- "Mr. Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: "Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action." Miami, Sandwich, and now Geneva. I propose to wring the truth out of you."
- ― Auric Goldfinger to James Bond
Auric Goldfinger was a fictional entrepreneur and the treasurer of SMERSH. The character was first introduced as the main antagonist of Ian Fleming's 1959 James Bond novel, Goldfinger, and was subsequently adapted for comics, film, television and games. The literary Goldfinger was subsequently referenced in Anthony Horowitz' 2015 continuation novel Trigger Mortis.
Biography[]
In the novel, Auric Goldfinger is the richest man in England and the treasurer of SMERSH. Goldfinger's passion is gold. He is also a jeweler, a metallurgist, and a smuggler.
When Goldfinger first meets James Bond in Miami, he claims that he is agoraphobic; a ploy to allow him to cheat against Junius Du Pont at a game of two-handed Canasta, by having Jill Masterton watch their game from his room, and report back Du Pont's cards to him via a hidden earpiece, disguised as a hearing aid. However, Du Pont suspected Goldfinger of cheating, and recruited James Bond to discover how he was doing it. Bond figured out how Goldfinger was managing this cheating and blackmailed him by forcing him to admit his deception. Goldfinger was also an avid golfer, but is known at his club for being a smooth cheater. When Bond contrived to play a match with Goldfinger, he again cheated the cheater by switching Goldfinger's Dunlop One with a Dunlop Seven he had found while playing.
Goldfinger is the owner of "Enterprises Auric A.G." in Switzerland, maker of metal furniture, which is bought by many airlines including Air India. A few times during the year, Goldfinger drives his Rolls Royce "Silver Ghost" car from England to Enterprises Auric. Bond learns that Goldfinger makes repeated dead drops of gold bars along the way and that his car's bodywork is 18 carat (75%), solid white gold under the ploy that the added weight is armor plating. Once at Enterprises Auric, his car is stripped down, melted and made into furniture (seating) for an airline company that Enterprises Auric is heavily invested in. The plane(s) are then flown to India where the seats are melted down again into gold bars and sold for a much higher premium rate; 100 to 200% profit.
Operation Grand Slam[]
Operation Grand Slam is Goldfinger's codename for his scheme that involves "knocking off" the U.S. bullion depository at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Through the use of a chemical created by the Germans during World War II, Goldfinger plans to poison the water supply at Fort Knox, thus rendering all sixty thousand people on the base dead. From there, Goldfinger would use an Atomic Bomb he had purchased for one million USD to blow open Fort Knox's impregnable vault. With the help of American gangsters, Goldfinger would then remove roughly fifteen billion dollars in gold bullion and escape.
However, James Bond foils Goldfinger's plan by getting word to Felix Leiter of the impending operation. With the help of The Pentagon, Leiter was able to stop Goldfinger, and foil the operation. But Goldfinger escapes. Goldfinger met his end while trying to escape to the Soviet Union. After taking the plane Bond was on for himself and intending to escape the authorities, Bond escapes. After the spy kills Oddjob, Goldfinger appears and a violent struggle ensues. James Bond eventually strangles the man.
Henchmen & Associates[]
In addition to Henchmen, Goldfinger enlisted the help of several American gangsters. All of the gangsters that participated in Operation Grand Slam were subsequently shot when the operation failed, but Goldfinger enlisted Pussy Galore's help in exacting his revenge on Bond, which ultimately failed. One of the gangsters, Helmut Springer, backed out of the deal and did not participate i Goldfinger's Operation Grand Slam. Moments later, Mr. Springer had an "accident", falling down the staircase as he was leaving. In fact, he was killed by Oddjob.
Behind the scenes[]
His first name, Auric, is an adjective meaning of gold. Ian Fleming chose the name to commemorate the architect Erno Goldfinger who had built his home in Hampstead next door to Fleming; Fleming disliked Goldfinger's style of architecture and destruction of Victorian terraces and decided to name a memorable villain after him. The architect was not pleased to find the character sharing his name and contacted his lawyers; he eventually settled for, among other things, the promise that the character's first name Auric would always be used.
Quotes[]
- "I have been in love with gold. I love its colour, its brilliance, its divine heaviness. I love the texture of gold, that soft sliminess that I have learnt to gauge so accurately by touch that I can estimate the fineness of a bar to within one carat. And I love the warm tang it exudes when I melt it down into a true golden syrup. But, above all, Mr Bond, I love the power that gold alone gives to its owner – the magic of controlling energy, exacting labour, fulfilling one’s every wish and whim and, when need be, purchasing bodies, minds, even souls."
- ― Goldfinger discusses his lust for gold with Bond.
See also[]
- Auric Goldfinger
- Auric Goldfinger (Gert Fröbe)
- Auric Goldfinger (Ian McKellen)
- Auric Goldfinger (Dynamite)
- Auric Goldfinger (James Bond Jr.)
- Goldfinger
- List of James Bond villains
References[]
- ↑ Ian Fleming's James Bond: Annotations and Chronologies for Ian Fleming's Bond Stories, Griswold, John, 2006, AuthorHouse, 9781425931001, p.445