Secret agent
The fictional stereotype of the Agent Secret comes from the phantasms of the Cold war, where the secret services and the Barbouze S of the great powers clashed in the shade.
The virile and tempting, drawn type with four pins, collecting the most sophisticated women and gadgets was literally phagocyte by the character of Flemming, James Bond; so much so that the only expression in the fictions referring is the Plagiat to it, without much hope of success. The use of this stereotype makes it possible to pour in the features suitable for the Virilité (" the covered man of femmes") insofar as the notch necessary to the execution of the missions recquière a breadth of exception; overflows scenaristic which would be contrary with the popularity of films in any other context of contemporary account, since the situations of seduction are made old-fashioned because of taking into account of the ideas of feminism in the Western company of these thirty last years.
The man thus passes from ultra-violence to bleuettes glamor after being himself left the race of cars without it reaching the perfection of its gominée cap.
Parodies of James Bond
Functioning on the mode of the parodic stereotype of reference, the parodies have more success than its plagiarisms, so much the universe of James Bond took on the evocation of the agent of the secret services. Not only the women for her seduction will like famous Bond but moreover will make dream the men by connecting all the missions…
See too
- Secret agent (film), of Alfred Hitchcock
- Secret agents, film of Frederic Schoendoerffer
- Spy novel
| Random links: | Trichotillomanie | Marc' O | Kurdish institute of Paris | Jerome Lempereur | Isotopic separation | 1790_au_Canada |