common.
In Like Flint: It was the women that I watched it for.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3081298/posts
What about Dr. NO-means-NO.
Unlees I be blind, they glarinly left lut “Never Say Never” from the list. Not the best by any stretch, but it had muzzies in it.
You ever notice how the arm moves when the head hits it?
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