Bond girl: Kara Milovy
February 28, 2015Photo © EON, United Artists, Danjaq LLC |
Bond girl: Kara Milovy
Bond connection: Kara Milovy is General Georgi Koskov‘s girlfriend and later Bond’s love interest.
James Bond has been informed that General Koskov is willing to defect from the Soviet Union. As Koskov runs across the road to meet Bond, he spots a sniper, whom he recognizes as the cellist he spotted during a concert earlier. Defying his orders to kill her, Bond shoots the rifle out of her hands, only marginally injuring her. This prompts the line for which the film is named, “I must have scared the living daylights out of her.”
Convinced that Kara (who actually is Koskov’s girlfriend) is more of a victim than a proper assassin, Bond helps Kara escape from the KGB in Bratislava, gaining her trust by claiming to be sent by Koskov, and then he takes her to Austria; when Bond’s Aston Martin is destroyed during the escape, the two of them resort to sledding to the Austrian border in Kara’s cello case. Eventually Kara contacts Koskov directly, and he leads his girlfriend to believe that Bond is actually a KGB agent. On Koskov’s instructions, she drugs Bond to allow Koskov to capture him, but she soon realizes that Koskov has been deceiving her and switches back to Bond’s side.
Kara and Bond are taken to Afghanistan, where they team up with a Mujahideen group headed by Kamran Shah. Kara convinces Shah to help Bond by attacking a Soviet airbase. After boarding a C-130 plane that Bond had hijacked, Kara helps him to pilot the plane carrying drugs while he battles the villainous Necros at the back. The film ends with Kara’s world tour (as a prize for her bravery, she’s been given a special visa which allows her to play around the world), where she is disappointed that Bond did not attend. Much to her surprise, she discovers him in her dressing room.