BizJournals Portfolio

The Bond Market

A rough estimate of how much the world’s most famous spy has brought in since his debut in 1953.

The Brat Pack The Brat Pack

Toddlers are big onscreen this year, and few are more in demand than this group. What some of Hollywood’s “it” kids are earning. See All Video & Multimedia

Hollywood or Bust! Hollywood or Bust!

Can a couple of Midwestern lawyers parlay their stunning defense of Wesley Snipes on tax evasion felonies into stardom in the world of L.A. law? The Bobs think so, but then they hold a lot of weird opinions. Read More
Various Bond characters

Writer Ian Fleming never wanted James Bond to be an especially likable character. In the first 007 novel, Casino Royale, he describes Bond as “ironical, brutal, and cold” and once said that he’d given him the “dullest, plainest-sounding name I could find.” Yet the character has proven to be extremely lucrative for two families—the Flemings and their Hollywood partners, the Broccolis. With the latest Bond movie, Quantum of Solace, out this month, Condé Nast Portfolio takes aim at determining how much 007 has generated over the years.

MoviesIn 1961, Fleming sold the film rights to all published and future novels to Harry Saltzman and Albert R. Broccoli, co-producers of the first Bond film, Dr. No. Today, Broccoli’s daughter and stepson oversee EON Productions, which makes the Bond films in tandem with MGM and Sony. The 21 films re­leased so far have generated $11.6 billion in sales at the box office. (The most successful was 1965’s Thunderball, earning $986 million, adjusted for inflation; the least successful was 1989’s License to Kill, which brought in $277 million.) DVD and VHS sales have probably added an extra $400 million.
Subtotal: $12 billion

Videogames Developers have released more than two dozen Bond games, including several from ­Electronic Arts—like 2001’s Agent Under Fire—that aren’t based on specific ­movies or books. ­According to NPD Group, a market research firm, Bond games have generated about $662 million in U.S. revenue since 1995. One title alone—1997’s Goldeneye 007, for the ­Nintendo 64—racked up $251 million. Throw in an ­additional $150 million or so for the prior decade.
Subtotal: $812 million

Books In addition to the 14 Bond books Fleming wrote between 1953 and 1966, Ian Fleming Publications (owned by his descendants) has commissioned 30 Bond sequels, a Young Bond series for teens, and The Money­penny Diaries, a trilogy that follows the life of the personal secretary of Bond’s boss, M. The books have been translated into 45 languages and sold more than 100 million copies in 25 countries. The recently released Devil May Care, by Sebastian Faulks, became the fastest-selling hardcover fiction title in Penguin’s history.
Subtotal: $1 billion

The Bottom Line The master spy is one of the most lucrative fictional characters in history, leading a pack that includes Harry Potter, Frodo Baggins, and Batman.
Total: $13.8 billion

Most Popular Theme Songs

Goldfinger, Anthony Newley1
Played 196,035 times on radio

Die Another Day, Madonna
Played 85,073 times on radio

Live and Let Die, Paul McCartney and Wings
Played 72,498 times on radio

A View to a Kill, Duran Duran
Played 22,774 times on radio

SOURCE: Nielsen BDS.
NOTE: 1 Released on a 30th anniversary compilation album, The Best of Bond ... James Bond; Shirley Bassey recorded the original.


blog comments powered by Disqus
Real Business, Real Results

The Financial Services Committee chair follows through on a pledge to rewrite the banking rules.

Health care bankers win big as risk returns to Wall Street. But that may be just the tip of the iceberg.

Madoff forces business schools to face ethics' dark side: teaching students how to commit fraud.

spotlight on

Media and Publishing

Follow the Leader

How social media and blogging changed executives from international men of mystery to the suits who friended you. Read More