Casino Royale



"So you want me to be half monk, half hitman."

Ian Fleming sold the rights to his first James Bond novel separately from the rest of the films, which is the reason that it took so long for a proper adaptation of the first novel.

With the 21st film in the franchise, the EON production team essentially rebooted the continuity of the Bond series and started over with Bond acquiring his license to kill (due to Comic Book Time however, it is still officially part of the same series).

In this film, adapted from the novel (moving its setting from the 1950s to the present day and from France to the newly-independent Montenegro), Bond must essentially win a high-stakes game of Poker against a terrorist financier known only as Le Chiffre. Along the way, Bond gets tortured and falls in love with Vesper Lynd.

The film's first half, which shows how Bond earned his 00 status and tracked down Le Chiffre, was written directly for the screen. The second half follows Fleming's original novel, but features several changes. The card game was originally Baccarat but changed to Texas Hold 'Em Poker, a trendy move but also better suited for film. The book in general lacks the wisecracks and otherwise humorous moments, which makes the torture scene a different affair altogether. Lastly Vesper's final scenes are less action-packed, which also leaves out a long discussion between Bond and Mathis on the nature of evil.

This film is a lot darker than the previous films, with the fight scenes brutal and bloody. At some point during the Bond franchise it became essentially its own genre, about a suave superhero secret agent who would save the world from megalomaniacs using Underwater Bases, Kill Sats, pilfered nuclear weapons or anything else that might spell out the end of the world. This film in general tone is a bit closer to a political thriller at its core (tracking down the cash flow of a terrorist organization) modified to include the talents of James Bond. It was cheered on by fans of the franchise for rebooting and generally tightening what had become somewhat tired and stale.

Quantum of Solace continues directly from this movie, making it among the few Bond movies that elaborate a greater story arc instead of the standalone format.

The film is in fact the third (and certainly best) production of Casino Royale. Its predecessors were made by companies other than EON. Neither can be considered in any way canon, and both took a lot of liberties with the story and character (of course, true to form, this film took its own liberties):
 * The 1954 version was an episode made for the American Climax! TV series. While it has the honor of being the first Bond production outside a book, it Americanized everything including Bond himself, as well as greatly simplifying the story. It starred Barry Nelson as Jimmy Bond and Peter Lorre as Le Chiffre. In turn Leiter was changed from American to British.
 * The 1967 version was an unholy mess of a spoof, with no less than 8 Bonds (9 including Sean Connery, who does not appear but receives a Shout-Out) and almost as many directors. Logic is paid little heed in the pursuit of comedy. Notably, it includes David Niven as the one-and-only original Sir James Bond -- Niven was Fleming's first choice for the part before Connery made it his own -- as well as Ursula Andress's second appearance in a Bond movie, this time as both the Bond girl and James Bond. It also starred Woody Allen as young Jimmy Bond (his "disappointing" nephew), Peter Sellers as Evelyn Tremble a.k.a. James Bond, and Orson Welles as Le Chiffre. This version of the movie is now officially hosted on YouTube, for your viewing curiousity.

The 2006 film contains examples of these tropes--and you'd be surprised how many of these actually turn up in the novel:
"Arm yourself, because no one else here will save you
 * All Girls Want Bad Boys: Brutally Deconstructed with Solange. She married Demitrios and regrets it, then briefly hooks up with Bond, remarking on how they're both "bad men" and how she loves this kind of guy because they're "so much more interesting" than "nice guys". Later in the film, her association with the man who helped orchestrate the bomb plot (Demitrios) and the man who foiled it (Bond) are what gets her tortured to death.
 * Awesome Yet Practical - Very few gadgets, very little jokes, greater focus on the intelligence and physical skill of the main character. (This comes more or less from the book, since Bond didn't become a gadgeteer until the original film adaptations.) In fact, the only two pieces of truly high-tech equipment are a tracer placed into Bond's forearm and a rather high-tech first-aid kit in his car with an electrocardiogram that is connected to the MI 6 headquarters, both of which are extremely practical.
 * The relative lack of gadgets can be a case of Technology Marches On. Imagine if Sean Connery's Bond was given a radio telephone that could download navigational data from a network of military satellites in geosynchronous orbit over the Earth? Nevermind his portable wireless computer terminal that can connect to MI 6's computer database from evidently anywhere, even a fishing boat in the middle of the water, and which can  fit in a suitcase easily?
 * Good God man, be reasonable! We have to make it believable!
 * Actually there are as many gadgets as in any other Bond movie, they only lack traditional exposition. Tracking device allowing to precisely show the location of the target on the 3D map of the building and using a cellphone application as an interface? Bloodstream toxin analyzer with satellite connection? Call analysis system allowing to track the place the call was made by reading the SIM card? Definitely 'gadgety' enough.
 * Badass - Daniel Craig's version of Bond is remorseless when he kills, which becomes a theme in the film. He can also apparently smash his way through drywall and takes a nail gun to his shoulder without even a grimace.
 * Which is quite accurate to Ian Fleming's original novel version.
 * Badass in a Nice Suit: Particularly in the film's final scene.
 * Blood on These Hands - Vesper, in the shower, hysterical from panic.
 * Bond Gun Barrel - The movie plays with this bit; a part of the actual narrative becomes the "Bond Shooting At A Gun Barrel's POV" scene.
 * Break the Cutie - Bond in the chair with no bottom. Bond being heartbroken, and that causes Bond's depression and weariness seen in most of Quantum of Solace.
 * Briefcase Full of Money: The poker winnings.
 * Byronic Hero: Bond
 * Bulungi: In Madagascar, Bond storms the embassy of a fictionnal country named "Nambutu".
 * The Cameo: In the Miami airport scene, look very closely at who is in the metal detection scanner opposite the  Of all people, Richard Branson decides to make an appearance.
 * When the film is shown in airlines, it's usually cut or blurred.
 * The Can Kicked Him - Bond's first murder was in a bathroom in a Paris subway.
 * California Doubling: All scenes that take place in Montenegro and United States are actually shot in Czech Republic (that is located in different climatic zone than Montenegro and Florida). Also, Madagascar in the opening is the Bahamas.
 * Cast the Expert:
 * The actor playing the guy that James Bond pursues in the Le Parkour scene at the beginning of Casino Royale is one of the inventors of Le Parkour.
 * Perhaps in a less related example, Richard Branson in the Miami airport scene.
 * Cat Smile: Valenka (Le Chiffre's girlfriend).
 * Chase Scene - Played straight with the Parkour scene, but subverted for the car chase:.
 * Chekhov's Gun: Near the beginning is a scene with Le Chiffre playing poker. "I have 2 pair, you have a 17.5% chance of getting a straight". Guess what happens during the big poker game...
 * Bond actually
 * Early in the movie, The Bombmaker gets spooked when he sees one of the British agents holding a finger to his ear, giving away that he was using an earpiece. Later on, when Bond and Vesper are trying to evade a pair of bad guys via Fake-Out Make-Out, one of the bad guys notices the earpiece that Bond was using to listen in on Le Chifre with.
 * Chess Motifs: Variation, with casino and poker motifs.
 * City of Canals - Including a scene where
 * Cool Car: Just look at Bond's Aston! Just freaking look at it! Even if it was completely stock it would still be gorgeous!
 * And the older Aston that Bond runs into isn't half bad either.
 * Cold-Blooded Torture: Pretty disturbing especially for a Bond movie.
 * Continuity Reboot - The movie did this to the Bond movie franchise. Though they also have claimed in secondary material that it's a Prequel.
 * Possibly. A popular fan theory holds that "James Bond" is just a pseudonym used by 007 agents, and that each Bond actor in the series portrays a different character. If it's true, Casino Royale could just be the origin story for a new agent.
 * Broad Strokes - It still retains Judi Dench and the post-Cold War scenario from the Pierce Brosnan films, though now she misses the Cold War, when agents had the decency to defect after a big mistake, rather than seeing Bond as a relic of that era.
 * CPR: Clean, Pretty, Reliable: At the end, Bond isn't so much trying to restore circulation as
 * Cosmopolitan Council - The players at the high-stakes poker game.
 * Darker and Edgier - The movie tries to be more mature and realistic than its predecessors -- for example, instead of just adding extra blood, sex, and swearing (all of which existed in previous Bond films), the movie made more subtle changes. Interestingly, some of its darkest elements were actually taken straight from the book (such as the torture scene late in the film).
 * Dare to Be Badass - The chorus from the opening song puts a darker spin on this trope, basically couching it in a warning that if you don't Take a Level In Badass, you will be dead very quickly:

The odds will betray you

And I will replace you..."

"Vesper: Hello.
 * Design Student's Orgasm - With a playing card theme, in the opening credits.
 * Determinator - Bond, whenever he's in chase mode. When going after the Parkour-adept bombmaker, he uses a bulldozer to smash through the obstacles.
 * Didn't Think This Through - At least a couple on the part of the writers, where they somewhat misunderstood elements of the original novel.
 * Bond blows his cover when he and Vesper arrive at the hotel, his reasons for doing so being that he's giving Le Chiffre a name he already has in exchange for more vital information about him. In the original novel it is stated that Bond's cover didn't matter as far as Le Chiffre was concerned, he already knew who he was and if he didn't he was going to as soon as they sat down to play cards with each other, but it was important to keep up appearances so as to keep his identity as a SECRET agent a secret from all the other guests and players.
 * Downer Ending -
 * Drop-Dead Gorgeous -.
 * Dungeon Bypass - Bond's answer to Mollaka's freerunning.
 * Dyeing for Your Art - Daniel Craig buffed up and put on 20 lbs of muscle for the role of Bond.
 * Eye Scream: In the final gunfight,
 * Fake Brit - Eva Green is French.
 * Fake-Out Make-Out - Fails when a guard spots Bond's earpiece.
 * Five-Bad Band:
 * The Big Bad: Le Chiffre
 * The Dragon: Leo
 * The Evil Genius: Alex Dimitrios
 * The Brute: Kratt
 * The Dark Chick: Valenka
 * Bigger Bad: Mr. White
 * Finger-Suck Healing: Bond sucks on Vesper's fingers when she is going into shock.
 * Freeze-Frame Bonus - When Dryden is shot, there's a brief shot of him with his family, emphasizing the fact that no matter how you paint him, Bond is a killer.
 * Grenade Tag
 * Groin Attack: What Le Chiffre does with a knotted rope.
 * Heroic BSOD: Bond has a variation at the end of one game while everyone else leaves the table.
 * Hoist by His Own Petard: In one scene, a mook tries to blow up a plane via remote detontator, only to find that Bond somehow clipped the bomb to his belt...
 * Hollywood Nerd: Le Chiffre somewhat qualifies. He's very good at math, a poker prodigy, and he has an inhaler.
 * In the book, it's stated that the inhaler is benzedrine. It might not necessarily be for asthma, though; perhaps he's using it as a stimulant.
 * Benzedrine is an older name for dextroamphetamine.
 * Hostage Situation - Somewhat reversed, in that the hero is the one taking the hostage. Subverted again in that
 * Image Song - Chris Cornell's "You Know My Name", which also has cues in the score to act as the Leitmotif before the final scene.
 * Informed Attractiveness
 * Informed Attractiveness

Mathis: I suppose I don't have to tell you how beautiful you look. Half the people on that table are still watching you."

"Dryden: How did he die?
 * It Gets Easier:

Bond: Your contact? Not well.

Dryden: Made you feel it, did he? Well, you needn't worry. The second is--(gets shot by Bond)

Bond: Yes. Considerably."

"Dryden: [Discussing Bond's first kill] Made you feel it, did he? Well... not to worry. The second is-
 * It Works Better with Bullets: Bond to Dryden in the pre-credits sequence.
 * The African bomber tries to shoot Bond while on the crane, but his gun isn't loaded.
 * To be fair, he just couldn't remember if he fired six shots or only five.
 * I Want My Beloved to Be Fashionable: An inversion: Bond and Lynd are dressing each other up long before their relationship has had much development.
 * Jack of All Stats: They make a point of establishing this about him early in the movie. He's athletic but can't match the Le Parkour skills of his quarry and has to use his brain, working the environment, to make up the difference.
 * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Craig's Bond is shown initially as a cynical and tough guy. However that doesn't mean he has no humanity or he doesn't feel compassion or pity. The "shower" sequence says all.
 * Killed Mid-Sentence: Bond does this early in the film to earn his 00 status.


 * pew*

Bond: ...Yes. Considerably."

"*thump* "Yeaaaaaargh! No! No! A little more to the right.""
 * Kiss of Life:
 * Kneecapping: Casino Royale ends with Bond locating and knee-capping.
 * Kung Shui
 * Le Parkour: The original creator of parkour plays a bomber running away from Bond. The bomber uses parkour, whereas Bond takes somewhat more of a direct route...
 * The Man Behind the Man: Alex Dimitrios to the parkour bomber, then Le Chiffre to Dimitrios and Mr. White to Le Chiffre. Continues on into Quantum of Solace, where more men behind Mr. White are revealed.
 * Manservice - Bond climbing out of the ocean. Many jaws dropped.
 * For the more traditional fanservice: Why is that woman in a bathing suit riding a horse on a beach?
 * Meaningful Echo - "Money isn't as important as knowing who to trust": What Le Chiffre says to Dimitiros when he reminds him what's important in their organization
 * Misplaced Wildlife - An early scene has people watching a fight between a mongoose and a cobra... except the mongoose is actually a ferret.
 * Mobstacle Course: The Le Parkour villain does this when he wants to be a jerk.
 * Mood Whiplash: During the exceptionally brutal torture scene, Bond informs Le Chiffre that he has an itch "down there". The villain takes another whack at the poor man's family jewels while Bonds screams: "No, no! To the right! To the right!" before breaking down into hysterical laughter/tears and exclaiming: "Now the whole world's gonna know you died scratching my balls!"
 * Mythology Gag - Vesper's introduction to Bond references Miss Moneypenny, who does not appear in the film. Later in the film, a bartender asks him whether he prefers his martini shaken or stirred, but Bond is too frustrated at the moment to care and snaps, "Do I look like I give a damn?"
 * And on their way to the Casino, Bond jokingly tells Vesper her alias is "Stephanie Broadchest", referencing the naming style of Bond girls like Pussy Galore, Honey Ryder and Kissy Suzuki.
 * When M chastises Bond early in the movie, she mentions "Christ, I miss the Cold War," a callback to her character's introduction in Goldeneye, where she chastises Bond (played by Pierce Brosnan) for being a "relic of the Cold War."
 * Also Bond wins a classic Aston Martin DB5, which is one of the best known cars from the older movies.
 * Can anyone say "Two measures of Gordon's, one of vodka, half a measure of Kina Lilet, shaken well over ice until chilled, and served with a thin slice of lemon"?
 * Nail'Em: Gettler attacks bond with a nail gun in the climax. It appears to have rapid fire function.
 * The Name Is Bond, James Bond - Avoided until the last scene. Complete with the Leitmotif.
 * Never Bring a Knife to A Fist Fight: Bond can handle the guy with a machete.
 * Never Trust a Trailer - You see Bond kissing Vesper in the sea in the poster up there? The scene, which also appears in the trailer, is not in the movie.
 * Parking Payback - Bond is mistaken for a member of the resort staff and ordered by a guest (with extreme condescension) to park his car. He does so -- by backing it forcefully into a parking barrier, setting off many car alarms. This is not just for kicks and giggles; it's a handy distraction as well so Bond can get a good look at the hotel's security footage. Gets a Brick Joke when the guest spots Bond later that night, double-taking in surprise.
 * Pragmatic Adaptation - While obviously more well-known and popular, Texas Hold-Em is also far more of a psychological warfare game than Baccarat.
 * Product Placement - Lots, especially for Sony. The most bizarre one has to be the hotel that stores its surveillance camera footage on Blu-ray discs...
 * Also, Vesper brings up James's watch when evaluating his personality, which he corrects her Rolex guess to Omega. The marketing for the film also included Omega ads involving Bond.
 * Race Lift - Felix Leiter (a blond Texan in the novels) is black in this movie and in Quantum of Solace (played by Jeffrey Wright). Incidentally, before Wright the actor playing Leiter had changed with every film; only one actor (David Hedison) had ever reprised the role, and his two appearances were non-consecutive and 16 years apart. (There was a black Leiter prior to Wright: Bernie Casey in the non-canonical Never Say Never Again.)
 * Railing Kill: Bond throws a bodyguard over a stairwell railing before fighting Obanno.
 * Rated "M" for Manly
 * Red Right Hand: As many Bond villains do, most of the bad guys have one.
 * Rewind, Replay, Repeat: Bond checks the security tapes at the Ocean Club.
 * Road Trip Across the Street
 * Rule of Cool -
 * Nearly mathematically impossible, yes, but ask any card player about their worst bad beat, and it'll sound almost exactly like Le Chiffre's. The odds of quad aces losing a hand are effectively zero, and yet it happens.
 * Scenery Porn: Southern Europe is gorgeous.
 * Sequel Hook: So much that the opening scene of Quantum of Solace continues right after Bond gets Mr. White.
 * Sherlock Scan: Bond and Vesper do this to each other on the train.
 * Shirtless Scene: Oh, yeah.
 * Shoot the Shaggy Dog: It sure took a long time for Bond and Vesper to go to Italy just for
 * Shower of Angst - Vesper takes one fully clothed while Bond tries to comfort her.
 * Show Some Leg - To give Bond an advantage in the poker game, he gets Vesper a very low-cut dress. It backfires somewhat - Bond ends up just as distracted, especially since Vesper intentionally ignores his instruction to walk up behind him and instead approaches from the other side of the table so that he can see her coming.
 * Somebody Set Up Us the Bomb
 * Staggered Zoom - At the start of the airport chase sequence.
 * Tampering with Food and Drink:
 * The Stoic - James Bond, as mentioned above.
 * Technology Marches On: Cell phones, here probably intended to show how gadgets aren't nessecary in the modern world. Amusingly being pre-iPhone they all now look terribly out of date
 * Theme Music Withholding: Done so very well.
 * These Hands Have Killed: Vesper goes through this during her Shower of Angst, after she's involved with Bond's confrontation with the African warlords.
 * Too Kinky to Torture: Not really, but invoked by Bond as part of being Defiant to the End. He asks Le Chiffre to scratch an itch for him.

"Bond: "Don't worry, you're not my type."
 * To the Pain - "You know, I never understood all these elaborate tortures. It's the simplest thing... to cause more pain than a man can possibly endure." (then comes the Groin Attack mentioned above)
 * This also may be a Take That Mythology Gag referring to the fairly elaborate torture scenes from prior Bond movies, most notably the laser cutting table in Goldfinger.
 * But that wasn't a torture scene in Goldfinger. He didn't expect him to talk, he expected him to DIE!
 * Tragic Hero - The novel is written basically as a tragedy, showing Bond's downward spiral of failure and futility. As a spy, he's clearly in over his head and only succeeds in a technical sense through sheer luck and outside intervention. It's only after he loses everything, including Vesper, that he embraces his profession as a super-spy.
 * Trailers Always Spoil: The trailers for the film include the very last shot of the film, with Bond in the very nice suit and vest while carrying a silenced submachine gun. They do leave out the context and the line that makes that scene so awesome though.
 * Try and Follow - Bond chasing after the bomber.
 * Two Decades Behind: Definitely an example of Pandering to the Base. The recipe for the martini variant Bond names after Vesper Lynd is taken word-for-word from the novel. The problem is, Lillet stopped making one of its ingredients, Kina Lillet, in 1986, replacing it with a reformulated Lillet (sans the quinine that gave it the "Kina" part of the name) called Lillet Blanc. But the film is set in the present-day, and mentions Kina Lillet by name. (This also shows up in Quantum of Solace.)
 * Viewers are Morons: Baccarat is changed to the more popular Texas Hold 'Em, which was enjoying a surge of popularity in mid-decade.
 * Villainous Breakdown - Le Chiffre's "You! Are SO WRONG!!"
 * Watch the Paint Job - The effects crew managed to rotate Bond's Aston Martin 7 times for the scene where it's totaled. Makes any car fan weep, and it set a world record in the process.
 * On the DVD extra featurette about how they performed the stunt, they felt it necessary to include a disclaimer noting the car was specially reinforced and Do Not Try This At Home. As if the average person who buys an Aston Martin's first impulse is to see how many times you can roll it . . ..
 * What Happened to Felix Leiter Stepping In To Bring In Le Chiffre?
 * What the Hell, Hero?: Subverted. M gives Bond a severe chewing out for shooting the unarmed bombmaker and blowing up an embassy, but her main complaint is that he got caught on videotape doing it.
 * Why We're Bummed Communism Fell - "Christ, I miss the Cold War." (Consider too that this is the first Bond film explicitly set after 9/11 and world politics in Hollywood History terms is much more complex.)
 * It's also a Mythology Gag. When Judi Dench was first cast in the Bond universe, while chastising Brosnan!Bond about his trigger-happy nature, she refers to him as a "relic from the Cold War."
 * Xanatos Speed Chess - Things take a sharp turn for the confusing after Bond and Vesper are rescued following the card game.
 * Yank the Dog's Chain -
 * You Look Familiar - Poker game participant Madame Wu is played by Tsai Chin, who also played the Chinese girl Bond bedded at the beginning of You Only Live Twice.
 * You're Not My Type: In an exchange between Bond and Vesper.

Vesper: "Smart?"

Bond: "Single.""


 * Your Princess Is in Another Castle - The Big Bad has been defeated, Vesper and Bond do it, all is good...

The 1967 movie contains examples of:

 * All-Star Cast
 * Americans Are Cowboys - The American army is apparently composed of cowboys and Indians.
 * And Starring - Terence Cooper and Barbara Bouchet are credited as co-stars, but right before them, George Raft and Jean Paul Belmondo are featured in the secondary cast with no special words around their names despite making a very minor appearance at the climax.
 * Anyone Can Die - It's the only movie where James Bond dies.
 * Backwards-Firing Gun
 * Bizarritecture- East Berlin
 * BLAM Episode- If there was one film that could be called a Big Lipped Alligator movie this is it
 * Bonnie Scotland - Much of the film's first section takes place here.
 * Breakaway Pop Hit - "The Look of Love", due to severe Mood Whiplash (see below).
 * Cast as a Mask - Dr. Noah is pretty much a spoof of this trope.
 * Celibate Hero - Niven's Bond, following having to double-cross the love of his life, Mata Hari (yes, that Mata Hari), and have her executed. And then he kisses Moneypenny's daughter. Yeah.
 * Cover Drop - During the opening credits, you may have noticed the images of explosions and several characters as angels. These will make sense at the very end.
 * Creator Killer - A sadly literal instance. The stress of making the film caused producer Charles K. Feldman to develop heart problems, which claimed his life just two years after its release.
 * A less lethal instance happened to all of the film's directors except for John Huston. All of them had fairly distinguished careers prior to working on this film, but none of them had anywhere near the same success afterwards. Probably the worst affected was Val Guest; after word got out that he had taken over as the primary director late in production, he got unfairly blamed for the resulting mess and was reduced to directing Awful British Sex Comedies for the rest of his career.
 * The Danza - Terence Cooper as Coop.
 * Death by Adaptation -
 * Dropped a Bridge on Him / McLeaned -
 * Dueling Movies - It was released in the same year as an official Bond, You Only Live Twice.
 * Egocentric Team Naming: Once Sir James Bond becomes head of MI 6 after the previous M gets offed, the very first thing he does is rename ALL his agents, male AND female, James Bond 007 as a ploy to confuse the enemy.
 * Everyone Join the Party: In the finale, all Hell breaks loose when the Big Bad's casino is invaded by Ransome and an army of secret agents (apparently) sent to assist James Bond, consisting of . And then everyone else in the casino joins in on the action. No one is safe,.
 * Everything's Better with Monkeys -
 * Fluffy Cloud Heaven and Fire and Brimstone Hell - Spoofed in the final scene.
 * "Six of them went to a heavenly spot, the seventh one is going to a place where it's terribly hot."
 * Follow That Car! - Spoofed.
 * Gainax Ending
 * I Am Spartacus- The original Bond gives orders that all agents are to be James Bond, 007.
 * Instrument of Murder - Ursula Andress uses the old machine-gun-in-the-bagpipes trick.
 * Karma Houdini -
 * Mood Whiplash - When Vesper Lynd recruits Evelyn Tremble, the film suddenly becomes considerably less wacky, though still heavy on comic Double Entendre; it's where "The Look of Love" comes in - after 40+ minutes of slapstick. Indeed, most of Peter Sellers' scenes come as this compared to the rest of the film, in part because he plays his role mostly straight.
 * Real Life Writes the Plot - The increasingly zany nature of the film and its production was largely compensating for Sellers being fired before all his material was shot. How zany did things get? In the end, each segment of the movie was filmed by a different director, making it seem absurdly disjointed.
 * Rule of Funny - About the only reason for all the stuff that happens in the climactic fight.
 * Star-Derailing Role - For Peter Sellers; this started a downward trajectory for his career that lasted eight years before a Career Resurrection.
 * Take That - Niven's Bond calls Sean Connery's Bond a sex maniac who dragged the James Bond name through the dirt, and takes his fellow spies to task for relying on gadgets.
 * Peter Sellers was fired midway through the shoot due to chronic absence and miscellaneous poor behavior, so the filmmakers making up for this by having his character can be seen as this as well.
 * Too Many Cooks Spoil the Soup: 5 directors working on it wouldn't lead into good results.
 * Troubled Production: Not only an obscene number of directors and screenwriters got involved, but the actors fought with them.
 * Villainous Rescue-
 * Who's Laughing Now? -
 * Your Makeup Is Running
 * Your Makeup Is Running

The 1954 TV production contains examples of:

 * Deleted Scene:
 * Hostage for Macguffin
 * Mutilation Interrogation
 * Playing Against Type: Peter Lorre is not an Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain...
 * Pretty in Mink
 * The Un-Reveal - Chiffre is shown groping for his hat -- then the show ends. It had previously been mentioned that he kept a razor hidden there.
 * What Could Have Been: The network apparently commissioned a James Bond TV show based on the strength of this one special. Ian Fleming wrote a few outlines for some episodes and then negotiations fell through, and Fleming used the outlines he had already created and that became the eighth Bond book For Your Eyes Only. Fleming would have his turn in television again when he did some concept work for The Man from U.N.C.L.E..
 * What Could Have Been: The network apparently commissioned a James Bond TV show based on the strength of this one special. Ian Fleming wrote a few outlines for some episodes and then negotiations fell through, and Fleming used the outlines he had already created and that became the eighth Bond book For Your Eyes Only. Fleming would have his turn in television again when he did some concept work for The Man from U.N.C.L.E..