Featured Posts
Licence To Queer covers queer aspects of Bond books, video games and more. Search here for your favourite titles and characters or find content related to particular queer identities (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, etc).
Build-A-Bond
What would a version of Casino Royale made in 1958 with an entirely queer cast have looked like? That was the challenge I set myself when I was invited on the Build-A-Bond podcast.
Our Year in Bond - Review of 2023
Antony and David review a year of book launches, film screenings, events, trips to Bond locations at home and abroad, charity fundraisers, awards and - most thrillingly of all - making new Bond friends. The episode ends with them talking about their Christmas trip to Venice and their exclusive first reading of the new Bond novel (due out in April 2024) A Spy Like Me.
“We’re just looking”: gazing at Bond through the ages
Daniel Craig emerging from the ocean was not as revolutionary as we think. In fact, it was more of an evolution of something that has always been there in the Bond series: an invitation, whatever our gender or sexual orientation, to look - lingeringly, even longingly - at James Bond himself.
Christmas comes again! (And again!): The various versions of The World Is Not Enough
In the latest instalment of their popular series uncovering how Bond films developed through the scripting process, Tom Mason and David Lowbridge-Ellis set their gunbarrel sights on The World Is Not Enough. Early versions of the script reveal significantly different locations, different action sequences, different characters and different versions of the infamous gag which brings the film to its memorable climax!
Countdown to Christmas - Our Month in Bond
Your hosts recount their trip to Buckingham Palace to pick up David's MBE, the climactic 007GB event of 2023 and their experience of David Arnold's intimate live gig. After making a Doctor Who-themed Martini, they run through Christmas gift ideas for Bond fans, the release of Mark Edlitz's new book and finish with a discussion of Bond-tangential media they have enjoyed, including the film Saltburn and a 'shaken not stirred' Super Mario video game.
007: Road to a Million
What did David and Antony think of the Amazon Prime show? Listen to this Licence to Queer podcast to find out! WARNING: Contains spoilers for the first two episodes and David gets quite passionate! (But maybe not for the reasons you might be expecting)
Bond Girls are for Everyone
We all love Bond Girls but the reasons for this aren’t always obvious. As beautiful as Bond Girls are, their enduring worldwide appeal is surely down to more than just looking good? I NEED YOU to take part in this research - the results of which will be included in a new book!
Our Month in Bond
Antony and David reflect on another busy month which included David introducing a special screening of Casino Royale and interviewing six Bond authors at Pinewood Studios for Bondstars. They also discuss the Doctor Who connections with Bond (Doctor Who is celebrating its 60th anniversary), Halloween-related articles on the LTQ website, the Roger Moore auction and David receiving a very special item that once belonged to Roger Moore.
Author interviews
Check out Licence to Queer’s interviews with Bond authors Raymond Benson, Kim Sherwood and Charlie Higson. Each is available as a video and a podcast.
Can Bond Be Forever?
Daniel Craig’s debut allowed more people than ever before to not only see themselves as James Bond, but also want to be part of his world. A panel of (00)7 huge fans - including LTQ’s own David Lowbridge-Ellis - discussed the continual reinvention of Bond ahead of a very special screening.
One Woman, Many Talents: A Love Letter to Kara Milovy
The Living Daylights may be Timothy Dalton’s picture, but it is Kara Milovy’s story, writes Craig Gent. In this love letter to one of the most underestimated Bond girls in the franchise, Craig writes that far from being naïve, she has nothing to declare… “except for cello!”
Hear my love letter to the music of Casino Royale on the latest episode of The Scores Are Not Enough.