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Submitted URL: https://archive.org/details/completejamesbond
Effective URL: https://archive.org/details/completejamesbond
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GET /search.php

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ALL JAMES BOND FILMS


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01:49:44
1
M1.Dr. No (1962)
02:05:26
2
M10.Spy Who Loved Me (1977)
02:04:03
3
M11.Moonraker (1979)
02:07:38
4
M12.For Your Eyes Only (1981)
02:10:36
5
M13.Octopussy (1983)
02:05:43
6
M14.A View to a Kill (1985)
02:05:44
7
M15.Living Daylights (1987)
02:07:25
8
M16.License to Kill (1989)
02:09:44
9
M17.Goldeneye (1995)
01:58:40
10
M18.Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
02:08:07
11
M19.The World is Not Enough (1999)
01:55:07
12
M2.From Russia With Love (1964)
02:07:02
13
M20.Die Another Day (2002)
02:24:34
14
M21.Casino Royale (2006)
01:46:07
15
M22.Quantum of Solace (2008)
02:23:10
16
M23.Skyfall (2012)
02:28:07
17
M24.Spectre (2015)
02:43:38
18
M25.No Time to Die (2021)
01:49:59
19
M3.Goldfinger (1965)
02:04:55
20
M4.Thunderball (1965)
01:51:55
21
M5.You Only Live Twice (1967)
02:21:27
22
M6.OHMSS (1969)
01:54:52
23
M7.Diamonds Are Forever (1971)
02:02:42
24
M8.Live And Let Die (1973)
02:04:52
25
M9.Man With the Golden Gun (1974)
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movies


ALL JAMES BOND FILMS

by Amazon Prime

Publication date 1962-2021 Usage Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0
International Topics James Bond, 007, Ian Fleming, Spy, film franchise Language
English

All 25 EON James Bond films (1962-2021). From Dr. No to No Time to Die. All
back-to-back and complete. -3 days, 16 hours, 8 minutes


James Bond is a fictional character created by British novelist Ian Fleming in
1953. A British secret agent working for MI6 under the codename 007, Bond has
been portrayed on film in twenty-seven productions by actors Sean Connery, David
Niven, George Lazenby, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan and Daniel
Craig. Eon Productions, which now holds the adaptation rights to all
of Fleming's Bond novels, made all but two films in the film series.



It was rebooted once, but there will never be a good reinvention of Bond again.


CREDITS

Sean Connery
George Lazenby
Roger Moore
Timothy Dalton
Pierce Brosnan
Daniel Craig

Produced by EON Productions / Michael G Wilson and Barbara Broccoli


SEGMENTS

1. "Dr. No" (1962) -A resourceful British government agent seeks answers in a
case involving the disappearance of a colleague and the disruption of the
American space program. (Sean Connery)

2. "From Russia With Love" (1963) -James Bond willingly falls into an
assassination plot involving a naive Russian beauty in order to retrieve a
Soviet encryption device that was stolen by S.P.E.C.T.R.E. (Sean Connery)

3. "Goldfinger" (1964) -While investigating a gold magnate's smuggling, James
Bond uncovers a plot to contaminate the Fort Knox gold reserve. (Sean Connery)

4. "Thunderball" (1965) -James Bond heads to the Bahamas to recover two nuclear
warheads stolen by S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Agent Emilio Largo in an international
extortion scheme. (Sean Connery)

5. "You Only Live Twice" (1967) -James Bond and the Japanese Secret Service must
find and stop the true culprit of a series of space hijackings, before war is
provoked between Russia and the United States. (Sean Connery)

6. "OHMSS" (1969) -James Bond woos a mob boss' daughter and goes undercover to
uncover the true reason for Ernst Stavro Blofeld's allergy research in the Swiss
Alps involving beautiful women from around the world. (George Lazenby)

7. "Diamonds Are Forever" (1971) -A diamond smuggling investigation leads James
Bond to Las Vegas, where he uncovers an evil plot involving a rich business
tycoon. (Sean Connery)

8. "Live And Let Die" (1973) -James Bond is sent to stop a diabolically
brilliant heroin magnate armed with a complex organisation and a reliable
psychic tarot card reader. (Roger Moore)

9. "Man With The Golden Gun" (1974) -James Bond is targeted by the world's most
expensive assassin, while he attempts to recover sensitive solar cell technology
that is being sold to the highest bidder. (Roger Moore)

10. "Spy Who Loved Me" (1977) -James Bond investigates the hijacking of British
and Russian submarines carrying nuclear warheads, with the help of a K.G.B.
agent whose lover he killed. (Roger Moore)

11. "Moonraker" (1979) -James Bond investigates the mid-air theft of a space
shuttle, and discovers a plot to commit global genocide. (Roger Moore)

12. "For Your Eyes Only" (1981) -James Bond is assigned to find a missing
British vessel, equipped with a weapons encryption device and prevent it from
falling into enemy hands. (Roger Moore)

13. "Octopussy" (1983) -A fake Fabergé egg, and a fellow Agent's death, lead
James Bond to uncover an international jewel-smuggling operation, headed by the
mysterious Octopussy, being used to disguise a nuclear attack on N.A.T.O.
forces. (Roger Moore)

14. "A View To A Kill" (1985) -The recovery of a microchip off the body of a
fellow agent leads James Bond to a mad industrialist who plans to create a
worldwide microchip monopoly by destroying California's Silicon Valley. (Roger
Moore)

15. "The Living Daylights" (1987) -James Bond is sent to investigate a KGB
policy to kill all enemy spies and uncovers an arms deal that potentially has
major global ramifications. (Timothy Dalton)

16. "License To Kill" (1989) -James Bond is sent to investigate a KGB policy to
kill all enemy spies and uncovers an arms deal that potentially has major global
ramifications. (Timothy Dalton)

17. "Goldeneye" (1995) -James Bond is sent to investigate a KGB policy to kill
all enemy spies and uncovers an arms deal that potentially has major global
ramifications. (Pierce Brosnan)

18. "Tomorrow Never Dies" (1997) -James Bond sets out to stop a media mogul's
plan to induce war between China and the UK in order to obtain exclusive global
media coverage. (Pierce Brosnan)

19. "World Is Not Enough" (1999) -James Bond uncovers a nuclear plot while
protecting an oil heiress from her former kidnapper, an international terrorist
who can't feel pain. (Pierce Brosnan)

20. "Die Another Day" (2002) -James Bond is sent to investigate the connection
between a North Korean terrorist and a diamond mogul, who is funding the
development of an international space weapon. (Pierce Brosnan)

21. "Casino Royale" (2006) -After earning 00 status and a licence to kill,
secret agent James Bond sets out on his first mission as 007. Bond must defeat a
private banker funding terrorists in a high-stakes game of poker at Casino
Royale, Montenegro. (Daniel Craig)

22. "Quantum of Solace" (2008) -James Bond descends into mystery as he tries to
stop a mysterious organisation from eliminating a country's most valuable
resource. (Daniel Craig)

23. "Skyfall" (2012) -James Bond's loyalty to M is tested when her past comes
back to haunt her. When MI6 comes under attack, 007 must track down and destroy
the threat, no matter how personal the cost. (Daniel Craig)

24. "Spectre" (2015) -A cryptic message from James Bond's past sends him on a
trail to uncover the existence of a sinister organisation named SPECTRE. With a
new threat dawning, Bond learns the terrible truth about the author of all his
pain in his most recent missions. (Daniel Craig)

25. "No Time To Die" (2021) -James Bond has left active service. His peace is
short-lived when Felix Leiter, an old friend from the CIA, turns up asking for
help, leading Bond onto the trail of a mysterious villain armed with dangerous
new technology. (Daniel Craig)
-------------------------

Addeddate 2023-02-21 17:10:57 Color color Identifier completejamesbond Scanner
Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.7.0 Sound sound Year 1962
PLUS-CIRCLE ADD REVIEW

COMMENT
REVIEWS

Reviewer: BossTweed01 - - November 10, 2023
Subject: Spectre and No Time to Die
Where is the English Audio to Spectre and No Time to Die? They don't have
English Audio on them.
Reviewer: gary proffitt - favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite - October 24,
2023
Subject: All James Bond Films
List of James Bond films


This article is about the Bond films themselves. For the production background
of the films, see Production of the James Bond films. For the various portrayals
of the character, see Portrayal of James Bond in film.
James Bond is a fictional character created by British novelist Ian Fleming in
1953. A British secret agent working for MI6 under the codename 007, Bond has
been portrayed on film in twenty-seven productions by actors Sean Connery, David
Niven, George Lazenby, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan and Daniel
Craig. Eon Productions, which now holds the adaptation rights to all of
Fleming's Bond novels, made all but two films in the film series.

In 1961, producers Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman purchased the filming
rights to Fleming's novels. They founded Eon Productions and, with financial
backing by United Artists, produced Dr. No, directed by Terence Young and
featuring Connery as Bond. Following its release in 1962, Broccoli and Saltzman
created the holding company Danjaq to ensure future productions in the James
Bond film series. The Eon series currently has twenty-five films, with the most
recent, No Time to Die, released in September 2021. With a combined gross of
$7.8 billion to date, it is the fifth-highest-grossing film series in nominal
terms. Adjusting for inflation, the series has earned over $19.2 billion in 2022
dollars from box-office receipts alone,[a] with non-Eon entries pushing this
inflation-adjusted figure to a grand total in excess of $20 billion.

The films have won six Academy Awards: for Sound Effects (now Sound Editing) in
Goldfinger (at the 37th Awards), to John Stears for Visual Effects in
Thunderball (at the 38th Awards), to Per Hallberg and Karen Baker Landers for
Sound Editing, to Adele and Paul Epworth for Original Song in Skyfall (at the
85th Awards), to Sam Smith and Jimmy Napes for Original Song in Spectre (at the
88th Awards), and to Billie Eilish and Finneas O'Connell for Original Song in No
Time to Die (at the 94th Awards). Several other songs produced for the films
have been nominated for Academy Awards for Original Song, including Paul
McCartney's "Live and Let Die", Carly Simon's "Nobody Does It Better", and
Sheena Easton's "For Your Eyes Only". In 1982, Albert R. Broccoli received the
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award.

When Broccoli and Saltzman bought the rights to existing and future Fleming
titles, the deal did not include Casino Royale, which had been sold to producer
Gregory Ratoff for a television adaptation in 1954. After Ratoff's death, the
rights passed to Charles K. Feldman, who subsequently produced the Bond spoof
Casino Royale in 1967. A legal case ensured that the film rights to the novel
Thunderball were held by Kevin McClory, as he, Fleming and scriptwriter Jack
Whittingham had written a film script on which the novel was based. Although Eon
Productions and McClory joined forces to produce Thunderball, McClory still
retained the rights to the story and adapted Thunderball into 1983's non-Eon
entry, Never Say Never Again. Distribution rights to both of those films are
currently held by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, which distributes Eon's regular
series.

Eon films
List of Eon films

Title Year Bond actor Director Box office (millions) Budget (millions) 🔽 🔽
Received Cash


Dr. No 1962 Sean Connery Terence Young 59.5 448.8 1.1 7.0

From Russia with Love 1963 Sean Connery Terence Young 78.9 543.8 2.0 12.6

Goldfinger 1964 Sean Connery Guy Hamilton 124.9 820.4 3.0 18.6

Thunderball 1965 Sean Connery Terence Young 141.2 848.1 6.8 41.9

You Only Live Twice 1967 Sean Connery Lewis Gilbert 111.6 514.2 10.3 59.9

On Her Majesty's Secret Service 1969 George Lazenby Peter R. Hunt 64.6 291.5 7.0
37.3

Diamonds Are Forever 1971 Sean Connery Guy Hamilton 116.0 442.5 7.2 34.7

Live and Let Die 1973 Roger Moore Guy Hamilton 126.4 460.3 7.0 30.8

The Man with the Golden Gun 1974 Roger Moore Guy Hamilton 97.6 334.0 7.0 27.7

The Spy Who Loved Me 1977 Roger Moore Lewis Gilbert 185. 533.0 14.0 45.1

Moonraker 1979 Roger Moore Lewis Gilbert 210.3 535.0 34.0 91.5

For Your Eyes Only 1981 Roger Moore John Glen 194.9 449.4 28.0 60.2

Octopussy 1983 Roger Moore John Glen 183.7 373.8 27.5 53.9

A View to a Kill 1985 Roger Moore John Glen 152.4 275.2 30.0 54.5

The Living Daylights 1987 Timothy Dalton John Glen 191.2 313.5 40.0 68.8

Licence to Kill 1989 Timothy Dalton John Glen 156.2 250.9 36.0 56.7

GoldenEye 1995 Pierce Brosnan Martin Campbell 352.0 518.5 60.0 76.9

Tomorrow Never Dies 1997 Pierce Brosnan Roger Spottiswoode 333.0 463.2 110.0
133.9

The World Is Not Enough 1999 Pierce Brosnan Michael Apted 361.8 439.5 135.0
158.3

Die Another Day 2002 Pierce Brosnan Lee Tamahori 432.0 465.4 142.0 154.2

Casino Royale 2006 Daniel Craig Martin Campbell 606.0 589.4 150.0 145.3

Quantum of Solace 2008 Daniel Craig Marc Forster 586.1 514.2 200.0 181.4

Skyfall 2012 Daniel Craig Sam Mendes 1,108.6 943.5 150–200 128–170

Spectre 2015 Daniel Craig Sam Mendes 880.7 725.5 245–250 202–206

No Time to Die 2021 Daniel Craig Cary Joji Fukunaga 771.2 582 250–301 189–226

Total of Eon-produced films 7,612.1 12,676 1,453–1,508 2,069–2,155

By converting the total 2005-adjusted box-office gross of $12.672 billion to
2022 dollars, the current inflation-adjusted box-office as of 2022 is
approximately $19.2 billion
The official production budget for Spectre has been debated. Estimates range
from $245–250 to as high as $300–350 million. The $350 million figure also
incorporates the $100 million marketing budget.

Dr. No (1962)
Main article: Dr. No (film)

Strangways, the British Intelligence (SIS) Station Chief in Jamaica, is killed.
In response, British agent James Bond—also known as 007—is sent to Jamaica to
investigate the circumstances. During his investigation Bond meets Quarrel, a
Cayman fisherman, who had been working with Strangways around the nearby islands
to collect mineral samples. One of the islands was Crab Key, home to the
reclusive Dr. No.

Bond visits the island, where he meets a local shell diver, Honey Ryder. The
three are attacked by No's men, who kill Quarrel using a flame throwing armoured
tractor; Bond and Honey are taken prisoner. Dr. No informs them he is a member
of SPECTRE, the Special Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge
and Extortion, and he plans to disrupt the Project Mercury space launch from
Cape Canaveral with his atomic-powered radio beam. Bond and Honey escape from
the island, killing No and blowing up his compound in the process.

From Russia with Love (1963)
Main article: From Russia with Love (film)

SPECTRE's expert planner Kronsteen, known as "Number Five", upon order of the
organisation's Number One, devises a plot to steal a Lektor cryptographic device
from the Soviets and sell it back to them while exacting revenge on Bond for
killing their agent Dr. No; ex-SMERSH operative Rosa Klebb, SPECTRE's Number
Three, is in charge of the mission. She recruits Donald "Red" Grant as an
assassin and Tatiana Romanova, a cipher clerk at the Soviet consulate in
Istanbul, as the unwitting bait.
Bond travels to Turkey and meets Ali Kerim Bey, the MI6 officer in Turkey.
Between them, they obtain the Lektor, and the three escape with the device on
the Orient Express. However, they are followed by Grant, who kills Kerim Bey and
a Soviet security officer. Grant pretends to be another British agent and meets
Bond. Over dinner Grant drugs Romanova, then overcomes Bond. Bond tricks Grant
into opening Bond's attaché case in the manner that detonates its tear gas booby
trap, allowing Bond to attack and kill him. Bond and Romanova escape with the
Lektor to Venice. Rosa Klebb, disguised as a hotel maid, attempts to steal the
Lektor and kill Bond, but ends up being shot by Romanova.

Goldfinger (1964)

James Bond's Aston Martin DB5 debuted in Goldfinger and also appears in
Thunderball, GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies, Skyfall, Spectre and No Time to
Die.
Main article: Goldfinger (film)

Bond is ordered to observe bullion dealer Auric Goldfinger. He suspects
Goldfinger of cheating at cards and foils his scheme by distracting his female
accomplice, who is later killed by Goldfinger's Korean manservant and henchman
Oddjob after Bond seduces her. Bond is then instructed to investigate
Goldfinger's gold smuggling operation and he tails the dealer to Switzerland.
Bond is captured when he reconnoitres Goldfinger's plant and is drugged
unconscious; Goldfinger then transports Bond to his Kentucky stud farm where he
holds Bond captive. Bond escapes briefly to witness Goldfinger's meeting with US
mafiosi, observing secretly as Goldfinger presents to the gangsters his plans to
rob Fort Knox by using materials they have smuggled to him and later kills them
to avoid paying his dues.
Bond is recaptured after hearing the details of the operation, but he
subsequently seduces Pussy Galore, Goldfinger's private pilot, and convinces her
to inform the American authorities. Goldfinger's private army breaks into Fort
Knox and accesses the vault, where Bond fights and kills Oddjob, while American
troops battle with Goldfinger's army outside. Bond's plane is hijacked by
Goldfinger, but Bond struggles with him and shoots out a window, creating an
explosive decompression, killing Goldfinger.

Thunderball (1965)

Sean Connery during the production of Thunderball in 1965
Main article: Thunderball (film)

Bond investigates the hijacking of an Avro Vulcan loaded with two atomic bombs,
which had been taken by SPECTRE. The organisation demands a ransom for the
return of the bombs. Bond follows a lead to the Bahamas, where he meets up with
his CIA counterpart and friend Felix Leiter. The pair suspect a rich playboy,
Emilio Largo, who is soon discovered to be SPECTRE's Number Two, ordered by the
secretive Number One to direct the operation, and search the area around his
yacht and then the area where they think the yacht may have travelled. After
finding the plane—but without the nuclear devices on board—the two agents
arrange for Largo's yacht to be tracked and ambushed once the bombs are being
moved by Largo.

You Only Live Twice (1967)
Main article: You Only Live Twice (film)

007 is sent to Japan to investigate the spacecraft theft and astronaut
kidnapping in orbit of American Project Gemini spacecraft Jupiter 16 by an
unidentified spacecraft. Upon his arrival, Bond is contacted by Aki, assistant
to the Japanese secret service leader Tiger Tanaka. Bond established that the
mastermind behind the hijacking is SPECTRE's Number One, Ernst Stavro Blofeld,
in conjunction with Osato, a local industrialist. Bond follows the trail to
Blofeld's island headquarters and spaceport, while the spacecraft, Bird One,
attacks a Soviet capsule. Blofeld explains to Bond that his plot is to fake in
front of each superpower that Bird One is an enemy spacecraft to transform the
Cold War into World War III.

Tanaka's ninja troops attack the island, while Bond manages to distract Blofeld
and create a diversion which allows him to open the hatch, letting in the
ninjas. During the battle, Osato is killed by Blofeld, who activates the base's
self-destruct system and escapes. Bond, Kissy, Tanaka and the surviving ninjas
escape through the cave tunnel before it explodes, and are rescued by submarine.

On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969)
Main article: On Her Majesty's Secret Service (film)

Bond actor George Lazenby with Diana Rigg while filming On Her Majesty's Secret
Service in 1969
While searching for Blofeld, the head of SPECTRE, Bond (played by George
Lazenby) saves Tracy di Vicenzo (Diana Rigg) on the beach from committing
suicide by drowning, and later meets her again in a casino. Bond then receives
information from Marc-Ange Draco, the head of the European crime syndicate
Unione Corse and Tracy's father, about Blofeld's Swiss solicitor. Bond breaks
into the solicitor's office and establishes Blofeld is corresponding with the
London College of Arms. Posing as an emissary of the college, Bond meets
Blofeld, who has established a clinical allergy-research institute atop Piz
Gloria in the Swiss Alps. Bond soon establishes that Blofeld is brainwashing his
patients to distribute bacteriological warfare agents throughout various parts
of the world.

Bond escapes from the clinic after Blofeld identifies him as a British agent.
Bond arranges a raid on the clinic using men from Draco's organisation. The raid
is a success, although Blofeld escapes. Bond marries Tracy, but she is murdered
shortly afterwards by Irma Bunt, Blofeld's partner.

Diamonds Are Forever (1971)
Main article: Diamonds Are Forever (film)

Bond is tasked with investigating a major diamond smuggling ring which begins in
Africa and runs through Holland and the UK to the United States. Disguised as
professional smuggler and murderer Peter Franks, Bond travels to Amsterdam to
meet contact Tiffany Case: he is given the diamonds and travels on to the US,
where he is met by Felix Leiter. Bond moves through the chain, which leads to
the Whyte House, a casino-hotel owned by the reclusive billionaire Willard
Whyte.

Bond follows the diamonds to a pick-up by Bert Saxby, Whyte's head of security,
and then onto a research laboratory owned by Whyte, where he finds that a
satellite is being built by a laser refraction specialist, Professor Dr. Metz.
Suspecting Whyte, Bond tries to confront him, but instead meets Blofeld, who
captures the agent and explains to him that the satellite can blow up nuclear
missiles. Blofeld admits that he intends to auction it to the highest bidder.
Bond escapes and frees the captive Whyte and they establish that Blofeld is
using an offshore oil rig as his base. Bond attacks the rig, stopping Blofeld's
operation and dispersing his organisation.

Live and Let Die (1973)

Roger Moore in 1973
Main article: Live and Let Die (film)

James Bond is sent to investigate the murder of three British MI6 agents, all of
whom have been killed within 24 hours. The victims were all separately
investigating the operations of Dr. Kananga, the dictator of a small Caribbean
island, San Monique. Bond discovers that Kananga also acts as Mr. Big, a
ruthless and cunning American gangster.

Upon visiting San Monique, Bond determines that Kananga is producing two tons of
heroin and is protecting the poppy fields by exploiting locals' fear of voodoo
and the occult. Through his alter ego, Mr. Big, Kananga plans to distribute the
heroin free of charge at his Fillet of Soul restaurants, which will increase the
number of addicts. Bond is captured by Kananga, but he escapes, killing Kananga
and destroying the poppy crop.

The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)
Main article: The Man with the Golden Gun (film)
After receiving a golden bullet with James Bond's code "007" etched into its
surface M relieves Bond of a mission locating a British scientist, Gibson, who
has invented the "Solex agitator", a device to harness solar power, thereby
solving the energy crisis. The bullet signifies Bond is a target of assassin
Francisco Scaramanga and Bond sets out unofficially to find him. From a spent
golden bullet, Bond tracks Scaramanga to Macau, where he sees Scaramanga's
mistress collecting golden bullets at a casino. Bond follows her to Hong Kong,
where he witnesses the murder of Gibson and the theft of the Solex agitator.
Bond is subsequently assigned to retrieve the agitator and assassinate
Scaramanga.

Bond meets with Hai Fat, a wealthy Thai entrepreneur suspected of arranging
Gibson's murder, and is captured, but subsequently escapes. He tracks Scaramanga
to an island in Red Chinese waters, where the two men fight and Bond kills the
assassin.

The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)
Main article: The Spy Who Loved Me (film)
Bond is tasked with investigating the disappearance of British and Soviet
ballistic missile submarines and the subsequent offer to sell a submarine
tracking system. Bond works alongside Major Anya Amasova of the KGB. The pair
track the plans across Egypt and identify the person responsible for the thefts
as shipping tycoon, scientist and anarchist Karl Stromberg.

Bond and Amasova follow a suspicious tanker owned by Stromberg and establish it
is responsible for the missing submarines; the submarine in which they are
travelling is also captured by Stromberg. Stromberg plans to destroy Moscow and
New York, triggering nuclear war, and to then establish a new civilisation. Bond
escapes, freeing the submariners captured from the other submarines, and follows
Stromberg to his headquarters, where he shoots the tycoon and a torpedo destroys
the base.

Moonraker (1979)
Main article: Moonraker (film)
A Drax Industries Moonraker space shuttle on loan is hijacked and Bond is
ordered to investigate. Bond meets the owner of the company, Hugo Drax and one
of Drax's scientists, Dr. Holly Goodhead. Bond follows the trail to Venice,
where he establishes that Drax is manufacturing a nerve gas deadly to humans,
but harmless to animals. Bond again meets Goodhead and finds out that she is a
CIA agent.

Bond travels to the Amazon looking for Drax's research facility, where he is
captured. He and Goodhead pose as pilots on one of six space shuttles being sent
by Drax to a hidden space station. There Bond finds out that Drax plans to
destroy all human life by launching fifty globes containing the toxin into the
Earth's atmosphere. Bond and Goodhead disable the radar jammer hiding the
station from Earth and the US sends a platoon of Marines in a military space
shuttle. During the battle, Bond kills Drax and his station is destroyed.

For Your Eyes Only (1981)
Main article: For Your Eyes Only (film)
After a British spy boat sinks, a marine archaeologist, Sir Timothy Havelock, is
tasked to retrieve its Automatic Targeting Attack Communicator (ATAC)
communication system before the Russians do. After Havelock is murdered by
Gonzales, a Cuban hit-man, Bond is ordered to find out who hired Gonzales. While
investigating, Bond is captured, but Gonzales is subsequently killed by
Havelock's daughter Melina, and she and Bond escape. Bond identifies one of
those present with Gonzales as Emile Leopold Locque and so follows a lead to
Italy and meets his contact, Luigi Ferrara, and a well-connected Greek
businessman and intelligence informant, Aris Kristatos. Kristatos tells Bond
that Locque is employed by Milos Columbo, Kristatos' former organised crime
partner.

After Ferrara is murdered—and the evidence points to Columbo—Bond is captured by
men working for Columbo. Columbo then explains that Locque was actually hired by
Kristatos, who is working for the KGB to retrieve the ATAC. Bond and Melina
recover the ATAC but are captured by Kristatos. They escape and follow Kristatos
to Greece, where he is killed and the ATAC is destroyed by Bond.

Octopussy (1983)
Main article: Octopussy
Bond investigates the murder of 009, killed in East Berlin while dressed as a
circus clown and carrying a fake Fabergé egg. An identical egg appears at
auction and Bond establishes the buyer, exiled Afghan prince Kamal Khan, is
working with Orlov, a renegade Soviet general, who is seeking to expand Soviet
borders into Europe. Bond meets Octopussy, a wealthy woman who leads the Octopus
cult. Bond finds out that Orlov has been supplying Khan with priceless Soviet
treasures, replacing them with replicas, while Khan has been smuggling the real
versions into the West via Octopussy's circus troupe.

Bond infiltrates the circus and finds that Orlov replaced the Soviet treasures
with a nuclear warhead primed to explode at a US Air Force base in West Germany.
The explosion would trigger Europe into seeking disarmament, in the belief that
the bomb was an American one that was detonated by accident, leaving the West's
borders open to Soviet invasion. Bond deactivates the warhead and then he
returns to India, joining an assault on Khan's palace.

A View to a Kill (1985)
Main article: A View to a Kill
Bond investigates millionaire industrialist Max Zorin, who is trying to corner
the world market in microchips. He establishes that Zorin was previously trained
and financed by the KGB, but has now gone rogue. Zorin unveils to a group of
investors his plan to destroy Silicon Valley, which will give him a monopoly in
the manufacturing of microchips.

Bond uncovers Zorin's plan is to detonate explosives beneath the lakes along the
Hayward and San Andreas faults, which will cause them to flood. A larger bomb in
a mine will destroy a "geological lock" that prevents the two faults from moving
at the same time. Bond destroys the bomb, and subsequently kills Zorin.

The Living Daylights (1987)

Timothy Dalton in 1987
Main article: The Living Daylights
Bond aids the defection of KGB officer General Georgi Koskov, by wounding a
female KGB sniper, Kara Milovy, a cellist. During his debriefing Koskov alleges
that the KGB's old policy of Smiert Spionam, meaning Death to Spies, has been
revived by General Leonid Pushkin, its new head. Koskov is subsequently abducted
from the safe-house and Bond is ordered to kill Pushkin.

Bond tracks down Milovy and establishes she is Koskov's girlfriend and that the
defection was staged. He subsequently finds out that Koskov is a friend of the
arms dealer Brad Whitaker. After meeting Pushkin and faking his assassination,
Bond investigates a scheme by Koskov and Whitaker to embezzle KGB funds and use
them to purchase diamonds, which they then use to purchase drugs. After Koskov
purchases the drugs, Bond destroys them. Koskov is subsequently arrested by
Pushkin, while Bond kills Whitaker.

Licence to Kill (1989)
Main article: Licence to Kill
Bond aids Felix Leiter in the capture of drugs lord Franz Sanchez, who escapes
and maims Leiter, killing Leiter's wife. Bond swears revenge, but is ordered to
return to duty by M. Bond refuses, and M revokes his licence to kill, causing
Bond to become a rogue agent. Although officially stripped of his status, Bond
is unofficially given help by Q.

Bond journeys to Sanchez's home in the Republic of Isthmus and is taken-on to
Sanchez's staff, where he manages to raise Sanchez's suspicions against a number
of his employees. When Bond is taken to Sanchez's main base and drugs refinery,
he is recognised by one of Sanchez's men and captured. He escapes, destroying
the refinery in the process, and pursues Sanchez, killing him.

GoldenEye (1995)
Main article: GoldenEye

In 1986 Bond and Alec Trevelyan—agent 006—infiltrate an illicit Soviet chemical
weapons facility and plant explosive charges. Trevelyan is shot, but Bond
escapes from the facility as it explodes. Nine years later, Bond witnesses the
theft by criminal organisation Janus of a prototype Eurocopter Tiger helicopter
that can withstand an electromagnetic pulse. Janus uses the helicopter to steal
the control disk for the dual GoldenEye satellite weapons, using the GoldenEye
to destroy the complex with an electromagnetic pulse; there are two survivors of
the attack, the programmers Natalya Simonova and Boris Grishenko.

Bond investigates the attack and travels to Russia where he locates Simonova and
learns that Trevelyan, who had faked his own death, was the head of Janus.
Simonova tracks computer traffic to Cuba and she and Bond travel there and
locate Trevelyan, who reveals his plan to steal money from the Bank of England
before erasing all of its financial records with the GoldenEye, concealing the
theft and destroying Britain's economy. Bond and Simonova destroy the satellite
facility, killing Trevelyan and Grishenko in the process.

Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
Main article: Tomorrow Never Dies

Bond investigates the sinking of a British warship in Chinese waters, the theft
of one of the ship's cruise missiles, and the shooting down of a Chinese fighter
plane. He uncovers a link to media mogul Elliot Carver which suggests that
Carver had purchased a GPS encoder on the black market.

Bond encounters Chinese agent Wai Lin, who is also investigating the matter, and
the two agree to work together. They discover that Carver had used the GPS
encoder to push the British ship off course and into Chinese waters to incite a
war for ratings. With the British fleet on their way to China, Bond and Wai Lin
find Carver's stealth ship, board it and prevent the firing of a British cruise
missile at Beijing. They blow a hole in the ship, exposing it to radar, leading
to its sinking and thus averting war between Britain and China.

The World Is Not Enough (1999)
Main article: The World Is Not Enough

Bond recovers money for Sir Robert King, a British oil tycoon and friend of M,
but the money is booby-trapped and kills King shortly afterwards. Bond traces
the money to Renard, a KGB agent-turned-terrorist, who had previously kidnapped
King's daughter Elektra. MI6 believes that Renard is targeting Elektra King a
second time and Bond is assigned to protect her; the pair are subsequently
attacked.

Bond visits Valentin Zukovsky and is informed that Elektra's head of security,
Davidov, is in league with Renard: Bond kills Davidov and follows the trail to a
Russian ICBM base in Kazakhstan. Posing as a Russian nuclear scientist, Bond
meets American nuclear physicist Christmas Jones. The two witness Renard
stealing the GPS locator card and a half quantity of weapons-grade plutonium
from a bomb and set off an explosion, from which Bond and Jones escape. Elektra
kidnaps M after she thinks Bond had been killed and Bond establishes that
Elektra intends to create a nuclear explosion in a submarine in Istanbul to
increase the value of her own oil pipeline. Bond frees M, kills Elektra and then
disarms the bomb on the submarine, where he kills Renard.

Die Another Day (2002)
Smiling man with short, tousled hair, wearing white shirt open at collar, and
black jacket.
Pierce Brosnan at the 2002 Cannes for the press conference of Die Another Day
Main article: Die Another Day

Bond investigates North Korean Colonel Tan-Sun Moon, who is illegally trading
African conflict diamonds for weapons. Moon is apparently killed and Bond is
captured and tortured for 14 months, after which he is exchanged for Zao, Moon's
assistant. Despite being suspended on his return, he decides to complete his
mission and tracks down Zao to a gene therapy clinic, where patients can have
their appearances altered through DNA restructuring. Zao escapes, but the trail
leads to British billionaire Gustav Graves.

Graves unveils a mirror satellite, "Icarus", which is able to focus solar energy
on a small area and provide year-round sunshine for crop development. Bond
discovers that Moon has also undergone the gene therapy and has assumed the
identity of Graves. Bond then exposes Moon's plan: to use the Icarus as a sun
gun to cut a path through the Korean Demilitarized Zone with concentrated
sunlight, allowing North Korean troops to invade South Korea and reunite the
countries through force. Bond disables the Icarus controls, kills Moon and stops
the invasion.

Casino Royale (2006)
Main article: Casino Royale (2006 film)

This serves as a reboot of the series, with Bond gaining his 00 status in the
pre-credits sequence. Bond tracks down and kills a bomb-maker and takes his
mobile phone. Searching through the phone, Bond discovers a text message which
he traces to Alex Dimitrios, and then on to terrorist financier Le Chiffre, who
short-sells stock in successful companies and then engineers terrorist attacks
to sink their share prices. Bond foils Le Chiffre's plan to destroy the
prototype Skyfleet airliner, which forces Le Chiffre to set up a high-stakes
poker tournament at the Casino Royale to recoup his fortune. Bond is instructed
to beat Le Chiffre and is aided by a member of HM Treasury, Vesper Lynd.

Bond beats Le Chiffre at the poker table, but Lynd is kidnapped by Le Chiffre
after the game, as is Bond, who is captured while pursuing them; Lynd is
ransomed for the money and Bond is tortured. Le Chiffre is subsequently killed
by Mr. White, a liaison between Le Chiffre and a number of his clients. Bond
learns that his poker winnings were never repaid to the Treasury, which Lynd was
supposed to have done, and establishes that she was a double agent. Bond pursues
her and is attacked by members of White's organisation: he survives, but White
takes the money and Lynd sacrifices herself to save Bond, as he later finds out
from M. Bond subsequently finds and captures White.

Quantum of Solace (2008)
Main article: Quantum of Solace

Along with M, Bond interrogates Mr. White regarding his organisation, Quantum.
M's bodyguard, Mitchell, a double agent, attacks M, enabling White to escape.
Bond traces the organisation to Haiti and a connection to environmentalist
Dominic Greene.

Bond uncovers a plot between Greene and an exiled Bolivian General, Medrano, to
put Medrano in power in Bolivia while Quantum is given a monopoly to run the
water supply to the country. Bond ascertains that Quantum is damming Bolivia's
supply of fresh water to force the price up. With help from Bolivian secret
agent Camille Montes, Bond attacks the hotel where Greene and Medrano are
finalising their plans and leaves Greene stranded in the desert with only a tin
of engine oil to drink. Bond then finds Vesper's former lover and member of
Quantum, Yusef Kabira, bringing him to justice.

Skyfall (2012)
Main article: Skyfall

After an operation in Istanbul ends in disaster, Bond is missing and presumed to
be dead. In the aftermath, questions are raised over M's ability to run the
Secret Service, and she becomes the subject of a government review over her
handling of the situation. The Service itself is attacked, prompting Bond's
return to London. His presence assists MI6's investigation in uncovering a lead,
and Bond is sent to Shanghai and Macau in pursuit of a mercenary named Patrice.
There, he establishes a connection to Raoul Silva, a former MI6 agent who was
captured and tortured by Chinese agents. Blaming M for his imprisonment, Silva
sets in motion a plan to ruin her reputation before murdering her. Bond saves M
and attempts to lure Silva into a trap, and while he is successful in repelling
Silva's assault, M is killed. Bond returns to active duty under the command of
the new M, Gareth Mallory.

Spectre (2015)

Daniel Craig at the Berlin premiere of Spectre in October 2015
Main article: Spectre (2015 film)

Following her death in Skyfall, M sends Bond a posthumous message that leads him
to thwart a terrorist attack in Mexico City. Gareth Mallory takes Bond off
active duty for his illegal operation, but Bond continues his investigation off
the books. The trail leads him first to Rome, where he learns of a sinister
terrorist organisation known as Spectre, and later to Austria. There he finds
former adversary Mr. White, who has become terminally ill after being poisoned
by Spectre. White asks Bond to protect his daughter Madeleine Swann from Spectre
and its leader, Franz Oberhauser, before committing suicide.

Meanwhile, Mallory comes under pressure to have British intelligence join a
global intelligence-sharing network code-named "Nine Eyes". With Swann's help,
Bond tracks Spectre to Morocco and learns that Spectre is behind the terror
attacks, creating a need for Nine Eyes. Spectre controls Nine Eyes, giving them
access to the intelligence-sharing network. Oberhauser captures and tortures
Bond, revealing that his father was Bond's guardian after the deaths of Bond's
parents. Jealous of the attention and care that his father gave to the young
James Bond, Oberhauser faked his own death while at the same time murdering his
own father. Now known as Ernst Stavro Blofeld, he claims responsibility for
everything Bond has suffered in his career. Bond and Swann escape and return to
London where Bond joins forces with Mallory and Q to shut down Nine Eyes and
apprehend Blofeld.

No Time to Die (2021)
Main article: No Time to Die

Five years after Blofeld's imprisonment, Bond is retired and living in Jamaica
when Felix Leiter and his colleague Logan Ash enlist his help in searching for
the missing MI6 scientist, Valdo Obruchev. Bond eventually accepts Leiter's
request and follows his leads about the scientist's whereabouts to Cuba, where
he infiltrates a Spectre gathering. Obruchev realises that it is a trap set by
Blofeld to kill Bond with a deadly virus, but he is working for someone else and
has re-engineered the virus to attack only the members of Spectre. When Bond
brings Obruchev to Leiter, Ash betrays them and helps Obruchev escape, killing
Leiter. Bond returns to MI6 and confronts M regarding the virus, known as
"Heracles," a nanoscale weapon that can be programmed to attack specific people
based on their genetic marker. He then visits Blofeld in prison and is
reacquainted with Madeleine Swann. Swann decides to leave before Blofeld
arrives, while Bond has an altercation with Blofeld, who dies soon after. It is
revealed that when he touched Swann, Bond was infected with Heracles nanobots
that were programmed to kill Blofeld.

Bond traces Swann back to her childhood home where she is living with her
five-year-old daughter, Mathilde. She tells Bond about Lyutsifer Safin, the man
who controls Heracles. After Bond avenges Leiter's death by killing Ash, Safin
captures Swann and Mathilde and brings them to his island, which is the Heracles
factory. Bond works with MI6 to rescue Swann and Mathilde and destroy Safin's
factory with a missile strike launched from a nearby Royal Navy destroyer.
Before Bond kills him, Safin infects Bond with nanobots that have been
programmed to attack Swann and Mathilde. Because of this, Bond decides to
sacrifice himself to save them. After a tearful goodbye to Swann, who confirms
that Mathilde is in fact his daughter, Bond is killed when the missiles
obliterate the factory.

Non-Eon films
The two Bond films from other production companies have a combined gross of over
$200 million (or approximately $871 million in 2020 dollars)

List of non-Eon films
Title Year Bond actor Director(s) Box office (millions) Budget (millions)
Actual $ Adjusted $2005 Actual $ Adjusted $2005
Casino Royale 1967 David Niven Ken Hughes
John Huston
Joseph McGrath
Robert Parrish
Val Guest
Richard Talmadge 44.4 260.0 12.0 70.0
Never Say Never Again 1983 Sean Connery Irvin Kershner 160.0 314.0 36.0 71.0
Total of non-Eon films 204.4 574.0 48.0 141.0
Casino Royale (1967)

David Niven, in Casino Royale
Main article: Casino Royale (1967 film)

Bond is brought out of retirement to deal with SMERSH and is promoted to the
head of MI6 on the death of M. He recruits baccarat player Evelyn Tremble to
beat SMERSH agent Le Chiffre. Having embezzled SMERSH's money, Le Chiffre is
desperate for money to cover up his theft. Tremble stops Le Chiffre's cheating
and beats him in a game of baccarat. Tremble is captured, tortured and killed.
Bond establishes that the casino is located atop a giant underground
headquarters run by the evil Dr. Noah; he and Moneypenny travel there to
investigate. Dr. Noah turns out to be Sir James's nephew Jimmy Bond, who plans
to use biological warfare to make all women beautiful and kill all tall men,
leaving him as the "big man" who gets all the girls. The casino is then overrun
by secret agents and a battle ensues, but the building explodes, killing all
inside.

Never Say Never Again (1983)
Main article: Never Say Never Again

Bond investigates the hijacking of two cruise missiles with live nuclear
warheads which had been taken by SPECTRE. He meets Domino Petachi, the pilot's
sister, and her lover, Maximillian Largo, SPECTRE's Number One, who reports
directly to Blofeld. Following them to France, Bond informs Domino of her
brother's death and subsequently finds his MI6 colleague killed by Fatima Blush,
another SPECTRE agent: Bond kills her. Bond and Felix Leiter then attempt to
board Largo's motor yacht, the Disco Volante (Flying Saucer), in search of the
missing nuclear warheads. Bond becomes trapped and is taken, with Domino, to
Palmyra, Largo's base of operations in North Africa, but Bond subsequently
escapes with Domino. The two agents ambush Largo while he is placing one of the
bombs.

Critical and public reception
Film Critical Public
Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic CinemaScore
Eon films

Dr. No 95% (60 reviews)[56] 78 (8 reviews)[57]
From Russia with Love 95% (62 reviews)[58] 83 (18 reviews)[59]
Goldfinger 99% (69 reviews)[60] 87 (12 reviews)[61]
Thunderball 87% (52 reviews)[62] 64 (9 reviews)[63]
You Only Live Twice 73% (52 reviews)[64] 61 (14 reviews)[65]
On Her Majesty's Secret Service 81% (54 reviews)[66] 61 (12 reviews)[67]
Diamonds Are Forever 64% (50 reviews)[68] 59 (11 reviews)[69]
Live and Let Die 65% (52 reviews)[70] 55 (9 reviews)[71]
The Man with the Golden Gun 39% (51 reviews)[72] 43 (11 reviews)[73]
The Spy Who Loved Me 80% (56 reviews)[74] 55 (12 reviews)[75]
Moonraker 60% (53 reviews)[76] 66 (13 reviews)[77]
For Your Eyes Only 72% (53 reviews)[78] 54 (12 reviews)[79]
Octopussy 43% (49 reviews)[80] 63 (14 reviews)[81]
A View to a Kill 38% (61 reviews)[82] 40 (20 reviews)[83]
The Living Daylights 74% (57 reviews)[84] 60 (18 reviews)[85] A
Licence to Kill 78% (59 reviews)[86] 58 (25 reviews)[87] B+
GoldenEye 80% (85 reviews)[88] 65 (19 reviews)[89] A−
Tomorrow Never Dies 56% (90 reviews)[90] 52 (38 reviews)[91] A−
The World Is Not Enough 52% (145 reviews)[92] 57 (38 reviews)[93] B+
Die Another Day 56% (222 reviews)[94] 56 (43 reviews)[95] A−
Casino Royale (2006) 94% (264 reviews)[96] 80 (46 reviews)[97] A−
Quantum of Solace 64% (299 reviews)[98] 58 (48 reviews)[99] B−
Skyfall 92% (384 reviews)[100] 81 (49 reviews)[101] A
Spectre 63% (367 reviews)[102] 60 (48 reviews)[103] A–
No Time to Die 83% (406 reviews)[104] 68 (66 reviews)[105] A–
Non-Eon films
Casino Royale (1967) 25% (40 reviews)[106] 48 (11 reviews)[107]
Never Say Never Again 70% (53 reviews) 68 (15 reviews)
Awards
In their sixty-year history, the Bond films have been nominated for and won many
awards, including British Academy Film Awards, Golden Globe Awards and Academy
Awards. In 1982, series originator Albert R. Broccoli also received the Irving
G. Thalberg Memorial Award.

Film Awards
Eon films
Dr. No Winner, Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actress at the 21st
Golden Globe Awards
From Russia with Love Winner, BAFTA Award for British Cinematography: Colour at
the 17th British Academy Film Awards
Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 22nd Golden Globe
Awards
Goldfinger Winner, Academy Award for Best Sound Effects at the 37th Academy
Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best British Art Direction: Colour at the 18th
British Academy Film Awards
Thunderball Winner, Academy Award for Best Visual Effects at the 38th Academy
Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best British Art Direction: Colour at the 19th
British Academy Film Awards
You Only Live Twice Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best British Art Direction:
Colour at the 21st British Academy Film Awards
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Nominated, Golden Globe Award for New Star of
the Year – Actor at the 27th Golden Globe Awards
Diamonds Are Forever Nominated, Academy Award for Best Sound at the 44th Academy
Awards
Live and Let Die Nominated, Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 46th
Academy Awards
The Man with the Golden Gun
The Spy Who Loved Me Nominated, Academy Awards for Best Original Score, Best
Original Song and Best Art Direction at the 50th Academy Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Production Design at the 31st British Academy
Film Awards
Nominated, Anthony Asquith Award at the 31st British Academy Film Awards
Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 35th Golden Globe
Awards
Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score at the 35th Golden Globe
Awards
Moonraker Nominated, Academy Award for Best Visual Effects at the 52nd Academy
Awards
For Your Eyes Only Nominated, Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 54th
Academy Awards
Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 39th Golden Globe
Awards
Octopussy
A View to a Kill Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the
43rd Golden Globe Awards
The Living Daylights
Licence to Kill
GoldenEye Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Sound at the 49th British Academy Film
Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Special Visual Effects at the 49th British
Academy Film Awards
Tomorrow Never Dies Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the
55th Golden Globe Awards
The World Is Not Enough
Die Another Day Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 60th
Golden Globe Awards
Casino Royale (2006) Winner, BAFTA Award for Best Sound at the 60th British
Academy Film Awards
Nominated, Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film at the 60th British
Academy Film Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role at the 60th British
Academy Film Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Special Visual Effects at the 60th British
Academy Film Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 60th British Academy
Film Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Production Design at the 60th British Academy
Film Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Editing at the 60th British Academy Film Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Cinematography at the 60th British Academy Film
Awards
Nominated, Anthony Asquith Award for achievement in Film Music at the 60th
British Academy Film Awards
Quantum of Solace Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Sound at the 62nd British
Academy Film Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best Special Visual Effects at the 62nd British
Academy Film Awards
Skyfall Winner, Academy Award for Best Sound Editing at the 85th Academy Awards
Winner, Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 85th Academy Awards
Winner, Best Cinematography Award at the Los Angeles Film Critics Association
awards
Winner, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 70th Golden Globe
Awards
Winner, BAFTA Award for Outstanding British Film at the 66th British Academy
Film Awards
Winner, BAFTA Award for Best Film Music at the 66th British Academy Film Awards
Nominated, Academy Award for Best Sound Mixing at the 85th Academy Awards
Nominated, Academy Award for Best Cinematography at the 85th Academy Awards
Nominated, Academy Award for Best Original Score at the 85th Academy Awards
Spectre Winner, Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 88th Academy Awards
Winner, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 73rd Golden Globe
Awards
No Time to Die Winner, Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 94th Academy
Awards
Winner, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 79th Golden Globe
Awards
Nominated, Academy Award for Best Sound at the 94th Academy Awards
Nominated, Academy Award for Best Visual Effects at the 94th Academy Awards
Non-Eon films
Casino Royale (1967) Nominated, Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 40th
Academy Awards
Nominated, BAFTA Award for Best British Costume Direction: Colour at the 21st
British Academy Film Awards
Never Say Never Again Nominated, Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress
– Motion Picture at the 41st Golden Globe Awards
See also
Bond girl
"Casino Royale" (Climax!), the first live-action adaptation of an Ian Fleming
novel
James Bond music
Outline of James Bond
References and sources
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