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In the film the poison caused death within seven seconds. Bond uses it to interrogate Tatiana and sends the tape back to MI6, where M and other officials play it back to listen to the technical specifications of the Lektor.ĭagger shoes - A shoe with a retractable, poison-tipped blade concealed in the toe-cap. Tape-Recorder Camera - A small reel-to-reel tape recorder disguised as a camera. Bond uses it to see if the telephone in his Istanbul hotel room is bugged. This case is almost identical to the one described in Fleming's novel except the book added a cyanide capsule which Bond was to use to commit suicide upon capture (Bond immediately flushes it down a toilet).īug detector - A small device that is designed to detect the presence of a phone tap device in a regular telephone when placed against such a device. In addition, there is a safety mechanism that will detonate a gas bomb in the briefcase if opened improperly. This briefcase given to Bond by Q Branch contains a folding sniper rifle inside while ammunition, a knife and fifty gold sovereigns are contained in secret compartments accessible on the outside of the case.
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It is worth noting that in 1963 the pager didn't exist, and wouldn't become a common item for over 20 years.Īttaché case - This is Bond's first real film gadget. The pager is a one-way method of communication (from MI6 to the operative) and bleeps when the user is needed. Syncraphone - Bond had a pager to notify him if he ever needed to contact MI6. He later attempts to strangle the real 007 in the film's climax, only to have it turned against him. It is used by Red Grant to strangle a Fake fake Bond as part of a training exercise in the opening scene. Garotte Wristwatch - A wristwatch from which a wire garrote can be drawn. This is a holdover from Fleming's novels, in which Bond is described as having a similar watch. Luminous Rolex Wristwatch - Bond confirms the functioning of the Geiger Counter by testing it against the luminous, slightly radioactive dial of his wristwatch (a Rolex 6538 Submariner). He uses it to scan the bottom of the boat that had taken the late John Strangways to Crab Key Island, confirming that the rock samples he had brought back had been radioactive. Geiger Counter - Bond requests a Geiger counter be shipped to Jamaica, and he picks it up at Pleydell-Smith's office. Although it doesn't appear in the novel, Bond is sent a cyanide-laced basket of fruit by Dr. In a bid to escape interrogation by Bond, he bites down on a cigarette and dies seconds later. Strangways' assistant was operating the equipment when she was murdered.Ĭyanide cigarettes - Cigarettes containing cyanide. Radio Transmitter - Hidden behind a fake panel in John Strangways' bookcase, the MI6 radio transmitter was located at the Jamaican station and was used to make regular contact with London. In Quantum of Solace use of the Walther PPK was resumed.
#007 SHARK BRIDGE MOVIE#
Bond has since used the pistol in every movie up to Tomorrow Never Dies, when it was temporarily switched to a Walther P99. Walther PPK - Technically the only notable "gadget" in the entire film is when M and Major Boothroyd force Bond to trade in his Beretta 418 for the Walther PPK. For his gadget vehicles, see List of James Bond vehicles. This article concerns the gadgets James Bond typically carried on his person, along with additional gadgets used by others. In this sense, Bond gadgets became a prime example of the literary technique of Chekhov's gun.įans eventually complained that the use of gadgets became excessive in the Roger Moore films, particularly in Moonraker, and subsequent productions struggled to find a balance in which gadgets could have a place without giving the impression that the character unduly depended on them or using stories that arbitrarily included situations that exactly fit the use of the gadgets assigned. For instance, it became an expected scene in each film where Q would present and demonstrate Bond's assigned tools for the mission, and it was a near guarantee that each and every piece would be invaluable to Bond in the field. However, the gadgets took on a more spectacular profile in the film version of Goldfinger and its tremendous success encouraged the following films to have Bond supplied still more equipment. The original books and early adaptations had only relatively minimal pieces like the modified attache case in From Russia with Love. One popular element of the James Bond franchise is the exotic equipment and vehicles he is assigned on his missions, which often prove to be critically useful.