James Bond Dr No

James Bond Dr No Filmhandlung und Hintergrund
Nach dem Verschwinden eines britischen Agenten wird James Bond nach Jamaika geschickt, um dessen Verbleib aufzuklären und herauszufinden, welche geheimnisvollen Energiequellen die Flugbahnen amerikanischer Raketen auf Cape Canaveral stören. Bond. James Bond – jagt Dr. No (Originaltitel: Dr. No) ist ein britischer Spielfilm nach der gleichnamigen Romanvorlage von Ian Fleming. Es ist der erste Film von. Dr. No ist die Bezeichnung für. den Roman James Bond jagt Dr. No von Ian Fleming; den Film James Bond – jagt Dr. No; den Dr.-No-Bikini von Ursula. grafik-designer.eu - Kaufen Sie James Bond jagt Dr. No günstig ein. Qualifizierte Bestellungen werden kostenlos geliefert. Sie finden Rezensionen und Details zu. grafik-designer.eu: Finden Sie James Bond jagt Dr. No in unserem vielfältigen DVD- & Blu-ray-Angebot. Gratis Versand durch Amazon ab einem Bestellwert von. Atomwissenschaftler Dr. No will Amerikas Raketenprogramm außer Kraft setzen. Dem ersten „James Bond“-Abenteuer folgten bisher 23 weitere Filme. James Bond – jagt Dr. No. Dr. No. Regie: Terence Young Mit: Sean Connery, Joseph Wiseman, Ursula Andress, Jack Ford, Lois Maxwell, Bernard Lee.

No one who comes to the island is allowed to leave. No, with aid from the Soviets , sabotages the nearby tests of American missiles by jamming their signals and making them land and explode on a different target than that planned.
This forces the Americans to spend time and money redesigning their missiles. He also recovers unexploded missiles from the ocean and turns them over to the Russians.
This was further revealed in Ernst Stavro Blofeld 's master plan using the "three fighting fish" as an analogy; when the Cold War ended, SPECTRE would then engage in sabotage and subversion against the victor, now weakened from the war.
Bond does not actually learn of No's plot until he and Quarrel—with Honey Rider , who would trespass to find shells—had infiltrated Crab Key and been captured.
Bond had gone there after Commander Strangways had disappeared, murdered by No's henchmen. Bond eventually kills No by suffocating him in a mound of guano.
No is a brilliant scientist with an implied Napoleon complex , and an example of the mad scientist trope.
He is a self-described "unwanted child of a German missionary and a Chinese girl of a good family". He later "became treasurer of the most powerful criminal society in China"; in this case, the Tongs.
He specialized in radiation , which cost him both of his hands; they were replaced with crude bionic metal ones. No's hands have great strength he can crush a metal figurine with them but are lacking in manual dexterity which leads to his demise.
He offered his skills and expertise to the Americans, and then the Soviets, but was rejected by both superpowers.
When Bond is sent to investigate the murder of two British agents and any possible connection with recent rocket disasters, No orders several attempts on 's life.
He is particularly displeased with henchman Professor Dent 's failures, such as through the chauffeur Jones.
He gives Dent a venomous spider, which is released in Bond's room whilst he sleeps; however, Bond wakes up, kills it, and lures Dent to a private house, where Dent is interrogated and then shot twice by Bond.
No fails in his own attempts to kill Bond; first, inadvertently, by locking him in a ventilation shaft, which is variously heated and filled with water; and then, deliberately, by beating him with his metal hands.
No captures Bond and Honey Rider when they trespass on his island, and they are put through a decontamination shower since No's henchmen detected radiation on them.
Inviting them to dinner at his private apartment, he offers Bond a position in his organization, but Bond refuses.
Bond escapes through a ventilation shaft and avoiding the obstacles of heat and flooding , and disguises himself with a radiation suit. Bond enters the control area where No and his assistants are preparing to disrupt the launch of an American rocket.
Bond sabotages No's swimming pool reactor , allowing the American missile to launch successfully while No and most of his henchmen do not understand it.
When No observes Bond's sabotage, the two men fight while the personnel flees the imminent explosion. They fall onto a small platform that slowly descends into the boiling coolant of the overheating reactor.
Bond manages to climb out, but No cannot get a grip on the metal framework, due to his metal hands, and is poached alive.
Bond frees Honey from where she has been chained in a room filling with water, and escapes before the reactor explodes. No made several appearances in the cartoon series James Bond Jr.
His skin, however, was rendered bright green similar to the Mandarin in Iron Man possibly due to the chemicals he was exposed to in the film.
Total Film. Archived from the original on 12 June Retrieved 28 January The Independent. The Telegraph. Retrieved 8 April Starlog 68 : The New York Times Company.
Retrieved 14 March Retrieved 16 June The Times. Empire : The Jamaica Observer. Retrieved 2 February British Board of Film Classification. Archived from the original on 19 August Goldfinger audio commentary.
Hunt" 2. Archived from the original on 14 February Sight and Sound. Monty Norman official website. Archived from the original on 9 March Retrieved 28 March Daily Variety.
Official UK Charts Archive. Archived from the original on 11 October Retrieved 30 June Chronicle Books. Winter Archived from the original on 10 April Films in Review.
The Courier-Journal. Daily Express. The Observer. Retrieved 14 October AFI Years Series. American Film Industry. Archived from the original PDF on 20 May James Bond".
Premiere Magazine. The Numbers. Retrieved 1 June James Bond's Top Archived from the original on 27 September Entertainment Weekly.
Archived from the original on 19 January Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 3 March Kennedy Miscellaneous Information". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
Archived from the original on 21 February The 10 best Bond girls". Retrieved 24 February Archived from the original PDF on 16 July Archived from the original on 8 February Retrieved 20 July Retrieved 29 August No; or, unexpected roots for Kubrick's cold war classic".
Film History. Entertainment Weekly : Retrieved 3 July No bikini". First Showing. Retrieved 23 April The Plain Dealer.
Retrieved 1 October Balio, Tino University of Wisconsin Press. Kiss Kiss Bang! Batsford Books. The James Bond Bedside Companion.
London: Boxtree Ltd. The politics of James Bond: from Fleming's novel to the big screen. University of Nebraska Press. Sean Connery; The measure of a Man.
London: Faber and Faber. When the Snow Melts. London: Boxtree. The Music of James Bond. Indiana University Press. James Bond: The Legacy. Bond girls are forever: the women of James Bond.
The James Bond phenomenon: a critical reader. Manchester University Press. Film fatales: women in espionage films and television, — For Yours Eyes Only.
London: Bloomsbury Publishing. University of California Press. My Word is My Bond. London: Michael O'Mara Books.
Guide for the Film Fanatic. Bra: a thousand years of style, support and seduction. The Essential Bond. The James Bond films: a behind the scenes history.
Westport, Conn: Arlington House. The rough guide to James Bond. London: Rough Guides. Bond Films. London: Virgin Books.
Das grosse James-Bond-Buch in German. Berlin: Henschel Verlag. James Bond in the 21st century: why we still need Dallas, Texas: BenBella Books.
James Bond in film. List Production Portrayal. On Her Majesty's Secret Service The Living Daylights Licence to Kill Book Category.
No ; Dr. James Bond Jr. The films of Terence Young. Theirs Is the Glory Films produced by Harry Saltzman. Israel: A Right to Live Categories : films Dr.
No film s action films s spy films s thriller films British films Cold War spy films English-language films Films about amputees Films about terrorism Films adapted into comics Films directed by Terence Young Films produced by Albert R.
Namespaces Article Talk. Views Read Edit View history. Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file.
Download as PDF Printable version. Wikimedia Commons Wikiquote. Harry Saltzman Albert R. No by Ian Fleming. United Kingdom [1]. Wikiquote has quotations related to: Dr.
This is the plane that takes Bond from London to Zurich. Aerospatiale Alouette III. This is the helicopter that takes Bond to Piz Gloria.
Morane-Saulnier MS. This is the plane that intercepts Helicopter bound to attack Piz Gloria [46]. With a crew of British sailors on this naval patrol boat, Felix Leiter finds Bond and Honey adrift at sea in their escape boat and offers to rescue them - but Bond prefers to be left alone with Honey.
A cabin cruiser used as a patrol boat by Dr. No's security force to protect their employer's private island of Crab Key.
This boat appears off shore and strafes the beach where Bond, Honey Ryder and Quarrel are hiding with machine gun fire.
Operated by a fearful Jamaican Captain, this rather unkempt boat provides water taxi service between Kingston, Jamaica , and Crab Key. The main rule for the operation of this boat is that it never makes the trip in daylight — but emergency conditions prompt the persistent passenger, Professor Dent, to ignore this rule at his own peril.
It is seen both as a full-sized prop and as a scale model on a miniature set. Moored to the docks at Dr. No's bauxite mine, this little runabout is commandeered by Bond and used to escape Crab Key with Honey.
Seen both as a full-sized prop and as a scale model on a miniature set, it is featured in the final shot of the movie. This simple motorized dinghy is used by Felix to transport Bond from Kingston Harbor to his rendezvous at sea with Quarrel's boat.
Quarrel and Honey Ryder. Two such simple sailboats one belonging to Honey and one belonging to Quarrel are featured: one to covertly transport Bond and Quarrel onto Crab Key by night and the other to do the same for Honey.
Her beached boat is destroyed by machine gun fire, while Quarrel's which is normally used for fishing trips features in several earlier scenes, as well.
This industrial tug escorts the water taxi up to the bauxite mine docks on Crab Key. It is not a life-sized vessel, but is instead represented by a scale model on a miniature set.
A background vessel prominently visible at Kingston Harbor when Bond meets with Quarrel. Though no name is given in the movie, her real life name was Evangeline and she was owned by the Volusia Steamship Co.
With her name changed to Yarmouth Castle , this ship was lost at sea in a tragic fire 3 years later.
Blofeld 1 holds a planning meeting with Rosa Klebb 3 and Kronsteen 5 aboard this vessel, anchored in Venice Harbor.
For the failure of his plan, Kronsteen is later executed at another meeting aboard this same vessel. She is now named MV Aurora under a new owner.
A public passenger ferry, where Bond and Tatiana Romanova meet while posing as tourists during a sightseeing cruise along the Bosporus.
Fairey Huntress 23 Powerboat. Intended as Red Grant 's escape boat, this craft equipped with extra fuel drums on a modified rack is commandeered by Bond and used as an escape boat for himself and Tatiana Romanova off the Dalmatian Coast.
This scene was quite problematic, because someone put the wrong kind of fuel into the Fairey boats and they kept stalling out during filming. Presumably deployed from Blofeld's yacht, this small craft brings Kronsteen to the meeting aboard the larger luxury vessel.
A small antique motor vessel that carries Bond and Tatiana on a romantic trip along the canals of Venice, Italy in the final scene of the movie.
Though never used by any character in the movie, several of these craft are seen plying the canals as incidental vessels to establish the location of Venice, Italy both at the beginning of the story, proper following the opening action and main title sequences and at the end.
Kerim Bey or British Intelligence. Kerim transports Bond through the ancient underground aqueducts of Istanbul in a small punted dinghy kept beneath the British Intelligence station , to a chamber beneath the Soviet embassy, where they can observe an enemy meeting room by periscope.
Bond and Sylvia relax and prepare to enjoy a picnic lunch in a grounded punting boat alongside a river in a park somewhere in the London area, just before he is called away on his mission by headquarters.
Another couple also passes by on the river in a similar punt. This is the rare Bond movie with no prominent watercraft used or owned by any significant character - though there are a few incidental boats being small rowboats or sailboats seen at the docks where Bond swims ashore to sabotage a Latin American oil storage facility in the pre-credit action sequence and many incidental boats of various recreational types seen in the background off Miami Beach.
With an Italian name that means "Flying Saucer" in English, Disco Volante is a modern, low slung, luxury yacht with a crew of several dozen and many secret features.
The nose section becomes a high-speed hydrofoil , while the unpowered, rear "cocoon" section becomes a weapons platform sprouting hidden machine guns, a light artillery gun in an armored barbette, and a smokescreen generator.
Seen both as a full-sized prop and as a scale model, this vessel plays a key part in Largo's entire plot and escape attempt. The scale model version is destroyed in an explosive crash into a coral islet.
In real life, the hydrofoil section is modified from an Italian-built Rodriquez Cantieri Navali PT 20, with a cocoon section specially built for the movie by the 3M Shipyard of Miami.
Though no name for this ship is given in the movie, her hull number identifies her as the real life HMS Rothesay. While deployed to Bahamian waters, this British warship crewed by actual RN personnel participated in the movie filming for 3 days, appearing as one of the 5 military vessels in pursuit of Disco Volante during the climactic naval chase.
In this capacity, the ship even fires upon the enemy yacht with its main artillery gun presumably loaded with blanks. The film's stars, Sean Connery and Claudine Auger were given a well publicized tour of the Royal Navy vessel at the time.
This identical pair of real life US Coast Guard patrol boats crewed by actual Coast Guard personnel participated in the movie filming as 2 of the 5 military vessels in pursuit of Disco Volante during the climactic naval chase.
Their names are visible on their sterns. This real life US Coast Guard utility boat crewed by actual Coast Guard personnel participated in the movie filming as 1 of the 5 military vessels in pursuit of Disco Volante during the climactic naval chase.
It can be identified by its hull number. This particular boat, however with a prone sailor firing a.
It is probably kept at Largo's Palmyra estate. Another similar water taxi is seen leaving with a load of tourists just as Bond arrives at the dock.
As one of the first jet boats to be marketed, this unique runabout either belongs to Domino or has been provided for her use by Largo.
It is seen when Bond first meets Domino while snorkel diving off the coast of Nassau and is used by her to take him back to shore. She will also lend it to Bond, as it appears in the background when he swims ashore at the Palmyra breakwater, evidently being the vessel that brought him there.
Evinrude Sport Runabout. Paula Caplain, Pinder, British Intelligence or rental. A small, square bowed, outboard runabout that is supplied for Bond's use, possibly by Pinder the British Intelligence Station Chief in the Bahamas or Paula Caplain a field assistant, who also lives there.
It is used by Bond and Paula when they first meet Domino Derval while snorkel diving off the Nassau coast, whereupon Bond transfers from the Evinrude with Paula to Domino's boat.
NOTE: Due to a continuity error, this description applies only to the wide exterior shots - while the studio close-ups in front of a rear projection screen show Bond and Leiter in a slightly different, unidentifiable prop boat.
A tiny runabout, apparently carried by Disco Volante as a dinghy. It is used by 3 of Largo's men in an attempt to run Bond down while he conducts an underwater reconnaissance of the yacht by night.
Hitting something, they believe they have killed him, but have actually only clipped his detached scuba tank with the boat's propeller.
A bright orange, spade-shaped, twin prop submersible with an open 2-man cockpit and a pair of side racks for the underwater carriage of two atomic bombs, designed and built specifically for the movie.
Stowed in a hangar bay aboard Disco Volante and used by Largo's scuba crew every time the bombs must be transported to or from the yacht, it also features handholds for the external carriage of several more divers in addition to the 2-man crew , 6 forward-firing spear guns and 2 headlights.
As such, it also serves as a kind of underwater tank in battle, until captured by US Navy divers allied with Bond. It is incorrectly referred to by Largo as a "submarine", though it is clearly a "submersible".
The difference is that the former is a sealed underwater vessel that stays dry with an oxygenated atmosphere inside, while the latter is un underwater vessel that is open to the sea or fills with water, requiring any crew members to wear scuba gear.
Several small, wedge-shaped, 1-man, motorized aqua-sleds with handlebar controls, for the external carriage of scuba divers, designed and built specifically for the movie.
Stowed in a hangar bay aboard Disco Volante and frequently used by Largo's scuba crew during underwater operations, they also feature twin, forward-firing spear guns and headlights for combat.
During the climactic, underwater battle scene, one of these craft is used by Largo and another two commandeered from the enemy on separate occasions are used by Bond.
A specialized, triple-tanked scuba rig, designed and built specifically for the movie, with a small electric motor for self-propulsion.
Featuring a forward-firing mini-torpedo launcher and a headlight, it leaves a trail of yellow dye in the water, which is supposed to be some kind of underwater concealment device similar to a smoke screen to be deployed against pursuers, but is instead deployed all the time by the Director, just for the look of it.
Issued to by Q in Pinder's British Intelligence station and used by Bond during the climactic underwater battle, it is destroyed when he switches to a miniature re-breather and abandons the larger rig in a shipwreck to lure enemy divers close so that he can drop an underwater grenade on them.
A paddle-powered, commando-style assault raft known in military parlance as a "rubber boat" , used by Leiter and Pinder to deploy Bond into the sea by night for his underwater reconnaissance of Disco Volante.
Oddly enough, they do not wait around to pick him up and he must make his own way back by hitchhiking.
The cable would then be caught in a special fork on the nose of the rescue plane and the rescue subject would be whisked into the air in the harness to trail beneath and behind the aircraft, where a crew in the belly of the plane would snatch the cable with hooks, attach it to a winch, and reel the subject into the bomb bay.
With Domino clinging tightly to him, Bond uses this system to be plucked from the sea in the final scene of the movie.
A giant, two-masted, gaffe rigged catamaran, incidentally anchored near Disco Volante off Nassau. Her name clearly appears on her bow.
First seen by Bond and Leiter by day, it is used by them and Pinder that night for concealment as the insertion point for Bond's underwater reconnaissance of the enemy yacht and he is chased back under it by SPECTRE boatmen afterwards, to again use it for concealment in his escape.
Within the movie, no owner or reason for this vessel to be present other than coincidence is given. However, owned by Tropic Cruises Ltd, and captained by its designer Syd Hartshorne in real life, Tropic Rover was well known for charter tours around Nassau, had been featured in "Life" magazine, and was the largest catamaran in the world at that time.
Two years later in , she ran aground and sank in Nassau Harbor, with no loss of life. A large, old fashioned, two-masted topsail schooner seen prominently in the background when Bond meets Domino off the Nassau coast.
It seems to be plying back and forth all through the filming day, suggesting that its presence must have been arranged with the real life owner by the film makers rather than by incidental coincidence.
Even discounting the possible incidental appearance of this ship, "Thunderball" easily features the most marine vehicles and watercraft of any James Bond film.
This cold war submarine, operated by RN personnel, appears to be on loan from the Royal Navy to British Intelligence for use by M as a mobile headquarters.
Outfitted with an office for the intelligence chief and a reception room for Moneypenny, it bears the fictional pennant number M-1 probably in reference to the boat's temporary assignment to M.
It appears at the beginning of the movie where Bond is secretly taken on board after his falsified funeral at sea, receives his mission briefing, and is deployed ashore to Japan through a torpedo tube , and again at the end where he and Kissy Suzuki are scooped up in their rescue raft by the surfacing sub.
Though given no name in the movie, it can be seen by her pennant number F65 that this is the real life HMS Tenby crewed by actual RN personnel.
It is the warship on which Bond's false funeral and burial at sea are held in Hong Kong Harbor. A commercial freighter ship used by Osato Chemicals for the secret transport of rocket fuel to Blofeld's volcano base.
First seen in an enemy photograph stolen from Mr. Osato's safe, the motor vessel and its cargo are investigated by Bond and Aki at the Kobe Docks in Japan, whereupon Bond is captured and taken aboard to the quarters of Helga Brandt.
It is seen again in a reconnaissance photo, showing by its water line that the cargo has been offloaded.
Ownership of this vessel is unclear, though it seems to be controlled by Mr. The owner may also be some unidentified shipping company that is complicit in the SPECTRE plan, as a preliminary investigation by Tiger Tanaka reveals that the ship has a Panamanian registry which is common for commercial ships from anywhere, as Panama has lenient maritime regulations.
A quaint, old-fashioned, Japanese shuttle boat of wood and bamboo construction with a chugging engine sound.
Disguised as locals among many other passengers, Bond, Kissy Suzuki and Tiger Tinaka travel to the Ama fishing village aboard this vessel.
Small, simple, stern-rowed, wooden boats similar to sampans , used for ama-style pearl diving. Disguised as a husband and wife team in their own such boat, Bond and Kissy Suzuki with he rowing and she diving break away from the rest of the pearling fleet in order to investigate a nearby cave.
The boat is abandoned there when poison gas is detected, prompting the two occupants to dive overboard.
Many bright orange, inflatable life rafts are air-dropped to Tanaka's ninja force by military transport plane as they make their swimming escape from Blofeld's volcano base.
Among this force, Bond and Kissy Suzuki get into their own raft, which drifts apart from the others. Just as the couple starts to get romantic, however, their raft is scooped up on the deck of M's submarine, which surfaces directly beneath them in the final scene of the movie.
Though not used for transport by any character, a small wooden rowboat is seen propped upside-down in the local dry storage method on a Portuguese beach in the pre-title action sequence.
During a fight against several attackers, Bond throws one of his opponents beneath this boat and kicks out the prop stake to trap the man under its hull.
Mountbatten Class SR. N4 Hovercraft Ferry Princess Margaret. Hovercraft are difficult vehicles to classify as they fly at an altitude of a few inches on a cushion of air over flat land or water - qualifying them as water, land, or air craft, simultaneously.
The one in this movie is shown traveling down a concrete land ramp and across the English Channel. N4 Saunders Roe. Nautical 4 , Princess Margaret which, together with her sister craft, Princess Anne , offered ferry service from Dover, England to Boulogne-sur-Mer and Calais, France , operated by Seaspeed from to and thence by Hoverspeed until Her name is visible on her bow, as is the Seaspeed logo.
Driving a commandeered car, Bond takes this ferry from Britain to mainland Europe at the beginning of his mission to Amsterdam.
In real life, the Princess Margaret could accommodate passengers and 30 cars, until modified in to carry more.
The Mountbatten Class is the largest hovercraft of its time and still holds the record for fastest car ferrying trip across the English Channel.
Being vulnerable to high winds, she was blown aground in a accident with the loss of 4 passengers killed.
She is now on display at the Hovercraft Museum in Hampshire, England. A submerged Soviet nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine that is destroyed while underway by Blofeld's laser satellite.
This is not a full-sized vessel, but is instead a scale model on an aquarium set. Though marked with a red star and clearly intended to represent a Soviet submarine, the model more closely resembles a US Benjamin Franklin Class.
A steam powered, turbo-electric ocean liner on which Bond and Tiffany Case travel back to England from the United States and aboard which Mr.
Wint and Mr. Kid make their final attack on Bond. Though the point of departure for this voyage is not specified in the film, it would presumably be New York, as in the book.
She was also pressed into service as a troop transport for the Falklands War between the United Kingdom and Argentina. A Dutch-style, motorized canal excursion boat with a glass top.
To establish the Amsterdam location, this boat is shown on a sight-seeing cruise of the Amstel River. Its female tour guide is heard to express shock as she passes a crime scene where the body of Mrs.
Whistler is being recovered from the water. The name of this real life vessel can be seen on the bow and its company of ownership is printed on the windshield.
A Dutch-style canal boat that has become part of a crime scene along the Amstel River in Amsterdam , Holland.
Though apparently an ordinary civilian vessel rather than a police boat , it has been either commandeered or simply boarded by the Amsterdam police and used as a platform to recover Mrs.
Whistler's body from the water. Its name is visible on the hull. A fictitious, wedge-shaped, one-man mini-sub, designed specifically for the movie.
Here, the long-standing Bond nemesis is presumably killed in this vessel, but his death is left somewhat ambiguous. Probably a non-working prop as it never gets free from its crane hook and is, thus, never shown to operate in the water as a submarine , the bathosub seems to be misnamed, as the word does not apply to any real world type of vehicle.
The closest actual word would be "bathyscaph", which is an entirely different type of underwater vehicle, intended only to go up or down to great depths, with limited lateral movement.
A spherical slightly polygonal watertight flotation device in which a single person can stand or walk on the surface of water.
The walking action turns the sphere much like a hamster wheel , imparting directional motion to it across the water.
Normally a leisure device, the one in the movie is specially equipped with a triple parachute in the fashion of a space capsule.
It is apparently issued to Bond for this purpose by British Intelligence or the CIA with whom he is working closely , or perhaps by the billionaire aerospace industrialist, Willard White, who owns all manner of high-tech equipment and with whom Bond is also working closely.
It is moored along a river in the Irish Bayou of Louisiana during the boat chase sequence. By ramming attack with his own commandeered boat, Bond deflects Adam's out-of-control speedboat into the open bow ramp of the LST, causing the enemy boat to crash and explode inside the assault ship presumably killing Adam in the process.
An old, rusty dredging barge, loaded with painting equipment. In his own commandeered boat, Bond hides behind this barge, from which he grabs a bucket of paint thinner to throw into Adam's eyes in order to blind the pursuing henchman and send his speedboat out of control.
Quarrel Jr. A rather unkempt cabin cruiser operated by Bond's field assistant, Quarrel Jr. The same boat later tows Bond into the air on a hang glider to infiltrate the mansion grounds.
It is again seen at the climax of the story as the scuba diving platform from which Felix Leiter drops Bond and Quarrel Jr.
Several similar cabin cruisers in much better maintenance condition are also seen at the tourist trap dock, where other fishing guides who seem far more enterprising than Quarrel Jr.
A small outboard speedboat, stolen by Bond from Dr. It is this boat modified for ramp stability with two hull rails on the underside and the pilot's seat moved to the center-line that makes the record-breaking foot jump over Sheriff Pepper's police car on a causeway road.
When its engine takes a bullet hit, Bond must abandon the GT for another boat. A small hydro-jet powered speedboat. Moored at Deke Rodger's house along the Irish Bayou, Bond transfers to this boat, which he steals after his original GT is disabled by gunfire, then completes the remainder of the boat chase in it.
The CV survives the chase and is presumably returned to Rodgers after Bond relinquishes it at a Louisiana marina, where Felix Leiter is waiting with a police entourage.
A souped-up hydro-jet powered speedboat, stolen from park ranger, Billy-Bob from a Louisiana Parks and Wildlife station by Kananga henchman Adam, who uses it to pursue Bond in the boat chase sequence.
Among the many craft involved in the chase, it is the last one destroyed, when Bond blinds Adam with paint thinner, sending it out of control.
By ramming attack with his own commandeered boat, Bond deflects Adam's out-of-control speedboat into the open bow ramp of an LST, causing the enemy boat to crash and explode inside the assault ship presumably killing Adam in the process.
A small outboard speedboat, which is one of many that pursue Bond in the boat chase through the Irish Bayou of Louisiana. While trying to follow Bond's stolen boat through a record-breaking jump over a causeway road, this boat is destroyed when it falls short and spears through Sheriff J.
Pepper 's car. A small hydro-jet powered speedboat, which is one of many that pursue Bond in the boat chase through the Irish Bayou of Louisiana.
While trying to follow Bond's boat across a lawn between bends of a river, this boat plows overland through an outdoor wedding ceremony.
It crashes through the wedding cake table, before ending up stuck in a cabana tent. A small outboard speedboat, which is one of the many that pursue Bond in the boat chase through the Irish Bayou of Louisiana.
While trying to follow Bond's boat across a lawn between bends of a river, this boat ends up in the swimming pool of Deke Rodger's elegant estate.
Two of these small outboard speedboats pursue Bond in the boat chase through the Irish Bayou of Louisiana. One is disabled after crashing into a tree, the other is simply outrun by Bond along with Kananga henchman, Adam, who remains in the chase.
Two of these small craft play an active part of the police blockade at Miller's Bridge along the Irish Bayou of Louisiana, during the boat chase sequence.
One is plowed through by Bond in his commandeered speedboat and the other is plowed through by Adam in his stolen speedboat.
Many other small boats are present at the blockade as incidental craft, but no others are directly involved in the action.
The Man With the Golden Gun. A wrecked and partially sunken ocean liner in Hong Kong Harbor, which is being used as a secret base with a refurbished interior by British Intelligence.
As identified in the film dialogue, this is the real-life RMS Queen Elizabeth , the largest passenger ship in the world at that time.
After that, she ran a route from New York to the Caribbean , before being sold to the Hong Kong-based Orient Overseas Line for conversion to a university cruise ship that was to be called Seawise University.
While being refitted for that purpose in , however, the ship caught fire, partially capsized, and sank in Hong Kong Harbor, where she appears in the film.
Eventually, she was declared a shipping hazard and partially scrapped where she lay. What remains still lies buried on the harbor floor.
The cause of the fire remains unknown. A traditional, 3 masted, Chinese junk, modified with motorized propulsion and a modern luxury interior, to serve as Francisco Scaramanga's personal yacht.
It is seen off the coast of Hong Kong , Bangkok , and Scaramanga's private island, where it is used for transport, as a reconnaissance platform to observe Bond's hotel, a safe storage vault for the solex agitator, and for bedroom trysts between the villain and his mistress.
In the end, it is commandeered by Bond and Mary Goodnight for their escape from Scaramanga's island, where it is the scene of a final fight between Bond and Nick Nack.
Though given no name in the movie, this vessel is the real life June Hong Chain Lee, a Malaysian Junk, built in and originally used as a merchant cargo vessel, but now owned by The Junk Worldwide Dive and Sail of Phuket, Thailand , for charter scuba diving excursions.
It is the only operational junk of its vintage type left in the world. A medium-sized hydrofoil ferry configured for passenger service.
Its name is clearly visible along the side of the superstructure. A smallish maybe 23 foot cabin cruiser type police patrol boat with flashing blue lights and the designation "No.
As it turns out, no escape was necessary as Hip turns out to be an ally who was transporting Bond to the ocean liner hulk all along.
Several identical teakwood, canopied, open tour boats with a 20 to 30 passenger seating capacity presumably all belonging to the same tour company can be seen operating along the klongs of the floating market in Bangkok, Thailand.
Though mostly incidental, three of these vessels play a direct role in the boat chase action, with one pulling out of a slip to cut off the chase boat, one containing a little street urchin boy who jumps off and swims to Bond's boat and one containing Sheriff J.
Pepper and his wife May Bell as the passing chase boats splash water on them. A long, canoe-like, six-man, longtail motorboat being a type of Thai motorboat powered by an outboard car engine on a stern tiller mount, turning a screw at the end of a long boom axle.
Moored on a Klong in front of Hai Fat's Kung Fu School, six kung-fu students jump into this boat and give chase after Bond, upon his escape from the school in another longtail.
A ramming attack from Bond's boat cuts it in half and dumps the students into the drink. A short, one-man, longtail motorboat being a type of Thai motorboat powered by an outboard car engine on a stern tiller mount, turning a screw at the end of a long boom axle.
Moored on a Klong in front of Hai Fat's Kung Fu School, Bond steals this boat to escape from the school, whereupon he is taken under pursuit by six kung-fu students in another longtail.
After foiling his pursuers by ramming their boat and cutting it in half, Bond makes good his leisurely escape and presumably abandons his stolen craft, intact, when finished with it.
Due to the torque of their big car engines, these boats are easy to turn in one direction, but hard to turn in the opposite direction when they often over-steer.
Because of this issue, Roger Moore managed to capsize his longtail and dump himself into the filthy Klong water during filming.
A small, simple, open, wood boat, propelled by oars. This little craft, rowed by an unidentified character, drops the mob assassin, Rodney, off at Scaramanga's island in the pre-title action sequence.
A simple, wedge-shaped, flat bottomed, wood boat, common to Southeast Asia and powered by paddle or punting pole.
At the end of the boat chase scene, Sheriff J. Pepper looks on from a dock as a tourist. Just as he recognizes Bond, he is knocked by a baby elephant into the Klong between two of these sampan boats - one of which is occupied by a Thai woman, who giggles at the Sheriff's undignified predicament.
Several similar craft are seen as incidental props all along the Klongs. Though more of a building built on a stationary barge than a true watercraft, the floating Casino de Macau casino is featured in the background when Bond arrives at Lazar's gun shop in Macau.
Later, he enters the presumably same casino while following the trail of a bullet shipment which is passed from Lazar to Andrea at the gaming tables.
At some point, its name was changed to Macau Palace Casino, and the building was rebuilt or renovated to a different appearance.
This new version has been towed to the inner harbor of Macau, where it has been out of business for some time. Though no owner of this establishment is mentioned in the film, all Macau casinos at that time were owned by a monopoly called Sociedade de Turismo e Diversoes de Macau.
A modified Lotus Esprit S1 sportscar that converts into a mini-submarine. During transformation, the wheels retract and the wheel wells are covered over by fairings, fins sprout from the fairings and the dashboard instruments change to a nautical instrument panel all activated by a lever on the floor.
It features tubes behind the rear license plate that spray liquid cement on land and squid-like ink in water activated by a dashboard switch , an anti-aircraft mini-missile launcher in the rear window activated by a stickshift button with a targeting monitor on the center console , a mini-torpedo launcher in the hood activated by a steering wheel button , a mine dispenser in the bottom activated by a dashboard switch and a periscope in the roof which displays its image on a viewscreen near the rear-view mirror.
In real life, there were 6 versions of the Lotus used in filming most of which were normal cars, one of which was modified for the transformation scene, one of which was watertight to emerge from the sea on a cable tow and one of which was a submersible only.
There was also a scale model version for use on a miniature aquarium set in conjunction with a scale model of Stromberg's underwater laboratory.
The submersible or wet-sub was not watertight or pressurized, but filled with water and was operated by two scuba divers — requiring heavily louvered windows to hide the scuba-suited occupants.
It featured four fins, two rudders and four electric motors that could only run forward. Though never mentioned in film dialogue, the submersible version was nicknamed "Wet Nellie" by the film crew after the "Little Nellie" gyroplane in " You Only Live Twice ".
In , this buyer sold it at auction for , pounds to Elon Musk. A gigantic oil supertanker said to be the largest in the western world , which is actually a secret mobile submarine base.
It features an advanced underwater tracking system for tracking submarines , a magnetic field generator for disabling submarines , clam shell bow doors for capturing or launching submarines , and an internal submarine bay capable of accommodating 3 submarines.
It also features armories, missile storage facilities, a mission control room, 3 detention brigs, and a monorail transport system. All this is in addition to the normal ship features such as bridge, crew quarters and engine rooms , which it presumably has, as well.
Owned by Karl Stromberg and operated by an armed crew of hundreds, under the command of an unnamed Captain, this ship serves as the operational base for the villain's plot, and is the primary scene of the movie climax.
The plot involves capturing nuclear submarines, imprisoning their crews, and using their nuclear missiles to provoke WWIII between the US and USSR, in order to destroy the corrupt surface civilization of Earth, so that a new Utopian civilization can be built under the sea.
In the end, it is overtaken in battle by the captive allied submarine crews freed by Bond and is eventually sunk with all hands, due to damage sustained in this battle.
A monorail car of the Liparus' internal transportation system that, when launched out of a hatch in the side of the supertanker, discards its car shell exterior and transforms into a motorboat.
A Liparus guard pilots Karl Stromberg with Anya Amisova as a prisoner from the supertanker at sea to the Atlantis laboratory. It is seen both as a full-sized prop and as a model on a miniature set.
A fictional ballistic missile submarine of the nuclear powered Resolution Class.
Bond escapes through a ventilation shaft and avoiding the obstacles of heat and flooding , and disguises himself with a radiation suit.
Bond enters the control area where No and his assistants are preparing to disrupt the launch of an American rocket. Bond sabotages No's swimming pool reactor , allowing the American missile to launch successfully while No and most of his henchmen do not understand it.
When No observes Bond's sabotage, the two men fight while the personnel flees the imminent explosion. They fall onto a small platform that slowly descends into the boiling coolant of the overheating reactor.
Bond manages to climb out, but No cannot get a grip on the metal framework, due to his metal hands, and is poached alive. Bond frees Honey from where she has been chained in a room filling with water, and escapes before the reactor explodes.
No made several appearances in the cartoon series James Bond Jr. His skin, however, was rendered bright green similar to the Mandarin in Iron Man possibly due to the chemicals he was exposed to in the film.
Julius No also appeared in the video game GoldenEye: Rogue Agent almost-completely unrelated, especially in the meaning of the title, to the film voiced by Carlos Alazraqui.
In the game, Xenia Onatopp works for No and he seems to possess a considerable army of well-equipped henchmen as well as numerous tanks and helicopter gunships that resemble V Ospreys.
He also seems to have soldiers placed on countless rooftops and buildings in Hong Kong. He is electrocuted by his own reactor in a fight with the rogue 00 agent "GoldenEye".
Julius No is also a multiplayer character in the video game From Russia with Love and is a playable multiplayer character in the video game GoldenEye for the Wii.
The character of Dr. No makes a brief appearance in a Heineken beer commercial to promote the release of the twenty-third Bond film, Skyfall.
Later in the book, it is revealed that Bond's mission to stop Dr. No along with Mr. Big is mentioned as being vampire elders killed and drained by the Diogenes Club agent Hamish Bond.
Stuart Smith and his critical attitude towards the government by calling him "Dr. No" was also used as the nickname of Northern Irish unionist politician Ian Paisley , due to his long-standing opposition to making concessions to Northern Ireland's Catholic community and to Irish nationalism.
No" for his frequent opposition to legislation in the United States Congress , particularly bills which would increase federal spending.
This nickname was also given to Representative Ron Paul for voting similarly against many bills, as well as his background as a medical doctor.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Fictional villain in the James Bond novel and film Dr. The Encyclopedia of Supervillains.
New York: Facts on File. Archived from the original on Retrieved Archived from the original on March 3, Retrieved 30 December Retrieved 2 August James Bond characters.
James Bond as literary character and as film character. Wint and Mr. List of recurring characters in the James Bond film series.
Categories : Bond villains Characters in British novels of the 20th century Dr. No film Fictional mad scientists Fictional amputees Literary characters introduced in Fictional Chinese people Fictional German people Fictional mobsters Fictional cyborgs Male literary villains Male characters in film Fictional terrorists Male film villains Action film villains.
Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Articles using Infobox character with multiple unlabeled fields.
Namespaces Article Talk. Views Read Edit View history. Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file. Download as PDF Printable version.
Wikimedia Commons. In the novelisation of GoldenEye it is stated that Bond purchased the DB5 as his own personal vehicle, although the 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 such as a teleprinter disguised as a CD player, and a champagne cooler.
It also appears in numerous other films in association to Bond including a small cameo in Catch Me If You Can where the main character purchases one to be like Bond, Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle in which Bernie Mac 's Bosley drives one and The Life and Death of Peter Sellers 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.
Appears in the pre-credits sequence as Bond makes his escape, where the rear-facing water cannon are activated this gadget was not referred to in Goldfinger , and this fades into the aquatically-themed credits sequence.
On Her Majesty's Secret Service. Aston Martin DBS [25]. 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 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. Seen parked in front of Oxford University and driven by Bond in a transitional scene of Bond arriving at the Ministry of Defence.
The World Is Not Enough. Seen parked in at the funeral of Sir Robert King. A thermal image of the DB5 briefly shown towards the end of the movie.
Aston Martin V12 Vanquish [26]. 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 to right the car when it has 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 and Everything or Nothing Casino Royale. Featured in the second Casino Royale.
The DBS is rolled and destroyed during a high pursuit car chase where swerves to avoid a tied-up Vesper Lynd in the middle of the road.
The DB5 is owned by a gambling villain in the Bahamas, which Bond acquires in a poker game. It has no special modifications. 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.
Two gadgets are shown on this vehicle, the ejector seat and two front-firing machine guns. This is the first time the machine guns have been used in action since 's Goldfinger.
This car is destroyed in the climactic battle scene. Bond absconds to Rome with the vehicle. Gadgets include a rear-facing double-barreled gun sticking out of the Aston Martin badge that Q forgot to load ammo with , a rear-facing flamethrower, and an ejection seat with parachute.
Following a chase and successful ejection, Bond sinks the car in the Tiber. The DB5 from Skyfall is found in Q's lab, in the process of being rebuilt, and is seen completed at the end of the film, to be driven from MI6 by Though the Valhalla will appear in the film, it is not clear which scene it will appear on and who will be driving it.
Also in the trailer, while Bond was being shot at, it was revealed that the DB5 featured guns inside the headlights, and he shot the guys firing at him while performing doughnuts.
Used as a part of General Koskov's defection and escape to Austria. The car has a Vienna-registration, W The car is the ownership of the Audi Museum in Ingolstadt, Germany.
British Intelligence. This was the estate version of the Audi saloon See above. The car's Moroccan. The car ends up flipped over and he continues his escape on a Honda motorbike.
Czechoslovak Law Enforcement. 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.
From Russia with Love. Never Say Never Again. Live and Let Die. Bentley R-Type Continental. These two cars are in pursuit. BMW Z3 [28]. 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 iL [29]. 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.
Cut in half by chopper after firing one shot from a surface-to-air missile SAM. Other gadgets involve a key that can summon the vehicle and a hidden remote control within the steering wheel.
Diamonds Are Forever. Commandeered by Bond at the Port of Dover , after Franks is arrested. The Spy Who Loved Me. Leyland Sherpa van.
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.
Used by Smithers to follow Kamal Khan from Sotheby's. British Government. Appears outside the Blayden Safe House, and in the emergency response convoy shortly after Necros' attack.
Agents follow Bond through Istanbul. Spectre assassin Donald "Red" Grant steals the car and uses it to follow Bond. For Your Eyes Only. Used in major car chase, after Bond's own car - Lotus Esprit Turbo - explodes.
Bond and love interest Malina Havelock are pursued by evil henchmen in Peugeot s. The chase includes a hairpin road, an olive orchard, and a village.
At one point the 2CV is on its side, and is righted by hand. Bond and Havelock dispatch their pursuers with car accidents, and make their escape.
The car is on display at the Orlando Auto Museum in Florida. Strangways is shot in the vehicle by the Three Blind Mice. This was the first vehicle to feature in any James Bond film.
Mr Solo is shot in the backseat by Oddjob and the vehicle is driven to a junkyard and crushed in a baling press.
Note that the vehicle which is crushed is a model. Later in the film a pair a sedan and a convertible bring Bond to the airport on behalf of the U.
Used by Volpe when she drives to the hotel. 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.
Mercury Cougar XR7. Red on Red 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.
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!
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.
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 Galaxie sedan. Ford LTD. Several go in pursuit of Bond in the stolen moon buggy, and are destroyed or damaged in the ensuing chase through the desert.
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. Mercury Grand Marquis stretched limousine. Elliot Carver 's henchmen. Ford Fairlane.
Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor. Ford Mondeo 2. The trio uses a stolen car to get from Havelock's estate to Port Antonio.
Bond rents this car for the purpose of getting from Toronto to Washington. The first car driven by in a Bond movie.
A speedometer close-up is actually from a Ford. Dent drives to the pier when catching the boat to Crab Key to warn Dr.
No of Bond's investigation. Cadillac Fleetwood 60 Special Brougham. Various Chevrolets appear throughout the film; during the car chase down Manhattan's FDR Drive , nearly all the cars which Bond's out of control taxicab encounters are '73 Impalas and Chevelles.
This is a combination of a Chevy Corvette and a Cadillac El Dorado, custom made by Dunham coaches which was known at the time for its customized pimp mobiles.
It is driven in the movie by the Kananga henchmen, Whisper, who fires a poison dart from its side mirror at the driver of Bond's taxi.
Chevrolet Veraneio ambulance. Cadillac Fleetwood 75 limousine. 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.
Is destroyed by a rocket fired from Bond's BMW i in the chase through the multi-storey parking lot.
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.
M 's official car, used in multiple scenes throughout the movie. Last seen driven by James Bond himself, chauffeuring M.
Jaguar C-X75 [31]. Used by Mr. In the car chase, Bond sets the front end on fire by activating his DB10's flamethrower hidden in the exhaust.
M 's car, destroyed in ambush set up by Ernst Stavro Blofeld 's henchmen. Range Rover Classic convertible. Used to tow the horse box containing the Acrostar Jet.
Crashes off the Rock of Gibraltar and explodes in the pre-credits sequence. Used by Bond and Milovy in their escape from the C Hercules shortly before it crashes.
Used to pursue Bond through the streets of Saigon. 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.
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. Land Rover Defender Bigfoot [31]. Range Rover Sport [31]. Discovery Sport.
Lotus Esprit S1 " Wet Nellie ". In this mode, it is equipped with anti-aircraft missiles wherein one was used to take down the chopper hovering above and XXX.
This car is on display in the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu. 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 with a sticker labeled "burglar protected".
The second one is a bronze model driven by Bond at a ski resort in Northern Italy. Contrary to popular belief, [ by whom? Mercedes-Benz Mercedes S.
Mercedes-Benz W After the raid on Kristatos' base in Albania, Locque attempts to escape Bond in the car by driving along a cliffside road.
While driving, he is shot by Bond and loses control, resulting in the car hanging perilously off the edge. Bond kicks the car off the cliff to finish off Locque.
Mercedes SE. 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.
Mercedes S British government. Mercedes S-Class. Upon arriving in Switzerland Bond is picked up with this car. Later they use it to pursue Bond and Tracy.
Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith [34]. Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow [35]. Aristotle Kristatos. The car in the film was owned by producer Cubby Broccoli.
Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. Valentin Zukovsky. Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith. The car, a red and black model, is driven by one of Blofeld's assistants to pick up Bond and Dr.
Madeleine Swann from the train station on their way to Blofeld's compound in North Africa. From Russia, with Love. Bond is picked up with this car at Yesilkoy airport.
Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost. Rolls-Royce Phantom. The Man from Barbarossa. Bond Nobody Lives for Ever. You Only Live Twice. Used by Aki during Bond's time in Tokyo.
This vehicle was unique as the GT did not have a convertible version. Due to his height, Connery could not fit in the car. Toyota removed the roof altogether and sent two cars to the set within two weeks.
Petersburg, when Bond was pursuing this car in a Russian T tank. Petersburg Police. Used to escape from San Monique's police force.
The upper deck of this bus got torn off after Bond drove under a low bridge; the removed upper deck unintentionally came in useful, as a police car crashed into it and then drove into a lake.
Bond steals a buggy with a VW Beetle chassis and drives it through the Nevada terrain, throwing off the cars chasing him.
Honda ATC all-terrain vehicle. BSA Lightning motorcycle. Locque drives this buggy along a beach in Italy and hits Countess Lisl von Schlaf , leaving her dead.
American LaFrance ladder truck. San Francisco Fire Department. International AEC Mammoth Major newsprint lorry. Krebs climbs onto it and cuts the ties securing the rolls of newsprint.
From a View to a Kill. Serves a major role in the plot as Bond disguises himself as a despatch rider in order to get close to the enemy spy. New Holland tractor.
Dodge M43 Military Ambulance. Military ambulance hiding a laser to cut through the doors of Fort Knox. Used by Kamal Khan's men to get rid of the dead bodies.
However, one of the bodies turns out to be Bond who is hiding. Land Rover 90 Lightweight. M5A1 Stuart Tank. TM5 Tank. Used by Bond in a hovercraft-chase in the Korean Demilitarized Zone.
Land Rover Station Wagon. Silver Meteor with diesel locomotive from New York to Miami. Ferrovie dello Stato.
London Underground Stock. Later on, Silva blows up a section of tunnel causing another tube to crash into a subterranean space.
NB: While the train is said to be the District Line in the film, the Stock never served the line in real life and filming took place at Charing Cross , a disused Jubilee Line station.
Hiller UH "Raven" helicopter. Lockheed JetStar [39]. Auric Goldfinger helicopter with atomic bomb. Still flying today [ when?
Aviation Traders Carvair. British United Air Ferries. Avro Vulcan [40]. Two Vulcans were used for filming, XH was used for flying scenes, and XA was used for ground-based scenes.
Both Vulcans were scrapped in 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.
Ireland on June 7, Ken Wallis walked away unhurt. Kawasaki KVII. Lockheed Hercules. 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.
Stolen by Bond escaping from Kananga's henchmen in a chase through Bleaker's hangar. Several other similar aircraft are destroyed in the chase.
AMC Matador — Flying car. The Spy who Loved Me. Bond arrives to meet with the British officials in this Royal Navy helicopter.
Used by Stromberg's personal pilot Naomi to pursue Bond's Lotus equipped with machine guns on the undercarriage. Bond blows it up using a missile launched from his Lotus.
Handley Page Jetstream. Lockheed L Electra. 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" Crashed in IFR weather and destroyed in England while flying too low.
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. Villan Khan, and his goon Gobinda, flee with captive Octopussy in Beech 18; Bond gallops to rescue on horse, leaping to roof of plane, which he rides aloft, through stunts.
Goon comes out to battle him in flight. Bond wins, rescues Octopussy in cliff-hanger finale. Airship Industries Skyship. Eurocopter AS Ecureuil 2.
Hawker Siddeley Nimrod. British Aerospace Harrier T. Fairchild C Provider. 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.
Eurocopter MH Dolphin. Eurocopter AS Ecureuil. Used by Bond to fly to Saint Petersburg. Equipped with a nuclear torpedo. Bond pilots the Albatros in order to fly the torpedo out of the terrorist base so that it won't be detonated by the on-route cruise missile which was launched by the Royal Navy.
Bond utilizes the Albatros' weapons systems in order to facilitate his escape. Bond successfully takes off but he is followed into the air by another pilot also in an Albatros who is in pursuit of Bond and a Dog fight ensues which Bond wins.
Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG Custom Eurocopter AS , equipped with giant saws that dangle from beneath the landing gear.
Originally utilized by King Industries to clear interfering forest brush, a pair are later sent to eliminate Bond. Eurocopter AS Dauphin.
Bond flies back to London whilst on the run after escaping to Hong Kong. Antonov An on the outside, Ilyushin Il when they're in the plane.
It was refitted with two mockup engines on each inner pylon and external fuel tanks on the outer pylons, somewhat anachronistically resembling a B Stratofortress.
This aircraft survives, permanently grounded and repainted plain white, at Dunsfold Aerodrome, England, where all the airfield action was filmed.
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. However, Bond manages to outmanoeuver the SF. Bombardier Challenger AgustaWestland Wildcat.
MBB Bo [45]. Marco Sciarra calls in this helicopter as an escape vehicle. Bond subsequently throws Sciarra and the pilot out and flies it himself.
Britten-Norman BN-2 Islander [45]. Used to chase Spectre agents. Loses its wings and is piloted along the ground for the last stretch of the chase.
Blofeld's escape helicopter. Bond is able to disable one of its engines with small arms fire, and it crashes on Westminster Bridge.
Boeing Stratocruiser. In Goldfinger the final battle is set on-board this plane. English Electric Canberra. This is the plane that takes Bond to Sierra Leone.
This is the plane that takes Red Grant from Crimea to Moscow. Diamonds Are Forever , Dr. Lockheed G Super Constellation. Lockheed L Super Constellation.
Goldfinger uses this plane for air surveillance of Fort Knox. Bond takes this plane to Canada instead of old Stratocruiser.
Sud Aviation Caravelle. This is the plane that takes Bond from London to Zurich. Aerospatiale Alouette III.
This is the helicopter that takes Bond to Piz Gloria. Morane-Saulnier MS. This is the plane that intercepts Helicopter bound to attack Piz Gloria [46].
With a crew of British sailors on this naval patrol boat, Felix Leiter finds Bond and Honey adrift at sea in their escape boat and offers to rescue them - but Bond prefers to be left alone with Honey.
A cabin cruiser used as a patrol boat by Dr. No's security force to protect their employer's private island of Crab Key.
This boat appears off shore and strafes the beach where Bond, Honey Ryder and Quarrel are hiding with machine gun fire. Operated by a fearful Jamaican Captain, this rather unkempt boat provides water taxi service between Kingston, Jamaica , and Crab Key.
The main rule for the operation of this boat is that it never makes the trip in daylight — but emergency conditions prompt the persistent passenger, Professor Dent, to ignore this rule at his own peril.
It is seen both as a full-sized prop and as a scale model on a miniature set. Moored to the docks at Dr. No's bauxite mine, this little runabout is commandeered by Bond and used to escape Crab Key with Honey.
Seen both as a full-sized prop and as a scale model on a miniature set, it is featured in the final shot of the movie.
This simple motorized dinghy is used by Felix to transport Bond from Kingston Harbor to his rendezvous at sea with Quarrel's boat.
Quarrel and Honey Ryder. Two such simple sailboats one belonging to Honey and one belonging to Quarrel are featured: one to covertly transport Bond and Quarrel onto Crab Key by night and the other to do the same for Honey.
Her beached boat is destroyed by machine gun fire, while Quarrel's which is normally used for fishing trips features in several earlier scenes, as well.
This industrial tug escorts the water taxi up to the bauxite mine docks on Crab Key. It is not a life-sized vessel, but is instead represented by a scale model on a miniature set.
A background vessel prominently visible at Kingston Harbor when Bond meets with Quarrel. Though no name is given in the movie, her real life name was Evangeline and she was owned by the Volusia Steamship Co.
With her name changed to Yarmouth Castle , this ship was lost at sea in a tragic fire 3 years later. Blofeld 1 holds a planning meeting with Rosa Klebb 3 and Kronsteen 5 aboard this vessel, anchored in Venice Harbor.
For the failure of his plan, Kronsteen is later executed at another meeting aboard this same vessel. She is now named MV Aurora under a new owner.
A public passenger ferry, where Bond and Tatiana Romanova meet while posing as tourists during a sightseeing cruise along the Bosporus. Fairey Huntress 23 Powerboat.
Intended as Red Grant 's escape boat, this craft equipped with extra fuel drums on a modified rack is commandeered by Bond and used as an escape boat for himself and Tatiana Romanova off the Dalmatian Coast.
This scene was quite problematic, because someone put the wrong kind of fuel into the Fairey boats and they kept stalling out during filming.
Presumably deployed from Blofeld's yacht, this small craft brings Kronsteen to the meeting aboard the larger luxury vessel.
A small antique motor vessel that carries Bond and Tatiana on a romantic trip along the canals of Venice, Italy in the final scene of the movie.
Though never used by any character in the movie, several of these craft are seen plying the canals as incidental vessels to establish the location of Venice, Italy both at the beginning of the story, proper following the opening action and main title sequences and at the end.
Kerim Bey or British Intelligence. Kerim transports Bond through the ancient underground aqueducts of Istanbul in a small punted dinghy kept beneath the British Intelligence station , to a chamber beneath the Soviet embassy, where they can observe an enemy meeting room by periscope.
Bond and Sylvia relax and prepare to enjoy a picnic lunch in a grounded punting boat alongside a river in a park somewhere in the London area, just before he is called away on his mission by headquarters.
Another couple also passes by on the river in a similar punt. This is the rare Bond movie with no prominent watercraft used or owned by any significant character - though there are a few incidental boats being small rowboats or sailboats seen at the docks where Bond swims ashore to sabotage a Latin American oil storage facility in the pre-credit action sequence and many incidental boats of various recreational types seen in the background off Miami Beach.
With an Italian name that means "Flying Saucer" in English, Disco Volante is a modern, low slung, luxury yacht with a crew of several dozen and many secret features.
The nose section becomes a high-speed hydrofoil , while the unpowered, rear "cocoon" section becomes a weapons platform sprouting hidden machine guns, a light artillery gun in an armored barbette, and a smokescreen generator.
Seen both as a full-sized prop and as a scale model, this vessel plays a key part in Largo's entire plot and escape attempt.
The scale model version is destroyed in an explosive crash into a coral islet. In real life, the hydrofoil section is modified from an Italian-built Rodriquez Cantieri Navali PT 20, with a cocoon section specially built for the movie by the 3M Shipyard of Miami.
Though no name for this ship is given in the movie, her hull number identifies her as the real life HMS Rothesay. While deployed to Bahamian waters, this British warship crewed by actual RN personnel participated in the movie filming for 3 days, appearing as one of the 5 military vessels in pursuit of Disco Volante during the climactic naval chase.
In this capacity, the ship even fires upon the enemy yacht with its main artillery gun presumably loaded with blanks.
The film's stars, Sean Connery and Claudine Auger were given a well publicized tour of the Royal Navy vessel at the time.
This identical pair of real life US Coast Guard patrol boats crewed by actual Coast Guard personnel participated in the movie filming as 2 of the 5 military vessels in pursuit of Disco Volante during the climactic naval chase.
Their names are visible on their sterns. This real life US Coast Guard utility boat crewed by actual Coast Guard personnel participated in the movie filming as 1 of the 5 military vessels in pursuit of Disco Volante during the climactic naval chase.
It can be identified by its hull number. This particular boat, however with a prone sailor firing a. It is probably kept at Largo's Palmyra estate.
Another similar water taxi is seen leaving with a load of tourists just as Bond arrives at the dock. As one of the first jet boats to be marketed, this unique runabout either belongs to Domino or has been provided for her use by Largo.
It is seen when Bond first meets Domino while snorkel diving off the coast of Nassau and is used by her to take him back to shore.
She will also lend it to Bond, as it appears in the background when he swims ashore at the Palmyra breakwater, evidently being the vessel that brought him there.
Evinrude Sport Runabout. Paula Caplain, Pinder, British Intelligence or rental. A small, square bowed, outboard runabout that is supplied for Bond's use, possibly by Pinder the British Intelligence Station Chief in the Bahamas or Paula Caplain a field assistant, who also lives there.
It is used by Bond and Paula when they first meet Domino Derval while snorkel diving off the Nassau coast, whereupon Bond transfers from the Evinrude with Paula to Domino's boat.
NOTE: Due to a continuity error, this description applies only to the wide exterior shots - while the studio close-ups in front of a rear projection screen show Bond and Leiter in a slightly different, unidentifiable prop boat.
A large, old fashioned, two-masted topsail schooner seen prominently in the background when Bond meets Domino off the Nassau coast. Lockheed JetStar [39]. In the end, it is overtaken in battle by the captive allied submarine crews freed by Bond and is eventually sunk with all hands, Castiel Engel to damage sustained League Of Justice this battle. We thought it would be fun for him to have some stolen Esc Michael Schulte so we used Goya's Portrait of the Duke of WellingtonFranziska Knuppe Christian Möstl was still missing at the time. Retrieved 1 June Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. James Bond Dr No Navigation menu Video
grafik-designer.eu in 007 James Bond 1962 - James Bond - Dr No -James Bond Dr No - Votiv Kino
Die britische Presse konnte James Bond — jagt Dr. Bühnenbildner Ken Adam schuf trotz dieses niedrigen Budgets eine Reihe futuristischer Kulissen in den Pinewood Studios und leistete damit einen nicht unerheblichen Beitrag zum durchschlagenden Erfolg an den Kinokassen. Januar in den bundesdeutschen Kinos. Bond überlebt weitere Mordanschläge, unter anderem tötet er eine Vogelspinne in seinem Bett. Andererseits waren sie von Anfang an Willens, eine Filmserie zu realisieren. Seit ist der Film auch auf Blu-ray Disc erhältlich. Lester Prendergast. Albert R. No im Stream. Zusammen mit Quarrel fährt er dorthin und trifft dort auf die schöne Muschelsammlerin Honey Ryder, Bening Dr. Mit dieser Rolle konnte Kino-Streamz Hoffmann als Standardsprecher von Connery etablieren und 4 Blocks Staffel 2 Folge 1 dies auch bis zu seinem Tod. Wie viel Geld sie damit verdienen sollten, war ihnen wahrscheinlich nicht mal Hitcher Der Highway Killer Uncut klar. No: Der erste Agententhriller der erfolgreichsten Realistisch der Welt. Der Schotte Sean Connery, der bislang Nebenrollen gespielt hatte, übernahm die Rolle des britischen Geheimagenten mit der Lizenz zum Töten und formte den unverwechselbaren Stil aus mutigem Kämpfer, attraktivem Macho, Frauenheld und cleverem ironischen Spion. This little craft, rowed by an unidentified character, drops the mob assassin, Rodney, off at Scaramanga's island in the pre-title action sequence. Stream Die Unendliche Geschichte release, Kinox Black Sails. Retrieved 23 April Our asylums are full of people who think they're Napoleon. Used by Kamal Khan's men to Die Lage rid of the dead bodies.
Ganz richtig! Mir scheint es die ausgezeichnete Idee. Ich bin mit Ihnen einverstanden.