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Yaroslav Horak

Autor(a) de The James Bond Omnibus, Volume 002

4+ Works 85 Membros 3 Críticas

Obras por Yaroslav Horak

The James Bond Omnibus, Volume 4 (2012) — Ilustrador — 25 exemplares
The James Bond Omnibus, Volume 002 (1751) — Ilustrador — 25 exemplares
The Phoenix Project (1974) — Ilustrador — 20 exemplares
The James Bond Omnibus, Volume 3 (1600) — Ilustrador — 15 exemplares

Associated Works

James Bond: The Living Daylights [graphic novel] (1987) — Ilustrador — 8 exemplares

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Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

Beginning in 1958, the Daily Express ran a daily comic strip adapting the James Bond novels, which has been collected into a series of omnibuses by Titan. I reviewed the first volume rel="nofollow" target="_top">a few years ago, and now that I've read all the novels adapted in the second, I've read that one, too. This collects adaptations of the last few James Bond books—On Her Majesty's Secret Service, You Only Live Twice, The Man with the Golden Gun, and Octopussy & The Living Daylights—and then it circles back to adapt some stuff skipped over before—"The Hildebrand Rarity" from For Your Eyes Only and The Spy Who Loved Me.The first two stories here are written by Henry Gammidge and illustrated by John McLusky; McLusky illustrated every story in volume 001 and Gammidge wrote most of them, and as there, they are perfectly serviceable adaptations. Gammidge doesn't make a lot of tweaks to the stories, usually just streamlining them a bit, e.g., long passages about Bond learning about Japanese culture in You Only Live Twice just don't make the cut. He does make the biggest change I can recollect from him in YOLT; in the novel, Bond infiltrates Blofeld's Japanese base alone, but here, Kissy Suzuki sneaks in with him. The story also has a weird discontinuity; at its beginning, Mary Goodnight is introduced as Bond's new secretary, but at its end, when Bond is thought dead, we're told she's so sad because she had been Bond's secretary for years. He does also massage the way one story leads into the next; we see Mary get reassigned to Station J after Bond dies, setting up her role in The Man with the Golden Gun.

Lawrence is much more likely to take liberties in his adaptations. He adds a whole subplot in The Man with the Golden Gun before Bond goes to Jamaica; Bond is recuperating from his brainwashing at the same clinic where one of Scaramanga's victims is recovering, and is turns out the victim's nurse is a Russian spy who tries to seduce Bond, and then whom he foils. The Living Daylights is a pretty straight adaptation, but Octopussy adds a lot. The short story is told from the perspective of the villain; Bond comes to see him, tells him he's been caught, and the villain ends his own life. But here, we see Bond's investigation play out in Austria, aided by (of course) a young woman, and then in Jamaica, aided by both her and Mary Goodnight, picking up from TMWTGG. Chinese gangsters try to kill Bond; the whole thing is much more elaborate.

This, then, becomes the go-to method for the last two adaptations. There's no spy plot in the original of "The Hildebrand Rarity"; Bond just bumps into some rich American jerk collecting wildlife specimens while on vacation. Here, the rich American jerk is also working with the Soviets to steal an experimental NATO unmanned submarine. Many people seem to praise these strips for capturing the feel of the novels, but in this one, I felt the influence of the movies a bit; the strips began before the films did, but by the time of this strip, the first four or five films were out, and it feels a bit Thunderball to me in particular. The Spy Who Loved Me is also quite different; the first two thirds of that novel don't feature Bond at all, but tell the life story of Vivienne Michel, whose life Bond saves in the final third. The novel replaces all this with a completely unrelated story about Bond trying to stop a recently revived SPECTRE from stealing technical data on a new stealth airplane. This expands massively on a very brief story Bond tells Vivienne in the novel. Again, it feels more film Bond than novel Bond.

But it also works. I like adaptations best when they bring something new to the table; Gammidge and McLusky did solid work, but it often didn't add much. Lawrence and Horak's work is at its best when they are adding their own stuff, and I look forward to seeing where they go in future volumes, when the strip's adventures became (with one exception) wholly original, because based on this, they know how to spin an entertaining Bond tale even without Fleming as a basis.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Stevil2001 | 1 outra crítica | Jul 23, 2022 |
An entertaining collection of stories, based on Ian Flemings character that does not yet rely on the films as original source material. Very entertaining in places but probably needs some revision if you have only modern sensibilities. Read as a period piece it is very entertaining. More for Bond fans than the casual reader.
 
Assinalado
aadyer | Jul 6, 2014 |
Brilliant graphic novel depiction of the James Bond novels. Don't expect movie Bond, just very, very good literary Fleming Bond. It's a period piece so has the feel of the 50's & 60's.
 
Assinalado
aadyer | 1 outra crítica | Nov 10, 2013 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
4
Also by
1
Membros
85
Popularidade
#214,931
Avaliação
3.8
Críticas
3
ISBN
4

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