New Technologies — "Shaken, Not
Stirred"
by
Frederik Nebeker
When Goldfinger, the third James Bond
movie, opened in 1964, most people had
never heard of a laser, even though Ted Maiman at Hughes Aircraft had
built such a device in 1960. An early scene in the movie
featured an industrial laser, which Auric Goldfinger helpfully
explained for Bond —
and the grateful audience. The studio was proud of this scene,
boasting in a press release that the movie "is sure to give the
laser its greatest international publicity as a scientific
development of great power and worth in the modern world." (The
studio is today no doubt proud of some classic lines in that
scene: "Choose your next witticism carefully, Mr. Bond, it may
be your last"; and Bond: "Do you expect me to talk?"; Goldfinger:
"No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die.")
In 21 films over four decades, the
Bond movies have introduced many new technologies to the public.
From Russia with Love (1963), the second Bond movie,
shows the use of a beeper, eleven years before Motorola's
Pageboy, the first commercially successful beeper in the United
States. Many people learned for the first time about numerous
other communications devices from Bond movies: the scrambler used in
Thunderball
(1965) utilized a form of secure communications; a videophone
appears in a car in You Only Live Twice
(1967); miniaturized two-way radio, in the form of a lady's compact in
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969); video conferencing
is portrayed in Never Say Never Again (1983); a frequency
scanner is used to locate police radio, in The Living Daylights
(1987); electronic money transfer, in GoldenEye
(1995); and using a cell phone to take a picture and transmit
it elsewhere, in Die Another Day (2002).
The Aston Martins, Ferraris and
other cars that Bond has driven have attracted a great deal of
attention. So have various technologies found in vehicles, such
as a plan-position-indicator screen allowing Bond to track a
planted transmitter in Goldfinger (1964); cruise control
in a tanker truck in Licence to Kill (1989); remote
control of a BMW in Tomorrow Never Dies (1997); and the
navigation system in a speedboat that allows Bond to take a
shortcut through London in The World is not Enough
(1999).
New military technologies are
present in many Bond movies. There is an infrared scope on a
sniper rifle in From Russia with Love (1963) and
night-vision goggles in The Living Daylights (1987). A
surveillance satellite tracks submarines with an infrared camera
(using "heat signature recognition") in The Spy Who Loved Me
(1977). Two important anti-radar techniques, both developed
during World War II, are shown: jamming in Moonraker
(1979) and antiradar coating (of a stealth ship) in Tomorrow
Never Dies (1997). We learn about AWACS planes in Licence
to Kill (1989) and about terrain-following cruise missiles
(seeing how the guidance system finds a match between stored
information and observed terrain) in Never Say Never Again
(1983). The Living Daylights (1987) shows the use of a
heads-up display for firing missiles, and The World is not
Enough (1999) shows a sniper using a laser to fix a target.
Not surprisingly, security systems
occur in many Bond movies. Diamonds are Forever (1971)
shows the surveillance system in a casino, and video
surveillance plays a large part in Octopussy (1983). Licence to Kill (1989) includes a pistol with "signature
grip," allowing it to be fired by a specific person only.
Several techniques for access to secure areas are shown:
iris-pattern matching in Never Say Never Again (1983),
voice-matching in GoldenEye (1995), and
handprint-matching in Die Another Day (2002).
The first Bond movie, Dr. No
(1962), contains an explanation of a Geiger counter. A View
to a Kill (1985) presents a surveillance robot. Several Bond
movies, the first of them being For Your Eyes Only
(1981), show the automatic searching of an image database. New
consumer-electronics products appear in Bond movies, such as the
Pulsar digital watch in Live and Let Die (1973), and a
liquid-crystal TV screen in Octopussy (1983).
The Bond movies have made people
interested in technology, but along with the presentation of
actual or feasible devices is an admixture of fantasy
technology. The "active camouflage" that makes a car invisible
in Die Another Day (2002); the Rolex wristwatch that
produces a magnetic field powerful enough to deflect a bullet in
Live and Let Die (1973); and the electronic device
implanted in the neck that makes one person's voice sound like
another person's in Diamonds are Forever (1971) are
hardly realistic. But most of the technology in Bond movies is
quite authentic —
even these counterexamples are
theoretically possible. The Bond movies have become more and
more realistic with time. Many of the gadgets
that amazed audiences in earlier decades, such as pagers,
portable phones, tracking devices and miniature
voice-recorders, have become commonplace.