Showing posts with label OHMSS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OHMSS. Show all posts

Friday, 29 April 2022

7777



“The Traffic was much sparser now and there were kilometres where theirs was the only car on The Road that arrowed away between white meadows and larch copses, towards the glittering barrier where blood had been shed between warring armies for centuries. 

Bond glanced behind him. Miles away down the great highway was a speck of red. The Maserati? They certainly hadn’t got much competitive spirit if they couldn’t catch the Lancia at eighty! No good having a car like that if you didn’t drive it so as to lose all other traffic in your mirror. 

Perhaps he was doing them an injustice. Perhaps they too only wanted to motor quietly along and enjoy the day. 

Ten minutes later, Tracy said, ‘There’s a red car coming up fast behind. Do you want me to lose him?’ 

‘No,’ said Bond. ‘Let him go. We’ve got All The Time in The World.’ 

Now he could hear the rasping whine of the eight cylinders. He leaned over to the left and jerked a laconic thumb forwards, waving the Maserati past. 

The whine changed to a shattering roar. 

The wind-screen of the Lancia disappeared as if hit by a monster fist. Bond caught a glimpse of a taut, snarling mouth under a syphilitic nose, the flash-eliminator of some automatic gun being withdrawn, and then the red car was past and the Lancia was going like hell off the verge across a stretch of snow and smashing a path through a young copse. 

Then Bond’s head crashed into the wind-screen frame and he was out. 

When he came to, a man in the khaki uniform of the Autobahn Patrol was shaking him. The young face was stark with horror. ‘Was ist denn geschehen? Was ist denn geschehen?’ 

Bond turned towards Tracy. She was lying forward with her face buried in the ruins of the steering-wheel. Her pink handkerchief had come off and the bell of golden hair hung down and hid her face. 

Bond put his arm round her shoulders, across which the dark patches had begun to flower. 

He pressed her against him. He looked up at the young man and smiled his reassurance. 

‘It’s all right,’ he said in a clear voice as if explaining something to a child. ‘It’s quite all right. She’s having a rest. We’ll be going on soon. There’s no hurry. You see –’ 

Bond’s head sank down against hers and he whispered into her hair – ‘You See, We’ve Got All The Time in The World.’ 

The young patrolman took a last scared look at the motionless couple, hurried over to his motor cycle, picked up the hand-microphone, and began talking urgently to the rescue headquarters.”




007 :
The World’s moved on 
since you retired, 
Commander Bond.
Perhaps you didn’t notice.

James Bond :
No, can’t say I had.
And in My Humble Opinion, 
The World doesn’t change very much.

007 :
You would say that.
Look, this all seems like Heaven, 
this little bubble, or whatever.
[laughs]
But it’s so obvious 
You’re a Man 
who only has 
Time to Kill, 
Nothing to Live For.






‘He probably doesn’t think much of us.’ M.’s mouth bent down at the corners. ‘People don’t these days. 

They may be Right or Wrong. I’m not a Politician. He doesn’t know much about the Service except what he’s penetrated or heard from the C.I.A. And that won’t be greatly to our advantage, I’d say. 

We haven’t had a Station in Japan since 1950. No traffic. It all went to the Americans. You’ll be working under the Australians. They tell me their man’s good. Section J says so too. Anyway, that’s the way it is. If anyone can bring it off, you can. Care to have a try, James?’ 

M.’s face was suddenly friendly. It wasn’t friendly often. James Bond felt a quick warmth of affection for this man who had ordered His Destiny for so long, but whom he knew so little. His Instinct told him that there were things hidden behind this assignment, motives which he didn’t understand. 

Was this a rescue job on him? 
Was M. giving him his last chance? 

But it sounded solid enough. 
The reasons for it stood up. 
Hopeless? Impossible? Perhaps

Why hadn’t M. chosen a Jap speaker? Bond had never been east of Hong Kong. But then Orientalists had their own particular drawbacks – too much tied up with tea ceremonies and flower arrangements and Zen and so forth. 

No. It sounded a True Bill. 

He said, ‘Yes, sir. I’d like to have a try.’ 

M. gave an abrupt nod. ‘Good.’ He leant forward and pressed a button on the intercom. 

‘Chief of Staff? What number have you allotted to 007? Right. He’s coming to see you straight away.’ 

M. leant back. He gave one of his rare smiles. ‘You’re stuck with your old digit. 

All right, four sevens. 

Go along and get briefed.’ 

Bond said, ‘Right, sir. 
And, er, Thank You.’ 

He got up and walked over to the door and let himself out.



Mighty Aphrodite :
Computer, transfer primary controls to me. 
[GROANING] 

Mighty Aphrodite : 
Computer, set course for the Delta Quadrant. 
We have 400 additional years to expand The Collective. 

RAFFI
She's gonna die if I can't stop the bleeding — 
Don't do this. 

Mighty Aphrodite :
I have absorbed millions of languages, 
and there are a few common words among them. 
‘Love’, certainly. ‘Hope’ and ‘Fear’. 
And one more common still - ‘Futility’. 

Species thrive without love. 
Kingdoms conquer without fear. 
But it is the imperfect nature 
of all organic things to fight an unwinnable battle 
against an undefeatable foe : Death. 

PICARD
Now we can get to The Ship. 


[DOOR OPENS] 

SOONG :
I'm no stranger to lost lab rats. 
To catch one, you don't 
follow it through The Maze. 
You force it to The Surface. 

[GROANING, PANTING] 


Mighty Aphrodite :
Why am I crying? 

Psyche
Those aren't your tears. 
They're mine
Those same chemicals you used to take control... 
dopamine and adrenaline... 
aren't just produced by a few drinks and a torch song. Sadness, loss, despair. 
Basically, what happens 
when you Hurt My Friends. 
That cooks the same neural soup, only this time, 
it allowed me to wrestle some control back. 

Mighty Aphrodite :
Impossible. 

Psyche : 
You might be well on your way if you 
had just shown a little mercy. 

[YELLS] [STRAINING] 

PICARD
Soong. You don't understand 
the future you're about to create. 

SOONG :
Thriving, prosperous. 
I'm told we're beloved 
across The Galaxy. 

PICARD
Feared

[DEEP WHIRRING] 

Mighty Aphrodite :
What is this? 

Psyche : 
The history of the Borg. 
Well, the only history that matters... The Ending
How it always ends for you. 
A lone Borgslayer, 
a united Federation, 
they come for you... 
for your top-shelf, overreaching, 
Icarus-worthy arrogance. 

Mighty Aphrodite :
If prattling on is Your Choice of Weapon, I can wait. 
You can't be sad forever. 

Psyche : 
Do The Math —
In this or any other universe, 
you always lose. 
That's why you fight so hard. 
You live with the death knell of your species 
across infinite timelines. 
You fear loss, just like we do. 
You long for what we all long for. 
Connection... Longevity, Discovery. 
Only you offer it without choice. 
I'm saying... what if we ask for it? 
You and I. 

Mighty Aphrodite :
Finally, the semblance of a point. 

Psyche : 
The galaxy is filled with lives that need saving. 
One of them is lying at your feet right now. 

SOONG: 
We have to create our own destiny. 
Captains of ships and captains of industry, 
to men like us, love and fear... the same thing. 
A means to an end. 

Mighty Aphrodite : 
You'd have a cohort pulled from the dying? 
Recruit from derelict ships? Flotsam of space? 
You'd have us collect scraps? 

Psyche : 
And offer second chances. 
What if we take this ship and build a better Borg? 
A real collective based not on assimilation but salvation. 
Think about it: a Borg collective that embraces 
the uniqueness of its members. 

Mighty Aphrodite :
You ask us to embrace weakness

Psyche : 
I'm positing that what you've 
written off as weakness 
is actually strength
Cooperation. 

Mighty Aphrodite :
Your proposal is absurd. 
But not entirely un-intriguing. 

Psyche : 
Imagine, members who would 
fight harder for what they chose. 
Who would lose no battles 
because they made no enemies. 
Who would not be discarded and replaced. 
Attachments could grow and deepen. 
Like Seven. 
Didn't you love her once, too?


 [GASPING WEAKLY] 

Psyche : 
And wasn't she... the best of what we could be? 
Somebody who used her Borg half 
to serve the best of her humanity. 
Let's build a universe of Sevens. 
Let's start with this one.

Sunday, 27 December 2020

Son-in-Law of The Dragon



Do not kill me, Mr Bond. 
At least not until we've had a drink.
Then if you wish, I'll give you another chance.

I'm Draco of Draco Construction.

[ He throws a knife and hits a calendar behind Draco ]

But today is the 13th, Commander.

I'm superstitious.

A Martini for our guest, Olympe. 

A pleasure.

Shaken, not stirred. 

Of course.

Campari for me.

My apologies for the way you were brought here today. 
Please sit down.

I was not sure you would accept a formal invitation.

There's always something formal about the point of a pistol.

Thank you, chérie.

Olympe, we will finish our struggle later.

As you wish.

She also plays a very good game of chess.

Salute. 

Cheers.
You usually drink Corsican brandy.

What else do you know about me?

Marc Ange Draco. Head of Union Corse, one of
Europe's biggest crime syndicates in Europe.

The Biggest. 

Not quite.

An organisation known as SPECTRE operates worldwide.

However, your legitimate business fronts are more extensive.

Construction, electrical supplies, numerous agricultural holdings.

Your dossier on me is not entirely complete.

I am also Teresa's father.

Tracy?

Yes, Tracy. Tracy.

My only child.

Her mother was an English girl, romantic, who had come to Corsica to look for bandits.

Rather like those women who ventured into the desert looking for sheikhs.

She found me in the mountains.

Hiding from the police at the time.

I came to love this girl.

We married. 
The Result: Teresa.

Twelve years later my wife died. 
I sent Teresa to Switzerland to finish her education.

Unfortunately I didn't give her a proper Home.
She was without supervision.

So... she joined the fast international set. 
One scandal after another.

When I disapproved, cut off her allowance, she committed some greater folly.

To spite me.

Yet, behind her bravado, something was eating away at her soul.

This can happen to men and women.

They burn the heart out of themselves by living too greedily.

And suddenly, all is finished. 

Why are you telling me this?

Without telling me, she married. An Italian count who killed himself in a Maserati with one of his mistresses.

I gave her too much, and it brought her nothing.

Now, why did I tell you all this?

I have been informed of everything you have done for my daughter.

Everything?

Don't worry, don't worry about that.

What you did, the way you behaved, might be the beginning of some kind of therapy.

She needs Help.

Your Help.

I find her fascinating, but she needs a psychiatrist, not me.

What she needs is a Man to Dominate her.

To Make Love to her enough to make her Love him.

A Man like you.

You overestimate me, Draco.

She's very attractive, but what you ask is not for me.

Mm.

Listen to me. 
On the day you marry her,

I'll give you a personal dowry of one million pounds in gold.

That's quite an inducement.

But I don't need a million pounds.

Stupid.

And I've a bachelor's taste for freedom.

Please, just see her some more.
Who knows what will come of it?

I'm sorry, Draco, but in my profession, I can't...

What?

You have connections not open to me.
Where is Ernst Stavro Blofeld?

Blofeld?
Some of my men have recently defected to him.
I don't know where he is. 

Can you find out?

If I could, I wouldn't tell Her Majesty's Secret Service.

But I might tell my future son-in-law.

Go on.

Next week is my birthday.

For that, Teresa always comes back to me.

You understand?

Let's say I'll sleep on the idea.

You do that.




James. 
Where have you been? 


Much too far from you, darling.

Oh, same old James.
Ooh. Only more so.
Heartless brute! Letting me pine away without even a postcard.

Pine no more.
Cocktails at my place, eight-ish, just the two of us.

Oh, I'd adore that.
If only I could trust myself.

Same old Moneypenny. 
Britain's last line of defence.

You'd better go in. 
He's running a very tight ship today.

I'm relieving you from Operation Bedlam, 007.

But, sir, Blofeld's something of a must with me.

You've had two years to run him down.

Does this mean you've lost confidence in me?

I'm well aware of your talents, 007.

But a licence to kill is useless, unless one can set up the target.

Sir...

I'll find you a more suitable assignment. That's all.



Sir, under the circumstances... 

That's all. That's all.

That was a quick conference.

How do you expect a girl to keep herself alluring...

Take a memo, please, Moneypenny.

Ready, James.

Sir, I have the honour to request, if you'll accept, my resignation effective forthwith.


Resignation from what?

Her Majesty's Secret Service.

And kindly present it to that monument in there.

♪ Underneath the mango tree ♪

♪ Me honey and me come watch for the moon ♪

Sorry, ma'am.

007... James Bond here.
 
He wants you, James.

Request granted.

Request granted. Not even with regret.

What did you expect? A knighthood?

Why don't you read it?

Two weeks' leave.

Well, you didn't really want to resign, did you?

Moneypenny, what would I do without you?

My problem is that you never do anything with me.

It's a date. The moment I get back.

Where are you off to?

Oh, just some place to laze about.

Beachcombing.

What would I do without you, Miss Moneypenny? Thank you.

Hello, Miguel.

Teresa. It's so long since we see you.

- Yes, very well. - There's Tracy.

- Huh? - Tracy.

Where is she? Ah, there she is.

- Teresa. - Happy birthday, Papa.

You make it so by being here. You look marvellous.

There's someone I want you to meet. Come on.

- Salud, Olympe. How are you? - It's good to have you back.

- You look wonderful. - Thanks.

Good day. Hello.

Mr Bond, may I introduce my daughter? Teresa.

Contessa.

Mr Bond and I've already met.

But each time is a renewed pleasure.

Madame always makes one feel so welcome.

She likes you, I can see it.

You must give me the name of your oculist.

Brilliant.

I didn't know Mr Bond knew Papa.

There are many things about Mr Bond one does not know.

It would be interesting to attend night school perhaps.

Papa is up to something, I'm sure of it.

Your father loves you very much, Tracy.

Whatever he may arrange, I know it's for your happiness.

What has Papa arranged?

Ah. Mr Bond.

Thank you.

Thank you.
 
Many happy returns.

The best years are still to come, let's hope.

Oh, allow me.

What are you doing here?

Yes, wasn't it kind of your father to invite me?

Mr Bond and I are discussing a business deal, Theresa.

Really?

No woman would waste excellent champagne discussing a business deal.

Unless, of course, she happened to be part of the arrangement.

Olympe, what have you said?

Don't blame Olympe, Papa. 
I'm not your daughter for nothing.

I detect a certain family resemblance.

I suggest you revise the terms of your contract, Mr Bond.

You'll find your liability far too expensive.

There you're mistaken.

- Papa. - Yes?

Mr Bond wants some information.
 
 
What are you talking about?

You always taught me a good host supplies his guest's needs.

Huh.
And without obligation.

And then?

I'm not sure obligation is quite the right word.

Tell him, Papa.

Tell him what he wants to know.

- Now. - Please, please, Teresa.

It's only a possibility, nothing definite.

Tell him, Papa, or you'll never see me again.

All right.
All right.

There may be a connection between that man Blofeld and the lawyer

with offices in Bern, Switzerland.

- Named Gumbold. - Gumbold?

- Bern, Switzerland? - Yes, Gumbold.

So, now Mr Bond need have no further interest in me.

Another mistake.

She always was a headstrong child.

I'm sorry...

Where has he gone?

Tracy.
Tracy.

I was always taught that mistakes should be remedied.
Especially between friends.
Or lovers.