The original script for the the darker, grittier, more faithful Timothy Dalton Bond movies — but that wasn’t their first thought.

By the time Moore stepped down from the role of 007 after A View to a Kill, he’d been widely criticized for having aged out of the part. To combat these complaints, the producers initially planned to reboot the series with a much younger Bond early in his career. Richard Maibaum and Michael G. Wilson started work on a script, but the project was eventually abandoned. And it’s probably for the best because, as detailed in "The Lost Adventures of James Bond" by Mark Edlitz, it sounds more like an Indiana Jones film than a Bond film.

An Unmade James Bond Script From The 1980s Sounds Suspiciously Like Indiana Jones

It's A Jungle Adventure About A Search For Lost Gold

Maibaum and Wilson’s unproduced script would’ve been an origin story revolving around a twentysomething Bond. Motivated by his family legacy, Bond would the Secret Intelligence Service and embark on a mission to Asia with an older agent — the current 007 — who would mentor him. The villain would be a warlord named Kwang, who operates within the Golden Triangle as an arms and opium dealer. With its jungle setting, its villain searching for lost gold, and its final battle set in a tomb, this script sounds more like an Indiana Jones movie than a James Bond movie.

Broccoli did like the script, but he felt that the underlying premise was fundamentally flawed. He thought audiences would reject a story about a rookie Bond still learning the ropes.

Although Maibaum and Wilson were happy with their script, it ended up being scrapped by producer Albert R. Broccoli. Broccoli did like the script, but he felt that the underlying premise was fundamentally flawed. He thought audiences would reject a story about a rookie Bond still learning the ropes, especially after the box office failure of Young Sherlock Holmes. Ironically, a decade after Broccoli ed, his daughter Barbara Broccoli produced a 007 origin story, Casino Royale, that became one of the most popular Bond films.

Why James Bond's Indiana Jones-Style Movie Plan Would've Been A Risk

It Could've Been Another Moonraker

Roger Moore on the poster for Moonraker

In theory, an Indiana Jones-style James Bond movie sounds cool. the bizarre (but underrated) Moonraker.

Source: "The Lost Adventures of James Bond" by Mark Edlitz.

No Time to Die Film Poster
Created by
Ian Fleming, Albert R. Broccoli
First Film
Dr. No
Latest Film
No Time to Die
Films
James Bond 26
Genres
Action

The James Bond franchise follows the adventures of British secret agent 007 as he combats global threats. With a license to kill, Bond faces off against various villains and criminal organizations, employing high-tech gadgets, espionage, and charm. The series spans multiple films, featuring exotic locations, thrilling action sequences, and memorable characters. Bond's mission to protect the world and uphold justice remains central, making the franchise an enduring icon in the spy genre.