In the 1979 film adaptation
Moonraker, Hugo Drax (
Michael Lonsdale) is a lavish
French-German billionaire who owns Drax Industries, a private company which constructs
Space Shuttles for
NASA. Though Drax lives in
California, he resides in a fully authentic
French chateau that was disassembled at its original site, transported to the United States, and rebuilt stone by stone. Drax also supposedly owns the
Eiffel Tower, but has not been able to secure a permit from the French government to export it out of the country. He is an accomplished pianist, playing
Frédéric Chopin's
"Raindrop" Prelude on his grand piano for his guests. James Bond (
Roger Moore) follows a trail around the world to investigate the theft of a space shuttle the kind of Drax had built, as shown in the movie´s pre-credits sequence. He begins his investigation in California at Drax Industries, and follows it to
Italy, then to
Brazil, then into outer space. Along the film, Drax reveals he seeks to destroy the entire human race except for a small group of carefully selected humans, both male and female, that would leave Earth on six shuttles and have sanctuary on a space station in orbit over Earth. As one of these six shuttles suffered delays, Drax decide the shuttle theft by himself. Using chemical weapons created by Drax's scientists —derived from the toxin of a rare South American plant, the Black Orchid— at an installation in Italy, he would wipe out the remainder of humanity. The biological agents were to be dispersed around the Earth from a series of 50 strategically placed globes, each containing enough toxin to kill 100 million people. After a period of time, when the
chemical agents had become harmless, Drax and his
master race would return to Earth to reinhabit the planet. Bond obtains a sample of the chemical agent at the location in Italy. It leads him to a remote part of Brazil, where he finds Drax's shuttle-launch facility in an ancient civilization's shrine. Bond and his companion,
CIA agent Dr.
Holly Goodhead (
Lois Chiles), commandeer one of Drax's space shuttles and blast off to his orbiting space station. Bond persuades Drax's henchman
Jaws (
Richard Kiel) to switch allegiances by getting Drax to reveal that Jaws and his girlfriend Dolly (
Blanche Ravalec) will be exterminated as "inferiors". A team of space soldiers sent by the U.S. government invade the space station, resulting in a laser battle in which Drax's "master race" are all killed. Bond then corners Drax in the station's airlock, shoots him with a
cyanide-tipped dart, and ejects him into space.
Henchmen •
Jaws – changed sides and survived • Chang (
Toshiro Suga) – thrown through a clock face by Bond, landing in a piano • Tree Sniper (
Guy Delorme) – shot by Bond • Corrine Dufour (
Corinne Cléry) – changed sides; eaten by Drax's dogs • Samuel (S. Newton Anderson) – unknown • Blonde Beauty (Irka Bochenko)– presumed killed during destruction of the space station • Museum Guide (
Anne Lonnberg) – presumed killed during destruction of the space station • La Signorina del Mateo (Chichinou Kaeppler) – presumed killed during destruction of the space station • Paramedic (Guy Di Rigo) – strapped to a stretcher and sent crashing headfirst into a billboard • Mademoiselle Deladier (Béatrice Libert) – presumed killed during destruction of the space station • Countess Labinsky (
Catherine Serre) – presumed killed during destruction of the space station • Lady Victoria Devon (Françoise Gayat) – presumed killed during destruction of the space station • Cavendish (
Arthur Howard) – survived • Fraser – survived • Dolly – fell in love with Jaws and survived
Novelization In
his novelization of the movie, screenwriter
Christopher Wood describes Drax as red-haired and with a face scarred and botched by poor plastic surgery (from a time "before he could afford the best in the world"), much as originally envisioned by Fleming. Although Drax's nationality is not specified, Bond idly wonders to himself which side he fought on during World War II.
Video games • Hugo Drax appears as a playable character in
GoldenEye 007 for the
Nintendo Wii and
GoldenEye 007: Reloaded for the
Xbox 360 and
PS3. • Hugo Drax appears in
007 Legends during the
Moonraker levels with
Michael Lonsdale reprising his role. ==See also==