31
Ne Facharbeit sollte schon was länger sein.

Ich fürchte nur meine Physiklehrer wären aufgrund meiner umwerfenden erläuterungen sowas von erschlagen, dass sie schon bei den Sauerstoffröhrchen aufgeben würden, geschweige denn von dem unsichtbaren Aston !
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33
lol.

Aber die gadgets - das wär doch mal was.


Eine Frage - ist Facharbeit nur Text oder kann man das auch so bildermäßig aufpeppen?


Bei meiner Englandmappe, die wir anfertigen mussten warens 50 Seiten, davon 35 Seiten Bilder.
Danach war die Druckerpatrone leer :)
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34
007 hat geschrieben:Da hast dsu dir wirklich etwas vorgenommen !

Das schwierigste sollte ja wohl das 3. Sein. 'unterschiedliche interpretationen'

biographie sollte ja eigenlich ganz gut gehen.


@ KNOX:
Roman-Buch ?
Meinst du Film-Roman ?

Natürlich Roman-Film. Hab´s bereits ausgebessert. Die Arbeit ist im Prinzip fertig. Es sind ungefähr 50 Word-Seiten, sprich 23.000 Wörter!

KNOX

36
Bilder müssen bei uns leider in den Anhang, heißt, du kannst ein zweu Bilder in den Textzusammenhang fügen, aber sonst auch nichts, 8-12 Seiten Text!
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"Sie sind nicht mein Typ!"
"Klug?"
"Single!" (Casino Royale 2006)

43
ernst stavro b. hat geschrieben:Macht ihr auch Powerpoint-Präsentation?
Nein. Ein (freiwilliges) Skript, dessen Inhalt man bei der Prüfung im Kopf haben sollte...

KNOX

44
So ich habe mal ein bisschen geschrieben zu meiner Facharbeit und habe bis jetzt etwas über drei Seiten an Text zusammen, viel Spaß bei lesen, kopiert es euch runter:
1.1 Introduction

I do not know how it happened or why it happened, but suddenly in a period of my life, bored of cartoon series and super heroes like Batman, Superman or Spiderman, I turned to a character, which seemed to be a real hero for me. The most popular secret agent of Great Britain, who posesses an incomparable charme and always sleeps with a gun under the pillow. A man that trusts nobody and that always fights against the most fancy psychopaths on earth, the man who is licenced to kill, where he chooses, when he chooses, whom he chooses: James Bond 007. My first introduction to James Bond was the film ‘GoldenEye’ with Pierce Brosnan as James Bond which I had watched at the age of 8 years with my parents in the living room. I suddenly seemed to be attracted of the imagination of being a secret agent like him, a man with the qualities mentioned here. But what does 007 make James Bond? How was James Bond created and what are the roots of the agent and the films we know today? How did it come that James Bond developed to a myth and an idol for nearly every man on earth? What are the typical character treats of James Bond and how did the 5 different actors interprete this role? Why have the films become such a huge success and which new techniques were introduced in the films? Who are the men behind the scenes of the movies? These are many questions and in the following I will try to clear the most of them. At first I want to give an information about James Bond and his creator, Ian Fleming and how he got to the idea of writing novels and calling their main character James Bond. Fleming was the one who wrote nearly all of the James Bond novels, who were the basement of the successful movies that started in the early nineteen-sixties. Furthermore I will inform about the men who made it possible that James Bond could reach international cinemas, Harry Saltzman and Albert R. Broccoli the producers of nearly all Bond films, their search for an actor to play James Bond in the early sixties, the production of Dr.No, the first Bond picture, and about techniques infront of the camera and behind the scenes that have made the Bond films to a sensation at the topic of secret service gadgets in the past and today. Beyond I will write about the two inofficial films, that were not produced by Harry Saltzman and Albert R. Broccoli, Casino Royale and especially about Never say never again, which was the defenately last film of Sean Connery in the role of 007, before he retired from it and turned to character roles which made him a successful Academy Award winner.Last but not least I will write about the actors of James Bond, their interpretation of the role and their life before and after having played James Bond.

2.1 Who is James Bond?
James Bond is a secret agent of the british Intelligence MI6, which stands for Military Intelligence Six, with the number 007. He is one of three men of the british secret service who posess the the double-0-number and are licensed to kill. He was created as the main character of Ian Fleming’s novels and first appeared in Fleming’s novel ‘Casino Royale’ which was published in 1953. He used to be the main character in all of Fleming’s novels. Bond is portrayed according to Fleming’s describtions like that: “Height 183 centimeters, Weight 76 kilogramms, slim, blue eyes, black hair, a vertical scar tissue on the right cheek.”(Tesche, p.16, ll.75-78 ). Bond is an excellent sportsman, pistol shooter, boxer and knife thrower who is passionated into women and alcohol. Bond speaks French and German fluently. Bond lives in Chelsea and never uses any codenames. Bond is a talented player, gourmet and judge of wines and is always irreproachable dressed, and prefers to drink “Dom Perignon, Château Lafite 1953”(Tesche, p.17, ll.25-26) or icecold medium dry Martini with Wodka. Bond has been the main character of 23 films in the last 50 years. There have been the 20 ‘official’ Bond films, produced by the production company of Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman and the three inofficial films, the TV version of Fleming’s novel ‘Casino Royale’ in 1954, the cinema edition of it starring David Niven as James Bond and ‘Never say never again’ in 1982, in which Sean Connery returned as James Bond after he had retired after ‘Diamonds are forever’ in 1973 and said that he never wanted to play Bond again. In 50 years of James Bond on TV and in cinemas seven actors played James Bond. Barry Nelson starred in the 1954 edition of ‘Casino Royale’ so did David Niven in 1967. Sean Connery was the first James Bond that starred in cinema. He played James Bond six times, from ‘Dr.No’ to ‘You only live twice’, in ‘Diamonds are forever’ and in ‘Never say never again’. George Lazenby, who only impersonated Bond one time, in ‘On her Majesty’s Secret Service’. Roger Moore, who embodied 007 in seven films, Timothy Dalton, who played him two times and the Bond of the nineties and the new century Pierce Brosnan, who has done four films until today. The role of James Bond is one of the most desireables in the world, because the Bond films have guaranted international fame and success over 40 years now and are popular in the entire world. Although the role of Bond has developed in the last fourty years, it is still claimed that Bond’s character and background is very close to his author’s, Ian Fleming. How much that is true and how Fleming created James Bond 007, we will see in the next chapter

2.2 The biography of Ian Fleming and the creation of James Bond

2.2.1 Ian Fleming
Ian Lancaster Fleming was born as the son of the rich military officer and Member of Parliament Major Valentine Fleming and his wife Evelyn Beatrice on May 28th 1908 in 29 Green Street near the well known Park Lane in London. Fleming had three brothers: Peter, who was one year older than him and used to be a famous author of guide books before he died 1971 after a hunting trip, Michael, who died in war captivity at the cause of heavy injuries resulting from the fight over Dünkirchen in the second World War and the in 1977 deceased Richard. Major Valentine Fleming, the boy’s father, had already died in the first World War in the belgian province Flandern. His mother had now the full responsibility over him and send Ian to the well known and straight Eton College and to the Royal Military Academy in Sandhurst. After his life as a student Fleming wanted to become a diplomate but failed to realize his dream twice. The first time he wanted to become a diplomate but then began studying psychology at the universities of Geneva and Munich. There he used to read famous authors like Thomas Mann, Jung, Adler und Rilke and loved to stay in Kitzbühel. The second time he accomplished the entrance examination of the diplomate chor and reached the 25th position of 62 applicants but finally was not picked. So he decided to pick a job as a journalist at the news agency Reuters for four years. He learnt Russian and either spoke French and German fluently because of his former studies at Munich and Geneva. In 1933 he got sent to Moscow for the first time to report about the process against six british engineers of the Metropolitan-Vickers Electrical Engineering Company, who were accused of espionage. Fleming got very good reputation during his correspondency in Moscow and after Stalin was not content with doing an interview with Fleming he quit his job as a correspondent. From 1933 till 1935 he dealed with security bonds at the bank Cull & Co. and 1935 got a new job at a company for stock-exchanges called Row & Pittman where he reached the position of a junior partner. After that Fleming went back to Russia with a special assignement of the “Times”. Fleming also was occupied in the reserve of the royal navy and got the position of the personal assistant of the head of the naval Intelligence Adm. John H. Goodfrey in 1939. His office was room 39 of the section 17, the so called “Naval Intelligence Division” (NID) in the Whitehall building in London. Soon with Goodfreys help Fleming, whose code was 17 F, reached the position of a commander who also instructed special task forces, that should operate behind enemy lines to get secret codes and equipment from the enemy. He had an excellent reputation as an excellent organizer and talented to solve problems, who knew most of the internal informations of the british Intelligences and knew Winston Churchill personally. He took care of several operations during the second World War, he shadowed the double agent Dusko Pupov and developed a plan to arrest Rudolf Heß, who was interested in Astrology and Occulty, by getting him visiting Scottland. Fleming was popular for his inconventional tactic to get information from a german submarine commander. Instead of interrogating him he went to a pub in Soho with him to make him drunk and by this getting the information he wanted, but the german officer failed to get drunk and the interrogation got a little to loud and was spoken in German until the other guests wondered about the two fellows. Fleming was often criticised because of this methods.

2.2.1 ist noch nicht komplett wollte ich nur noch anmerken,

Gruß George
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"Sie sind nicht mein Typ!"
"Klug?"
"Single!" (Casino Royale 2006)

45
Klingt gut !

Habs zwar nur überflogen, aber eine sache ist mir dann doch aufgefallen (der Lehrerin vielleicht nciht):
Warum nur 3 00-Agenten ?

Wir hatten schon 002, 008, 006, 007, 009...
In Tb sieht man 9 oder 10 Leute auf den 00-Stühlen in der Konferenz sitzen !
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