Vintage original 11 x 14 in. US lobby card from the 1979 James Bond 007 action/adventure thriller, MOONRAKER, released in 1979 by United Artists and directed by Lewis Gilbert, in which James Bond investigates the mid-air theft of a space shuttle, and discovers a plot to commit global genocide.

This is lobby card #7 and depicts James Bond (Roger Moore) using his boating skills to flip a phony gondolier off the back of his boat into a canal in Venice. It is unrestored in fine+ condition as shown.


Moonraker is the eleventh spy film in the James Bond series and the fourth to star Roger Moore as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond. In the film, Bond is sent to investigate the mysterious theft of a space shuttle, leading him to Hugo Drax, the billionaire owner of the shuttle-manufacturing firm. Along with the space scientist Dr. Holly Goodhead, who later is identified as also being a Central Intelligence Agency agent investigating Mr. Drax, Bond follows the trail of clues from California to Venice, Italy, Rio de Janeiro and the Amazon rain forest and, finally, into outer space in a bid to prevent a plot to wipe out the world population and to re-create humanity with a master race.

Moonraker was intended by its creator, Ian Fleming, to be turned into a film even before he completed the novel in 1954, since he based the novel on a manuscript he had written even earlier than this. The producers of the James Bond film series had originally intended to do Moonraker in 1973 with Roger Moore making his debut as Bond, but the making of this movie was put on hold and finally released in 1979, coinciding with the science fiction genre which had become extremely popular during this period with films such as Star Wars (1977). Derek Meddings, a long-time contributor to the James Bond series, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects for the special effects used in this movie and its space scenes. Moonraker was the highest grossing film of the series until the Pierce Brosnan Bond film GoldenEyeMoonrakerearned a total of $210,300,000 world wide — surpassing the preceding Bond movie The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). Moonraker was also noted for its high production cost for a Bond film, spending almost twice as much money as The Spy Who Loved Me.

MOONRAKER; United Artists; 1979; dir: Lewis Gilbert; cast: Roger Moore, Lois Chiles, Michael Lonsdale, Richard Kiel, Corinne Clery, Bernard Lee, Geoffrey Keen, Desmond Llewelyn, Lois Maxwell, Toshiro Suga, Emily Bolton, Blanche Ravalec, Irka Bochenko, Mike Marshall, Leila Shenna.