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Dr. No (film)

Dr. No is a 1962 spy film directed by Terence Young. It is the first film in the James Bond series. Starring Sean Connery, Ursula Andress, Joseph Wiseman and Jack Lord, it was adapted by Richard Maibaum, Johanna Harwood, and Berkely Mather from the 1958 novel of the same name by Ian Fleming. The film was produced by Harry Saltzman and Albert R. Broccoli, a partnership that continued until 1975. It was followed by From Russia with Love in 1963. In the film, James Bond is sent to Jamaica to investigate the disappearance of a fellow British agent. The trail leads him to the underground base of Dr. Julius No, who is plotting to disrupt an early American space launch from Cape Canaveral with a radio beam weapon.

Dr. No
British theatrical release poster by Mitchell Hooks
Directed byTerence Young
Screenplay by
Based onDr. No
by Ian Fleming
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyTed Moore
Edited byPeter R. Hunt
Music byMonty Norman
Production
company
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release dates
    • 5 October 1962 (1962-10-05) (United Kingdom)
    • 8 May 1963 (1963-05-08) (United States)
Running time
109 minutes
Countries
  • United Kingdom[1]
  • United States[2]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.1 million (£392,022[3])[4]
Box office$59.5 million

Although it was the first of the Bond books to be made into a film, Dr. No was the sixth of Fleming's series, beginning with Casino Royale. The film makes a few references to threads from earlier books, and later books in the series as well, such as the criminal organisation SPECTRE, which was not introduced until the 1961 novel Thunderball. Produced on a low budget, Dr. No was a financial success. While the film received a mixed critical reaction upon release, it has gained a reputation over time as one of the series' best instalments. Dr. No also launched a genre of secret agent films that flourished in the 1960s. The film spawned a comic book adaptation and soundtrack album as part of its promotion and marketing.

Many aspects of a typical James Bond film were established in Dr. No. The film begins with an introduction to the character through the view of a gun barrel and a highly stylised main title sequence, both of which were created by Maurice Binder.[5] It also introduced the iconic theme music. Production designer Ken Adam established an elaborate visual style that is one of the hallmarks of the film series.

Plot edit

John Strangways, the Station Chief of MI6 in Jamaica, is murdered, along with his secretary Mary, by a trio of assassins before his home is ransacked. When news of Strangways' death reaches M, the head of MI6, he assigns intelligence officer James Bond to investigate the matter, and determine if it is related to Strangways' cooperation with the CIA on a case involving the disruption of rocket launches from Cape Canaveral by radio jamming. When Bond arrives in Jamaica, he is accosted by a man claiming to be a chauffeur sent to collect him, but is really an enemy agent sent to kill him. Bond turns the tables on the agent, but before he can interrogate him, the agent kills himself by biting into a cyanide-laced cigarette. After visiting government headquarters, Bond asks principal secretary Pleydell Smith to set up a meeting with those who saw Strangways last, which includes Professor Dent. Later visiting Strangways' house Bond finds a receipt from Dent and a picture of Strangways and Quarrel, a man whom tailed Bond from the airport earlier. When Bond confronts Quarrel it is revealed that he is aiding the CIA and he introduces Bond to their agent Felix Leiter, who is also investigating Strangways' death.

Bond learns from Felix that the CIA traced the radio jamming signal to Jamaica (which was a British colony until 1962), and that Strangways was helping to pinpoint its exact origin. Quarrel reveals that before Strangways died, the pair collected mineral samples from an island called Crab Key, where people are forbidden to go. Bond visits Dent, inquiring about the samples and Crab Key, but is suspicious of his answers when he claims the samples checked out as normal. Following the meeting, Dent travels to Crab Key to meet its reclusive owner, for whom he works, to inform him of Bond's visit. Under strict instructions, Dent attempts to have Bond killed with a tarantula. However, Bond kills the spider and sets a trap for Dent. Bond turns the tables on the three blind mice assassins, then has Pleydell Smith's corrupt secretary Miss Taro arrested as well. When the geologist arrives, Bond holds him at gunpoint, revealing Dent lied about the samples being radioactive and his involvement in Strangways’ murder, then kills him.

After checking Quarrel's boat with a Geiger counter, Bond determines that Strangways must have suspected that the radio jamming was coming from Crab Key, and so persuades Quarrel to take him out there. The following day, after arriving, Bond meets Honey Ryder, a shell diver. When armed guards arrive in a boat, Bond and Quarrel take Ryder with them and escape into the swamp. At nightfall, the group encounter a flame tank disguised as a dragon to deter locals, which kills Quarrel. Bond and Ryder are captured and taken to a hidden base, whereupon they are swiftly put into decontamination due to the swamp being contaminated with radioactivity. After being led to private quarters set up for them, they are rendered unconscious with drugged coffee.

Upon awakening, the pair are escorted to dine with the base's owner, Dr. Julius No: a Chinese-German criminal scientist who has prosthetic metal hands due to radiation exposure. Bond learns that No was a former member of a Chinese crime organization tong, until he stole $10 million in gold, and now works for the secret organisation SPECTRE (Special Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, and Extortion). The radio jamming being conducted by No is being planned to disrupt the Project Mercury space launch at Cape Canaveral using a radio beam, which he states will be a demonstration of SPECTRE's power. When Bond refuses to join SPECTRE, No has Ryder taken away and Bond beaten and imprisoned. However, Bond manages to escape his cell through an air vent and disguises himself as a worker, before infiltrating the base's control centre.

Bond discovers that the radio beam being prepared to disrupt the launch is powered by a nuclear pool reactor, and overloads it as the launch commences. Dr. No attempts to stop him, but falls into the reactor pool and is boiled to death. As the base's personnel evacuate, Bond frees Ryder before the two escape the island by boat, moments before the base is destroyed. Felix finds the pair adrift at sea after their boat runs out of fuel, and has them towed to safety by a Royal Navy ship. However, as Ryder passionately kisses him, Bond lets go of the tow rope to embrace her.

Cast edit

Additional cast members include Lester Pendergast as Quarrel's friend Puss Feller, William Foster-Davis as Police Superintendent Duff, Dolores Keator as Strangways' personal assistant Mary Trueblood, and Anthony Chinn as Chen, one of No's lab technicians who was impersonated by Bond. Byron Lee and the Dragonaires appear as themselves, performing at Puss Feller's nightclub. Milton Reid, who later acted in The Spy Who Loved Me, appears as one of Dr. No's guards.

Production edit

Ian Fleming first wrote Dr. No as a television outline for film producer Henry Morgenthau III to promote the Jamaican tourism industry.[9] After this project fell through Fleming began meeting with Canadian film producer Harry Saltzman about making a screen adaptation. Although Fleming was not a fan of the "kitchen-sink realist" genre Saltzman was known for producing, after seeing Saturday Night and Sunday Morning Fleming sold him the rights to all of the James Bond novels except Casino Royale and Thunderball for $50,000.[9] After Saltzman gained the rights for the novel, he initially had trouble financing the project. Screenwriter Wolf Mankowitz introduced Saltzman to Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli, who wanted the rights to the novels and attempted to buy them from Saltzman. Saltzman did not want to sell the rights to Broccoli and instead, they formed a partnership to make the films. A number of Hollywood film studios did not want to fund the films, finding them "too British" or "too blatantly sexual".[10] Eventually the two received authorisation from United Artists to produce Dr. No, to be released in 1962. Saltzman and Broccoli created two companies: Danjaq, which was to hold the rights to the films, and Eon Productions, which was to produce them.[11] The partnership between Broccoli and Saltzman lasted until 1975 when tensions during the filming of The Man with the Golden Gun led to an acrimonious split and Saltzman sold his shares of Danjaq to United Artists.[12]

Initially Broccoli and Saltzman had wanted to produce the eighth Bond novel, 1961's Thunderball, as the first film, but there was an ongoing legal dispute between the screenplay's co-author, Kevin McClory, and Ian Fleming. As a result, Broccoli and Saltzman chose Dr. No:[13] the timing was apposite, with claims that American rocket testing at Cape Canaveral had problems with rockets going astray.[14]

The producers' first choice for the director was Phil Karlson, who asked for too high a salary.[9] They offered Dr. No to Guy Green, Guy Hamilton, Val Guest[15] and Ken Hughes to direct, but all of them turned it down. They finally signed Terence Young who had a long background with Broccoli's Warwick Films as the director. Broccoli and Saltzman felt that Young would be able to make a real impression of James Bond and transfer the essence of the character from book to film. Young imposed many stylistic choices for the character which continued throughout the film series.[11] Young also decided to inject much humour, as he considered that "a lot of things in this film, the sex, and violence, and so on if played straight, a) would be objectionable, and b) we're never gonna go past the censors; but the moment you take the mickey out, put the tongue out in the cheek, it seems to disarm."[16]

The producers asked United Artists for financing, but the studio would only put up $1 million. Later, the UK arm of United Artists provided an extra $100,000 to create the climax where Dr. No's base explodes.[17] As a result of the low budget, only one sound editor was hired (normally there are two, one for sound effects and another for dialogue),[18] and many pieces of scenery were made in cheaper ways, with M's office featuring cardboard paintings and a door covered in a leather-like plastic, the room where Dent meets Dr. No costing only £745 to build,[19] and the aquarium in Dr. No's base being magnified stock footage of goldfish.[20] Furthermore, when art director Syd Cain found out his name was not in the credits, Broccoli gave him a golden pen to compensate, saying that he did not want to spend money making the credits again.[21] Production designer Ken Adam later told UK daily newspaper The Guardian in 2005:

The budget for Dr No was under $1m for the whole picture. My budget was £14,500. I filled three stages at Pinewood full of sets while they were filming in Jamaica. It wasn't a real aquarium in Dr. No's apartment. It was a disaster to tell you the truth because we had so little money. We decided to use a rear-projection screen and get some stock footage of fish. What we didn't realise was because we didn't have much money the only stock footage they could buy was of goldfish-sized fish, so we had to blow up the size and put a line in the dialogue with Bond talking about the magnification. I didn't see any reason why Dr. No shouldn't have good taste so we mixed contemporary furniture and antiques. We thought it would be fun for him to have some stolen art so we used Goya's Portrait of the Duke of Wellington, which was still missing at the time. I got hold of a slide from the National Gallery – this was on the Friday, shooting began on the Monday – and I painted a Goya over the weekend. It was pretty good so they used it for publicity purposes but, just like the real one, it got stolen while it was on display.[22]

Writing edit

Broccoli had originally hired Richard Maibaum and his friend Wolf Mankowitz to write Dr. No's screenplay, partly because of Mankowitz's help in brokering the deal between Broccoli and Saltzman.[23] They wanted to rewrite the character of Dr. No since they saw him as little more than a "Fu Manchu with steel hooks".[9] An initial draft of the screenplay was rejected because the scriptwriters had made the villain, Dr. No, a marmoset.[24][25] Mankowitz left the film, and Maibaum then undertook a second version of the story, more closely in line with the novel. Mankowitz eventually had his name removed from the credits after viewing early rushes, as he feared it would be a disaster.[11] Johanna Harwood and thriller writer Berkely Mather then worked on Maibaum's script.[26] Terence Young described Harwood as a script doctor who helped put elements more in tune with a British character.[17] Harwood stated in an interview in a Cinema Retro special on the making of the film that she had been a screenwriter of several of Harry Saltzman's projects; she said both her screenplays for Dr. No and her screenplay for From Russia with Love had followed Fleming's novels closely.[27]

During the series' decades-long history only a few of the films have remained substantially true to their source material; Dr. No has many similarities to the novel and follows its basic plot, but there are a few notable omissions. Major elements from the novel that are missing from the film include Bond's fight with a giant squid, and the escape from Dr. No's complex using the dragon-disguised swamp buggy. Elements of the novel that were significantly changed for the film include the use of a (non-venomous) tarantula spider instead of a centipede; Dr. No's secret complex being disguised as a bauxite mine instead of a guano quarry; Dr. No's plot to disrupt NASA space launches from Cape Canaveral using a radio beam instead of disrupting US missile testing on Turks Island; the method of Dr. No's death by boiling in overheating reactor coolant rather than a burial under a chute of guano, and the introduction of SPECTRE, an organisation that was not to be introduced in the books until Thunderball.[25] The introduction of Dr. No's disruptions of NASA launches was added because of a perception that the United States was falling behind the Soviet Union in the Space Race. Additionally, although the series would be associated with the Cold War, Saltzman and Broccoli introduced SPECTRE as a substitute for the Soviet Union to avoid commenting on the international political situation.[9] Components absent from the novel but added to the film include the introduction of the Bond character in a gambling casino, the introduction of Bond's semi-regular girlfriend Sylvia Trench, a fight scene with an enemy chauffeur, a fight scene to introduce Quarrel, the seduction of Miss Taro, Bond's recurring CIA ally Felix Leiter, Dr. No's partner in crime Professor Dent, and Bond's controversial cold-blooded killing of this character.[25]

Sometimes episodes in the novel retained in the film's altered narrative introduce elements of absurdity into the plot. Bond's "escape" from his cell via the air shaft, for instance, originally conceived as a ruse of Dr. No's to test Bond's skill and endurance, becomes an authentic break-out in the film. Features carried over from the novel's obstacle course, however, such as the torrent of water and scalding surface, have no logical justification in the script. Such incongruities recurred in subsequent Bond films.[25]

Casting edit

James Bond edit

While producers Broccoli and Saltzman originally sought Cary Grant for the role, they discarded the idea as Grant would be committed to only one feature film, and the producers decided to go after someone who could be part of a series.[11] Richard Johnson has claimed to have been the first choice of the director, but he turned it down because he already had a contract with MGM and was intending to leave.[28] Another actor purported to have been considered for the role was Patrick McGoohan on the strength of his portrayal of spy John Drake in the television series Danger Man: McGoohan turned down the role.[29] Another potential Bond included David Niven, who later played the character in the 1967 parody Casino Royale.[30]

There are several apocryphal stories as to whom Ian Fleming personally wanted. Reportedly, Fleming favoured actor Richard Todd.[31] Fleming's stepson Paul Morgan claims that Fleming preferred Edward Underdown.[9] In his autobiography When the Snow Melts, Cubby Broccoli said Roger Moore had been considered, but had been thought "too young, perhaps a shade too pretty".[32] In his autobiography, My Word Is My Bond, Moore says he was never approached to play the role of Bond until 1972, for Live and Let Die.[33] Moore appeared as Simon Templar on the television series The Saint, airing in the United Kingdom for the first time on 4 October 1962, only one day before the premiere of Dr. No.[34]

Ultimately, the producers turned to 31-year-old Sean Connery for five films.[11] It is often reported that Connery won the role through a contest set up to "find James Bond". While this is untrue, the contest itself did exist, and six finalists were chosen and screen-tested by Broccoli, Saltzman, and Fleming. The winner of the contest was a 28-year-old model named Peter Anthony, who, according to Broccoli, had a Gregory Peck quality, but proved unable to cope with the role.[35] When Connery was invited to meet Broccoli and Saltzman he appeared scruffy and in unpressed clothes, but Connery "put on an act and it paid off" as he acted in the meeting with a macho, devil-may-care attitude.[36] When he left, both Saltzman and Broccoli watched him through the window as he went to his car, both agreeing that he was the right man for Bond.[37] After Connery was chosen, Terence Young took the actor to his tailor and hairdresser,[38] and introduced him to the high life, restaurants, casinos and women of London. In the words of Bond writer Raymond Benson, Young educated the actor "in the ways of being dapper, witty, and above all, cool".[39] The casting was announced on November 3, 1961.[9]

Secondary cast edit

For the first Bond girl Honey Ryder, Julie Christie was considered, but discarded as the producers felt she was not voluptuous enough.[40] Martine Beswick was also rejected for being too inexperienced as an actress while Gabriella Licudi was rejected as too young.[9] Just two weeks before filming began, Ursula Andress was chosen to play Honey after the producers saw a picture of her taken by Andress' then-husband John Derek.[11] Kirk Douglas persuaded Andress to take the part at a party hosted by Derek.[9] To appear more convincing as a Jamaican, Andress had a tan painted on her and ultimately had her lines redubbed by voice actress Nikki van der Zyl due to Andress' heavy Swiss-German accent.[11] For Bond's antagonist Dr. No, Ian Fleming wanted his friend Noël Coward, and Coward answered the invitation with "No! No! No!"[41] Fleming considered that his step-cousin, Christopher Lee, would be good for the role of Dr. No, although, by the time Fleming told the producers, they had already chosen Joseph Wiseman for the part.[42] Harry Saltzman picked Wiseman because of his performance in the 1951 film Detective Story,[43] and the actor had special make-up applied to evoke No's Chinese heritage.[11] Swedish actor Max von Sydow was also offered the role as Dr. No, but turned it down. He was later to appear as Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the unofficial James Bond film Never Say Never Again.[44]

The role as the first Felix Leiter was given to Jack Lord. This is Bond and Leiter's first time meeting each other on film and Leiter does not appear in the novel. Leiter returns for many of Bond's future adventures and in the 2006 reboot of the film series, Casino Royale, Leiter and Bond are seen meeting one another again for the first time. This was Lord's only appearance as Leiter, as he asked for more money and a better billing to return as Leiter in Goldfinger and was subsequently replaced.[45]

The cast also included a number of actors who were to become stalwarts of the future films, including Bernard Lee, who played Bond's superior M for another ten films, and Lois Maxwell, who played M's secretary Moneypenny in fourteen instalments of the series.[46] Maxwell received the part after beginning to look for film roles to support her family when her husband Peter Marriot suffered from a severe heart attack and was expected to die.[9] Lee was chosen because of being a "prototypical father figure",[47] and Maxwell after Fleming thought she was the perfect fit for his description of the character.[48] Maxwell was initially offered a choice between the roles of Moneypenny or Sylvia Trench and opted for Moneypenny as she thought the Trench role, which included appearing in immodest dress, was too sexual.[49][50] Eunice Gayson was cast as Sylvia Trench and it was planned that she would be a recurring girlfriend for Bond throughout six films,[38] although she appeared only in Dr. No and From Russia with Love. She had been given the part by director Terence Young, who had worked with her in Zarak and invited Gayson saying "You always bring me luck in my films",[51] although she was also cast due to her voluptuous figure. One role which was not given to a future regular was that of Major Boothroyd, the head of Q-Branch, which was given to Peter Burton. Burton was unavailable for the subsequent film, From Russia with Love, and the role was taken by Desmond Llewelyn.[52][53]

Anthony Dawson, who played Professor Dent, met director Terence Young when he was working as a stage actor in London, but by the time of the film's shooting Dawson was working as a pilot and crop duster in Jamaica.[17] Dawson also portrayed Ernst Stavro Blofeld, head of SPECTRE, in From Russia with Love and Thunderball, although his face was never seen and his voice was redubbed by Austrian actor Eric Pohlmann.[54][55] Zena Marshall, who played Miss Taro, was mostly attracted by the humorous elements of the script,[56] and described her role as "this attractive little siren, and at the same time I was the spy, a bad woman",[57] whom Young asked to play "not as Chinese, but a Mid-Atlantic woman who men dream about but is not real".[58] The role of Taro was previously rejected by Marguerite LeWars, the Miss Jamaica 1961 who worked at the Kingston airport, as it required being "wrapped in a towel, lying in a bed, kissing a strange man". Talitha Pol, Lina Margo, and Violet Marceau were also considered for the part.[9]

Filming edit

 
Dr. No's lair was this bauxite terminal near Oracabessa, Jamaica

Dr. No is set in London, Jamaica, and Crab Key, a fictional island off Jamaica.[59] Filming began on location at Palisaodes Airport in Kingston, Jamaica, on 16 January 1962.[9] The primary scenes there were the exterior shots of Crab Key and Kingston, where an uncredited Syd Cain acted as art director and also designed the Dragon Tank.[60] Shooting took place a few yards from Fleming's Goldeneye estate, and the author regularly visited the filming with friends.[61] Location filming was largely in Oracabessa, with additional scenes on the Palisadoes strip and Port Royal in St Andrew.[62] On 21 February, production left Jamaica with footage still unfilmed due to a change of weather.[17] Five days later, filming began at Pinewood Studios, Buckinghamshire, England, with sets designed by Ken Adam, which included Dr. No's base, the ventilation duct and the interior of the British Secret Service headquarters. The studio was used on the majority of later Bond films.[11] Adam's initial budget for the entire film was just £14,500 (£329,095 in 2021[63]), but the producers were convinced to give him an extra £6,000 out of their own finances.

After 58 days of filming, principal photography was completed on 30 March 1962.[64] Filmmaker Brian Trenchard-Smith, who visited Pinewood with his Wellington College film society during the shooting of the film, noted that Bond's awakening and first sighting of Honey was a pick-up shot filmed in a ten-foot-long space on an otherwise empty soundstage, and that Adam's set for the nuclear reactor was "a lot smaller than it looks on the screen. That opened my eyes to the power of lenses when I saw the finished movie a year later."[65] Costume designer Tessa Prendergast designed Honey's bikini from a British Army webbing belt.[9]

The scene where a tarantula walks over Bond was initially shot by pinning a bed to the wall and placing Sean Connery over it, with a protective glass between him and the spider. Director Young did not like the final results, so the scenes were interlaced with new footage featuring the tarantula over stuntman Bob Simmons.[17] Simmons, who was uncredited for the film, described the scene as the most frightening stunt he had ever performed.[66] In line with the book, a scene was to feature Honey tied to the ground and left to be attacked by crabs, but since the crabs were sent frozen from the Caribbean, they moved little during filming, so the scene was altered to have Honey slowly drowning.[11] Simmons also served as the film's fight choreographer, employing a rough fighting style. The noted violence of Dr. No, which also included Bond shooting Dent in cold blood, caused producers to make adaptations to get an "A" rating – allowing minors to enter accompanied by an adult – from the British Board of Film Classification.[67]

When Bond is about to have dinner with Dr. No, he is amazed to see Goya's Portrait of the Duke of Wellington. The painting had been stolen from the National Gallery by a 60-year-old amateur thief in London just before filming began.[68] Ken Adam had contacted the National Gallery in London to obtain a slide of the picture, painting the copy over the course of the weekend, prior to filming commencing on the following Monday.[20]

Editor Peter R. Hunt used an innovative editing technique, with extensive use of quick cuts, and employing fast motion and exaggerated sound effects on the action scenes.[69] Hunt said his intention was to "move fast and push it along the whole time, while giving it a certain style",[70] and added that the fast pacing would help audiences not notice any writing problems.[17] As title artist Maurice Binder was creating the credits, he had an idea for the introduction that appeared in all subsequent Bond films, the James Bond gun barrel sequence. It was filmed in sepia by putting a pinhole camera inside an .38 calibre gun barrel, with Bob Simmons playing Bond.[11] Binder also designed a highly stylised main title sequence, a theme that has been repeated in the subsequent Eon-produced Bond films.[71] Binder's budget for the title sequence was £2,000 (£45,392 in 2021[63]).[72]

Soundtrack edit

Monty Norman was invited to write the film score because Broccoli liked his work on the 1961 theatre production Belle, a musical about murderer Hawley Harvey Crippen.[73] Norman was busy with musicals, and only agreed to do the music for Dr. No after Saltzman allowed him to travel along with the crew to Jamaica.[74] The most famous composition in the soundtrack is the "James Bond Theme", which is heard in the gun barrel sequence and in a calypso medley over the title credits, and was written by Norman based on a previous composition of his. John Barry, who would later go on to compose the music for eleven Bond films, arranged the Bond theme but was uncredited—except for the credit of his orchestra playing the final piece. It has occasionally been suggested that Barry, not Norman, composed the "James Bond Theme". This argument has been the subject of two court cases, the most recent in 2001, which found in favour of Norman.[75] The theme, as written by Norman and arranged by Barry, was described by another Bond film composer, David Arnold, as "bebop-swing vibe coupled with that vicious, dark, distorted electric guitar, definitely an instrument of rock 'n' roll ... it represented everything about the character you would want: It was cocky, swaggering, confident, dark, dangerous, suggestive, sexy, unstoppable. And he did it in two minutes."[76]

The music for the opening scene is a calypso version of the nursery rhyme "Three Blind Mice", with new lyrics to reflect the intentions of the three assassins hired by Dr. No.[73] Other notable songs in the film are the song "Jump Up",[77] played in the background, and the traditional Jamaican calypso "Under the Mango Tree", famously sung by Diana Coupland (then Norman's wife), the singing voice of Honey Ryder, as she walked out of the ocean on Crab Key.[73] Byron Lee & the Dragonaires appeared in the film performing "Jump Up" and also performed some of the music on the later soundtrack album.[77] Lee and other Jamaican musicians who appear in the soundtrack, including Ernest Ranglin and Carlos Malcolm, were introduced to Norman by Chris Blackwell, the owner of then-small label Island Records who worked in the film as a location scout.[74][78] The original soundtrack album was released by United Artists Records in 1963 as well as several cover versions of the "James Bond Theme" on Columbia Records.[79] A single of the "James Bond Theme" entered the UK Singles Chart in 1962, reaching a peak position of number thirteen during an eleven-week spell in the charts.[80] Ranglin, who had acted as arranger on several tracks, and Malcolm sued Eon for unpaid fees, both settling out of court;[78] Malcolm and his band performed a year later at the film's premiere in Kingston.[78]

Release edit

Original theatrical trailer for Dr. No.

Promotion edit

As soon as late 1961, United Artists started a marketing campaign to make James Bond a well-known name in North America. Newspapers received a box set of Bond's books, as well as a booklet detailing the Bond character and a picture of Ursula Andress.[81] Eon and United Artists made licensing deals revolving around the character's tastes, having merchandising tie-ins with drink, tobacco, men's clothing and car companies. The campaign also focused on Ian Fleming's name due to the minor success of the books.[82] After Dr. No had a successful run in Europe, Sean Connery and Terence Young did a cross-country tour of the US in March 1963, which featured screening previews for the film and press conferences. It culminated in a well-publicised premiere in Kingston, where most of the film is set.[81][82] Some of the campaign emphasised the sex appeal of the film, with the poster artwork, by Mitchell Hooks, depicting Sean Connery and four scantily clad women.[83] The campaign also included the 007 logo designed by Joseph Caroff with a pistol as part of the seven.[84]

Dr. No had its worldwide premiere at the London Pavilion, on 5 October 1962, expanding to the rest of the United Kingdom three days later.[85] The North American premiere on 8 May 1963 was more low-profile, with 450 cinemas in Midwest and Southwest regions of the United States.[86] On 29 May it opened in both Los Angeles and New York City – in the former as a double-bill with The Young and the Brave[85] and the latter in United Artists' "Premiere Showcase" treatment, screening in 84 screens across the city to avoid the costly Broadway cinemas.[81]

Home video edit

Dr. No has been distributed[87] on CED Videodisc (1981),[88][89] VHS (1982, unredacted),[90] Betamax (1982, unredacted),[91] LaserDisc,[92] DVD,[93] Blu-ray,[94] Multi-Format[95] streaming,[96] and other formats.

Reception edit

Critical response edit

Upon release, Dr. No received a mixed critical reception. Time magazine called Bond a "blithering bounder" and "a great big hairy marshmallow" who "almost always manages to seem slightly silly".[97] Stanley Kauffmann in The New Republic wrote that he felt the film "never decides whether it is suspense or suspense-spoof." He also did not like Connery, or the Fleming novels.[98] The Vatican condemned Dr. No describing it as "a dangerous mixture of violence, vulgarity, sadism and sex",[99] whilst the Kremlin stated that Bond was the personification of capitalist evil – both controversies helped increase public awareness of the film and greater cinema attendance.[100] However, Leonard Mosely in The Daily Express wrote that "Dr. No is fun all the way, and even the sex is harmless",[101] and Penelope Gilliatt in The Observer wrote it was "full of submerged self-parody".[102] The Guardian's critic called Dr. No "crisp and well-tailored" and "a neat and gripping thriller."[103]

In the years that followed its release, it became more popular. Writing in 1986, Danny Peary described Dr. No as a "cleverly conceived adaption of Ian Fleming's enjoyable spy thriller ... Picture has sex, violence, wit, terrific action sequences, and colorful atmosphere ... Connery, Andress, and Wiseman all give memorable performances. There's a slow stretch in the middle and Dr. No could use a decent henchman, but otherwise, the film works marvelously." Describing Dr. No as "a different type of film", Peary notes that "Looking back, one can understand why it caused so much excitement."[104]

In 1999, it was ranked 41 on the BFI top 100 British films list compiled by the British Film Institute.[105] The 2005 American Film Institute's '100 Years' series also recognised the character of James Bond himself in the film as the third greatest film hero.[106] He was also placed at number eleven on a similar list by Empire.[107] Premiere also listed Bond as the fifth greatest movie character of all time.[108]

On Rotten Tomatoes, Dr. No holds a 95% "Certified Fresh" rating based on 61 reviews, with an average rating of 7.8/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Featuring plenty of the humor, action and escapist thrills the series would be known for, Dr. No kicks off the Bond franchise in style."[109]

Popular reaction edit

In the United Kingdom, playing in 168 cinemas, Dr. No grossed $840,000 in two weeks and wound up being the fifth most popular movie of the year there.[110] The box office results in mainland Europe were also positive.[81] The film ended up grossing $6 million, making it a financial success compared to its $1 million budget.[81][82] The original North American gross rental was $2 million, increasing to $6 million after its first reissue in 1965, as a double feature with From Russia with Love. The following reissue was in 1966 paired with Goldfinger, to compensate the fact that the next Bond movie would only come out in the following year.[111] The total gross of Dr. No ended up being $59.6 million worldwide,[112] IGN listed it as sixth-best Bond film ever,[113] Entertainment Weekly put it at seventh among Bond films,[114] and Norman Wilner of MSN as twelfth best.[115] The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes sampled 56 reviews and judged 95% of the reviews as positive.[116] President John F. Kennedy was a fan of Ian Fleming's novels[117] and requested a private showing of Dr. No in the White House.[14]

In 2003, the scene of Andress emerging from the water in a bikini topped Channel 4's list of one hundred sexiest scenes of film history.[118] The bikini was sold in 2001 at an auction for $61,500.[119] Entertainment Weekly and IGN ranked her first in a top ten "Bond babes" list.[120][121]

The introduction of James Bond edit

A seminal moment in cinema. Sean Connery introduces James Bond to the film world with his trademark statement, "Bond, James Bond."

The character James Bond was introduced towards, but not at, the beginning of the film in a "now-famous nightclub sequence featuring Sylvia Trench",[122] to whom he makes his "immortal introduction".[50] The introduction to the character in Le Cercle at Les Ambassadeurs, an upmarket gambling club, is derived from Bond's introduction in the first novel, Casino Royale,[123] which Fleming had used because "skill at gambling and knowledge of how to behave in a casino were seen ... as attributes of a gentleman".[124] After losing a hand of Chemin de Fer to Bond, Trench asks his name. There is the "most important gesture [in] ... the way he lights his cigarette before giving her the satisfaction of an answer. 'Bond, James Bond'."[125] Once Connery says his line, Monty Norman's Bond theme plays "and creates an indelible link between music and character."[126] In the short scene introducing Bond, there are portrayed "qualities of strength, action, reaction, violence – and this elegant, slightly brutal gambler with the quizzical sneer we see before us who answers a woman when he's good and ready."[125] Raymond Benson, author of the continuation Bond novels, has stated that as the music fades up on the scene, "we have ourselves a piece of classic cinema".[127]

Following the release of Dr. No, the quote "Bond ... James Bond", became a catch phrase that entered the lexicon of Western popular culture: writers Cork and Scivally said of the introduction in Dr. No that the "signature introduction would become the most famous and loved film line ever".[128] In 2001 it was voted as the "best-loved one-liner in cinema" by British cinema goers.[129] In 2005, it was honoured as the 22nd greatest quotation in cinema history by the American Film Institute as part of their 100 Years Series.[130]

Comic book adaptation edit

Around the time of Dr. No's release in October 1962, a comic book adaptation of the screenplay, written by Norman J. Nodel, was published in the United Kingdom as part of the Classics Illustrated anthology series. It was later reprinted in the United States by DC Comics as part of its Showcase anthology series, in January 1963. This was the first American comic book appearance of James Bond and is noteworthy for being a relatively rare example of a British comic being reprinted in a fairly high-profile American comic. It was also one of the earliest comics to be censored on racial grounds (some skin tones and dialogue were changed for the American market).[131]

Legacy edit

It is because of [Ken Adam] that people believe criminal masterminds operate from the insides of dormant volcanoes and travel between their sumptuously decorated lairs on chrome-plated monorails. It's his fault that we think gold bars are stacked in vast cathedral-tall warehouses and that secret agents escape capture by using jetpacks or ejector seats.

-- Johnny Dee, writing in The Guardian (2005).[20]

Dr. No was the first of 25 James Bond films produced by Eon, which have grossed just over $5 billion in box office returns alone,[132] making the series one of the highest-grossing ever. It is estimated that since Dr. No, a quarter of the world's population have seen at least one Bond film.[14] Dr. No also launched a successful genre of "secret agent" films that flourished in the 1960s.[133] The UK Film Distributors' Association have stated that the importance of Dr. No to the British film industry cannot be overstated, as it, and the subsequent Bond series of films, "form the backbone of the industry".[134]

Dr. No – and the Bond films in general – also inspired television output, with the NBC series The Man from U.N.C.L.E.,[135] which was described as the "first network television imitation" of Bond.[136] The style of the Bond films, largely derived from production designer Ken Adam, is one of the hallmarks of the Bond film series,[20] and the effect of his work on Dr. No's lair can be seen in another film he worked on, Dr. Strangelove.[137]

As the first film in the series, a number of the elements of Dr. No were contributors to subsequent films, including Monty Norman's "James Bond Theme" and Maurice Binder's gun barrel sequence, variants of which all appeared in subsequent films.[11] These conventions were also lampooned in spoof films, such as the Austin Powers series.[138] The first spoof films happened relatively soon after Dr. No, with the 1964 film Carry On Spying showing the villain Dr. Crow being overcome by agents who included Charlie Bind (Charles Hawtrey) and Daphne Honeybutt (Barbara Windsor).[139]

Sales of Fleming's novels rose sharply after the release of Dr. No and the subsequent films. In the seven months after Dr. No was released, 1.5 million copies of the novel were sold.[140] Worldwide sales of all the Bond books rose throughout the 1960s as Dr. No and the subsequent films – From Russia with Love and Goldfinger – were released: in 1961 500,000 books had been sold, which rose to six million in 1964 and seven million in 1965. Between the years 1962 to 1967, a total of nearly 22.8 million Bond novels were sold.[141]

The film influenced ladies' fashion, with the bikini worn by Ursula Andress proving to be a huge hit: "not only sent sales of two-piece swimwear skyrocketing, it also made Andress an international celebrity".[142] Andress herself acknowledged that the "bikini made me into a success. As a result of starring in Dr. No as the first Bond girl I was given the freedom to take my pick of future roles and to become financially independent".[143] It has been claimed that the use of the swimwear in Dr. No led to "the biggest impact on the history of the bikini".[142]

Global James Bond Day edit

On 5 October 2012, fifty years after the release of the film, Eon Productions celebrated "Global James Bond Day", a series of events around the world.[144] Events included a film festival of showings of the James Bond films, a documentary of the series, an online auction for charity and further events at the Museum of Modern Art and the Toronto International Film Festival.[145] A concert of various music was held in Los Angeles in conjunction with the New York event.[146] The day also saw the release of "Skyfall", the theme song of the 2012 James Bond film of the same name; the song was released at 0:07 BST.[147]

See also edit

References edit

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Sources edit

External links edit

film, 1962, film, directed, terence, young, first, film, james, bond, series, starring, sean, connery, ursula, andress, joseph, wiseman, jack, lord, adapted, richard, maibaum, johanna, harwood, berkely, mather, from, 1958, novel, same, name, fleming, film, pro. Dr No is a 1962 spy film directed by Terence Young It is the first film in the James Bond series Starring Sean Connery Ursula Andress Joseph Wiseman and Jack Lord it was adapted by Richard Maibaum Johanna Harwood and Berkely Mather from the 1958 novel of the same name by Ian Fleming The film was produced by Harry Saltzman and Albert R Broccoli a partnership that continued until 1975 It was followed by From Russia with Love in 1963 In the film James Bond is sent to Jamaica to investigate the disappearance of a fellow British agent The trail leads him to the underground base of Dr Julius No who is plotting to disrupt an early American space launch from Cape Canaveral with a radio beam weapon Dr NoBritish theatrical release poster by Mitchell HooksDirected byTerence YoungScreenplay byRichard MaibaumJohanna HarwoodBerkely MatherBased onDr Noby Ian FlemingProduced byHarry SaltzmanAlbert R BroccoliStarringSean Connery Ursula Andress Joseph Wiseman Jack Lord Anthony Dawson Zena Marshall John Kitzmiller Eunice Gayson Bernard LeeCinematographyTed MooreEdited byPeter R HuntMusic byMonty NormanProductioncompanyEon ProductionsDistributed byUnited ArtistsRelease dates5 October 1962 1962 10 05 United Kingdom 8 May 1963 1963 05 08 United States Running time109 minutesCountriesUnited Kingdom 1 United States 2 LanguageEnglishBudget 1 1 million 392 022 3 4 Box office 59 5 millionAlthough it was the first of the Bond books to be made into a film Dr No was the sixth of Fleming s series beginning with Casino Royale The film makes a few references to threads from earlier books and later books in the series as well such as the criminal organisation SPECTRE which was not introduced until the 1961 novel Thunderball Produced on a low budget Dr No was a financial success While the film received a mixed critical reaction upon release it has gained a reputation over time as one of the series best instalments Dr No also launched a genre of secret agent films that flourished in the 1960s The film spawned a comic book adaptation and soundtrack album as part of its promotion and marketing Many aspects of a typical James Bond film were established in Dr No The film begins with an introduction to the character through the view of a gun barrel and a highly stylised main title sequence both of which were created by Maurice Binder 5 It also introduced the iconic theme music Production designer Ken Adam established an elaborate visual style that is one of the hallmarks of the film series Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Writing 3 2 Casting 3 2 1 James Bond 3 2 2 Secondary cast 3 3 Filming 4 Soundtrack 5 Release 5 1 Promotion 5 2 Home video 6 Reception 6 1 Critical response 6 2 Popular reaction 6 3 The introduction of James Bond 7 Comic book adaptation 8 Legacy 8 1 Global James Bond Day 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksPlot editJohn Strangways the Station Chief of MI6 in Jamaica is murdered along with his secretary Mary by a trio of assassins before his home is ransacked When news of Strangways death reaches M the head of MI6 he assigns intelligence officer James Bond to investigate the matter and determine if it is related to Strangways cooperation with the CIA on a case involving the disruption of rocket launches from Cape Canaveral by radio jamming When Bond arrives in Jamaica he is accosted by a man claiming to be a chauffeur sent to collect him but is really an enemy agent sent to kill him Bond turns the tables on the agent but before he can interrogate him the agent kills himself by biting into a cyanide laced cigarette After visiting government headquarters Bond asks principal secretary Pleydell Smith to set up a meeting with those who saw Strangways last which includes Professor Dent Later visiting Strangways house Bond finds a receipt from Dent and a picture of Strangways and Quarrel a man whom tailed Bond from the airport earlier When Bond confronts Quarrel it is revealed that he is aiding the CIA and he introduces Bond to their agent Felix Leiter who is also investigating Strangways death Bond learns from Felix that the CIA traced the radio jamming signal to Jamaica which was a British colony until 1962 and that Strangways was helping to pinpoint its exact origin Quarrel reveals that before Strangways died the pair collected mineral samples from an island called Crab Key where people are forbidden to go Bond visits Dent inquiring about the samples and Crab Key but is suspicious of his answers when he claims the samples checked out as normal Following the meeting Dent travels to Crab Key to meet its reclusive owner for whom he works to inform him of Bond s visit Under strict instructions Dent attempts to have Bond killed with a tarantula However Bond kills the spider and sets a trap for Dent Bond turns the tables on the three blind mice assassins then has Pleydell Smith s corrupt secretary Miss Taro arrested as well When the geologist arrives Bond holds him at gunpoint revealing Dent lied about the samples being radioactive and his involvement in Strangways murder then kills him After checking Quarrel s boat with a Geiger counter Bond determines that Strangways must have suspected that the radio jamming was coming from Crab Key and so persuades Quarrel to take him out there The following day after arriving Bond meets Honey Ryder a shell diver When armed guards arrive in a boat Bond and Quarrel take Ryder with them and escape into the swamp At nightfall the group encounter a flame tank disguised as a dragon to deter locals which kills Quarrel Bond and Ryder are captured and taken to a hidden base whereupon they are swiftly put into decontamination due to the swamp being contaminated with radioactivity After being led to private quarters set up for them they are rendered unconscious with drugged coffee Upon awakening the pair are escorted to dine with the base s owner Dr Julius No a Chinese German criminal scientist who has prosthetic metal hands due to radiation exposure Bond learns that No was a former member of a Chinese crime organization tong until he stole 10 million in gold and now works for the secret organisation SPECTRE Special Executive for Counter intelligence Terrorism Revenge and Extortion The radio jamming being conducted by No is being planned to disrupt the Project Mercury space launch at Cape Canaveral using a radio beam which he states will be a demonstration of SPECTRE s power When Bond refuses to join SPECTRE No has Ryder taken away and Bond beaten and imprisoned However Bond manages to escape his cell through an air vent and disguises himself as a worker before infiltrating the base s control centre Bond discovers that the radio beam being prepared to disrupt the launch is powered by a nuclear pool reactor and overloads it as the launch commences Dr No attempts to stop him but falls into the reactor pool and is boiled to death As the base s personnel evacuate Bond frees Ryder before the two escape the island by boat moments before the base is destroyed Felix finds the pair adrift at sea after their boat runs out of fuel and has them towed to safety by a Royal Navy ship However as Ryder passionately kisses him Bond lets go of the tow rope to embrace her Cast editSean Connery as James Bond a British MI6 agent codename 007 Ursula Andress as Honey Ryder a local shell diver making a living by selling Jamaican seashells to dealers in Miami Andress spoken dialogue was dubbed by Nikki van der Zyl 6 and her singing voice was dubbed by Diana Coupland 7 Both were uncredited Joseph Wiseman as Dr Julius No a reclusive member of SPECTRE Jack Lord as Felix Leiter a CIA operative sent to liaise with James Bond while he is in Kingston This was Lord s only appearance as Leiter Bernard Lee as M The head of the British Secret Service John Kitzmiller as Quarrel a Cayman Islander who was employed by John Strangways to secretly go to Crab Key to collect rock samples he also worked with Felix Leiter before Bond s arrival Anthony Dawson as Professor R J Dent a geologist with a practice in Kingston who also secretly works for Dr No Zena Marshall as Miss Taro the secretary to Mr Pleydell Smith at Government House in Kingston She is actually a double agent working for Dr No Eunice Gayson as Sylvia Trench a woman who meets Bond during a game of Baccarat at the London club Le Cercle Lois Maxwell as Miss Moneypenny the secretary to M Peter Burton as Major Boothroyd the head of Q Branch Boothroyd is brought in by M to replace Bond s Beretta M1934 with a Walther PPK This was Burton s only appearance as Q 8 Reginald Carter as Mr Jones a henchman of Dr No who was sent to pick up 007 at the Palisadoes Airport Yvonne Shima as Sister Lily a prison warden working at Dr No s lair Michel Mok as Sister Rose another warden working at Dr No s lair Marguerite LeWars as Annabel Chung a photographer and one of Dr No s operatives who trails Bond Louis Blaazer as Pleydell Smith Chief Secretary at Government House in Kingston Timothy Moxon as John Strangways the head of the Kingston station for the MI6 murdered by Dr No s henchmen impersonating three blind men Moxon s dialogue was dubbed by Robert Rietti 6 Neither Moxon nor Rietti were credited Additional cast members include Lester Pendergast as Quarrel s friend Puss Feller William Foster Davis as Police Superintendent Duff Dolores Keator as Strangways personal assistant Mary Trueblood and Anthony Chinn as Chen one of No s lab technicians who was impersonated by Bond Byron Lee and the Dragonaires appear as themselves performing at Puss Feller s nightclub Milton Reid who later acted in The Spy Who Loved Me appears as one of Dr No s guards Production editIan Fleming first wrote Dr No as a television outline for film producer Henry Morgenthau III to promote the Jamaican tourism industry 9 After this project fell through Fleming began meeting with Canadian film producer Harry Saltzman about making a screen adaptation Although Fleming was not a fan of the kitchen sink realist genre Saltzman was known for producing after seeing Saturday Night and Sunday Morning Fleming sold him the rights to all of the James Bond novels except Casino Royale and Thunderball for 50 000 9 After Saltzman gained the rights for the novel he initially had trouble financing the project Screenwriter Wolf Mankowitz introduced Saltzman to Albert R Cubby Broccoli who wanted the rights to the novels and attempted to buy them from Saltzman Saltzman did not want to sell the rights to Broccoli and instead they formed a partnership to make the films A number of Hollywood film studios did not want to fund the films finding them too British or too blatantly sexual 10 Eventually the two received authorisation from United Artists to produce Dr No to be released in 1962 Saltzman and Broccoli created two companies Danjaq which was to hold the rights to the films and Eon Productions which was to produce them 11 The partnership between Broccoli and Saltzman lasted until 1975 when tensions during the filming of The Man with the Golden Gun led to an acrimonious split and Saltzman sold his shares of Danjaq to United Artists 12 Initially Broccoli and Saltzman had wanted to produce the eighth Bond novel 1961 s Thunderball as the first film but there was an ongoing legal dispute between the screenplay s co author Kevin McClory and Ian Fleming As a result Broccoli and Saltzman chose Dr No 13 the timing was apposite with claims that American rocket testing at Cape Canaveral had problems with rockets going astray 14 The producers first choice for the director was Phil Karlson who asked for too high a salary 9 They offered Dr No to Guy Green Guy Hamilton Val Guest 15 and Ken Hughes to direct but all of them turned it down They finally signed Terence Young who had a long background with Broccoli s Warwick Films as the director Broccoli and Saltzman felt that Young would be able to make a real impression of James Bond and transfer the essence of the character from book to film Young imposed many stylistic choices for the character which continued throughout the film series 11 Young also decided to inject much humour as he considered that a lot of things in this film the sex and violence and so on if played straight a would be objectionable and b we re never gonna go past the censors but the moment you take the mickey out put the tongue out in the cheek it seems to disarm 16 The producers asked United Artists for financing but the studio would only put up 1 million Later the UK arm of United Artists provided an extra 100 000 to create the climax where Dr No s base explodes 17 As a result of the low budget only one sound editor was hired normally there are two one for sound effects and another for dialogue 18 and many pieces of scenery were made in cheaper ways with M s office featuring cardboard paintings and a door covered in a leather like plastic the room where Dent meets Dr No costing only 745 to build 19 and the aquarium in Dr No s base being magnified stock footage of goldfish 20 Furthermore when art director Syd Cain found out his name was not in the credits Broccoli gave him a golden pen to compensate saying that he did not want to spend money making the credits again 21 Production designer Ken Adam later told UK daily newspaper The Guardian in 2005 The budget for Dr No was under 1m for the whole picture My budget was 14 500 I filled three stages at Pinewood full of sets while they were filming in Jamaica It wasn t a real aquarium in Dr No s apartment It was a disaster to tell you the truth because we had so little money We decided to use a rear projection screen and get some stock footage of fish What we didn t realise was because we didn t have much money the only stock footage they could buy was of goldfish sized fish so we had to blow up the size and put a line in the dialogue with Bond talking about the magnification I didn t see any reason why Dr No shouldn t have good taste so we mixed contemporary furniture and antiques We thought it would be fun for him to have some stolen art so we used Goya s Portrait of the Duke of Wellington which was still missing at the time I got hold of a slide from the National Gallery this was on the Friday shooting began on the Monday and I painted a Goya over the weekend It was pretty good so they used it for publicity purposes but just like the real one it got stolen while it was on display 22 Writing edit Broccoli had originally hired Richard Maibaum and his friend Wolf Mankowitz to write Dr No s screenplay partly because of Mankowitz s help in brokering the deal between Broccoli and Saltzman 23 They wanted to rewrite the character of Dr No since they saw him as little more than a Fu Manchu with steel hooks 9 An initial draft of the screenplay was rejected because the scriptwriters had made the villain Dr No a marmoset 24 25 Mankowitz left the film and Maibaum then undertook a second version of the story more closely in line with the novel Mankowitz eventually had his name removed from the credits after viewing early rushes as he feared it would be a disaster 11 Johanna Harwood and thriller writer Berkely Mather then worked on Maibaum s script 26 Terence Young described Harwood as a script doctor who helped put elements more in tune with a British character 17 Harwood stated in an interview in a Cinema Retro special on the making of the film that she had been a screenwriter of several of Harry Saltzman s projects she said both her screenplays for Dr No and her screenplay for From Russia with Love had followed Fleming s novels closely 27 During the series decades long history only a few of the films have remained substantially true to their source material Dr No has many similarities to the novel and follows its basic plot but there are a few notable omissions Major elements from the novel that are missing from the film include Bond s fight with a giant squid and the escape from Dr No s complex using the dragon disguised swamp buggy Elements of the novel that were significantly changed for the film include the use of a non venomous tarantula spider instead of a centipede Dr No s secret complex being disguised as a bauxite mine instead of a guano quarry Dr No s plot to disrupt NASA space launches from Cape Canaveral using a radio beam instead of disrupting US missile testing on Turks Island the method of Dr No s death by boiling in overheating reactor coolant rather than a burial under a chute of guano and the introduction of SPECTRE an organisation that was not to be introduced in the books until Thunderball 25 The introduction of Dr No s disruptions of NASA launches was added because of a perception that the United States was falling behind the Soviet Union in the Space Race Additionally although the series would be associated with the Cold War Saltzman and Broccoli introduced SPECTRE as a substitute for the Soviet Union to avoid commenting on the international political situation 9 Components absent from the novel but added to the film include the introduction of the Bond character in a gambling casino the introduction of Bond s semi regular girlfriend Sylvia Trench a fight scene with an enemy chauffeur a fight scene to introduce Quarrel the seduction of Miss Taro Bond s recurring CIA ally Felix Leiter Dr No s partner in crime Professor Dent and Bond s controversial cold blooded killing of this character 25 Sometimes episodes in the novel retained in the film s altered narrative introduce elements of absurdity into the plot Bond s escape from his cell via the air shaft for instance originally conceived as a ruse of Dr No s to test Bond s skill and endurance becomes an authentic break out in the film Features carried over from the novel s obstacle course however such as the torrent of water and scalding surface have no logical justification in the script Such incongruities recurred in subsequent Bond films 25 Casting edit James Bond edit While producers Broccoli and Saltzman originally sought Cary Grant for the role they discarded the idea as Grant would be committed to only one feature film and the producers decided to go after someone who could be part of a series 11 Richard Johnson has claimed to have been the first choice of the director but he turned it down because he already had a contract with MGM and was intending to leave 28 Another actor purported to have been considered for the role was Patrick McGoohan on the strength of his portrayal of spy John Drake in the television series Danger Man McGoohan turned down the role 29 Another potential Bond included David Niven who later played the character in the 1967 parody Casino Royale 30 There are several apocryphal stories as to whom Ian Fleming personally wanted Reportedly Fleming favoured actor Richard Todd 31 Fleming s stepson Paul Morgan claims that Fleming preferred Edward Underdown 9 In his autobiography When the Snow Melts Cubby Broccoli said Roger Moore had been considered but had been thought too young perhaps a shade too pretty 32 In his autobiography My Word Is My Bond Moore says he was never approached to play the role of Bond until 1972 for Live and Let Die 33 Moore appeared as Simon Templar on the television series The Saint airing in the United Kingdom for the first time on 4 October 1962 only one day before the premiere of Dr No 34 Ultimately the producers turned to 31 year old Sean Connery for five films 11 It is often reported that Connery won the role through a contest set up to find James Bond While this is untrue the contest itself did exist and six finalists were chosen and screen tested by Broccoli Saltzman and Fleming The winner of the contest was a 28 year old model named Peter Anthony who according to Broccoli had a Gregory Peck quality but proved unable to cope with the role 35 When Connery was invited to meet Broccoli and Saltzman he appeared scruffy and in unpressed clothes but Connery put on an act and it paid off as he acted in the meeting with a macho devil may care attitude 36 When he left both Saltzman and Broccoli watched him through the window as he went to his car both agreeing that he was the right man for Bond 37 After Connery was chosen Terence Young took the actor to his tailor and hairdresser 38 and introduced him to the high life restaurants casinos and women of London In the words of Bond writer Raymond Benson Young educated the actor in the ways of being dapper witty and above all cool 39 The casting was announced on November 3 1961 9 Secondary cast edit For the first Bond girl Honey Ryder Julie Christie was considered but discarded as the producers felt she was not voluptuous enough 40 Martine Beswick was also rejected for being too inexperienced as an actress while Gabriella Licudi was rejected as too young 9 Just two weeks before filming began Ursula Andress was chosen to play Honey after the producers saw a picture of her taken by Andress then husband John Derek 11 Kirk Douglas persuaded Andress to take the part at a party hosted by Derek 9 To appear more convincing as a Jamaican Andress had a tan painted on her and ultimately had her lines redubbed by voice actress Nikki van der Zyl due to Andress heavy Swiss German accent 11 For Bond s antagonist Dr No Ian Fleming wanted his friend Noel Coward and Coward answered the invitation with No No No 41 Fleming considered that his step cousin Christopher Lee would be good for the role of Dr No although by the time Fleming told the producers they had already chosen Joseph Wiseman for the part 42 Harry Saltzman picked Wiseman because of his performance in the 1951 film Detective Story 43 and the actor had special make up applied to evoke No s Chinese heritage 11 Swedish actor Max von Sydow was also offered the role as Dr No but turned it down He was later to appear as Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the unofficial James Bond film Never Say Never Again 44 The role as the first Felix Leiter was given to Jack Lord This is Bond and Leiter s first time meeting each other on film and Leiter does not appear in the novel Leiter returns for many of Bond s future adventures and in the 2006 reboot of the film series Casino Royale Leiter and Bond are seen meeting one another again for the first time This was Lord s only appearance as Leiter as he asked for more money and a better billing to return as Leiter in Goldfinger and was subsequently replaced 45 The cast also included a number of actors who were to become stalwarts of the future films including Bernard Lee who played Bond s superior M for another ten films and Lois Maxwell who played M s secretary Moneypenny in fourteen instalments of the series 46 Maxwell received the part after beginning to look for film roles to support her family when her husband Peter Marriot suffered from a severe heart attack and was expected to die 9 Lee was chosen because of being a prototypical father figure 47 and Maxwell after Fleming thought she was the perfect fit for his description of the character 48 Maxwell was initially offered a choice between the roles of Moneypenny or Sylvia Trench and opted for Moneypenny as she thought the Trench role which included appearing in immodest dress was too sexual 49 50 Eunice Gayson was cast as Sylvia Trench and it was planned that she would be a recurring girlfriend for Bond throughout six films 38 although she appeared only in Dr No and From Russia with Love She had been given the part by director Terence Young who had worked with her in Zarak and invited Gayson saying You always bring me luck in my films 51 although she was also cast due to her voluptuous figure One role which was not given to a future regular was that of Major Boothroyd the head of Q Branch which was given to Peter Burton Burton was unavailable for the subsequent film From Russia with Love and the role was taken by Desmond Llewelyn 52 53 Anthony Dawson who played Professor Dent met director Terence Young when he was working as a stage actor in London but by the time of the film s shooting Dawson was working as a pilot and crop duster in Jamaica 17 Dawson also portrayed Ernst Stavro Blofeld head of SPECTRE in From Russia with Love and Thunderball although his face was never seen and his voice was redubbed by Austrian actor Eric Pohlmann 54 55 Zena Marshall who played Miss Taro was mostly attracted by the humorous elements of the script 56 and described her role as this attractive little siren and at the same time I was the spy a bad woman 57 whom Young asked to play not as Chinese but a Mid Atlantic woman who men dream about but is not real 58 The role of Taro was previously rejected by Marguerite LeWars the Miss Jamaica 1961 who worked at the Kingston airport as it required being wrapped in a towel lying in a bed kissing a strange man Talitha Pol Lina Margo and Violet Marceau were also considered for the part 9 Filming edit nbsp Dr No s lair was this bauxite terminal near Oracabessa JamaicaDr No is set in London Jamaica and Crab Key a fictional island off Jamaica 59 Filming began on location at Palisaodes Airport in Kingston Jamaica on 16 January 1962 9 The primary scenes there were the exterior shots of Crab Key and Kingston where an uncredited Syd Cain acted as art director and also designed the Dragon Tank 60 Shooting took place a few yards from Fleming s Goldeneye estate and the author regularly visited the filming with friends 61 Location filming was largely in Oracabessa with additional scenes on the Palisadoes strip and Port Royal in St Andrew 62 On 21 February production left Jamaica with footage still unfilmed due to a change of weather 17 Five days later filming began at Pinewood Studios Buckinghamshire England with sets designed by Ken Adam which included Dr No s base the ventilation duct and the interior of the British Secret Service headquarters The studio was used on the majority of later Bond films 11 Adam s initial budget for the entire film was just 14 500 329 095 in 2021 63 but the producers were convinced to give him an extra 6 000 out of their own finances After 58 days of filming principal photography was completed on 30 March 1962 64 Filmmaker Brian Trenchard Smith who visited Pinewood with his Wellington College film society during the shooting of the film noted that Bond s awakening and first sighting of Honey was a pick up shot filmed in a ten foot long space on an otherwise empty soundstage and that Adam s set for the nuclear reactor was a lot smaller than it looks on the screen That opened my eyes to the power of lenses when I saw the finished movie a year later 65 Costume designer Tessa Prendergast designed Honey s bikini from a British Army webbing belt 9 The scene where a tarantula walks over Bond was initially shot by pinning a bed to the wall and placing Sean Connery over it with a protective glass between him and the spider Director Young did not like the final results so the scenes were interlaced with new footage featuring the tarantula over stuntman Bob Simmons 17 Simmons who was uncredited for the film described the scene as the most frightening stunt he had ever performed 66 In line with the book a scene was to feature Honey tied to the ground and left to be attacked by crabs but since the crabs were sent frozen from the Caribbean they moved little during filming so the scene was altered to have Honey slowly drowning 11 Simmons also served as the film s fight choreographer employing a rough fighting style The noted violence of Dr No which also included Bond shooting Dent in cold blood caused producers to make adaptations to get an A rating allowing minors to enter accompanied by an adult from the British Board of Film Classification 67 When Bond is about to have dinner with Dr No he is amazed to see Goya s Portrait of the Duke of Wellington The painting had been stolen from the National Gallery by a 60 year old amateur thief in London just before filming began 68 Ken Adam had contacted the National Gallery in London to obtain a slide of the picture painting the copy over the course of the weekend prior to filming commencing on the following Monday 20 Editor Peter R Hunt used an innovative editing technique with extensive use of quick cuts and employing fast motion and exaggerated sound effects on the action scenes 69 Hunt said his intention was to move fast and push it along the whole time while giving it a certain style 70 and added that the fast pacing would help audiences not notice any writing problems 17 As title artist Maurice Binder was creating the credits he had an idea for the introduction that appeared in all subsequent Bond films the James Bond gun barrel sequence It was filmed in sepia by putting a pinhole camera inside an 38 calibre gun barrel with Bob Simmons playing Bond 11 Binder also designed a highly stylised main title sequence a theme that has been repeated in the subsequent Eon produced Bond films 71 Binder s budget for the title sequence was 2 000 45 392 in 2021 63 72 Soundtrack editMain article Dr No soundtrack Monty Norman was invited to write the film score because Broccoli liked his work on the 1961 theatre production Belle a musical about murderer Hawley Harvey Crippen 73 Norman was busy with musicals and only agreed to do the music for Dr No after Saltzman allowed him to travel along with the crew to Jamaica 74 The most famous composition in the soundtrack is the James Bond Theme which is heard in the gun barrel sequence and in a calypso medley over the title credits and was written by Norman based on a previous composition of his John Barry who would later go on to compose the music for eleven Bond films arranged the Bond theme but was uncredited except for the credit of his orchestra playing the final piece It has occasionally been suggested that Barry not Norman composed the James Bond Theme This argument has been the subject of two court cases the most recent in 2001 which found in favour of Norman 75 The theme as written by Norman and arranged by Barry was described by another Bond film composer David Arnold as bebop swing vibe coupled with that vicious dark distorted electric guitar definitely an instrument of rock n roll it represented everything about the character you would want It was cocky swaggering confident dark dangerous suggestive sexy unstoppable And he did it in two minutes 76 The music for the opening scene is a calypso version of the nursery rhyme Three Blind Mice with new lyrics to reflect the intentions of the three assassins hired by Dr No 73 Other notable songs in the film are the song Jump Up 77 played in the background and the traditional Jamaican calypso Under the Mango Tree famously sung by Diana Coupland then Norman s wife the singing voice of Honey Ryder as she walked out of the ocean on Crab Key 73 Byron Lee amp the Dragonaires appeared in the film performing Jump Up and also performed some of the music on the later soundtrack album 77 Lee and other Jamaican musicians who appear in the soundtrack including Ernest Ranglin and Carlos Malcolm were introduced to Norman by Chris Blackwell the owner of then small label Island Records who worked in the film as a location scout 74 78 The original soundtrack album was released by United Artists Records in 1963 as well as several cover versions of the James Bond Theme on Columbia Records 79 A single of the James Bond Theme entered the UK Singles Chart in 1962 reaching a peak position of number thirteen during an eleven week spell in the charts 80 Ranglin who had acted as arranger on several tracks and Malcolm sued Eon for unpaid fees both settling out of court 78 Malcolm and his band performed a year later at the film s premiere in Kingston 78 Release edit source source Original theatrical trailer for Dr No Promotion edit As soon as late 1961 United Artists started a marketing campaign to make James Bond a well known name in North America Newspapers received a box set of Bond s books as well as a booklet detailing the Bond character and a picture of Ursula Andress 81 Eon and United Artists made licensing deals revolving around the character s tastes having merchandising tie ins with drink tobacco men s clothing and car companies The campaign also focused on Ian Fleming s name due to the minor success of the books 82 After Dr No had a successful run in Europe Sean Connery and Terence Young did a cross country tour of the US in March 1963 which featured screening previews for the film and press conferences It culminated in a well publicised premiere in Kingston where most of the film is set 81 82 Some of the campaign emphasised the sex appeal of the film with the poster artwork by Mitchell Hooks depicting Sean Connery and four scantily clad women 83 The campaign also included the 007 logo designed by Joseph Caroff with a pistol as part of the seven 84 Dr No had its worldwide premiere at the London Pavilion on 5 October 1962 expanding to the rest of the United Kingdom three days later 85 The North American premiere on 8 May 1963 was more low profile with 450 cinemas in Midwest and Southwest regions of the United States 86 On 29 May it opened in both Los Angeles and New York City in the former as a double bill with The Young and the Brave 85 and the latter in United Artists Premiere Showcase treatment screening in 84 screens across the city to avoid the costly Broadway cinemas 81 Home video edit Dr No has been distributed 87 on CED Videodisc 1981 88 89 VHS 1982 unredacted 90 Betamax 1982 unredacted 91 LaserDisc 92 DVD 93 Blu ray 94 Multi Format 95 streaming 96 and other formats Reception editCritical response edit Upon release Dr No received a mixed critical reception Time magazine called Bond a blithering bounder and a great big hairy marshmallow who almost always manages to seem slightly silly 97 Stanley Kauffmann in The New Republic wrote that he felt the film never decides whether it is suspense or suspense spoof He also did not like Connery or the Fleming novels 98 The Vatican condemned Dr No describing it as a dangerous mixture of violence vulgarity sadism and sex 99 whilst the Kremlin stated that Bond was the personification of capitalist evil both controversies helped increase public awareness of the film and greater cinema attendance 100 However Leonard Mosely in The Daily Express wrote that Dr No is fun all the way and even the sex is harmless 101 and Penelope Gilliatt in The Observer wrote it was full of submerged self parody 102 The Guardian s critic called Dr No crisp and well tailored and a neat and gripping thriller 103 In the years that followed its release it became more popular Writing in 1986 Danny Peary described Dr No as a cleverly conceived adaption of Ian Fleming s enjoyable spy thriller Picture has sex violence wit terrific action sequences and colorful atmosphere Connery Andress and Wiseman all give memorable performances There s a slow stretch in the middle and Dr No could use a decent henchman but otherwise the film works marvelously Describing Dr No as a different type of film Peary notes that Looking back one can understand why it caused so much excitement 104 In 1999 it was ranked 41 on the BFI top 100 British films list compiled by the British Film Institute 105 The 2005 American Film Institute s 100 Years series also recognised the character of James Bond himself in the film as the third greatest film hero 106 He was also placed at number eleven on a similar list by Empire 107 Premiere also listed Bond as the fifth greatest movie character of all time 108 On Rotten Tomatoes Dr No holds a 95 Certified Fresh rating based on 61 reviews with an average rating of 7 8 10 The site s critical consensus reads Featuring plenty of the humor action and escapist thrills the series would be known for Dr No kicks off the Bond franchise in style 109 Popular reaction edit In the United Kingdom playing in 168 cinemas Dr No grossed 840 000 in two weeks and wound up being the fifth most popular movie of the year there 110 The box office results in mainland Europe were also positive 81 The film ended up grossing 6 million making it a financial success compared to its 1 million budget 81 82 The original North American gross rental was 2 million increasing to 6 million after its first reissue in 1965 as a double feature with From Russia with Love The following reissue was in 1966 paired with Goldfinger to compensate the fact that the next Bond movie would only come out in the following year 111 The total gross of Dr No ended up being 59 6 million worldwide 112 IGN listed it as sixth best Bond film ever 113 Entertainment Weekly put it at seventh among Bond films 114 and Norman Wilner of MSN as twelfth best 115 The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes sampled 56 reviews and judged 95 of the reviews as positive 116 President John F Kennedy was a fan of Ian Fleming s novels 117 and requested a private showing of Dr No in the White House 14 In 2003 the scene of Andress emerging from the water in a bikini topped Channel 4 s list of one hundred sexiest scenes of film history 118 The bikini was sold in 2001 at an auction for 61 500 119 Entertainment Weekly and IGN ranked her first in a top ten Bond babes list 120 121 The introduction of James Bond edit source source source source A seminal moment in cinema Sean Connery introduces James Bond to the film world with his trademark statement Bond James Bond The character James Bond was introduced towards but not at the beginning of the film in a now famous nightclub sequence featuring Sylvia Trench 122 to whom he makes his immortal introduction 50 The introduction to the character in Le Cercle at Les Ambassadeurs an upmarket gambling club is derived from Bond s introduction in the first novel Casino Royale 123 which Fleming had used because skill at gambling and knowledge of how to behave in a casino were seen as attributes of a gentleman 124 After losing a hand of Chemin de Fer to Bond Trench asks his name There is the most important gesture in the way he lights his cigarette before giving her the satisfaction of an answer Bond James Bond 125 Once Connery says his line Monty Norman s Bond theme plays and creates an indelible link between music and character 126 In the short scene introducing Bond there are portrayed qualities of strength action reaction violence and this elegant slightly brutal gambler with the quizzical sneer we see before us who answers a woman when he s good and ready 125 Raymond Benson author of the continuation Bond novels has stated that as the music fades up on the scene we have ourselves a piece of classic cinema 127 Following the release of Dr No the quote Bond James Bond became a catch phrase that entered the lexicon of Western popular culture writers Cork and Scivally said of the introduction in Dr No that the signature introduction would become the most famous and loved film line ever 128 In 2001 it was voted as the best loved one liner in cinema by British cinema goers 129 In 2005 it was honoured as the 22nd greatest quotation in cinema history by the American Film Institute as part of their 100 Years Series 130 Comic book adaptation editMain article Dr No comics Around the time of Dr No s release in October 1962 a comic book adaptation of the screenplay written by Norman J Nodel was published in the United Kingdom as part of the Classics Illustrated anthology series It was later reprinted in the United States by DC Comics as part of its Showcase anthology series in January 1963 This was the first American comic book appearance of James Bond and is noteworthy for being a relatively rare example of a British comic being reprinted in a fairly high profile American comic It was also one of the earliest comics to be censored on racial grounds some skin tones and dialogue were changed for the American market 131 Legacy editIt is because of Ken Adam that people believe criminal masterminds operate from the insides of dormant volcanoes and travel between their sumptuously decorated lairs on chrome plated monorails It s his fault that we think gold bars are stacked in vast cathedral tall warehouses and that secret agents escape capture by using jetpacks or ejector seats Johnny Dee writing in The Guardian 2005 20 Dr No was the first of 25 James Bond films produced by Eon which have grossed just over 5 billion in box office returns alone 132 making the series one of the highest grossing ever It is estimated that since Dr No a quarter of the world s population have seen at least one Bond film 14 Dr No also launched a successful genre of secret agent films that flourished in the 1960s 133 The UK Film Distributors Association have stated that the importance of Dr No to the British film industry cannot be overstated as it and the subsequent Bond series of films form the backbone of the industry 134 Dr No and the Bond films in general also inspired television output with the NBC series The Man from U N C L E 135 which was described as the first network television imitation of Bond 136 The style of the Bond films largely derived from production designer Ken Adam is one of the hallmarks of the Bond film series 20 and the effect of his work on Dr No s lair can be seen in another film he worked on Dr Strangelove 137 As the first film in the series a number of the elements of Dr No were contributors to subsequent films including Monty Norman s James Bond Theme and Maurice Binder s gun barrel sequence variants of which all appeared in subsequent films 11 These conventions were also lampooned in spoof films such as the Austin Powers series 138 The first spoof films happened relatively soon after Dr No with the 1964 film Carry On Spying showing the villain Dr Crow being overcome by agents who included Charlie Bind Charles Hawtrey and Daphne Honeybutt Barbara Windsor 139 Sales of Fleming s novels rose sharply after the release of Dr No and the subsequent films In the seven months after Dr No was released 1 5 million copies of the novel were sold 140 Worldwide sales of all the Bond books rose throughout the 1960s as Dr No and the subsequent films From Russia with Love and Goldfinger were released in 1961 500 000 books had been sold which rose to six million in 1964 and seven million in 1965 Between the years 1962 to 1967 a total of nearly 22 8 million Bond novels were sold 141 The film influenced ladies fashion with the bikini worn by Ursula Andress proving to be a huge hit not only sent sales of two piece swimwear skyrocketing it also made Andress an international celebrity 142 Andress herself acknowledged that the bikini made me into a success As a result of starring in Dr No as the first Bond girl I was given the freedom to take my pick of future roles and to become financially independent 143 It has been claimed that the use of the swimwear in Dr No led to the biggest impact on the history of the bikini 142 Global James Bond Day edit On 5 October 2012 fifty years after the release of the film Eon Productions celebrated Global James Bond Day a series of events around the world 144 Events included a film festival of showings of the James Bond films a documentary of the series an online auction for charity and further events at the Museum of Modern Art and the Toronto International Film Festival 145 A concert of various music was held in Los Angeles in conjunction with the New York event 146 The day also saw the release of Skyfall the theme song of the 2012 James Bond film of the same name the song was released at 0 07 BST 147 See also edit nbsp 1960s portal nbsp Film portal nbsp United Kingdom portalOutline of James BondReferences edit Dr No Lumiere European Audiovisual Observatory Archived from the original on 29 September 2020 Retrieved 9 October 2020 AFI Catalog Archived from the original on 29 August 2019 Retrieved 17 December 2019 Chapman L 2021 They wanted a bigger more ambitious film Film Finances and the American Runaways That Ran Away Journal of British Cinema and Television 18 2 176 197 p 180 https doi org 10 3366 jbctv 2021 0565 Chapman J 2022 The Money Behind the Screen A History of British Film Finance 1945 1985 Edinburgh University Press p 360 Spies Mark Kermode s Secrets of Cinema Series 2 Episode 3 2 April 2020 Event occurs at 13 26 BBC BBC Four Archived from the original on 9 May 2020 Retrieved 3 April 2020 a b Dr No 1962 Cast Screenonline British Film Institute Archived from the original on 4 August 2011 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Actress Diana Coupland dies at 74 BBC News 10 November 2006 Archived from the original on 16 August 2007 Retrieved 7 June 2011 Time Out the Guns of James Bond Archived from the original on 7 January 2021 Retrieved 4 January 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Field Matthew 2015 Some kind of hero 007 the remarkable story of the James Bond films Ajay Chowdhury Stroud Gloucestershire ISBN 978 0 7509 6421 0 OCLC 930556527 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pfeiffer amp Worrall 1998 p 13 a b c d e f g h i j k l Inside Dr No Documentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment 1999 Parkinson David January 2011 Broccoli Albert Romolo 1909 1996 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 63151 Retrieved 1 December 2012 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription required Cork amp Scivally 2002 p 29 a b c Dodds Klaus 2005 Screening Geopolitics James Bond and the Early Cold War films 1962 1967 Geopolitics 10 2 266 289 doi 10 1080 14650040590946584 S2CID 144363319 Rigby Jonathan Interview with Val Guest NFT Interviews British Film Institute Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 7 June 2011 Young Terence 1999 Audio commentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment a b c d e f Cork John 1999 Audio commentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment Wanstall Norman 1999 Audio commentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment Adam Ken 1999 Audio commentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment a b c d Dee Johnny 17 September 2005 Licensed to drill The Guardian London Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Cain Syd 1999 Audio commentary DVD MGM Home Entertainment From Russia With Love Ultimate Edition 2006 Dee Johnny 17 September 2005 Licensed to drill The Guardian London Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 Retrieved 10 March 2016 Broccoli 1998 p 158 Broccoli 1998 p 159 a b c d Smith 2002 p 19 McGilligan 1986 p 286 Johanna Harwood interview Movie Classics 4 Solo Publishing 2012 Retro Cinema 9 October 2009 Richard Johnson Interview Cinema Retro Archived from the original on 23 September 2011 Retrieved 13 June 2011 Barker Dennis 14 January 2009 Obituary Patrick McGoohan The Guardian London Archived from the original on 26 February 2017 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Macintyre 2008 p 202 Richard Todd Obituary The Daily Telegraph London 4 December 2009 Archived from the original on 13 November 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 Broccoli 1998 p 165 Moore 2008 p 173 Clark Anthony Saint The 1962 69 Screenonline British Film Institute Archived from the original on 21 June 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2011 Cork amp Scivally 2002 p 31 Bray 2010 p 73 Bray 2010 p 74 a b Gayson Eunice 1999 Audio commentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment Benson Raymond Can the Cinematic Bond Ever Be the Literary Bond p 7 In Yeffeth 2006 Lisanti amp Paul 2002 p 36 Pfeiffer amp Worrall 1998 p 16 The Total Film Interview Christopher Lee Total Film 1 May 2005 Archived from the original on 12 June 2007 Retrieved 28 January 2014 Joseph Wiseman Actor of stage and screen who played the title role in the 1962 James Bond movie Dr No The Independent London 27 October 2009 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 26 August 2017 Telegraph Reporters 9 March 2020 Max von Sydow star of The Exorcist and Game of Thrones dies aged 90 The Telegraph Archived from the original on 10 March 2020 Retrieved 8 April 2020 Goldberg Lee March 1983 The Richard Maibaum Interview Starlog 68 26 Lois Maxwell 80 an Actress Who Played in 14 Bond Films Dies The New York Times Associated Press October 2007 Archived from the original on 24 November 2020 Retrieved 14 March 2020 Cork amp Scivally 2002 p 38 Rubin 2002 p 272 Smith 2002 p 15 a b Pfeiffer amp Worrall 1998 p 15 Cork amp d Abo 2003 p 21 Simpson 2002 p 83 Although Llewelyn s character was generally only ever referred to as Q in 1977 s The Spy Who Loved Me he is referred to on screen as Major Boothroyd confirming he was still playing Burton s character Smith 2002 p 30 Thunderball 1965 Screenonline British Film Institute Archived from the original on 7 May 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2011 Zena Marshall actress in Dr No The Times London 18 July 2009 Archived from the original on 23 May 2010 Retrieved 11 July 2011 Lind Benjamin 10 May 2017 Spotlight Zena Marshall thebondbulletin com Archived from the original on 30 July 2020 Retrieved 14 March 2020 Marshall Zena 1999 Audio commentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment Cork amp Scivally 2002 p 305 Cain 2005 Nathan Ian October 2008 Unseen Bond Empire 97 Campbell Howard 17 June 2012 James Bond marathon begins with JA The Jamaica Observer Kingston Archived from the original on 19 June 2012 Retrieved 17 June 2012 a b UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Rubin 1981 p 21 Trenchard Smith Brian 9 January 2014 Dr No Trailers From Hell Archived from the original on 22 November 2020 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Pfeiffer amp Worrall 1998 p 17 Dr No rated A by the BBFC British Board of Film Classification Archived from the original on 19 August 2012 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Greatest heists in art history BBC News 23 August 2004 Archived from the original on 14 March 2007 Retrieved 21 November 2007 Hunt Peter R 1999 Goldfinger audio commentary MGM Home Entertainment Goldfinger Ultimate Edition 2006 Disk 1 Interview with Peter R Hunt Retrovision 1997 Archived from the original on 14 February 2009 Cork amp Scivally 2002 p 46 Kirkham Pat December 1995 Dots and sickles Sight and Sound London 5 12 10 a b c The James Bond Theme History Monty Norman official website Archived from the original on 9 March 2008 Retrieved 28 March 2008 a b Norman Monty Audio commentary Dr No Ultimate Edition 2006 DVD MGM Home Entertainment Bond theme writer wins damages BBC News 19 March 2001 Archived from the original on 26 August 2007 Retrieved 13 June 2011 Burlingame Jon 3 November 2008 Bond scores establish superspy template Daily Variety Archived from the original on 9 November 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2020 a b Smith 2002 p 17 a b c Burlingame 2012 p 10 Music Dr No Mi6 HQ com Archived from the original on 29 March 2012 Retrieved 15 June 2011 John Barry Seven Official UK Charts Archive The Official UK Charts Company Archived from the original on 11 October 2011 Retrieved 30 June 2011 a b c d e Balio 1987 pp 259 260 a b c Lindner 2009 pp 120 121 Nourmand Tony 2004 James Bond Movie Posters The Official 007 Collection Chronicle Books p 11 ISBN 978 0811844659 Selling Bond Cinefantastique 37 9 126 Winter 2006 Archived from the original on 10 April 2005 a b Tesche 2002 p 425 Chapman 2007 p 253 According to the Hollywood Reporter 25 March 1963 p 3 Dr No will premiere in the US with a massive 450 theater engagement in the midwest and southwest starting May 8 James Bond 007 Home Video Archived from the original on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 3 November 2021 James Bond 007 Home Video CED Archived from the original on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 3 November 2021 James Bond CED Cover Lot RCA 1981 1982 Rolled Very Fine CED Lot 53251 Heritage Auctions Archived from the original on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Dr No Archived from the original on 25 December 2015 via Amazon Dr No 1962 on Warner Home Video United Kingdom Betamax VHS videotape Archived from the original on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 3 November 2021 1 Archived 3 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine 2 Archived 3 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine 3 Archived 3 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine 4 Archived 3 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine Amazon com Dr No Special Edition Sean Connery Ursula Andress Bernard Lee Joseph Wiseman Jack Lord Anthony Dawson Zena Marshall John Kitzmiller Eunice Gayson Loi Amazon Archived from the original on 30 August 2020 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Dr No 21 October 2008 Archived from the original on 31 October 2015 via Amazon Dr No Archived from the original on 5 December 2018 via Amazon Watch Dr No Prime Video Amazon Archived from the original on 11 January 2021 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Cinema Hairy Marshmallow Time 31 May 1963 p 80 Archived from the original on 18 February 2011 Retrieved 14 June 2011 Anez Nicholas 1 September 1992 James Bond Films in Review 43 9 310 Shame James The Courier Journal Louisville 18 May 1965 p 16 Archived from the original on 25 August 2017 Retrieved 25 August 2017 via Newspapers com Pfeiffer amp Worrall 1998 p 21 Moseley Leonard 5 October 1962 James Bond flirts with death Daily Express London p 4 Gilliatt Penelope 7 October 1962 Getting a laugh out of Bond The Observer London p 27 James Bond v Dr No The Guardian London 8 October 1962 p 17 Peary 1986 p 127 Entertainment Best 100 British films full list BBC News 23 September 1999 Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 14 October 2017 100 years series 100 heroes and villains PDF AFI 100 Years Series American Film Industry Archived from the original PDF on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 The 100 Greatest Movie Characters 11 James Bond Empire Archived from the original on 11 October 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time Premiere Magazine Archived from the original on 13 April 2013 Retrieved 8 June 2011 Dr No 1962 archived from the original on 7 July 2020 retrieved 7 November 2021 Money Making Films of 1962 The Times London 4 January 1964 p 4 Balio 1987 pp 262 265 Dr No The Numbers Nash Information Services LLC Archived from the original on 25 November 2009 Retrieved 1 June 2009 James Bond s Top 20 9 6 James Bond s Top 20 IGN Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 1 June 2009 Svetkey Benjamin Rich Joshua 1 December 2006 Ranking the Bond Films Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 28 August 2009 Retrieved 1 June 2009 Wilner Norman Rating the Spy Game MSN Archived from the original on 19 January 2008 Retrieved 1 June 2009 Dr No Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on 20 February 2010 Retrieved 3 March 2010 John F Kennedy Miscellaneous Information John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Archived from the original on 21 February 2012 Retrieved 7 June 2011 Andress scene voted most sexy BBC News 30 November 2003 Archived from the original on 30 October 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Westcott Kathryn 5 June 2006 The bikini Not a brief affair BBC News Archived from the original on 21 July 2008 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Countdown The 10 best Bond girls Entertainment Weekly 24 November 2006 Archived from the original on 29 December 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Zdyrko Dave 16 November 2006 Top 10 Bond Babes IGN Archived from the original on 31 August 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 Barnes amp Hearn 2001 p 11 Chapman 2007 p 58 Black 2005 p 7 a b Comentale Watt amp Willman 2005 p 45 Lindner 2009 p 142 Benson 1988 p 170 Cork amp Scivally 2002 p 6 James Bond tops motto poll BBC News 11 June 2001 Archived from the original on 5 March 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2011 100 Years Series Movie Quotes PDF AFI 100 Years Series American Film Industry Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2011 Evanier Mark 3 December 2006 Secrets Behind the Comics NewsFromme com Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 20 July 2007 Box Office History for James Bond Movies Nash Information Services LLC Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 29 August 2011 Smith 2002 p 21 British film classics Dr No BBC News 21 February 2003 Archived from the original on 16 December 2003 Retrieved 30 June 2011 Grigg Richard November 2007 Vanquishing Evil without the Help of God The Man from U N C L E and a World Come of Age Journal of Communication amp Religion 30 2 308 339 Worland Rick Winter 1994 The Man From U N C L E and TV espionage in the 1960s Journal of Popular Film amp Television 21 4 150 162 doi 10 1080 01956051 1994 9943983 Stillman Grant B Winter 2008 Two of the MADdest scientists where Strangelove Meets Dr No or unexpected roots for Kubrick s cold war classic Film History 20 4 487 500 doi 10 2979 FIL 2008 20 4 487 ISSN 0892 2160 S2CID 194069362 Gleiberman Owen 9 May 1997 A wild and crazy spy Entertainment Weekly No 378 p 56 ISSN 1049 0434 Angelini Sergio Carry On Spying 1964 Screenonline British Film Institute Archived from the original on 10 October 2011 Retrieved 3 July 2011 Black 2005 p 96 online copy p 96 at Google Books Black 2005 p 97 online copy p 97 at Google Books a b Pedersen 2004 p 69 Bennett Will 12 January 2001 Former Bond girl to sell Dr No bikini The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 29 May 2018 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Billington 29 August 2012 Eon Announces a Global James Bond Day on October 5th This Year First Showing Archived from the original on 16 May 2013 Retrieved 23 April 2013 Coombes Rachel 30 August 2012 Global James Bond Day to celebrate 007 s 50th anniversary The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 November 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Global James Bond Day The world celebrates 007 The Plain Dealer 5 October 2012 Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 23 April 2013 Skyfall Official Theme Song News Release To Coincide With Bond s 50th Anniversary Eon Productions 1 October 2012 Archived from the original on 6 December 2012 Retrieved 1 October 2012 Sources editBalio Tino 1987 United Artists The Company That Changed the Film Industry University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 11440 4 Barnes Alan Hearn Marcus 2001 Kiss Kiss Bang Bang the Unofficial James Bond Film Companion Batsford Books ISBN 978 0 7134 8182 2 Benson Raymond 1988 The James Bond Bedside Companion London Boxtree Ltd ISBN 978 1 85283 233 9 Black Jeremy 2005 The politics of James Bond from Fleming s novel to the big screen University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 6240 9 Bray Christopher 2010 Sean Connery The measure of a Man London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 23807 1 Broccoli Albert R 1998 When the Snow Melts London Boxtree ISBN 978 0 7522 1162 6 Burlingame Jon 2012 The Music of James Bond Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 986330 3 Archived from the original on 7 May 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2020 Cain Syd 2005 Not Forgetting James Bond The Autobiography of Syd Cain London Reynolds amp Hearn ISBN 978 1 905287 03 1 Chapman James 2007 Licence to Thrill A Cultural History of the James Bond Films London New York City I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 515 9 Comentale Edward P Watt Stephen Willman Skip 2005 Ian Fleming amp James Bond the cultural politics of 007 Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 21743 1 Archived from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2020 Cork John Scivally Bruce 2002 James Bond The Legacy London Boxtree ISBN 978 0 7522 6498 1 Cork John d Abo Maryam 2003 Bond girls are forever the women of James Bond London Boxtree ISBN 978 0 7522 1550 1 Lindner Christoph 2009 The James Bond phenomenon a critical reader Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 6541 5 Lisanti Tom Paul Louis 2002 Film fatales women in espionage films and television 1962 1973 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 1194 8 Archived from the original on 7 May 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2020 Macintyre Ben 2008 For Yours Eyes Only London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 7475 9527 4 McGilligan Patrick 1986 Backstory Interviews with Screenwriters of Hollywood s Golden Age University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05689 3 Moore Roger 2008 My Word is My Bond London Michael O Mara Books ISBN 978 1 84317 318 2 Peary Danny 1986 Guide for the Film Fanatic New York City Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 61081 4 Pedersen Stephanie 2004 Bra a thousand years of style support and seduction Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 2067 9 Pfeiffer Lee Worrall Dave 1998 The Essential Bond London Boxtree ISBN 978 0 7522 2477 0 Rubin Steven Jay 1981 The James Bond films a behind the scenes history Westport Conn Arlington House ISBN 978 0 87000 523 7 Rubin Steven Jay 2002 The Complete James Bond Movie Encyclopedia New York McGraw Hill Contemporary ISBN 978 0 07 141246 9 Simpson Paul 2002 The rough guide to James Bond London Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 84353 142 5 Smith Jim 2002 Bond Films London Virgin Books ISBN 978 0 7535 0709 4 Tesche Siegfried 2002 Das grosse James Bond Buch in German Berlin Henschel Verlag ISBN 978 3 89487 440 7 Yeffeth Glenn ed 2006 James Bond in the 21st century why we still need 007 Dallas Texas BenBella Books ISBN 978 1 933771 02 1 Archived from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Dr No film nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dr No Dr No at BFI Screenonline Dr No at Box Office Mojo Dr No at IMDb Dr No at AllMovie Dr No at the TCM Movie Database Dr No at the American Film Institute Catalog Dr No at Metro Goldwyn Mayer Dr No at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dr No film amp oldid 1187152643, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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