
James Bond (Roger Moore) uses his cigar and aftershave to burn and kill a snake in Live and Let Die (1973)

Solitaire (Jane Seymour) regrets her first time with James Bond (Roger Moore) in Live and Let Die (1973)

James Bond (Roger Moore) peruses the Oh Cult Voodoo Shop in Live and Let Die (1973)

James Bond’s disapproval face
Alright, since it’s a voodoo shop I guess I’ll let “rituals” slide, but what else would skulls be used for?!

A statue of James Bond (Roger Moore) has its hands shot by Scaramanga in The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)

James Bond (Roger Moore) shows a wide-eyed sarcastic face in A View to a Kill (1985)
007 wasn’t shy with Moneypenny about his activities in Siberia aboard the glacier sub…

Bond fans are weary too, 007.
The Daniel Craig introspective James Bond should be over. We know where he came from. We know how he got here. Now let’s have a true, formulaic James Bond movie in the Craig era.
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Bunky (Paul Brooke) loses a big hand of baccarat to James Bond (Roger Moore) after originally being confident in his hand in For Your Eyes Only (1981)
It was humorous (ironic?) to have a cross-eyed character play baccarat with James Bond in For Your Eyes Only, and his appearance slightly reminded me of the “Looks Good To Me” meme.
Well, there you have it. The character James Bond does, in fact, officially “know” the James Bond theme. 🙂
This short sequence from Octopussy (1983) is a good one, not only because Bond (Roger Moore) meets his cool India contact Vijay (Vijay Armitraj), but also because of the way they agree to identify each other. Obviously, when Bond meets a contact in a foreign country, they need to agree upon something to indicate the other that they are in fact who they say they are. Whether it be a handshake or a secret password – it really doesn’t matter. It just has to be something agreed upon during earlier communications.
Read More»The six actors that have portrayed 007 in the official movies have changed since their first and last on-screen appearances. Below, you can see each actor’s first and last appearances as James Bond.

Sean Connery as James Bond at the beginning of Dr. No (1962) and Sean Connery as James Bond and Jill St. John as Tiffany Case at the end of Diamonds Are Forever (1971)