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M (James Bond)



         


M - the title and code letter for James Bond's boss and fictional head of the British Secret Intelligence Service MI6. The title "M" is believed to derive from the first real life head of MI6, Mansfield Smith-Cumming, who used his initial "C" to indicate he had seen a paper and so became referred to as "C", a practice which carried on with his successors.

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Admiral Sir Miles Messervy

Bernard Lee as M in The Man With the Golden Gun
M
Actor Bernard Lee
Gender Male
Age 60's
Affiliation MI6
Status Retired

In the Bond books M is named as Admiral Sir Miles Messervy (the name, hinted at throughout the series, was finally revealed in The Man with the Golden Gun, Ian Fleming's final Bond novel). In the movies only his first name, Miles, was revealed (in The Spy Who Loved Me), and he also has the rank of Admiral. It is assumed that the M of the movies and of Fleming's books is the same person.

In the books M clearly has a liking for Bond, and they have obviously had a long professional relationship. M bends the rules for Bond on several occasions. At one point Bond attempts to assassinate M, as a result of extreme Soviet brainwashing, but M insists that Bond is rehabilitated rather than punished. In the first post-Fleming book Colonel Sun M is kidnapped, and Bond goes to great lengths to rescue him. In the later books M protects Bond even more from the new, less aggressive, climate in the Secret Service, saying that 'sometime this country will need a blunt instrument'. In the movies the relationship is similar.

In the movies the role of Messervy (M) was played by Bernard Lee from the first movie, Dr. No, until Moonraker (1979). Lee died in 1981 and out of respect the character was removed from that year's For Your Eyes Only (1981) (with M's lines given to either his Chief of Staff or Q).

The M in the Bond books is believed to have been a composite character based on Rear-Admiral John Godfrey (Ian Fleming's former boss in the Department of Naval Intelligence), Maxwell Knight, former head of counter-subversion in MI5 and Maurice Buckmaster, head of the F Section of the SOE.

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Robert Brown as M

Robert Brown as M in Licence to Kill
M
Actor Robert Brown
Gender Male
Age 60's
Affiliation MI6
Status Retired

After Lee's death in 1981, the producers decided to hire actor Robert Brown to continue the role of M in the James Bond films. Brown picks up the role in Octopussy however, it is never explicitly stated onscreen whether Robert Brown's character is intended to be the same person played by Bernard Lee, or if he was intended to be a promoted Admiral Hargeaves, the role played by Brown in 1977's The Spy Who Loved Me, though the later Bond books retain Messervy. The personality of Brown's M lacks a sense of humor and has absolutely no tolerance whatsoever for Bond's antics, though with Dalton, he barely had any. Still, Brown's M came off tougher than anyother M wasting no time to revoke Bond's license to kill in the film Licence to Kill when Bond went off in search of a vendetta.

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Edward Fox as M

In 1983's unofficial Never Say Never Again, it is clearly stated that a new M is in post, played by Edward Fox. This M is portrayed as being concerned with making the books balance, constantly testing agents and being quite open about his low regard for Bond, three character traits that Judi Dench's M also shares in her first movie, GoldenEye.

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Judi Dench as M

Judi Dench as M in GoldenEye
M
Actor Judi Dench
Gender Female
Age 50's
Affiliation MI6
Status Active

After the long period between Licence to Kill and GoldenEye, the producers brought in Dame Judi Dench to take over as the new M. In reality, the character may have been based on Stella Rimmington, the head of the real MI5. Judi Dench clearly plays a new person appointed to the position of M, possibly Barbara Mawdsley, who is named as a female M in the later Bond books. In the films she is very cold, blunt and not at all anything like the previous M's. In her first film, GoldenEye, she comes right out and tells Bond that she thinks he's a "sexist, misogynist dinosaur, a relic of the Cold War". Because of these characteristics some MI6 agents have referred to her as "the evil queen of numbers". In her later films it appears she takes on a more "caring" role of Bond especially after Bond saves her in The World is Not Enough, although in Die Another Day they're at odds with each again over Bond being disavowed and abandoned to torture in North Korea. Although it would appear that Dench's M and Bond don't get along to well, M still has a high respect for Bond on a professional basis that her predecessors had as well.

As of 2004, she is still the current M.

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References

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