Amazon.com: Death to Spies: A Novel of the Espionage Adventures of Ian Fleming. James Bond's creator, who was a mid-level agent for British naval. LaVO: From the real James Bond to the Doan Gang, here are the spies of Bucks County. Plumstead’s gang of spies: 4914 Point Pleasant Pike. Moses was shot to death. Levi and Abraham Doan.
Universe | James Bond series |
---|---|
Type | Intelligence agency |
Founded | 1940 or earlier |
Location | Leningrad Moscow Numerous |
Key people | General Grubozaboyschikov (leader) Rosa Klebb (Director of Operations) Donovan 'Red' Grant (Chief Executioner) Mr. Big Auric Goldfinger |
Purpose | Counter-intelligence Political subversion of the West |
SMERSH is a Sovietcounterintelligence agency featured in Ian Fleming's early James Bond novels as agent 007's nemesis. It is a fictionalised version of SMERSH, which existed from 1943 to 1946. The name is a portmanteau of two Russian words: 'SMERt' SHpionam' [Смерть Шпионам, Směrť Špionam], meaning 'Death to Spies'.
Though the real SMERSH was officially subsumed by the MGB in 1946, the novels portray SMERSH as a massive counterintelligence organisation which continues operating into later decades. In this it more greatly resembles the real-life KGB. Fleming's SMERSH aims its operatives abroad for the subversion of the West, with the additional goal of killing Western spies, particularly James Bond of SIS. SMERSH's headquarters are variously stated to be in Leningrad or in Moscow, Soviet Union.
In the Bond film series, SMERSH is usually replaced with SPECTRE – a global terrorist organisation.
The novel Casino Royale breaks SMERSH down into five departments or отделы (оtdyels):
Within the world of James Bond, SMERSH is a Soviet counterintelligence agency that is a recurring threat to him and the British Secret Service. In Casino Royale, the first Bond novel, SMERSH is described as the most powerful and feared organisation in the Soviet Union, with its main headquarters in Leningrad. It was believed to be under the personal direction of Lavrentiy Beria and was tasked with 'the elimination of all forms of treachery and back-sliding within the various branches of the Soviet Secret Service and Secret Police at home and abroad' (a mission vaguely similar to that of the real-life SMERSH). The organisation was suspected of having carried out Leon Trotsky's assassination in 1940. While it was hugely expanded during World War II to deal with treachery among Soviet forces, it was purged after the war and by the time of Casino Royale was believed 'to consist of only a few hundred operatives of very high quality', only one of whom had ever been captured by British agents.[1] By the time of From Russia, with Love, however, Fleming describes SMERSH as having 40,000 agents and being based in Moscow rather than in Leningrad.[2]
SMERSH makes its first impact on Bond in Casino Royale, in which the Communist agent Le Chiffre loses a large sum of money entrusted to him by the organisation. An agent kills him and cuts a Sha (ш), the initial Cyrillic letter of 'Špion' (Russian for 'spy') into the back of Bond's right hand. (Despite skin grafts, signs of the wound remain in later Bond books).[3] Then, at the end of the novel, Bond's lover and fellow agent Vesper Lynd—in fact a Soviet double agent—commits suicide when she learns that a SMERSH agent has her under surveillance and that the organisation is planning to kill her. As a result of her death, Bond swears vengeance upon SMERSH, which he calls 'the threat behind the spies, the threat that made them spy'.[4] His revenge begins in the second novel, Live and Let Die, wherein he becomes highly interested in disrupting Mr. Big's financing of Soviet operations upon learning that he is a SMERSH agent.[5] SMERSH retaliates in From Russia, with Love, issuing a death warrant for the immediate execution of James Bond ('To be killed with ignominy').[6] SMERSH goes to great lengths in an effort to achieve three goals: kill Bond, cause an embarrassing scandal for the British intelligence community, and kill its code-breaking experts with a booby-trapped encryption machine. The first part of From Russia, with Love is presented entirely from SMERSH's point of view, depicting the interplay between various agents and operatives and the meticulous preparations for killing Bond, and a large part of the book passes before Bond confronts any SMERSH personnel directly. Bond faces SMERSH again in Goldfinger after learning that Auric Goldfinger, the agency's treasurer, is planning to steal the gold bullion stored at Fort Knox and defect to the Soviet Union with it.
After Goldfinger, SMERSH is mentioned only fleetingly, usually in reference to having been disbanded. In Thunderball, three former members of SMERSH joined and became top members of the apolitical criminal organization, SPECTRE.
In the continuation novels (and novelizations), however, SMERSH returns as an organisation essentially renamed and reorganised within Soviet intelligence. They are first mentioned again in the novelization of The Spy Who Loved Me, although replaced by KGB in the film. In John Gardner's series of Bond novels, SMERSH is renamed Department V (the letter) in Icebreaker. They return in a larger role in No Deals, Mr. Bond, renamed Department Eight, Directorate S, a KGB sub-section.
In the film series, Bond's archenemy became SPECTRE, which first appeared in Fleming's novel Thunderball (1961). SPECTRE is introduced in the first film, Dr. No (1962), in which Julius No explains to Bond that it is the acronym for the SPecial Executive for Counterintelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, and Extortion, the four great cornerstones of power. Film versions of novels where SMERSH appears substituted either SPECTRE or independent villains.
Although twice referred to, SMERSH never appears in the official film series; first, in From Russia with Love (1963), Bond initially thinks he is fighting SMERSH, only to learn that the villains are from SPECTRE, including Rosa Klebb, the former head of operations for SMERSH who has secretly defected to SPECTRE. Bond's love interestTatiana Romanova says she knows Klebb as SMERSH's head of operations, and obeys her orders, presuming them from SMERSH. Second, The Living Daylights (1987) features a faked SMERSH re-activation. Throughout, it is referred to with its full name, Smiert Spionam (alternative spelling of Smert' Shpionam), rather than the better-known acronym; General Pushkin, then head of KGB, says it has been inoperative for 20 years. SMERSH is also an element in the 1967 spoofed film adaptation of Casino Royale that centres upon Le Chiffre's attempted recovery of SMERSH monies via baccarat at the Royale casino.
In the 2006 film adaptation of Casino Royale, SMERSH's role in the plot is filled by a terrorist organisation called Quantum which in the later film Spectre was revealed to be a subgroup of SPECTRE.
Notable villains in the Bond novels who were SMERSH agents or associates, included:
A number of other fictional spy organisations appear to be loosely based on SMERSH, some of them parodies, e.g., THRUSH in The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Schlecht in The Intelligence Men, and STENCH in Carry On Spying.
Retro shooting 2018 wikipedia movies. definition of Wikipedia
Wikipedia
Universe | James Bond series |
---|---|
Type | Intelligence agency |
Founded | 1943 |
Location | Leningrad Numerous |
Key people | General Grubozaboyschikov (leader) Rosa Klebb Auric Goldfinger Mr. Big Le Chiffre |
Purpose | Counter-intelligence Political subversion of the West |
SMERSH is a Sovietcounterintelligence agency featured in Ian Fleming's early James Bond novels as agent 007's nemesis. СМЕРШ (SMERSH) is an acronym from two Russian words: 'SMERt' SHpionam' (СМЕРть Шпионам, Směrt Špionam) meaning 'Death to Spies'. Though Fleming's version of SMERSH supposedly was modelled upon the real SMERSH organization, the novels portray SMERSH as a massive Soviet counterintelligence organisation, much more resembling the real-life KGB, which aims its operatives abroad in subversion of the West, with the additional goal of killing Western spies, particularly James Bond of SIS. SMERSH's headquarters are in Leningrad, Soviet Union.
|
The novel Casino Royale breaks SMERSH down into five departments or отделы (оtdyels):
Within the world of James Bond, SMERSH is a Soviet counterintelligence agency that is a recurring threat to him and the British Secret Service. SMERSH made its first and perhaps longest-lasting impact on Bond in Casino Royale when their agent sent to kill Le Chiffre carved a Sha (ш), the initial Cyrillic letter of 'Špion' (Russian for 'spy') into the back of Bond's left hand; despite skin grafts, a faint scar remains. Since then, Bond has sought revenge several times, beginning in the second novel, Live and Let Die, wherein Bond is almost uninterested in disrupting Mr. Big's financing of Soviet operations until learning that Big is a SMERSH agent. SMERSH retaliates in From Russia, with Love, issuing a death warrant for the immediate execution of James Bond ('To be killed with ignominy'). Not only is his assassination arranged, but SMERSH goes to great lengths to ensure his death will be scandalously embarrassing throughout the entire intelligence community. Later, Bond again squares off against SMERSH in Goldfinger after learning that Auric Goldfinger is the agency's treasurer.
After Goldfinger, SMERSH is mentioned only fleetingly, usually in reference to having been disbanded or made inoperant. In the continuation novels (and novelisations), however, SMERSH returns as an organisation essentially renamed and reorganised within Soviet intelligence. They are first mentioned again in The Spy Who Loved Me film novelisation, although replaced by KGB in the film. In John Gardner's series of Bond novels, SMERSH is renamed Department V (the letter) in Icebreaker. They return in a larger role in No Deals, Mr. Bond, renamed Department Eight, Directorate S, a KGB sub-section.
In the film series, Bond's archenemy became SPECTRE, which first appeared in Fleming's novel Thunderball (1961). SPECTRE is introduced in the first film, Dr. No (1962), in which the doctor explains to Bond that it is the acronym for the SPecial Executive for Counterintelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, and Extortion, the four great cornerstones of power. Film versions of novels where SMERSH appears substituted either SPECTRE or independent villains in order to avoid fomenting hatred of the Soviets, and so contributing to unstable relations with the USSR.[citation needed]
Although twice referred to, SMERSH never appears in the official film series; first, in From Russia with Love (1963), Bond initially thinks he is fighting SMERSH, only to learn that the villains are from SPECTRE, including villainess Rosa Klebb, the former head of SMERSH who has secretly defected to SPECTRE. Tatiana Romanova, the Bond girl heroine, says she knows Klebb as SMERSH's head of operations, and obeys her orders, presuming them from SMERSH. Second, The Living Daylights (1987) features a faked SMERSH re-activation. Throughout, it is referred to with its less-known full name Smert Shpionam, rather than the better-known acronym; General Pushkin, then head of KGB, says it has been inoperant since twenty years before in the 60s. SMERSH is also an element in the 1967 spoofed film adaptation ofCasino Royale that centres upon Le Chiffre's attempted recovery of SMERSH monies via baccarat at the Royale casino. Wartile xbox.
In the 2006 film adaptation of Casino Royale, SMERSH's role in the plot is filled by a terrorist organization called Quantum.
Notable villains in the Bond novels who were SMERSH agents include:
A joking reference to SMERSH also appears in the spoof film, Casino Royale in which anyone who uttered the name was quieted by someone else saying 'SHHHHHHHH!' thereby making the acronym sound like 'SMERSHHHHHHHHH..'
James Bond portal |
|
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
Amazon.com: Death to Spies: A Novel of the Espionage Adventures of Ian Fleming. James Bond's creator, who was a mid-level agent for British naval. LaVO: From the real James Bond to the Doan Gang, here are the spies of Bucks County. Plumstead’s gang of spies: 4914 Point Pleasant Pike. Moses was shot to death. Levi and Abraham Doan.
Universe | James Bond series |
---|---|
Type | Intelligence agency |
Founded | 1940 or earlier |
Location | Leningrad Moscow Numerous |
Key people | General Grubozaboyschikov (leader) Rosa Klebb (Director of Operations) Donovan 'Red' Grant (Chief Executioner) Mr. Big Auric Goldfinger |
Purpose | Counter-intelligence Political subversion of the West |
SMERSH is a Sovietcounterintelligence agency featured in Ian Fleming's early James Bond novels as agent 007's nemesis. It is a fictionalised version of SMERSH, which existed from 1943 to 1946. The name is a portmanteau of two Russian words: 'SMERt' SHpionam' [Смерть Шпионам, Směrť Špionam], meaning 'Death to Spies'.
Though the real SMERSH was officially subsumed by the MGB in 1946, the novels portray SMERSH as a massive counterintelligence organisation which continues operating into later decades. In this it more greatly resembles the real-life KGB. Fleming's SMERSH aims its operatives abroad for the subversion of the West, with the additional goal of killing Western spies, particularly James Bond of SIS. SMERSH's headquarters are variously stated to be in Leningrad or in Moscow, Soviet Union.
In the Bond film series, SMERSH is usually replaced with SPECTRE – a global terrorist organisation.
The novel Casino Royale breaks SMERSH down into five departments or отделы (оtdyels):
Within the world of James Bond, SMERSH is a Soviet counterintelligence agency that is a recurring threat to him and the British Secret Service. In Casino Royale, the first Bond novel, SMERSH is described as the most powerful and feared organisation in the Soviet Union, with its main headquarters in Leningrad. It was believed to be under the personal direction of Lavrentiy Beria and was tasked with 'the elimination of all forms of treachery and back-sliding within the various branches of the Soviet Secret Service and Secret Police at home and abroad' (a mission vaguely similar to that of the real-life SMERSH). The organisation was suspected of having carried out Leon Trotsky's assassination in 1940. While it was hugely expanded during World War II to deal with treachery among Soviet forces, it was purged after the war and by the time of Casino Royale was believed 'to consist of only a few hundred operatives of very high quality', only one of whom had ever been captured by British agents.[1] By the time of From Russia, with Love, however, Fleming describes SMERSH as having 40,000 agents and being based in Moscow rather than in Leningrad.[2]
SMERSH makes its first impact on Bond in Casino Royale, in which the Communist agent Le Chiffre loses a large sum of money entrusted to him by the organisation. An agent kills him and cuts a Sha (ш), the initial Cyrillic letter of 'Špion' (Russian for 'spy') into the back of Bond's right hand. (Despite skin grafts, signs of the wound remain in later Bond books).[3] Then, at the end of the novel, Bond's lover and fellow agent Vesper Lynd—in fact a Soviet double agent—commits suicide when she learns that a SMERSH agent has her under surveillance and that the organisation is planning to kill her. As a result of her death, Bond swears vengeance upon SMERSH, which he calls 'the threat behind the spies, the threat that made them spy'.[4] His revenge begins in the second novel, Live and Let Die, wherein he becomes highly interested in disrupting Mr. Big's financing of Soviet operations upon learning that he is a SMERSH agent.[5] SMERSH retaliates in From Russia, with Love, issuing a death warrant for the immediate execution of James Bond ('To be killed with ignominy').[6] SMERSH goes to great lengths in an effort to achieve three goals: kill Bond, cause an embarrassing scandal for the British intelligence community, and kill its code-breaking experts with a booby-trapped encryption machine. The first part of From Russia, with Love is presented entirely from SMERSH's point of view, depicting the interplay between various agents and operatives and the meticulous preparations for killing Bond, and a large part of the book passes before Bond confronts any SMERSH personnel directly. Bond faces SMERSH again in Goldfinger after learning that Auric Goldfinger, the agency's treasurer, is planning to steal the gold bullion stored at Fort Knox and defect to the Soviet Union with it.
After Goldfinger, SMERSH is mentioned only fleetingly, usually in reference to having been disbanded. In Thunderball, three former members of SMERSH joined and became top members of the apolitical criminal organization, SPECTRE.
In the continuation novels (and novelizations), however, SMERSH returns as an organisation essentially renamed and reorganised within Soviet intelligence. They are first mentioned again in the novelization of The Spy Who Loved Me, although replaced by KGB in the film. In John Gardner's series of Bond novels, SMERSH is renamed Department V (the letter) in Icebreaker. They return in a larger role in No Deals, Mr. Bond, renamed Department Eight, Directorate S, a KGB sub-section.
In the film series, Bond's archenemy became SPECTRE, which first appeared in Fleming's novel Thunderball (1961). SPECTRE is introduced in the first film, Dr. No (1962), in which Julius No explains to Bond that it is the acronym for the SPecial Executive for Counterintelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, and Extortion, the four great cornerstones of power. Film versions of novels where SMERSH appears substituted either SPECTRE or independent villains.
Although twice referred to, SMERSH never appears in the official film series; first, in From Russia with Love (1963), Bond initially thinks he is fighting SMERSH, only to learn that the villains are from SPECTRE, including Rosa Klebb, the former head of operations for SMERSH who has secretly defected to SPECTRE. Bond's love interestTatiana Romanova says she knows Klebb as SMERSH's head of operations, and obeys her orders, presuming them from SMERSH. Second, The Living Daylights (1987) features a faked SMERSH re-activation. Throughout, it is referred to with its full name, Smiert Spionam (alternative spelling of Smert' Shpionam), rather than the better-known acronym; General Pushkin, then head of KGB, says it has been inoperative for 20 years. SMERSH is also an element in the 1967 spoofed film adaptation of Casino Royale that centres upon Le Chiffre's attempted recovery of SMERSH monies via baccarat at the Royale casino.
In the 2006 film adaptation of Casino Royale, SMERSH's role in the plot is filled by a terrorist organisation called Quantum which in the later film Spectre was revealed to be a subgroup of SPECTRE.
Notable villains in the Bond novels who were SMERSH agents or associates, included:
A number of other fictional spy organisations appear to be loosely based on SMERSH, some of them parodies, e.g., THRUSH in The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Schlecht in The Intelligence Men, and STENCH in Carry On Spying.
Retro shooting 2018 wikipedia movies. definition of Wikipedia
Wikipedia
Universe | James Bond series |
---|---|
Type | Intelligence agency |
Founded | 1943 |
Location | Leningrad Numerous |
Key people | General Grubozaboyschikov (leader) Rosa Klebb Auric Goldfinger Mr. Big Le Chiffre |
Purpose | Counter-intelligence Political subversion of the West |
SMERSH is a Sovietcounterintelligence agency featured in Ian Fleming's early James Bond novels as agent 007's nemesis. СМЕРШ (SMERSH) is an acronym from two Russian words: 'SMERt' SHpionam' (СМЕРть Шпионам, Směrt Špionam) meaning 'Death to Spies'. Though Fleming's version of SMERSH supposedly was modelled upon the real SMERSH organization, the novels portray SMERSH as a massive Soviet counterintelligence organisation, much more resembling the real-life KGB, which aims its operatives abroad in subversion of the West, with the additional goal of killing Western spies, particularly James Bond of SIS. SMERSH's headquarters are in Leningrad, Soviet Union.
|
The novel Casino Royale breaks SMERSH down into five departments or отделы (оtdyels):
Within the world of James Bond, SMERSH is a Soviet counterintelligence agency that is a recurring threat to him and the British Secret Service. SMERSH made its first and perhaps longest-lasting impact on Bond in Casino Royale when their agent sent to kill Le Chiffre carved a Sha (ш), the initial Cyrillic letter of 'Špion' (Russian for 'spy') into the back of Bond's left hand; despite skin grafts, a faint scar remains. Since then, Bond has sought revenge several times, beginning in the second novel, Live and Let Die, wherein Bond is almost uninterested in disrupting Mr. Big's financing of Soviet operations until learning that Big is a SMERSH agent. SMERSH retaliates in From Russia, with Love, issuing a death warrant for the immediate execution of James Bond ('To be killed with ignominy'). Not only is his assassination arranged, but SMERSH goes to great lengths to ensure his death will be scandalously embarrassing throughout the entire intelligence community. Later, Bond again squares off against SMERSH in Goldfinger after learning that Auric Goldfinger is the agency's treasurer.
After Goldfinger, SMERSH is mentioned only fleetingly, usually in reference to having been disbanded or made inoperant. In the continuation novels (and novelisations), however, SMERSH returns as an organisation essentially renamed and reorganised within Soviet intelligence. They are first mentioned again in The Spy Who Loved Me film novelisation, although replaced by KGB in the film. In John Gardner's series of Bond novels, SMERSH is renamed Department V (the letter) in Icebreaker. They return in a larger role in No Deals, Mr. Bond, renamed Department Eight, Directorate S, a KGB sub-section.
In the film series, Bond's archenemy became SPECTRE, which first appeared in Fleming's novel Thunderball (1961). SPECTRE is introduced in the first film, Dr. No (1962), in which the doctor explains to Bond that it is the acronym for the SPecial Executive for Counterintelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, and Extortion, the four great cornerstones of power. Film versions of novels where SMERSH appears substituted either SPECTRE or independent villains in order to avoid fomenting hatred of the Soviets, and so contributing to unstable relations with the USSR.[citation needed]
Although twice referred to, SMERSH never appears in the official film series; first, in From Russia with Love (1963), Bond initially thinks he is fighting SMERSH, only to learn that the villains are from SPECTRE, including villainess Rosa Klebb, the former head of SMERSH who has secretly defected to SPECTRE. Tatiana Romanova, the Bond girl heroine, says she knows Klebb as SMERSH's head of operations, and obeys her orders, presuming them from SMERSH. Second, The Living Daylights (1987) features a faked SMERSH re-activation. Throughout, it is referred to with its less-known full name Smert Shpionam, rather than the better-known acronym; General Pushkin, then head of KGB, says it has been inoperant since twenty years before in the 60s. SMERSH is also an element in the 1967 spoofed film adaptation ofCasino Royale that centres upon Le Chiffre's attempted recovery of SMERSH monies via baccarat at the Royale casino. Wartile xbox.
In the 2006 film adaptation of Casino Royale, SMERSH's role in the plot is filled by a terrorist organization called Quantum.
Notable villains in the Bond novels who were SMERSH agents include:
A joking reference to SMERSH also appears in the spoof film, Casino Royale in which anyone who uttered the name was quieted by someone else saying 'SHHHHHHHH!' thereby making the acronym sound like 'SMERSHHHHHHHHH..'
James Bond portal |
|
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)