Sunday, September 11, 2016

The James Bond Movie List

Hello everyone and thank for coming back for another one of my blog entries. Like the James Bond Book List I posted earlier, this is just going to be a quick and dirty list of all of the 007 films, listed in the order they were released, with a couple glowing exceptions: there are 26 James Bond films BUT only 24 of them are by Eon Productions and therefore are considered canon films. The other two will be covered at the end of this post. I will eventually cover all of the movies individually and in depth, so please just use this as a reference.


Sean Connery

Scottish born Sir Sean Connery KBE starred in the original five James Bond films. Originally hesitant about the choice of Connery, Ian Fleming was quite pleased with Connery's performance. So much so that in Fleming's later novels, James Bond was given a Scotch-Swiss heritage. Connery went on to a long, successful career after the Bond films. For those of you keeping tabs, Dr. No is my favorite Bond film. 

Dr. No (1962)
Goldfinger (1964)
Thunderball (1965)

George Lazenby

A lot of things set George Lazenby apart from the other actors who have played James Bond. At 29 years old, he was the youngest to portray 007. As a native Australian, he was the first Bond from outside the United Kingdom. He had also never acted before, aside from modeling. Probably most unique of all is the fact that he only starred in one film. He hated being micro-managed by people who knew the film business and they reportedly said he was a very difficult person to work with. Either way, after deciding not to continue with the Bond films, Lazenby sort of faded away and became a businessman.

On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969)

Sean Connery (again)


He had grown tired of the role and the fact that not a single movie had been completed in time, causing Connery's other commitments to suffer. But with George Lazenby's departure, United Artists was desperate and they wanted Connery back, price was no object. So Sean Connery was paid a then unheard of £1.25 Million pounds to reprise the role. That was more than the ENTIRE BUDGET for Dr. No. He donated a vast majority of his pay to a Scottish charity he founded.

Diamonds Are Forever (1971)


Roger Moore

Picking up from Sean Connery in 1973, Sir Roger Moore KBE went on to play 007 in seven films, spanning 12 years. This makes him the record holder for most films. At 57 years old when License to Kill came out, Moore is by far also the oldest person to play Bond.

Live and Let Die (1973)
Moonraker (1979)
Octopussy (1983)

Timothy Dalton

After Roger Moore was put out to pasture, Eon Productions and United Artists went shopping for a new James Bond. Eventually, they settled on Welshman Timothy Dalton. While contracted for three movies, Dalton would only star in two James Bond films. Before Movie #3 (presumably GoldenEye) could come into being, MGM and United Artists, now merged into MGM/UA planned to sell certain 007 film rights to a French company which touched off a lengthy legal battle and delayed GoldenEye for 6 years, during which time, Timothy Dalton's contract expired.

The Living Daylights (1987)

Pierce Brosnan 

With MGM/UA and Albert Broccoli's legal troubles behind them it was time to make another Bond film. Enter Irishman Pierce Brosnan OBE. Originally considered for The Living Daylights before losing out to Dalton (partly due to scheduling issues) Brosnan was tapped in 1995 to be the new James Bond and went on to be one of the best.

GoldenEye (1995)

Daniel Craig

And last but not least, we come to Daniel Craig. To date, Craig has starred in four James Bond films. Craig's Bond has been extremely popular and has served to "reboot" the series. His future as James Bond is currently up in the air. Everyone wants him to stay, but he has stated that the James Bond films simply take him away from his family to much. In an attempt to rectify this, Eon executives have reportedly offered to shoot the next two Bond films back to back, making the production time significantly shorter.

Casino Royale (2006)
Skyfall (2012)
Spectre (2015)

The Non-Eon Films

Due to the sale of rights to Casino Royal, as well as collaboration, which gave the rights to Thunderball to another non-Eon entity, there were two independent films released. Casino Royal was a comedy, while Never Say Never Again was a rehashing of Thunderball with Sean Connery reprising the role of James Bond. I'll speak more about these in a separate, more specific article.


Casino Royale (1967, starring David Nevin)
Never Say Never Again (1983, starring Sean Connery)

No comments:

Post a Comment