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In combat during The Spy Who Loved Me, Bond found himself caught in an unbreakable death grip by Jaws, who was about to fatally bite him; Bond escaped by using a broken electric lamp to send an electric shock through the assassin's teeth to stun him.
While Sandor waited at Fekkesh's house and was eventually killed by James Bond, Jaws followed Fekkesh to the pyramids. When Fekkesh saw Jaws, he panicked and ran away, pursued by Jaws and Bond. Fekkesh was able to slip through a gate and lock it with a chain behind him.
The James Bond film producers spotted Kiel in Barbary Coast, and thought he was ideal for the role of Jaws in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). He was one of the few Bond villains to appear in two Bond films, later appearing in Moonraker (1979). He was often shot with his mouth closed or briefly showing his dangerous smile as he admitted the ...
Jaws' mission to eliminate anyone who comes into contact with the microfilm containing the submarine tracking system is very successful. Throughout the film he murderers Aziz Fekkesh, Max Kalba and even a shark, although fails to kill Major Anya Amasova when Bond interferes.
Jaws manages to survive, as always, by safely landing on a circus tent. Later in the film, the main villain Hugo Drax hires Jaws to kill James Bond. While Bond is in a cable car half way down a mountain, jaws kills the car operator and stops Bond's car in mid air.
- Villain/Allie
- Steel Jaws, Hands
- Alive
Sep 10, 2016 · Jaws attempts to kill Bond at the Rio Carnival and then again on the cable cars at Sugarloaf Mountain. Jaws crashes at high speed into the control station where having emerged from the rubble he meets Dolly and the pair immediately fall in love.
Aug 3, 2023 · Jaws eventually grabs Bond by the neck and tries to bite him, just as Bond grabs a nearby lamp, smashes the glass, and aims the wires at Jaws’ steel teeth, electrocuting him. Bond then kicks Jaws out of the window, but he simply dists himself down and heads off on foot.