Casino Royale (novel)

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Title Casino Royale

First edition cover - published by Jonathan Cape.
Author Ian Fleming
Cover artist Ian Fleming (devised)
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Series James Bond
Genre(s) Spy novel
Publisher Jonathan Cape
Released 13 April 1953
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
ISBN NA
Followed by Live and Let Die

Casino Royale by Ian Fleming was the first James Bond novel. It would eventually pave the way for 11 other novels by Fleming himself in addition to 2 short story collections, followed by many 'continuation' Bond novels by other authors.

Since first being published on April 13, 1953, by Jonathan Cape, Casino Royale has been adapted for the screen three times: a 1954 CBS television episode of Climax! starring Barry Nelson as "Jimmy Bond", a 1967 film spoof of the same name starring David Niven as 007, and the twenty-first official film in the EON Productions Bond franchise, released on November 17, 2006, and starring Daniel Craig as Bond.

Contents

[edit] The novel

Casino Royale was first released on April 13 1953, in a United Kingdom hardcover edition by publishers Jonathan Cape[1]. The first paperback edition of Casino Royale in the United States was re-titled by publisher American Popular Library in 1955 (this followed a hardcover edition with the original title). Fleming's suggestions for a new title, The Double-O Agent and The Deadly Gamble, were disregarded in favour of You Asked For It. The novel was subtitled "Casino Royale" and made reference to secret agent 007 as "Jimmy Bond" on the back cover. In 1960 the original title Casino Royale replaced You Asked For It for all further paperback editions in the United States.

In 1954, Anthony Boucher reviewed the book for The New York Times, commenting that the book, although about a British Secret Service operative, belongs "pretty much to the private-eye school" of fiction. He praised the first part, saying that

Fleming, in a style suggesting a more literate version of Cheyney's "Dark" series, manages to make baccarat clear even to one who's never played it and produced as exciting a gambling sequence as I've ever read. But then he decides to pad out the book to novel length and leads the weary reader through a set of tough clichés to an ending which surprises nobody save Operative 007. You should certainly begin this book; but you might as well stop when the baccarat game is over.[2]

When the book came to the UK in paperback form in 1955, readers were given their first glimpse of an image of secret agent James Bond on the book jacket. The image of Bond was based on a photograph of American actor Richard Conte, who would become known for roles in films such as Ocean's Eleven (1960) and The Godfather (1972).

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
Rare 1969 reprint by Pan Books.
Rare 1969 reprint by Pan Books.

Monsieur Le Chiffre, "the cipher", is an agent for the Soviet assassination bureau SMERSH, running a baccarat game at a French casino to raise needed operational funds—namely, to recover SMERSH's money that he lost in a failed attempt to establish a chain of brothels.

Expert baccarat player James Bond (British secret agent 007) is assigned the job of beating Le Chiffre, in the hope that the Russian agent's gambling debts will provoke SMERSH into killing him. After hours of intense play, Bond manages to beat Le Chiffre, but only with extra money provided by Felix Leiter of the CIA, who is in attendance as a covert observer.

Bond has been provided with an assistant, the beautiful but emotionally turbulent Vesper Lynd, who becomes his lover. But she is holding a terrible secret — she is actually a Russian double agent, under orders to see that Bond does not escape Le Chiffre. With her unwilling connivance, Bond is captured and tortured by Le Chiffre, but Le Chiffre is assassinated by SMERSH. Unintentionally, the SMERSH agent who kills Le Chiffre (and whose organization would be Bond's bitter enemies over several later books) saves the captive Bond, telling him "I have no orders about you" - but does mark him by cutting the Cyrillic letter "Ш" (for "шпион" (Shpion), i.e. Spy) in the back of his left hand "for future reference".

The role of SMERSH (an organization which actually existed) in the book reflects the fact that it started as a kind of internal security service targeting those Soviet agents branded as disloyal, and only gradually expanding their operations to direct confrontations with the Western intelligence agencies.

Bond spends three weeks hospitalized while recovering from Le Chiffre's torture. He expresses an intention to resign from the Service and spends his convalescence with Vesper Lynd, but becomes suspicious of her after her apparent dishonesty in combination with her terror of a man with an eyepatch. Believing the man to be Gettler, another agent of SMERSH sent to kill her (and Bond) for her disobedience, Vesper commits suicide and leaves a note for Bond explaining her actions. Her betrayal inspires Bond to remain in the Service and he reports to his superiors, tersely: "The bitch is dead now."

[edit] Story inspirations

Ian Fleming claimed that Casino Royale was inspired by certain incidents that took place during his career at the Naval Intelligence Division of the Admiralty. The first, and the basis for the novel, was a trip to Lisbon that Fleming and the Director of Naval Intelligence, Admiral Godfrey, took during World War II en route to the United States. While there, they went to the Estoril Casino in Estoril, which (due to the neutral status of Portugal) had a number of spies of warring regimes present. Fleming claimed that while there he was cleaned out by a "chief German agent" at a table playing Chemin de Fer. Admiral Godfrey tells a different story: Fleming only played Portuguese businessmen and that afterwards Fleming had fantasized about their being German agents and the excitement of cleaning them out. His references to 'Red Indians' (Four times, twice on last page) comes from Fleming's own 30 Assault Unit, which he nicknamed his own 'Red Indians'.

The failed assassination attempt on Bond while at Royale-les-Eaux is also claimed by Fleming to be inspired by a real event. The inspiration comes from a failed assassination on Franz von Papen who was a Vice-Chancellor and Ambassador under Adolf Hitler. Both Papen and Bond survive their assassination attempts, carried out by Bulgarians, due to a tree that protects them both from a bomb blast.[3]

[edit] Comic strip adaptation

Casino Royale was the first James Bond novel to be adapted as a daily comic strip which was published in the British Daily Express newspaper, and syndicated worldwide. It ran from July 7, 1958 to December 13, 1958, and was written by Anthony Hern and illustrated by John McLusky; the strip was reprinted by Titan Books in the early 1990s and again in 2005; the 2005 collection, titled Casino Royale, also includes the comic strip adaptations of Live and Let Die and Moonraker.

To aid the Daily Express in illustrating James Bond, Ian Fleming commissioned an artist to create a sketch of what he believed James Bond to look like. John McLusky, however, felt that Fleming's 007 looked too "outdated" and "pre-war" and thus changed Bond to give him a more masculine look.

[edit] Adaptation history

[edit] The 1954 television episode

Main article: Casino Royale (1954)

In 1954, producer and director Gregory Ratoff of CBS paid Ian Fleming $1,000 to adapt Casino Royale into a one-hour television adventure as part of their Climax! series. Additionally, in the late 1950s CBS invited Fleming to write 32 episodes over a two-year period for a television show based on the James Bond character. Fleming agreed and began to write outlines for this series. When nothing ever came of this, however, Fleming grouped and adapted three of the outlines into short stories and released the 1960 anthology For Your Eyes Only along with an additional two new short stories.

The episode, Casino Royale, aired on October 21, 1954 and starred Barry Nelson as secret agent "Card Sense" James 'Jimmy' Bond and Peter Lorre as Le Chiffre. For this Americanised version of the story, Bond is described as an agent for "Combined Intelligence" (apparently confusing what the "C" in CIA stood for), while the character Felix Leiter from the original novel became "Clarence Leiter," an agent for Station S, and a combination of Leiter and Rene Mathis. The name "Mathis" was given to the leading lady, who is named Valerie Mathis (instead of Vesper Lynd).

This was the first screen adaptation of a James Bond novel, and was made before EON acquired the Bond film rights (actually, before there even was an EON Productions). When MGM eventually obtained the rights to the 1967 film version of Casino Royale, it also received the rights to this television episode.

The hour long showing itself is split into three acts:

  • Act I: Opening -- Opening of Baccarat scene
  • Act II: Opening of Baccarat Scene -- Hotel Room finale Opening
  • Act III: Hotel Room finale Opening -- Ending

According to Lee Pfeiffer[1], a well known James Bond expert, the Casino Royale TV-film was lost for decades after its first broadcast on 21st October 1954. It was not until early 1980s that the show was finally found and put on VHS release (there was also a one-time appearance on TBS). However, such release (that was later included as a bonus feature to the DVD of the 1967 Casino Royale film) and the airing on TBS did not include the full finale of the adaptation, which were at that point lost. It was found later on and included on a Spy Guise & Cara Entertainment VHS release. That release is the only one to date which includes the full finale that was last seen on the original broadcast, although as Lee Pfeiffer points out, the very last few seconds of the ending credits are still missing. After the VHS version, Spy Guise offered pre-orders for a DVD release, but rights issues with MGM forced them to scuttle the DVD release. MGM subsequently included the truncated version on its DVD of the 1967 Casino Royale. While Spy Guise has made the full version available to MGM, no public announcement of such a DVD release has been made. Early announcements regarding the DVD and HD disc releases of the 2006 film version of Casino Royale do not indicate the TV special's inclusion.

All incomplete versions, as mentioned above, have the show ending with Bond confronting Le Chiffre and telling Valerie to go call the police. The complete ending has Le Chiffre grabbing Valerie and holding her captive with a razor, while slowly moving out of the room. Bond takes the chance to shoot him. It then ends with Bond and Valerie in embrace, a few words from host William Lundigan, and the credits.

There is an urban legend that Peter Lorre, "killed" in Act 3, stood up and walked off camera during the broadcast. In fact, this actually occurred during an earlier episode of Climax!, during an adaptation of Raymond Chandler's The Long Goodbye; the event was widely covered in the media of the day.[4]

[edit] Cast and characters

[edit] The 1967 spoof/Charles K. Feldman production

David Niven & Barbara Bouchet in Casino Royale / 1967.
David Niven & Barbara Bouchet in Casino Royale / 1967.

In 1955, Ian Fleming sold the film rights of Casino Royale to producers Michael Garrison (later creator of The Wild Wild West) and Gregory Ratoff for $6,000. Ratoff eventually tried to sell the idea of a James Bond series to 20th Century Fox but was turned down. In conjunction with Michael Garrison, Ratoff's widow sold the film rights to producer Charles K. Feldman after Ratoff's death. With the success of the official James Bond film series in the early 1960s, Feldman went to producers Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman with a proposition to produce a serious film version starring Sean Connery as agent 007, but was turned down after their discontent on a joint production with Kevin McClory on Thunderball. Like McClory's later 1983 production of Never Say Never Again, Feldman started his own production and first approached Connery who was in the heat of frustration playing the role. Connery offered his acceptance to do the film under a $1 million dollar salary (a salary Connery eventually received to return for 1971's Diamonds Are Forever and an even larger salary on Never Say Never Again), which Feldman disapproved of. Coming off the success of the comedy What’s New, Pussycat?, Feldman decided the best way to profit from the film rights was to make a spoof. Feldman's spoof was produced and released in 1967 by Columbia Pictures whose close TV subsidiary, CBS, also produced the earlier version. Burt Bacharach wrote and arranged the soundtrack, which had appearances by Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass and Dusty Springfield.

The spoof was originally going to be centred around the character of Evelyn Tremble (played by Peter Sellers) and his impersonation of James Bond. However, Sellers expressed increasing discontent when the film became focused on a comedy and not just the original serious treatment, which he felt his performance was suited for exclusively. This led to Sellers walking off the picture and Feldman's inability to continue production; firing the actor. Feldman later turned to one of the original choices to play James Bond before Sean Connery, actor David Niven, to shape his new scenes around what Peter Sellers/Ursula Andress segments could be used. Despite Feldman having on board what Bond film alumni screenwriter Richard Maibaum referred to in a 1987 interview as Fleming's main inspiration for Bond, the parody continued due to the absence of having Connery on board for a Bond film. After this film's budget had ballooned from its original $6 million dollar budget to $12 million, Feldman reportedly told Connery at a later Hollywood party that it would have been cheaper to have paid him his $1 million fee on only a serious version of the Casino Royale material.

The 'serious version' of Casino Royale as it has come to be called went missing for years upon its showing. It was not until 1981 when film collector Jim Shoenberger discovered an old film can labeled Casino Royale. They were almost disposed of when it was thought it was a copy of the more widely known Casino Royale parody until he realized it contained a black & white piece.

[edit] The unproduced Raymond Benson stage play

In 1985, Raymond Benson adapted Fleming's novel into a stage play, although the play was never produced. The play was submitted to a British agent who recommended that it not be produced. In an interview Benson stated,

"She was very elderly and in my opinion she just didn't get it. She recommended that the play not be produced. After further thought, Glidrose shelved it with the ultimate decision that a James Bond stage play simply wouldn't work. The films had Bond in a monopoly and there was no way a play could compete. I disagreed, but it was their property."[5] — Raymond Benson

In 1996, Benson went on to become the third continuation author of the James Bond novels (not counting John Pearson who did not write original novels in the oeuvre). In total, Benson wrote six novels, three novelisations, and three short stories before retiring from the job in 2002.

[edit] The 2006 film

The 2006 film tie-in novel.
The 2006 film tie-in novel.

In the 1990s, Sony Pictures Entertainment (which had incorporated Columbia Pictures) decided to make its own serious adaptation of Casino Royale and had also announced plans to produce its own rival Bond series, but these plans, in addition to Kevin McClory's plans for a second reconfiguration of Thunderball (the first being Never Say Never Again) were laid to rest when Sony settled a legal action with MGM/UA in 1999 giving up any rights to the James Bond character. Included in the settlement Sony traded the rights to Casino Royale for MGM's partial-rights to Spider-Man. The distribution rights to Never Say Never Again were previously acquired by MGM from Warner Bros. in 1997. Kevin McClory claimed until his death in November 2006 to own the film rights to Thunderball, but a court that heard the Sony/MGM case held that his rights had expired.

After MGM's acquisition of the film rights to Casino Royale there was speculation that an official version would be produced. Ironically, in 2004 a Sony/Comcast consortium acquired the Bond film series rights co-owner United Artists. Soon after, in 2005 it was announced by EON Productions that their next James Bond adventure would in fact be Casino Royale, to be directed by GoldenEye director Martin Campbell.

On October 14, 2005 during a news conference by EON Productions and Sony Pictures Entertainment it was announced that English actor Daniel Craig would play James Bond. Taking over from Pierce Brosnan, this is Craig's first appearance as the British secret agent. He is supported in the film by Eva Green as Vesper Lynd and Mads Mikkelsen as Le Chiffre. Judi Dench also returns for her fifth Bond film as Bond's superior, M. In keeping with the fact that Casino Royale is the first Bond novel, the film is a reboot/prequel, showing Bond at the beginning of his career as a 00-agent. The film was first released on November 17, 2006, and on DVD and Blu-ray Disc March 13, 2007.

[edit] Trivia

  • According to Win Scott Eckert, 'Casino Royale' is set between June and July 1951.
The 2002 Penguin Books paperback edition. This same cover was used for the 2006 edition, released to coincide with the newest film adaptation.
The 2002 Penguin Books paperback edition. This same cover was used for the 2006 edition, released to coincide with the newest film adaptation.
  • Jonathan Cape, the publishers of the first British edition, would publish the first hardcover editions of every Bond novel (with the exception of novelisations) until No Deals, Mr. Bond in 1987.
  • The novel’s physical description of Le Chiffre is based on the English occultist Aleister Crowley. Crowley’s interest in sadomasochistic pornography is said to have also influenced a scene in the novel in which Le Chiffre violently tortures Bond’s testicles with a carpet beater.
  • In the novel, Bond meets Felix Leiter for the first time after a run at the roulette table. After introducing himself with the popular line "Bond. James Bond," the two go to the bar where Bond orders his famous “dry martini” (see shaken, not stirred).
  • In 2006, first editions of the book were selling for $30,000 to $60,000 from antiquarian booksellers. Jonathan Cape has reported that 4,728 copies were printed and less than half of those were actually sold commercially; the rest were given to public libraries. A second printing was published by Cape in May 1953 and a third in May 1954 using the same cover. Further printings used a different cover. The first edition’s cover was devised by Ian Fleming and executed by Kenneth Lewis; the motif used on the cover--of blood dripping from a heart--would be included in the opening credits of the 2006 film. Fleming also devised the cover for the first editions of Live and Let Die (1954) and Moonraker (1955).
  • According to the biography Howard Hawks: The Grey Fox of Hollywood, by Todd McCarthy, the director of His Girl Friday considered filming a version of Casino Royale in 1962, possibly starring Cary Grant as James Bond, but, ultimately, chose not to. There is a webpage that speculates on what a Howard Hawks Bond film might have been like.[6]
  • The Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “The Royale” is set in an alien reconstruction of a fictional hotel and casino called “The Hotel Royale”, which takes its name from a (nonexistent) novel; the episode makes no mention of the Fleming novel. However, the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode “Our Man Bashir” has clear allusions to Casino Royale, including a British secret agent playing a game of baccarat against a villain at a French casino.
  • In Wu Ming’s novel 54 (pub. 2003), Cary Grant goes on a secret mission on behalf of MI6. In the English countryside he stumbles upon a copy of Casino Royale and starts to read it. Grant’s harsh judgement on both the plot and the James Bond character is one of the comedic elements in the novel. He ends up discussing the book’s “incoherence” with British secret agents and his friend David Niven, who short-sightedly comments: “They’ll never make a film out of that!”. This reference has a double significance, as Grant (as noted above) was one of the first actors considered to play James Bond and in a version of Casino Royale while Niven portrayed the character in the 1967 film adaptation of the book.
  • In a documentary included with the U.S DVD of the 1967 release of "Casino Royale", Charles K. Feldman states that Ian Fleming had written the book with David Niven in mind, and therefore sent a copy of the book to Niven.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Universal Exports-Casino Royale. Retrieved on March 4, 2006.
  2. ^ Boucher, Anthony (1954), "Criminals at Large," The New York Times, April 25, 1954, p. BR27
  3. ^ Chancellor, Henry (2005). James Bond: The Man and His World. John Murray. ISBN 0-7195-6815-3. 
  4. ^ Death Takes a Powder. Snopes.com. Retrieved on March 4, 2006.
  5. ^ Casino Royale The 'Lost' Stage Play. Retrieved on August 6, 2005.
  6. ^ Koenig, William (1998). Howard Hawks' CASINO ROYALE. Retrieved on March 4, 2006.

[edit] External links

Works of Ian Fleming
James Bond: Casino Royale (1953) | Live and Let Die (1954) | Moonraker (1955) | Diamonds Are Forever (1956) | From Russia with Love (1957) | Dr. No (1958) | Goldfinger (1959) | For Your Eyes Only (1960) | Thunderball (1961) | The Spy Who Loved Me (1962) | On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1963) | You Only Live Twice (1964) | The Man with the Golden Gun (1965) | Octopussy and The Living Daylights (1966)
Other Fiction: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1964)
Non-Fiction: The Diamond Smugglers (1957) | Thrilling Cities (1963)