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    James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch: Part II (a)    
         
   
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TAG Heuer 980.013 Professional wristwatch, circa 1986: Believed to have been the primary James Bond timekeeper throughout The Living Daylights.

  Timothy Dalton actually wore two different wristwatches as James Bond in The Living Daylights (1987). Part I of this article laid out the evidence favoring a thin-case TAG Heuer 980.031 Professional Diver as the first, with an 80-100% “certainty.” Several dozen screen images from the film are available to view this black PVD watch with its cream-colored, full-luminescent dial face — clearly worn a jubilee bracelet.

That first Dalton-Bond timekeeper has been labeled the “Gibraltar Heuer” by JamesBondWatches.com for researchers and collectors.

The second, “Tangier Rooftop Watch” is the focus here in Part II. It’s far less visible in the film, and in many ways best discussed in terms of what it is not. For example, its silver-colored case and bracelet unquestionably distinguish it from the black-dominant Gibraltar Heuer. It’s also unlikely to be a Rolex of any sort. And, as with the Gibraltar Heuer, Eon Productions has provided no information to help with the identification of the Tangier Rooftop Watch, nor is it anticipated that they will do so.

Thus, this article is about a wristwatch of which we can only be 20-40% “certain.” At the same time, that’s a very important 20-40% to have.

Catching a glimpse

The Tangier Rooftop Watch shows below Dalton’s cuff at a number of points throughout main action in The Living Daylights. In fact, other than the pre-title sequence, it gives every indication of being the primary James Bond watch for this film.

   
         
    An early example can be found around 12 minutes, 37 seconds along (as viewed on the 2006 Ultimate Edition DVD). Here, Bond is sitting on the bed in the sniper’s lair, preparing his equipment for the assignment, and the watch shows beneath his French Cuff as he holds the rifle.

At 39 minutes, 12 seconds, a reflection off his watch case can be seen in the restroom stall as he pulls Kara Milovy’s firearm from her white cello case. Then at 41 minutes, 18 seconds, another brief view comes during the scene in the girl’s apartment.

Now look at 44 minutes, 2 seconds, which has James Bond driving off from the conservatoire with Milovy in an Aston Martin with Volante badging. As 007’s sweater pulls back from his hand on the driver’s wheel, both the silver-colored case and indications of a black dial and black bezel on his watch are evidenced.

Finally, around 1 hour, 13 minutes, 49 seconds into The Living Daylights, Timothy Dalton is shown completing a jump from one Tangier rooftop to the next, swinging with the aid of a television antenna. The silver-colored watch brightly reflects as jacket rides up forearm; texturing on the visible band is consistent with that of a jubilee-style bracelet.

Fans have long assumed this must be a Rolex Submariner Date. (The same guesswork, I’ll add, which altogether misses the significantly more obvious TAG Heuer 980.031 seen earlier in the film.) One reasonable basis for this speculation is the confirmed appearance of the Rolex Submariner Date as James Bond’s watch in Licence to Kill (1989), the second of Dalton’s two performances as 007 and which premiered twenty-four months after The Living Daylights.

There is also Dalton’s dogged commitment to portraying Bond closely to the original concept of creator Ian Fleming. This is perhaps best summarized by Albert R. “Cubby” Broccoli of Eon Productions, in his autobiography, When the Snow Melts (1998). He wrote on page 282 that Timothy Dalton “…came to Bond determined to re-create the character, and delved through Fleming’s books for his source material.”

If this influence were to have extended down to wristwatch details — which it did not — that would be a strong position from which to argue that a precursor or even the same Rolex Submariner Date from Licence to Kill had appeared in The Living Daylights.

After all, the original literary Rolex specified for James Bond by Ian Fleming himself was not known until its discovery via JamesBondWatches.com was chronicled in the February 2009 issue of WatchTime magazine. That was over two decades after The Living Daylights premiered.

Go to "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," Part II (b)

   
         
    Media inquiries are welcome for additional rights and information. [link]

Part I (a) of "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," on James Bond Watches
Part I (b) of "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," on James Bond Watches
Part I (c) of "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," on James Bond Watches
Part I (d) of "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," on James Bond Watches

Part II (b) of "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," on James Bond Watches
Part II (c) of "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," on James Bond Watches
Part II (d) of "James Bond wore a TAG Heuer wristwatch," on James Bond Watches

   
         
   

Posted by Dell Deaton, April 2, 2010 at 8:26 PM

   
   
   
   

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08/05/2010 03:52 PM