James Bond and the Witch Doctor's Secret Society: Unearthing the Truth

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James Bonf was an American doctor who specialized in witchcraft and the supernatural. Born in 1874, Bonf became fascinated with the occult at a young age. He grew up in a small town in Ohio, where he witnessed a number of unexplained events that fueled his interest in the supernatural. After completing his medical training, Bonf dedicated his life to studying and understanding witchcraft. He spent several years traveling to different countries, exploring various occult practices and learning from seasoned witch doctors. His research led him to remote African villages where he observed ancient rituals and witnessed powerful spiritual healings.


The main henchman include Tee Hee, played by Julius W. Harris who has one of the most exciting roles within the Bond series. He is armed with a metal hook on one hand which previously had played victim to a hungry alligator called Albert, named after the Bond Producer, Albert R. Broccoli. We get to see Albert the Croc later on in the movie at the Louisiana Crocodile farm where Tee Hee gives a highly entertaining yet menacing tour of the farm before leaving Bond stranded on an island surrounded by the reptiles. Tee Hee makes an appearance in yet another memorable scene at the end of the movie where Bond has accomplished his mission and is travelling by train. Tee Hee managed to sneak on board travelling by mail bag and enters Bond’s cabin. The two meet and a fantastic fight takes place between the two. I particularly liked the shot where Bond throws a deck of cards at Tee Hee while he lunges forward at him. The two fight and we think Tee Hee has the upper hand until Bond manages to reach his briefcase with one hand and lift a pair of pliers. He then cuts the wires within Tee Hee’s metal arm and he becomes stuck, helpless while Bond lifts a window and chucks him out. Brilliant action sequence! An even more colourful villain in Live and Let Die and who I consider to be my favourite villain is Baron Samedi played by Geoffrey Holder. He plays the role of a Voodoo Witch Doctor who adds a whole new level of creepiness to the film. He has one distinguishing feature, his menacing laugh. We first catch a glimpse of him at the San Monique hotel where Bond is staying while he performs an evening performance for guests. There’s a brilliant close-up shot where Baron Samedi is seen for the first time and we see him dressed up with his white bowler hat and costume. He makes his second appearance in a cemetery on San Monique hiding behind a tombstone. Bond walks by and Samedi stands up, turning around while playing his flute. The tune he plays is really creepy and it’s a funny yet menacing little part of the film. Samedi also crops up right after Bond’s interrogation scene where Solitaire, Bond’s current love interest has been found guilty of betraying Kananga. Samedi walks in and stops behind Solitaire’s chair, dropping his hat in front of her. There’s Samedi’s flute music playing in the soundtrack and he walks over to begin setting alight Solitaire’s tarot cards. Kananga exchanges words with her and violently hits her, forcing her onto the floor. She looks up and Baron Samedi looks at her, giving off an incredible menacing laugh while holding a tarot card with the word, ‘Death’ written on it. Chilling stuff.

She had already predicted that to be the case earlier in the movie and here Bond asks her to pick a card from the deck he s prearranged She picks one and it turns out to be lovers again. A British spokesperson is killed off promptly with a electrical signal created by an unknown villain pushing down on a dynamite style lever at the film s opening.

James bonf witch doctir

His research led him to remote African villages where he observed ancient rituals and witnessed powerful spiritual healings. Bonf became well-known for his expertise in dealing with supernatural phenomena. He was sought after by individuals who believed they were victims of curses or demonic possession.

James Bond’s Watches: The Complete Movie Timeline

He’s the world’s most famous secret agent, and the selection of watches on his wrist is at least as varied as the parade of “Bond girls” at his side. Each watch reflects its epoch: from robust mechanical timekeepers, through digital timepieces, to state-of-the-art chronometers. With the long-awaited (and long-delayed) No Time to Die now in theaters, we re-present our timeline overview of 007’s wrist-wear over the years.

1962
James Bond first appeared on the silver screen in 1962 and has remained there ever since, but the Bond character was born 10 years prior to 007’s cinematic debut. Ian Fleming wrote Casino Royale, his first novel about the adventures of the charming MI6 agent, while on his honeymoon in 1952. Although Bond immediately showed extraordinarily good taste in automobiles and clothes, his wristwatch wasn’t identified until Fleming’s second novel, Live and Let Die (1954). Bond wears a Rolex in this book, which is not surprising, because Fleming himself wore a Rolex Explorer, Reference 1016, on an extensible Oyster riveted strap. Fleming’s affection for Rolex is apparent in the first James Bond film, where Bond, played by Sean Connery, casually straps on a Rolex Submariner without a date display while hunting the nefarious Dr. No, for whom the movie is named. Reference 6358 has a leather strap here. Film buffs believe that this model was one of Sean Connery’s personal possessions.

Rolex Submariner, Ref. 6538

1963/1964
James Bond remained faithful to Rolex in his second cinematic adventure, From Russia with Love. The movie shows Connery wearing a Rolex Submariner, Reference 6538, which still shows just the time because Q, the famous master of innovative weaponry, hadn’t yet equipped 007’s watch with any other special capabilities.

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From Russia with Love

Connery again wears Reference 6538 in Goldfinger, where it’s attached to a much-too-narrow textile strap. Pussy Galore, the aviatrix with the politically incorrect name, relies on a classical pilots’ watch: the Rolex GMT Master, Reference 6542.

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Goldfinger

1965
James Bond wears two watches in Thunderball. He uses his Rolex Submariner to tell the time, but he relies on a modified Breitling Top Time when he needs a Geiger counter. This watch was rediscovered in 2013 at an English flea market, where the authentic prop from the classic flick changed hands for a paltry 25 pounds – and was soon afterwards auctioned for a five-figure sum.

© 2015 JamesBondWatches.com and Dell Deaton, All Rights Reserved. USA. Images used with Permission Breitling Top Time

1967
The phrase “You Only Live Twice” is perhaps more appropriate for James Bond than for anyone else. In the movie of that name, the dapper agent battles his archenemy, Ernst Stavro Blofeld. No one knows exactly which watch accompanied 007, but some aficionados suspect it was a golden Gruen, which probably came from Connery’s private collection.

© 2015 JamesBondWatches.com and Dell Deaton, All Rights Reserved. USA. Images used with Permission Gruen Precision

1969
On Her Majesty’s Secret Service featured a new leading man, but this film would be Australian actor George Lazenby’s only stint as James Bond. As if to recompense him for his short-lived tenure, he has the good fortune in this film to wed the actress Diana Rigg, whom you may remember from the TV show The Avengers. In the movie Bond wore a Rolex Submariner (Ref. 5513) and a Rolex Chronograph (Ref. 6238).

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Above and below: On Her Majesty’s Secret Service Rolex “Pre-Daytona” chronograph, Ref. 6238

1971
A familiar face returned to the silver screen in Diamonds Are Forever, where Sean Connery, back as Bond, turns his attention not only to girls, but to girls’ best friends. Bond fights the good fight mostly without a watch, although one does make a cameo appearance in one scene. Connoisseurs think it might be the same golden Gruen worn in You Only Live Twice.

1973/1974
Roger Moore’s debut as James Bond, in Live and Let Die, and its follow-up, The Man with the Golden Gun, inaugurated a new era spiced not only with more humor, but also with a Rolex Submariner 5513 equipped with practical additional functions. For the first time, the agent’s watch hosted gadgets added by Q. The watch could be triggered to serve as a circular saw, which comes in handy when handcuffs need to be removed. It also had a built-in magnet to deflect incoming bullets or, when necessary, help to suavely disrobe a lady. In Live and Let Die, Bond wore another watch in the opening sequence, one of the power-hungry Pulsar LED digital watches from Hamilton, which helped usher in the quartz revolution.

The James Bond Blu-Ray Collection © 2015 Danjaq, LLC and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios INC. TM Danjaq, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Live and Let Die Hamilton Pulsar LED watch

The James Bond Blu-Ray Collection © 2015 Danjaq, LLC and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios INC. TM Danjaq, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

The Man with the Golden Gun Rolex Submariner Ref. 5513

1977
East meets West with a bang in The Spy Who Loved Me, in which sparks fly between Bond and Major Anya Amasova. A Rolex GMT Master assures precise timekeeping, while a Seiko 0674 LC functions as a pager: a label-making printer inside the watch ejects strips of paper bearing important messages from the office spymaster M.

Seiko 0674 LC

1979
Moonraker catapults 007 into outer space, where he’s assisted by a Seiko M354 Memory Bank Calendar, which conceals an explosive secret that blasts the way clear for the agent and his appealing flightmate.

Seiko M354 Memory Bank Calendar

1981
Moore dives into the Aegean Sea for his fifth Bond adventure, For Your Eyes Only. Two Seiko watches join him: the Seiko 7549-7009, above, and the Seiko H357 Duo Display, above right.

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For Your Eyes Only Seiko H357 Duo Display Seiko 7549-7009 Professional Divers’ watch

1983
The risqué name of the next Bond film, Octopussy, caused a furor in England. In it, Moore’s Bond, with a Seiko TV Watch on his wrist, turns his attention to a young lady who works as one of Q’s assistants. The same year, Connery gave his final performance as Bond in Never Say Never Again. The identity of his watch in this movie remains a mystery.

© 2015 JamesBondWatches.com and Dell Deaton, All Rights Reserved. USA. Images used with Permission Seiko watch from Octopussy

1985
A View to a Kill finds Bond on the Golden Gate Bridge, where both he and his nemesis Zorin wear Rolexes (Bond’s is a Datejust). In other scenes, Bond wears three Seiko watches, including a Seiko Diver’s 150m.

© 2015 JamesBondWatches.com and Dell Deaton, All Rights Reserved. USA. Images used with Permission Seiko Diver’s 150m

1987
After Timothy Dalton’s debut as James Bond in The Living Daylights, critics nicknamed this actor “Rambond.” In the movie, Agent 007 wears a TAG Heuer Professional Night-Dive Reference 980.031.

The James Bond Blu-Ray Collection © 2015 Danjaq, LLC and Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer Studios INC. TM Danjaq, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

The Living Daylights TAG Heuer Professional Night Dive, Ref. 980.031

1989
In Dalton’s second and final adventure as James Bond, License to Kill, Bond wears a Rolex Submariner.

Rolex Submariner, Ref. 16610

1995
Pierce Brosnan wears a quartz version of the Omega Seamaster Professional 300M (Reference 2541.80) when he takes over as James Bond in GoldenEye.

The James Bond Blu-Ray Collection © 2015 Danjaq, LLC and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios INC. TM Danjaq, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

GoldenEye Omega Seamaster Professional 300M, Ref. 2541.80

1997/1999/2002
An Omega Seamaster Professional (Reference 2531.80) is again the ticking costar in Tomorrow Never Dies.

The World Is Not Enough for this secret agent, so he escapes its confines aboard a rocket bound for outer space. In his battle against Elektra King and her cohorts, Bond relies on Reference 2561.80 as a radiant light source and as a rescue cable with a grappling hook.

Pierce Brosnan remains faithful to the Omega Seamaster in his fourth adventure. This chronometer saves 007’s life in Die Another Day thanks to an explosive charge in its helium valve that can be detonated via the bezel. A powerful laser in the watch’s crown serves Bond well in his battle against the evildoer Gustav Graves.

Omega Seamaster Professional, Ref. 2531.80

The James Bond Blu-Ray Collection © 2015 Danjaq, LLC and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios INC. TM Danjaq, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Die Another Day

2006
James Bond loves variety, so when Daniel Craig debuts as everyone’s favorite secret agent in a big-screen adaptation of Casino Royale, he alternately wears an Omega Seamaster Diver 300M (Ref. 2220.80) and a Seamaster Planet Ocean (Ref. 2900.50.91).

The James Bond Blu-Ray Collection © 2015 Danjaq, LLC and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios INC. TM Danjaq, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Casino Royale Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean, Ref. 2900.50.91

2008
It seems as though Bond needs an exceedingly watertight watch in Quantum of Solace. His Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M (Reference 2201.50) reliably resists pressure at great depths.

Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600m, Ref. 2201.50

2012
James Bond wears several watches in Skyfall, including one that was specially built for this film and which Christie’s auctioned for nearly 200,000 euros in 2012. Bond’s Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M has a titanium case, unlike the serially manufactured version, which is stainless steel. Both are fitted with Caliber 8500. For more information on the Skyfall watch, click here.

The James Bond Blu-Ray Collection © 2015 Danjaq, LLC and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios INC. TM Danjaq, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Skyfall Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600m

2015
In 2015’s Spectre, Daniel Craig returned to the screen, this time wearing an Omega Seamaster 300 Spectre, which alludes to a predecessor from the 1960s. He also sported an Omega Seamaster Aqua Terra in the opening sequence. We cover that watch in detail here.

Omega Seamaster 300 Spectre Limited Edition

In Craig’s final outing as Bond, 2021’s No Time to Die, he wore the Omega Seamaster Diver 007 Edition, a military-look dive watch designed with the actor’s own design input that sports a tough-but-lightweight titanium case, a tropical brown dial with vintage lume, and a scalloped rotating bezel with an aluminum insert. WatchTime’s Mark Bernardo reviewed the watch ahead of the film’s release; you can read the details here.

Omega Seamaster Diver 300M 007 Edition

This article originally appeared in WatchTime magazine and has been updated.

If you buy something using the affiliate links in our stories, WatchTime may earn a small commission. WatchTime does not accept money for editorial review.

While on the way to Kananga's heroin fields on San Monique, Bond and
James bonf witch doctir

Bonf developed his own unique methods of treatment, combining traditional medical practices with spiritual and mystical interventions. Although his work was highly criticized by the medical establishment at the time, Bonf gained a loyal following of patients who claimed to have experienced miraculous recoveries under his care. His book, "The Secrets of Witchcraft Healing," became a bestseller and was widely read by both skeptics and believers alike. Despite his success, Bonf faced relentless scrutiny and skepticism from the scientific community. He was often accused of exploiting vulnerable individuals and perpetuating superstition. However, he remained steadfast in his beliefs and continued his work until his death in 1948. Today, James Bonf is remembered as a pioneering figure in the field of witchcraft medicine. While his methods may not align with contemporary scientific understanding, his contributions helped shed light on the cultural and spiritual beliefs surrounding witchcraft. His legacy serves as a reminder that there are still mysteries in the world that defy scientific explanation and that alternative approaches to healing should not be dismissed outright..

Reviews for "The Witch Doctor's Scheme: Bond's Mission to Save the World"

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Bond vs. the Witch Doctor's Mind Control: A Battle of Wills

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