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Taking on existing criminals would bring in liabilities. And as president of an Island, however small, his face was known. So, he created 'Mr Big', and with the help of his government's money, started selling drugs in the US. Thanks to holding the whole chain of production to export, it was quite easy to grow 'big', as he was selling under the market price. Seeing how this worked, he expanded his fields, buying more land on the island. With such cashflow it was easy to get everyone to walk in line.
It is then he decided he could even better his current plan: and you've all seen that in the film.
You beat me to it.
Same here (I was too shy to post the obvious).
Although not touched on in the movie do we suspect San Monique had a large gap between wealth and poverty. Seems like an opulent hotel that Bond stays in. Later during the bus chase it looks like people are living with modest means. Now that I think of it, is LALD saying more than we may realize?
I'm glad the common sense answer was dropped right away. Thanks, gents. ;-)
The original inhabitants are living off of a monthly allowance, as long as they keep Kananga in place. However, they need people to take care of their houses, gardens, etc. So the work is done by immigrants, mainly from India, who have no voting rights, and live in shacks.
Any comparison to Quatar is strictly by accident.
Again: San Monique is a thinly disguised Haiti. Maybe the poorest country in America, yet apparently few people show obscene wealth.
Except of course, he pretty much decides to kill the leader of a foreign nation without consulting his superiors- I mean, does a licence to kill really extend that far?
Yes that's true, I never really thought about that! My reflex was to say that Kananga wasn't head of San Monique; after all, no other world leaders were at the UN summit. But it is pretty clearly stated that Kananga is the leader of San Monique.
As for the title question, Kananga would have to do very little actual country running. He could very easily leave power in the hands of bureaucrats or the politburo of his country and be free to run NY nightclubs and get involved in the whole entertainment business.
San Monique, as an out of the way tourist destination, could probably make money on its own from rich travellers or fishing companies and the like, and with a small population (and some form of foreign support) could probably run itself.
I don't think it does, even for a dictator. And that's assuming Kananga is a dictator, officially or not. It's certainly never stated. So Bond killed a criminal and a drug lord, yes, but also a legitimate head of government of a sovereign state. Maybe he omitted it in his report. "I completed the mission by killing in self defence the criminal known as Mr Big."
On a side note, there's a nice Jekyll and Hyde aspect to Kananga/Mr Big that was never used again for any other villain.
Yeah I'd never really thought about it before, but it's quite dodgy really isn't it? Killing the head of state of a fellow member of the UN, apparently without oversight, and in tandem with an agent of the CIA involved, also with no apparent supervision. Feels like Bond has gone quite far there. And I don't think there's any suggestion that he's even treating the inhabitants of San Monique particularly badly, is there?
Obviously we know Kananga was a bad guy, but M and his superiors have an awful lot of explaining to do!
Yeah it is a fun idea, although I must admit I'm not sure it ever quite pays off enough somehow. It's not a massive surprise, maybe because Big and Kananga do seem to suspiciously hang out with exactly the same people.
Lets move on to another theory.
There is a saying that shows and movie series will "jump the shark".
The idiom "jumping the shark", or "shark jumping", or to "jump the shark"; means that a creative work or entity has evolved and reached a point in which it has exhausted its core intent and is introducing new ideas that are discordant with or an extreme exaggeration (caricature) of its original theme or purpose.
My theory is that DAF is the point of the series where Bond "jumped the shark". When a low level diamond smuggler can pull out a Playboy Club card from the wallet of "James Bond" and seems to know who he is and what he is capable of, all pretense of Bond being a spy or secret agent is gone.
Compare this to FRWL where Grant says they had to sweat out the number of Bond from another operative. Or GF where Goldfinger mentions that Bond has been identified by his "opposite" number. It was assumed that Bond was still a secret agent. Sure in YOLT M says they faked his death to give him more elbow room, but that might be because of his frequent run-ins with SPECTRE.
No my theory is the series jumped the shark in DAF. A film I love but also realize this is where the Bond films became less about serious spy movies and more about excess and grandeur. Where everyone knows your drink, where low level operatives know who you are the gig is up.
Do you agree that DAF is where the series "jumped the shark"?
I would argue although there were attempts to get more grounded and serious, that didn't happen for over 10 years. The next time Bond got grounded was when Tim was cast in 1987. Curious to hear whether you agree with my theory. Was DAF the movie where the series "jumped the shark"?
The power went to his head.
And also isn't it generally when a decline is perceived to start? And I think the Bond series had many highlights after this.
The producers wanted everything bigger and better after Thunderball but at the expense of the Bond character.
But the series bounced back and has had ups and downs ever since.
I agree that jumping the shark implies a decline. Bond in both literature and film hasn’t worked like that. They’ve changed and even gotten bigger in scale, but it’s a franchise so subject to reinventions, course corrections and taking different directions it doesn’t have a natural/consistent decline. Even within individual eras, as much as they tend to get more fantastical as they go on (much like Fleming). In a way Bond can’t jump the shark in the same way a shorter running television series can.
Agreed the film series jumped the shark at YOLT, but not because of faithfulness to the novel or not, though, cerrtainly, they passed on a great novel with that one. I've read they did not want to make OHMSS right after TB because water-water-water then snow-snow-snow, but they should have. It would have set up YOLT properly, and then TMWTGG. The novel TMWTGG not that interesting so it wohave needed creative uld help. Could they have gotten Connery to stay ? Perhaps the drama of OHMSS would have piqued his interest enough. If not, they'd have been better off getting out a one-off - perhaps DAF but with a better script and action set-pieces - before starting the trilogy of OHMSS-YOLT-TMWTGG. At any rate, the series really dropped at YOLT. It was very popular, but, quite a drop-off.
I think the OP is right; the "You just killed James Bond!" moment is the first instance of outright parody in the series. There are later moments also breaking the fourth wall, like the James Bond theme played by Vijay in OP.
YOLT treads right up to the line...but it stops before Bond goes into space.