Goldeneye - Ian Fleming's Life and Fiction

Ian Fleming's Life and Fiction

  • Operation Goldeneye, a World War II operation developed by James Bond author Ian Fleming
  • Goldeneye (estate), Ian Fleming's Jamaican estate; currently an all-inclusive hotel
  • Goldeneye Hotel and Resort, based at Fleming's Jamaican estate
  • Golden Eye (1989; USA title Goldeneye: The Secret Life of Ian Fleming), fact-based film biography of Ian Fleming
  • GoldenEye (1995), a James Bond film starring Pierce Brosnan, in which the GoldenEye is a satellite weapon that can fire an electromagnetic pulse
    • "GoldenEye (song)", a song performed by Tina Turner for the 1995 film
    • "The Juvenile", a song written by Jonas "Joker" Berggren from Ace of Base, renamed from "GoldenEye" after the song was cut from the film's soundtrack

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Famous quotes containing the words ian fleming, fleming, life and/or fiction:

    What happens is that, as with drugs, he needs a stronger shot each time, and women are just women. The consumption of one woman is the consumption of all. You can’t double the dose.
    Ian Fleming (1908–1964)

    You watched and you saw what happened and in the accumulation of episodes you saw the pattern: Daddy ruled the roost, called the shots, made the money, made the decisions, so you signed up on his side, and fifteen years later when the women’s movement came along with its incendiary manifestos telling you to avoid marriage and motherhood, it was as if somebody put a match to a pile of dry kindling.
    —Anne Taylor Fleming (20th century)

    Art is beauty, and every exposition of art, whether it be music, painting, or the drama, should be subservient to that one great end. As long as nature is a means to the attainment of beauty, so-called realism is necessary and permissable [sic], but it must be realism enhanced by idealism and uplifted by the spirit of an inner life or purpose.
    Julia Marlowe (1866–1950)

    The society would permit no books of fiction in its collection because the town fathers believed that fiction ‘worketh abomination and maketh a lie.’
    —For the State of Rhode Island, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)