God bless Guy Hamilton, Richard Maibaum, and Paul Dehn for only showing the holes that mattered in the film.He literally goes through all 18 holes as I recall. It's kind of amazing.
...that sounds dirtier than I meant it to.

God bless Guy Hamilton, Richard Maibaum, and Paul Dehn for only showing the holes that mattered in the film.He literally goes through all 18 holes as I recall. It's kind of amazing.
The first issue I bought was for an interview with Steve Martin.The "articles" thing is, of course, an old joke, but the fact is much of the text content of Playboy really was top-notch. The fiction and interviews, in particular, were often excellent.
Playboy has articles?The first playboy I bought was a special about James Bond, with a lot of interesting facts about the franchise. When I talked about it I noticed people made fun of it because you don't read playboy for the articles, that is how I learned to not talk about buying a playboy
If there's one thing in the movies that is truly in spirit of the Fleming novels, it's the product placement. I don't think Fleming was paid for it, he just cared very deeply about brands of booze, cars, watches and so on. Makes me think he was the kind of guy who actually read and enjoyed the articles in Playboy.
I bought a book of essays on Bond. (I hope I haven't posted this before. Not recently anyway.) It opened with the author selling his first edition Bond books. And I wondered at why the article was going into such specific detail about the breakfast that he ordered while he was waiting for the buyer. Especially the bacon. I hadn't read Fleming yet so I didn't know that this was note perfect homage of the Fleming style.
Actually if you watch Dr. No there are quite a few more bits of "Flemingesque" character moments like those. Including, if I recall, Bond ordering breakfast. A few in From Russia With Love as well. And when he checks into the hotel in Jamaica they pretty much lift a similar scene from book of Casino Royale.
Yeah, Broccoli and Saltzman peppered the movies with product because they made extra cash from it. Fleming did it because he loved the stuff and wanted you to love the stuff too.
I made a similar joke about GQ or FHM (I forget which). A guy was talking about something he read in it, I said "you read that magazine?" He asked "you don't?" I answered "no, I look at it, I don't read a damn thing in it."Playboy has articles?
Back in the 90s heyday of the so-called Lads’ Mags, my former flatmate used to buy whichever one had the hottest woman on the cover in a given month.I made a similar joke about GQ or FHM (I forget which). A guy was talking about something he read in it, I said "you read that magazine?" He asked "you don't?" I answered "no, I look at it, I don't read a damn thing in it."
Even Bernie Kopell's LOVE BOAT Doc gave a shout-out to the articles. As for interviews, John Wayne's was extra-controversial while Connery's was half the traditional length.* I literally bought 60 back issues to peruse the most favored interviews over the decades. Spader got three. Much later issues were also reduced in size and page-count. After PLAYBOY went all digital, I found a way to create my own version by reading one chapter per day of every old or newly selected books-------most of them non-fiction. So this week it's Norman Mailer, William Goldman, Fleming's GOLDFINGER, SLIMER from Britain, Armond White, MORNING GLORIES, an oral history of THE WEST WING, George R.R. Martin, plus bio-books on Hillary Clinton, Bibi Netanyahu, Mitch McConnell and FOOLS ON THE HILL.Playboy's interviews were always really long, treated as the central text feature of the magazine.. I also remember a great group interview with the cast of Hill Street Blues.
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