“You only live twice:
Once when you are born
And once when you look death
in the face”
From Ian Fleming's thriller You Only Live Twice.
Having watched the great Scot
actor Sean Connery as James Bond in Dr No and From Russia With Love as a
pre-teen, I went on to read all of Ian Fleming’s James Bond thrillers and
became a live-long Ian Fleming aficionado.
The first Ian Fleming (seen in the above photo) novel I
read was You Only Live Twice. I loved the book. I loved the exotic Japanese
background and the fascinating characters, Bond, of course, and Tiger Tanaka,
Dikko Henderson and Kissy Suzuki, all based on people Fleming met in Japan.
I also loved the plot.
Fleming offered a criminal madman with a Japanese castle surrounded by a garden
full of deadly plants that enticed Japanese people to come and commit suicide.
Above the castle floated a
balloon with a scull’s face, that was officially meant to be a warning, but was
in fact, an advertisement. Great stuff.
I was thrilled to later visit
Japan when I was a young sailor on the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk. Prior
to embarking the ship, I reread Fleming’s You Only Live Twice, as well as
Fleming’s journalism piece on Japan in Thrilling Cities.
Today, on the 50th
anniversary of the film version of You Only Live Twice, I recall that I was disappointed
that the film did not use Fleming’s plot. Although Fleming’s stories were highly romanticized and improbable – but not impossible – the film’s plot was
preposterous.
The film got Bond's university and his Vodka Martini wrong, and there other glowing errors that a true Bond fan was able to catch.
The film got Bond's university and his Vodka Martini wrong, and there other glowing errors that a true Bond fan was able to catch.
The film’s saving grace was
Sean Connery as Bond, the exotic Japanese background, and John Barry’s
wonderful soundtrack.
In Damian Flanagan’s piece in
the British newspaper the Express he covers the back story of Ian Fleming’s
novel and the film and writes about the late Richard Hughes (seen in the below photo), the Australian reporter and spy that Fleming modeled his
character Dikko Henderson on.
(John le Carre would later also model a character on
Henderson in his novel The Honorable Schoolboy. Le Carre said that when he told
Hughes he was using him as a model, the big Australian boomed “Libel me to the
hilt!”)
You can read the Express piece
via the below link:
You can also watch a video clip from the film and listen to John Barry's great soundtrack via the below link:
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