Gallery: The Coolest James Bond Posters You've Never Seen
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The 007 film franchise began with *Dr. No*—and with a car chase, a poker game, the sheet music of Monty Norman’s theme, and Ursula Andress in a pink bikini, this Japanese poster from 1972’s re-release sets the tone for all of Bond's adventures to come.
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The French insert for *Dr. No* from 1963 evokes the painted covers of Ian Fleming’s beloved paperbacks, its pastel shades a departure from the signature stark Bond colors.
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How do you publicize a movie that hinges on the mystery of a golden corpse? The 1964 UK poster for *Goldfinger* projects Bond and Pussy Galore onto the woman in question (the character Dink, Bond’s masseuse).
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Toss the suit and martini—clad in flippers, a (partial) wetsuit, and a spear gun, the Bond from this UK 1965 poster for *Thunderball* is ready for underwater pursuit.
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Turn on, tune in, drop out: MI6's finest looks positively rad in this US poster for *On Her Majesty’s Secret Service* from 1969—and Tracey Di Vecenzo wields that ski pole like a pro. Far out, indeed.
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With *Diamonds Are Forever* in 1971, Sean Connery was back. This poster capitalizes on the space fever that was still affecting people after the 1969 moon landing—including his sweet ride, the WW Techtronics moon buggy, and Ernst Blofeld’s secret weapon, the diamond satellite.
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*The Spy Who Loved Me* was the first Bond movie ever shown in communist Eastern Europe—in 1989, 12 years after its first release. This Hungarian poster owes its abstract vibes to legal restrictions. Hungary became a parliamentary republic mere months after the movie’s release—a national longing for more Bond films, perhaps?
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*Moonraker* came out two years after *A New Hope*; clearly, Han Solo could learn a thing or two from this intergalactic badass Bond. (And Jabba would certainly have a creepy appreciation of Drax’s master race.)
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This 1981 *For Your Eyes Only* poster launched what soon became known as the “Legs Campaign.” We prefer to commend heroine Melina Havelock’s impressive weapon of choice: the menacing crossbow.
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This 1983 one-sheet for *Octopussy* showcases the seductive cult leader as not only a femme fatale, but an impressive multi-tasker: holding a Fabergé egg, stroking Bond’s gun, *and* straightening his bowtie and coiffure—all while brandishing a dagger.
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A *Goldeneye* poster from 1995 welcomes Pierce Brosnan into the world of 007—and uses computer design to highlight some high-tech icons of the mid-’90s. Check that satellite dish!
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The Japanese poster for *Tomorrow Never Dies* (1998) offers a frequent Japanese movie poster style. A capable Bond stands in the foreground, backed by a wall of red and black TV stills—particularly apt for the movie’s plot surrounding a media mogul.
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