Goldeneye begins with a truly outrageous stunt involving Bond freefalling in pursuit of an unpiloted, plummeting airplane. The trail leads to Cuba, where Trevelyan has a secret lair from which he is on the very brink of unleashing chaos upon the world. Bond teams up with a Russian computer programmer, Natalya Semyonova (Isabella Scorupco) and pursues Trevelyan around the globe in an effort to stop his sinister scheme. It emerges that his parents were Liensk Cossacks, brutally killed by the British when he was a boy, and he has long plotted a way to have his revenge. Trevelyan's plan is to get control of a powerful satellite called the Goldeneye and to use it to destroy a designated target on Earth - in this case, London. When Bond investigates, he discovers to his surprise that the plot involves his old colleague Alec - who is very much alive, having faked his death in the earlier exchange. Several years later, a state-of-the-art helicopter is stolen from the West by some Russian spies and used to destroy a Siberian satellite station. During the mission, Alec is apparently killed by the enemy forces but Bond manages a miraculous escape. James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) and his secret agent colleague Alec Trevelyan (Sean Bean) infiltrate a Russian military installation on a sabotage mission. But then Goldeneye came along, with Pierce Brosnan as Bond - it went on to become a commercial hit, propelling its star into the A-list and reinvigorating the entire series. Too much time had gone by, they said, no-one was interested any longer in the character or the stories. Six long years went by without a Bond movie and many insiders predicted an end for the British super-spy and his outrageous screen adventures. The box office returns of that film were disappointing the then-Bond actor Timothy Dalton was axed the film itself was presented in a grittier, more adult style than fans were accustomed to and various legal wranglings put the Bond character into limbo. Then, in 1989, with the release of Licence To Kill the series seemed to die. There followed a Bond movie every couple of years or so (the longest gap between two 007 films was the three-year-hiatus separating The Man With The Golden Gun - 1974 - and The Spy Who Loved Me - 1977). The James Bond franchise, in cinematic terms, began in 1962 with Dr No.
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