In 1972, Wilson joined
Eon Productions, the production company responsible for the James Bond film series dating back to 1962, beginning with his stepfather
Albert R. 'Cubby' Broccoli and
Harry Saltzman. Wilson specifically worked in Eon Productions' legal department until taking on a more active role as an assistant to Cubby Broccoli for the film
The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). In 1979 Wilson became executive producer of the film
Moonraker and since has been an executive producer or producer in every James Bond film, currently co-producing with his half-sister Barbara Broccoli. Wilson collaborated five times with veteran Bond screenwriter
Richard Maibaum, starting in 1981 with
For Your Eyes Only. In 1989, Wilson was forced to finish the screenplay to
Licence to Kill alone due to a strike by the
Writers Guild of America West which prevented Maibaum from having any further involvement. For both, this was their final James Bond script, as Maibaum died in 1991 and Wilson ceased writing, although he outlined a never-produced film in the series with writer Alfonse Ruggiero, scrapped due to internal legal issues between Eon and
MGM (the following film,
GoldenEye, being a completely different story written by
Michael France). In addition to his production duties, Wilson has also made many cameo appearances (speaking and non-speaking) in the Bond films. His first appearance, long before becoming a producer, was in
Goldfinger in which he appeared as a soldier. Wilson has made cameo appearances in every Eon-produced Bond film since 1977. In February 2025, Wilson and Broccoli announced that they would be ceding creative control of the Bond franchise to Amazon MGM Studios for a reported $1 billion, forming "a new joint venture to house the James Bond intellectual property rights". == Personal life ==