Sean Connery’s Bond is a paradox: a Scottish actor playing an English gentleman spy who operates outside of England. The film aggressively reclaims British agency. When Bond arrives in Jamaica (a former British colony, independent only since 1962), he moves through the island with an assumed authority that disregards local police and government. Bond’s contact, Quarrel (John Kitzmiller), is a Cayman Islander who serves as a loyal, deferential guide—a figure uncomfortably reminiscent of colonial “native assistant” tropes.
Crucially, Dr. No embodies Western fears of Asian-led technological superiority. As scholar Cynthia Hendershot notes, “The Bond villain of the 1960s often possesses what the West fears losing: absolute control over atomic energy” (Hendershot, 2004, p. 45). Dr. No’s plan to divert American missiles from Cape Canaveral using a radio beam is a direct response to the space race. Unlike Bond, who uses fists and a Walther PPK, Dr. No relies on remote manipulation and automation. His death—boiled alive in his own reactor’s cooling tank—serves as a symbolic assertion that humanity (Bond) defeats cold, mechanical reason. Dr. No -james Bond 007-