In Spectre, Moneypenny delivers a handful of personal effects recovered from Skyfall, Bond's ancestral estate. Included amongst the effects is the document that gave Hannes Oberhauser temporary custody of 12-year-old James Bond.
BOND: Your cello's a Stradivarius?
KARA: A famous one. The Lady Rose. Georgi got it in New York.
BOND: Quite a present.
He prefers not to shake hands because of a congenital condition that left his hands webbed like those of aquatic birds or mammals.
Q pops up at an Avis rental station in Germany to issue Bond's car. Later, during a chase inside a carpark, Bond exits the car and sends it flying off the carpark roof before crash-landing into an Avis station across the street.
At Largo's charity event, he and Bond play a 3-D video game called Domination, where players battle each other to conquer real-world nations, and the loser receives an electric shock of increasing intensity. If a player removes his hands from the joystick, he automatically loses. After losing a few games, Bond wins a potentially fatal match for control of the entire world when Largo takes his hands off the joystick. Bond refuses Largo's offer of cash to settle their wager and instead accepts a dance with Largo's mistress, Domino Petachi.
The film was originally titled Tomorrow Never Lies, which makes sense when you consider media mogul Elliot Carver's newspaper Tomorrow was creating the next day's headlines in advance. However, it was then the subject of a typo and the producers liked the alternate title so much they adopted it.
The solex agitator is part of a larger device with the potential to harness solar power and solve the 1973 energy crisis.
Believing Bond to be a murder suspect, the police try to arrest him, but he escapes in a stolen fire-truck.
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