Cover artwork for Ian Fleming’s “Il Grande Slam Della Morte” (Moonraker) in Amica magazine, August 1965. (Artist: Gianni G. Gaeta)
Ian Fleming
provided an heroic image for Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) by
pitting it against the ‘malevolent’ intelligence agencies of the Soviet Union
and the ‘evil’, often unhinged, plutocrat bad guys they often supported.
Britain may have forfeited its place as a world power to the United States, but
Fleming made it relevant through the Cold War exploits of Commander James Bond.
SIS, better
known as MI6, has in recent times earned a certain notoriety having suffered
several public relations setbacks involving the exposure of its part in ignoble
deeds. There was ‘Operation Mass Appeal’ which involved planting stories in the
media in a ploy aimed at influencing public support for the idea that Saddam
Hussein’s Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction. MI6 also helped the
United States with its policy of ‘Extraordinary Rendition’. And a 2015 Old
Bailey case against a jihadist was dropped on the grounds that Britain’s
security and intelligence services would have been “deeply embarrassed” about
their covert support for anti-Assad militias in the Syrian Civil War.
One can
therefore be forgiven for indulging in the nostalgia and moral certainty
attached to James Bond as the BBC radio drama department produces yet another
installment in the series of adaptations of Fleming’s novels.
Moonraker, which was
the third Bond novel, is the story of Hugo Drax, an industrialist who is behind
a project to design a missile capable of defending England from a Soviet
attack. Seemingly a super-patriotic Englishman who was orphaned at an early age
and seriously wounded as a soldier during World War Two, Drax is later revealed
to be a German Nazi who is hellbent on avenging Germany’s wartime defeat. The
missile is due to be launched amid great public fanfare as part of a test
firing exercise. However, instead of landing harmlessly in the North Sea, Drax
plans to arm the projectile with a nuclear warhead and re-configure its flight
coordinates so that it destroys London.
The drama
features Toby Stephens in his seventh appearance as Bond. Winston Churchill
(played by John Baddeley), in his post-war phase as prime minister, makes a
‘cameo appearance’. The actor who perhaps steals the scenes is Nigel Anthony
who plays Drax’s German henchman Krebs with a Peter Lorre-inspired accent.
Moonraker was
broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Saturday, March 31st 2018.
Director:
Martin Jarvis
Producer:
Rosalind Ayres
Adaptor:
Archie Scottney
© Adeyinka
Makinde
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England.
Much appreciated. Thank you. Great book, and I love these radio plays.
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