James Bond fandom

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The James Bond fandom (also known as The Bond Community) is an international and informal community drawn together by Ian Fleming's James Bond series. The fandom works through the use of many different forms of media, including fan clubs, web sites [1] and fanzines. [2]

Contents

Various Bond film shooting locations have become fan tourism locations.

Fan clubs and fan web sites

The first [3] James Bond Fan Club was founded in 1972 by Richard Schenkman and Bob Forlini, two high school students from Yonkers, NY. [4] In 1974 they began publishing a magazine called BONDAGE, which was at first mimeographed and stapled together. [5]

The James Bond British Fan Club was founded in 1979 and went through various impressive incarnations until it became nothing more than a news website.

MI6-HQ.com was founded in 1998. [6] Press organisations and websites that mention this site include Entertainment Weekly [6] and MTV. [7] The site maintains a comprehensive listing of the films' technological features and a user forum. [6]

Notable publications devoted to the James Bond phenomenon include 007 MAGAZINE (1979-2019), published by Graham Rye, 007 MAGAZINE & ARCHIVE Limited (www.007magazine.com); and the now defunct Goldeneye, originally published by the Ian Fleming Foundation. [8] [9]

During the 2000s, participants in the various websites and chat rooms devoted to Bond engaged in daily discussions comparing and assessing the films, the Bond girls, and the villains. [10]

Contributors to the fan site commanderbond.net have been credited with discovering the plagiarism in the novel Assassin of Secrets, which was published in the US by Little, Brown and Company and then withdrawn. [11]

Fan-made computer game remake

GoldenEye: Source is a total conversion mod in development using the Source engine developed by Valve for the computer game, Half-Life 2 . GoldenEye: Source is based on the award-winning Nintendo 64 video game, GoldenEye 007 , featuring Bond. An alpha release was distributed on 25 December 2005 receiving more than 65,000 downloads in 2 weeks. A Beta release of GoldenEye: Source was scheduled for 25 December 2006, but was released on 26 December 2006.

In January 2007 it was awarded twice in the 2006 annual Moddb awards, a win in Editor's Choice [12] for the Reinvention category, and was player-voted 3rd place in the overall category Mod of the year. [13] A significant rise from the 2005 awards, which earned GoldenEye: Source 4th place in the unreleased category.[ citation needed ]

On 5 December 2007 one of the developers released an unofficial patch. This patch fixes some of the bugs there are present in the first beta version. The developer team will not support this patch, and support is only available in a topic in the GoldenEye: Source forum. [14]

Fan demographics

In 2012, the polling organization YouGov conducted a survey of US Bond fans, with a particular focus on their preferences for actors. Sean Connery led in all groups, which were categorized by age cohort, gender, and party affiliation. It found that 60% of Americans described themselves as fans and that fandom "crosses gender, party, and age lines." More Barack Obama voters (65%) called themselves fans than did Mitt Romney voters (59%). [15] Hollywood.com analyzed Facebook mentions of the film Skyfall shortly after its release and found that among men, those aged 25 to 34 made the most frequent mentions and that mentions in the United Kingdom exceeded those in other countries. It found that 52% of the Facebook users who described themselves as Bond fans were female. [16] Fan demographics are considered by the filmmakers and the firms seeking product placement. Smirnoff vodka, which had been featured in Bond films since Dr. No, was replaced with Finlandia vodka in Die Another Day. A Smirnoff representative said that the company had lost interest in the Bond audience, whose major demographic they saw as men aged 25 to 45, and that it was seeking younger, more social customers aged 21 to 29. [17]

Mark O'Connell published Catching Bullets: Memoirs of a Bond Fan in 2012, describing his fandom in the context of being gay. [18]

Bond tourism

Several Bond film settings have become fan tourism destinations.

Ko Tapu found fame through the 1974 film The Man with the Golden Gun . It is now often known as James Bond Island and is toured by as many as 1,000 visitors per day. [19]

Other fan tourism destinations include the Contra Dam in Switzerland, the Rock of Gibraltar, the Meteora monasteries, and Jamaica's Green Grotto Caves. [20] Following Scotland's presence in Skyfall , CNN Travel named it the world's top travel destination for 2013. [21] In 2012, Great Britain's tourism board announced an initiative encouraging Bond tourism there, with the slogan "Bond is Great Britain." [22]

James Bond Island James Bond island.jpg
James Bond Island

Some travel agencies have organized a subdivision to create tours specifically highlighting iconic landmarks in the world of James Bond. where Fleming worked and lived, uncovering HQs of the intelligence communities, SOE, SIS, MI5 and MI6. [23] [ better source needed ]

The Fleming Collection is a collection of art founded by Ian Fleming's grandfather, Robert. In 2008, the centenary of the author's birth, the gallery exhibited the cover art for the various editions of the James Bond books. This attracted much attention from fans. A parallel exhibition at the Imperial War Museum likewise attracted Bond buffs. [24]

Fan interaction

US President John F. Kennedy was a fan of the Bond novels, naming From Russia with Love as one of his ten favorite books in a 1961 Life magazine article. [25] Jacqueline Kennedy gave Allen Dulles a copy of the book. [26] Dulles, then director of the CIA, and Fleming admired each other and entered into a correspondence. Dulles encouraged the CIA to develop and deploy Bond espionage gadgetry. [27] Several authors have suggested that Kennedy's fandom, along with that of other members of the CIA, influenced his decision to launch the Bay of Pigs invasion and other means of overthrowing Fidel Castro. Historian Howard Jones wrote that the administration's early effort to overthrow Castro was unsurprising in light of JFK's fascination with the Bond mystique; [28] Skip Willman that reading Bond influenced their expectations with regard to the Cuban situation. [29] Garry Wills wrote that while the invasion looked "crazy" in retrospect, it "made sense to a James Bond fan." [30]

The Rinspeed sQuba, a concept car released in 2008 that was the first car that can be driven on both land and underwater, was developed by designer and CEO Frank Rinderknecht, a James Bond fan who was directly inspired by the amphibious Lotus Esprit in the 1977 Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me . [31]

Actor Daniel Craig's announcement as Bond met with a protest from fans who organised the website craignotbond.com and urged a boycott. [32] [33] The site, later renamed DanielCraigIsNotBond.com, had been visited over a million times by mid-November 2006 and collected 20,627 signatures on a petition. [34] A portion of the fan base also protested Craig's on-screen consumption of beer rather than a martini. [35]

Critical assessment

The media historian James Chapman identifies a divide between the fans of the Bond films and those who focus on the Fleming books. He quotes oppositional views. Anthony Burgess wrote that "It is time for aficionados of the films to get back to the books and admire their quality as literature" and the authors of a fan history wrote that "We seek to reclaim Bond from the humourless Fleming pedants who view Bond as fixed, immutable, an unalterable period antiquity." [36] Another divide is identified by Mark Duffett, who sees the books' readership as a function of the expectations they had already acquired; some approached them as romance novels and others as spy thrillers. [37]

Stijn Reijnders discusses the phenomenon of the 'Bond pilgrimage', which he classifies as a media pilgrimage. The participants, who he describes as 'overwhelmingly white, middle-aged, heterosexual men,' visit Bond film shooting locations and recount their experiences in detail. Some contribute to Bond fan websites. [38]

The introduction to Ian Fleming & James Bond: The Cultural Politics of 007 considers the question of whether cultural studies of Bond are only a 'glorified form of fandom' and a guilty pleasure on the part of academics, and concludes that they are not. [39]

See also

Related Research Articles

<i>James Bond</i> Media franchise about a British spy

The James Bond series focuses on the titular character, a fictional British Secret Service agent created in 1953 by writer Ian Fleming, who featured him in twelve novels and two short-story collections. Since Fleming's death in 1964, eight other authors have written authorised Bond novels or novelisations: Kingsley Amis, Christopher Wood, John Gardner, Raymond Benson, Sebastian Faulks, Jeffery Deaver, William Boyd, and Anthony Horowitz. The latest novel is With a Mind to Kill by Anthony Horowitz, published in May 2022. Additionally Charlie Higson wrote a series on a young James Bond, and Kate Westbrook wrote three novels based on the diaries of a recurring series character, Moneypenny.

Q (<i>James Bond</i>) Fictional character from the James Bond franchise

Q is a character in the James Bond films and novelisations. Q is the head of Q Branch, the fictional research and development division of the British Secret Service charged with oversight of top secret field technologies.

M is a codename held by a fictional character in Ian Fleming's James Bond book and film series; the character is the Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service for the agency known as MI6. 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 appearing in twenty-four films. In the Eon Productions series of films, M has been portrayed by four actors: Bernard Lee, Robert Brown, Judi Dench and Ralph Fiennes, the incumbent; in the two independent productions, M was played by John Huston, David Niven and Edward Fox.

<i>GoldenEye</i> 1995 James Bond film by Martin Campbell

GoldenEye is a 1995 spy film, the seventeenth in the James Bond Series produced by Eon Productions, and the first to star Pierce Brosnan as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond. Directed by Martin Campbell, it was the first in the series not to utilize any story elements from the works of novelist Ian Fleming. It was also the first James Bond film not produced by Albert R. Broccoli, following his stepping down from Eon Productions and replacement by his daughter, Barbara Broccoli. The story was conceived and written by Michael France, with later collaboration by other writers. In the film, Bond fights to prevent a rogue ex-MI6 agent from using a satellite weapon against London to cause a global financial meltdown.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Felix Leiter</span> Fictional character in the James Bond books and films

Felix Leiter is a fictional character created by Ian Fleming in the James Bond books, films, and other media. The character is an operative for the CIA and Bond's friend. After losing a leg and a hand to a shark attack, Leiter joined the Pinkerton Detective Agency. The name "Felix" comes from the middle name of Fleming's friend Ivar Bryce, while the name "Leiter" was the surname of Fleming's friend Marion Oates Leiter Charles, the then wife of Thomas Leiter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eon Productions</span> British film production company known for producing the James Bond film series

Eon Productions Limited is a British film production company that primarily produces the James Bond film series. The company is based in London's Piccadilly and also operates from Pinewood Studios in the UK.

The James Bond video game franchise is a series centering on Ian Fleming's fictional British MI6 agent, James Bond. Games of the series have been predominantly shooter games, with some games of other genres including role-playing and adventure games. Several games are based upon the James Bond films and developed and published by a variety of companies, The intellectual property is owned by Danjaq.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bill Tanner</span> Fictional character in the James Bond franchise

William Tanner is a fictional character in the James Bond film and novel series. Tanner is an employee of the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) who acts as M's chief of staff.

<i>Casino Royale</i> (novel) 1953 novel by Ian Fleming, the first James Bond book

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shaken, not stirred</span> James Bond catchphrase

"Shaken, not stirred" is how Ian Fleming's fictional British Secret Service agent James Bond prefers his martini cocktail.

The James Bond film series is a British series of spy films based on the fictional character of MI6 agent James Bond, "007", who originally appeared in a series of books by Ian Fleming. It is one of the longest continually running film series in history, having been in ongoing production from 1962 to the present. In that time, Eon Productions has produced 25 films as of 2021, most of them at Pinewood Studios. With a combined gross of over $7 billion, the films produced by Eon constitute the fifth-highest-grossing film series. Six actors have portrayed 007 in the Eon series, the latest being Daniel Craig.

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<i>Skyfall</i> 2012 James Bond film by Sam Mendes

Skyfall is a 2012 spy film and the twenty-third in the James Bond series produced by Eon Productions. The film is the third to star Daniel Craig as fictional MI6 agent James Bond and features Javier Bardem as Raoul Silva, the villain, with Judi Dench returning as M. Directed by Sam Mendes and written by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, and John Logan, the film has Bond investigating a series of targeted data leaks and co-ordinated attacks on MI6 led by Silva. It sees the return of two recurring characters, Miss Moneypenny and Q, after an absence of two films. Ralph Fiennes, Bérénice Marlohe, and Albert Finney are among the supporting cast.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Portrayal of James Bond in film</span> Fictional character

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A bibliography of reference material associated with the James Bond films, novels and genre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sévérine</span> Fictional character in the 2012 film Skyfall

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References

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  2. Daniel Ferreras Savoye (January 2013). The Signs of James Bond: Semiotic Explorations in the World of 007. McFarland. p. 15. ISBN   978-0-7864-7056-3 . Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  3. "British Actor Daniel Craig Steps Into James Bond's Tux". MTV. 14 October 2005.
  4. Marvin Lachman (30 August 2005). The Heirs of Anthony Boucher . Poisoned Pen Press Inc. p.  64. ISBN   978-1-61595-286-1 . Retrieved 23 September 2013.
  5. "BONDAGE publisher nuts about 007". The Day (New London). 22 August 1981. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
  6. 1 2 3 "25 Essential Websites". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  7. "Bond 22 to Film in Panama".
  8. James Chapman (2000). Licence to Thrill: A Cultural History of the James Bond Films. Columbia University Press. p. 311. ISBN   978-0-231-12048-7 . Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  9. Mitzi M. Brunsdale (July 2010). Icons of Mystery and Crime Detection: From Sleuths to Superheroes. ABC-CLIO. p. 69. ISBN   978-0-313-34530-2 . Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  10. Michael DiLeo (2002). The Spy who Thrilled Us: A Guide to the Best of the Cinematic James Bond. Limelight Editions. p. 10. ISBN   978-0-87910-976-9 . Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  11. "James Bond's words live twice in plagiarised novel". The Guardian. 9 November 2011.
  12. Editor's Choice - Mod of the year Archived March 31, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  13. "3rd place - Mod of the year". Web.archive.org. 2008-05-06. Archived from the original on May 6, 2008. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  14. Beta 1.1h support topic Archived March 29, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  15. "He Last Played James Bond In 1983, But Americans Say Sean Connery Is Still The Best". YouGov. 15 November 2012.
  16. "'Skyfall' Box Office Bonanza!". Hollywood.com. 9 November 2012.
  17. "James Bond Changes His Drink of Choice". People. 19 November 2002.
  18. "A Gay Bond Fan Tells All -Mark O'Connell's memoir 'Catching Bullets' proves you can love 007 no matter what your personal persuasion". Out. 9 November 2012.
  19. Stijn Reijnders (2011). Places of the Imagination: Media, Tourism, Culture. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 55. ISBN   978-1-4094-1978-5 . Retrieved 23 September 2013.
  20. "Marking 50 years of Luxurious Travel with James Bond". Smithsonian Magazine. 11 August 2012.
  21. "Top travel destinations for 2013". CNN. 1 February 2013.
  22. "Introducing Great Britain's $1M Tourism Ambassador: James Bond". International Business Times. 10 February 2012.
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  25. Thomas Schatz (2004). Hollywood: Cultural dimensions: ideology, identity and cultural industry studies. Routledge. p. 330. ISBN   978-0-415-28135-5.
  26. John Prados (1 January 2006). Safe for Democracy: The Secret Wars of the CIA. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 239. ISBN   978-1-56663-574-5.
  27. "A close Bond: how the CIA exploited 007 for gadget ideas and public relations". University of Warwick . Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  28. Howard Jones (11 July 2008). The Bay of Pigs . Oxford University Press. p.  46. ISBN   978-0-19-974381-0.
  29. Edward P. Comentale; Stephen Watt; Skip Willman (2005). Ian Fleming & James Bond: The Cultural Politics of 007. Indiana University Press. p. 194. ISBN   978-0-253-34523-3.
  30. Garry Wills (2002). The Kennedy Imprisonment: A Meditation on Power. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 223. ISBN   978-0-618-13443-4.
  31. Chris V. Thangham (2008-02-14). "Diehard James Bond fan creates underwater car". Digitaljournal.com. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  32. "Shaken not stirred . . . 007 fans revolt over 'Daniel Bond'". Irish Independent. 23 February 2006.
  33. Holden, Simon (23 February 2006). "Bond villain defends actor Craig". BBC News.
  34. "Battle 'Royale': Some Bond Purists Say The Tux Doesn't Fit Daniel Craig -One Web site even calls for fans to boycott Friday's 'Casino Royale.'". MTV. 13 November 2006.
  35. "WATCH: Daniel Craig on Bond Drinking Beer, Product Placement in 'Skyfall'". BBCamerica.com. 25 October 2012.
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  37. Mark Duffett (29 August 2013). Understanding Fandom: An Introduction to the Study of Media Fan Culture. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 96. ISBN   978-1-62356-086-7.
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  39. Edward P. Comentale; Stephen Watt; Skip Willman (2005). Ian Fleming & James Bond: The Cultural Politics of 007. Indiana University Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN   978-0-253-34523-3.