List of James Bond henchmen in Thunderball
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A list of henchman from the 1965 James Bond film and novel Thunderball from the List of James Bond henchmen.
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[edit] Count Lippe
James Bond character | |
Count Lippe | |
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Gender | Male |
Affiliation | SPECTRE |
Portrayed by | Guy Doleman Pat Roach |
Count Lippe is a fictional character and henchman in the James Bond novel Thunderball. He also appears in the 1965 film of the same name and the 1983 remake, Never Say Never Again. In Thunderball he is played by Guy Doleman, and in Never Say Never Again by Pat Roach.
The Counts of Lippe really existed, and have descendants still living today. However, since 1806 all members of the family have had the title of Prince, not Count. The name is probably a reference to Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands (originally Prince of Lippe) who was a friend of Ian Fleming. The Prince said to friends the name 'Lippe' in the original novel was a practical joke on the part of Fleming.
[edit] Novel
Count Lippe is described as an extremely handsome lady-killer. He has brown hair, is athletic-looking, roughly six foot, and has certain features that suggest he may be Spanish or from South America. Based on stories that Lippe tells the staff at Shrublands, Bond assumes he is of Portuguese blood and is probably from Macau.
Lippe first meets Bond outside of the Shrublands health farm when he pulls up in a Bentley and nearly hits Patricia Fearing who is saved by James Bond's quick reaction. Lippe is later seen by Bond arguing with a Shrublands' masseur who requests that Lippe remove his wrist-watch while receiving a massage. When Lippe reluctantly does so, Bond notices that it was being used to cover a tattoo in red that he learns was the sign of the Red Lightning Tong. Lippe overhears Bond's phone conversation in which he is informed of the symbol and later attempts to kill Bond by turning up the power on a traction table that Bond is using. After being saved by Fearing, Bond retaliates against Lippe by trapping him in a steam bath and turning up the heat. Consequently, Lippe suffers second-degree burns and is hospitalised for a week.
Lippe was actually at Shrublands on behalf of SPECTRE, a terrorist organisation. Lippe, called "Sub-operator G" by Ernst Stavro Blofeld, the head of SPECTRE, was tasked to oversee Giuseppe Petacchi at the Boscombe Down Airfield where the bombing squadron was undergoing training. While Lippe's mission was semi-successful he was considered "unreliable" by Blofeld after getting into his childish clash with James Bond. As a consequence of Lippe being put into the hospital, Blofeld orders his elimination.
Because Bond knew of Lippe's connection to the Red Lightning Tong, Lippe was fearful that Bond may be able to take it a step further and learn of Lippe's connection to SPECTRE. For this reason Lippe tracks Bond down and tails him in a Volkswagen unknowing that he himself is being pursued by SPECTRE agent #6. Ultimately Lippe's attempt to kill Bond once again fails and Lippe is killed when his Volkswagen is blown up.
In the second Young Bond novel by Charlie Higson, Blood Fever, Count Lippe's father is mentioned as a guest in attendance at the villain's dinner party. His father is named as "Count Armando Lippe from Lisbon," however, the last name of Lippe only appears in the UK edition. In the U.S. edition he is simply "Count Armando from Lisbon" for unknown reasons.
[edit] Film
A nobleman of undetermined nationality, Count Lippe is encountered by James Bond at the Shrublands health spa. He is ultimately revealed to be an agent of SPECTRE charged with hiring Angelo Palazzi to impersonate Francois Derval. He makes at least one attempt on Bond's life at the clinic. Eventually, Lippe is killed by Fiona Volpe on Ernst Stavro Blofeld's orders, as punishment for his poor judgement in hiring the greedy Palazzi.
Unlike the previous version of Lippe, in Never Say Never Again there is no mention of him being a count. Also he is not directly involved in SPECTRE's plot to have Jack Petachi (this film's version of François Derval/Angelo Palazzi) steal NATO nuclear warheads. Instead, he is merely an assassin sent by Fatima Blush to kill Bond at the clinic. He and Bond have a fight that destroys the clinic, and Lippe is ultimately killed when he falls onto broken glass after Bond throws a beaker filled with his own urine sample into the killer's face.
[edit] Fiona Volpe
Fiona Volpe, played by Luciana Paluzzi, is a secondary villainess in the James Bond film Thunderball. A deadly assassin in SPECTRE's execution branch, she becomes NATO pilot Major Francois Derval’s mistress in the operation to steal the Vulcan and its precious cargo of two atomic bombs, which SPECTRE plans to use for a blackmail operation. She was killed when James uses her as a bullet shield.
[edit] Angelo Palazzi
James Bond character | |
Angelo Palazzi | |
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Gender | Male |
Affiliation | Emilio Largo, SPECTRE |
Portrayed by | Paul Stassino |
Angelo Palazzi, played by Greek actor Paul Stassino, is an agent of SPECTRE. Palazzi goes through two years studying NATO pilot François Derval, taking flying lessons and finally going through plastic surgery in order to impersonate Derval, so he can hijack an Avro Vulcan jet and its atomic bombs. Palazzi's first appearance is in a health clinic, covered in bandages due to the surgery. After Bond spies in his room, his contractor Count Lippe tries to kill Bond in a spinal traction machine. Then Palazzi comes to Derval's home with SPECTRE agents, gasses Derval and takes his documents and dogtag, and before leaving demands a higher fee for his mission on which his cohorts reluctantly appear to agree to.
In the air, Palazzi gasses the crew, allowing him to take control of the plane and sink it in a designated location with underwater landing lights near the Bahamas. However, when he tries to get out off his seat, he is unable to release his restraining harness. Emilio Largo comes with his men as Palazzi signals for help with his harness, but Largo cuts the air hose of Palazzi's oxygen mask instead, as punishment for his complaints of being underpaid. Palazzi is left to drown in the cockpit while Largo and his men take the bombs away.
Later, Bond discovers the sunken airplane and takes Derval's dogtag and watch from Palazzi in order to get some help from Derval's sister, Dominique.
[edit] Novel
In the novel, the V bomber is hijacked by Domino's brother Giuseppe Petacchi. He is an Italian Air Force pilot, hired by Lippe in Boscombe Down Airfield. Petacchi goes into the V bomber acting as a NATO observer of Royal Air Force procedure. After killing the crew he successfully flies the bomber to the Bahamas. After successfully ditching the aircraft, Petacchi walks out on the wing to meet Largo. Instead of congratulating him, Largo stabs him dead and dumps his body into the water for the sharks to consume.
[edit] Never Say Never Again
The plane hijacker in Never Say Never Again is again Domino's brother, Jack Petachi (Gavan O'Herlihy). Petachi has undergone an operation to alter one of his retinas to match the retinal pattern of the American President. Using his position as a pilot and the president's eye pattern to circumvent security, Petachi infiltrates an American military base in England and orders the dummy warheads in two cruise missiles replaced with two live nuclear warheads, which SPECTRE captures and uses to extort billions of dollars from the governments of the world. He is then killed by Fatima Blush.
[edit] Vargas
James Bond character | |
Vargas | |
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Gender | Male |
Affiliation | Emilio Largo, SPECTRE |
Portrayed by | Philip Locke |
Vargas is a villain and assassin in the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball. He is an assassin of SPECTRE and a personal henchman of Emilio Largo. The character is portrayed by Philip Locke.
According to Largo, Vargas does not drink, smoke or make love, abstinence which emphasises his devotion as a killer. Those characteristics were used by Ian Fleming to describe the whole Disco Volante crew, but the filmmakers reduced to only one character because it would be "many men doing nothing".
He is killed by James Bond on a beach with a speargun in the chest after trying to kill Bond and Dominique Derval while lurking in the palm trees, with Bond cooly remarking "I think he got the point".
[edit] Jacques Bouvar
James Bond character | |
Jacques Bouvard | |
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Gender | Male (in drag) |
Affiliation | SPECTRE |
Portrayed by | Rose Alba and Bob Simmons |
Colonel Jacques Bouvar is a villain in the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball. The character is portrayed by Rose Alba and Bob Simmons.
Bouvar was a SPECTRE agent (SPECTRE #6) featured at the beginning of the film, where his funeral is taking place. Bond says that Bouvar murdered two of his colleagues. It is revealed that the operative faked his death and dressed up as his own widow at the funeral. Bond surprises him at his French chateau, where a fight ensues and Bond breaks Boitier's neck with a fire poker. During the bogus funeral, one of the French liaison remarks that Boitier and Bond both share the same initials.
[edit] Ladislav Kutze
James Bond character | |
Ladislav Kutze | |
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Gender | Male |
Affiliation | Emilio Largo |
Portrayed by | George Pravda |
Dr Ladislav Kutze is a Henchman in the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball. The character is portrayed by George Pravda.
Kutze is a scientist from Warsaw, to whom Largo gives the bomb fuses. As the Disco Volante is being attacked by the US Navy, Kutze gets convinced Largo got mad, throws the arming device on the sea and releases Domino. For doing so, Bond saves Kutze, and as the Disco Volante is about to crash, 007 gives Kutze a lifebuoy, he gets it even after admitting he can't swim, and jumps. Oddly, Kutze mysteriously disappears afterwards, making it unknown if he survived.
[edit] Quist
James Bond character | |
Quist | |
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Gender | Male |
Affiliation | Emilio Largo |
Portrayed by | Bill Cummings |
Quist is a Henchman in the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball. The character is portrayed by Bill Cummings.
Quist is among the henchmen sent to capture Bond's contact Paula, and stays in the hotel to kill 007. When Bond arrives and doesn't find Paula, he reviews a hidden tape machine recording and gets suspicious. After exploring her apartment and receiving Felix Leiter, Bond finds Quist lurking in the shower, and scalds him out with hot water. After disarming Quist, Bond lets him go, telling him to report back to Largo. Largo then gets displeased at Quist's failure and has him thrown into a pool with sharks, where Quist is killed.
[edit] SPECTRE #9
James Bond character | |
SPECTRE #9 | |
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Gender | Male |
Affiliation | SPECTRE |
Portrayed by | Clive Cazes |
SPECTRE #9 is a villain in the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball. He is portrayed by Clive Cazes.
He appears at the SPECTRE meeting early in the film, reporting SPECTRE's dealings to Blofeld. #9 relays information about money he and #11 have brought into the organization. Blofeld questions #9 about the fact that the amount he described was less than the amount he brought in. #9 denies any knowledge if this, but Blofeld already knows the truth: #9 has been embezzling money from SPECTRE. Blofeld presses a button and sends an electric current through #9's chair, killing him.
[edit] Janni
James Bond character | |
Janni | |
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Gender | Male |
Affiliation | SPECTRE |
Portrayed by | Michael Brennan |
Please help improve this article or section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. (March 2008) |
Janni is a henchman in the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball. He is portrayed by Michael Brennan.
Janni is a large man who serves as an enforcer for SPECTRE. He is one of Emilio Largo's top men in the Bahamas, the other being Vargas.
[edit] See also
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