SPECTRE has been parodied many times in films, video games, and novels. The most obvious is the
Austin Powers series of films, with
Dr. Evil (
Mike Myers), a parody of Ernst Stavro Blofeld and his second-in-command known as Number Two (
Robert Wagner), a parody of
Emilio Largo. Other examples are: • The
Belgian comics series
Spirou & Fantasio features an international criminal organisation called the Triangle whose members also address each other by numbers. • Prior to
Dr. No, the 1962 film
The Road to Hong Kong featured a "third force" organisation the Third Echelon. • In the video game series
No One Lives Forever a man simply called "The Director" (voiced by John Armstrong) leads a similar organisation called "H.A.R.M.". A running joke during the series is that no one actually knows what H.A.R.M. stands for. H.A.R.M may jokingly refer to Human Aetiological Relations Machine, the name of a fictional intelligence agency featured in the 1966
spy film Agent for H.A.R.M.. • The 1964–1968 TV series
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. had, as its adversary, a shadowy organisation known as THRUSH (the
Terrestrial
Hegemony for the
Removal of
Undesirables and the
Subjugation of
Humankind). THRUSH (which, in the novels, stood for "Technological Hierarchy for Removal of Undesirables and Subjugation of Humanity") was opposed by the titular
United
Nations
Counterintelligence
LEague. • The 1986 TV series
Rambo: The Force of Freedom featured a
neo-Nazi organisation known as SAVAGE (
Specialist-
Administrators of
Vengeance,
Anarchy, and
Global
Extortion). • The 1991 James Bond spin-off animated series,
James Bond Jr., featured a clone of SPECTRE called "S.C.U.M." (Saboteurs and Criminals United in Mayhem), headed by a mysterious individual known as Scumlord (voiced by
Jeff Bennett). • The 1982–1985 animated series
Inspector Gadget featured a clone of SPECTRE called "M.A.D." (Malevolent Agency of Destruction). Dr. Claw (voiced by
Frank Welker and
Don Francks), the head of M.A.D., is also based on the villain Blofeld. • The 1973 Mexican films
Chabelo y Pepito vs los Monstruos (
Chabelo and Pepito vs. the Monsters) and
Chabelo y Pepito Detectives feature a criminal organisation named S.P.E.C.T.R.U.M., which carries two plans to dominate the world. In
Chabelo and Pepito vs. the Monsters, they extract uranium from a hill in the Mexican countryside, while in
Chabelo and Pepito Detectives, they sell toys that hypnotise children to make them work for them. • The young adult book series
Micro Adventure featured a shady organisation known as BRUTE (the
Bureau for
Revenge and
Universal
TErrorism). Its adversary was ACT (the
American
Counterintelligence
Taskforce). • An organisation known as SCORPIA (
Sabotage,
CORru
Ption,
Intelligence, and
Assassination) appears in the
Alex Rider novels and 2020–2024
TV series as recurring antagonists whose various members clash with the title character
Alex Rider (
Otto Farrant). Near the end of the Cold War, several secret agents and law enforcers abandoned their loyalty to their countries, and became effectively criminals for hire. Their actions range from supplying biological weapons to engineering terrorism and performing assassinations. They are defeated in the 2009 novel
Scorpia Rising and replaced in the 2020 novel
Nightshade by an organisation reminiscent of the rebooted James Bond movie continuity's
Spectre organization, simply dubbed
Nightshade. • The 1970–1971 TV series
Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp featured a shadowy organisation called CHUMP (
Unionized
Hierarchy for
Money,
Power, and
Control). It was opposed by APE (the
Agency of
Protection and
Enforcement). • The 1965–1970 TV series
Get Smart featured a SPECTRE-like organisation called KAOS. • In 1983, a highly successful
tabletop RPG called ''
James Bond 007: Role-Playing In Her Majesty's Secret Service'' was released. With the novels and films as inspirations, the stories were adapted for players. Minor changes to plots and villains were made; for example, Wint and Kidd were freelance assassins working for SPECTRE. They in fact leased out services to other terrorist organisations and various crime syndicates. The most noted changes were to SPECTRE: Blofeld's name was changed to Karl Ferenc Skorpios, and he was given a greyhound instead of a white cat; the organisation itself was renamed
TAROT (
Terrestrial
Acquisition and
Revenge via
Orchestrated
Turmoil), with the face cards representing various departments. This was due to the copyright issues referenced above.
Victory Games worked with EON productions (the film producers) for the rights to Bond, and were told they were not allowed to negotiate with McClory for the rights to SPECTRE, hence the hasty renaming. • The 1991–1992
Disney animated series
Darkwing Duck featured masked crimefighter Darkwing Duck (voiced by
Jim Cummings) who often worked with an agency called
S.H.U.S.H. (expanded name unknown) against the forces of
F.O.W.L. (the Fiendish Organisation of World Larceny). These organisations also featured in the
DuckTales reboot series. During the 2020–2021 third season of the series, F.O.W.L. were the main villains of McDuck family, with its leader and founder, Bradford Buzzard (voiced by
Marc Evan Jackson), resembling leader of SPECTRE, Ernst Stavro Blofeld. • The
T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents comic featured an enemy called S.P.I.D.E.R. (Secret People's International Directorate for Extralegal Revenue). • The Galaxy organisation features in the 1966 film
Our Man Flint where Agent 0008 (Robert Gunner) tells Derek Flint (
James Coburn) that Galaxy is "bigger than SPECTRE". •
Tom Clancy's 1998 novel
Rainbow Six features a terrorist organisation that the characters compare to SPECTRE once they learn that the terrorists are using
chemical warfare similar to that in ''On Her Majesty's Secret Service''. • The 2001–2006
ABC TV series
Alias featured several SPECTRE-like terrorist espionage organisations such as Alliance of Twelve (with its branch SD-6), the Covenant and Prophet Five. • The 2004 video game
Evil Genius and its 2021 sequel
Evil Genius 2: World Domination place the player in command of a SPECTRE-like organisation, complete with a rocket-launching base inside a volcano. Additionally, one of the player's choices of leader (Maximilian) is almost identical in appearance to SPECTRE's leader, Ernst Stavro Blofeld (as he appeared when portrayed by
Donald Pleasence in
You Only Live Twice). • In the 2006–2007 British television series
The Secret Show, the evil organisation T.H.E.M. (The Horrible Evil Menace) is similar to SPECTRE. • The 2007–2014
CBBC series
M.I. High features the criminal organisation "SKUL" (
Super
Kriminal
Underground
League), led by a man known only as The Grandmaster (
Julian Bleach) who is always seen stroking a white rabbit called General Flopsy. • The Spanish comic book
Mortadelo y Filemón features a parody of SPECTRE called
ABUELA (Agentes Bélicos Ultramarinos Especialistas en Líos Aberrantes – warlike agents overseas specialists in aberrant messes). • The
Matt Helm films featured the Brotherhood of International Government and Order abbreviated as "BIG O". • Synthesiser company "
Waldorf" has a synth named "
Blofeld". The computer based "
virtual editor" for the Blofeld is called "Spectre". One of Waldorf's virtual synths is called "Largo". • In the 1998–1999 animated series
The Secret Files of the Spy Dogs cartoon, the evil leader of cats, Catastrophe (voiced by Jim Cummings), always appears fondling a rubber mouse. • An evil organisation named STENCH (Society for the Total Extermination of Non-Conforming Humans) is featured in the 1964 film
Carry On Spying. •
James Earl Ray, who committed the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968, used the alias Eric Starvo Galt during 1967, almost certainly a mixture of Ian Fleming and
Ayn Rand (referencing the
Atlas Shrugged character
John Galt). "Ernst" and "Stavro" are peculiar sounds and spellings to American ears and eyes, and he mentally transposed them into "Eric" and "Starvo." • In
The Simpsons eighth season episode "
You Only Move Twice" from 1996, an organisation called Globex Corporation directed by
supervillain Hank Scorpio (voiced by
Albert Brooks) who successfully takes control of the
East Coast. • The
Marvel Universe has the organisations
HYDRA and
A.I.M., which are both opposed by
Nick Fury and
S.H.I.E.L.D., and are sometimes also opposed by
Captain America and the other Marvel heroes, while the
DC Universe came up with the organisation
H.I.V.E. as an analogue to SPECTRE. • The
Disney Channel's 2002–2007 TV series
Kim Possible has the organisation WEE (Worldwide Evil Empire), which is opposed by GJ (Global Justice) and Kim Possible (voiced by
Christy Carlson Romano) at times. • In the 1999 video game
Spy Fox 2: "Some Assembly Required", Spy Fox (voiced by Mike Madeoy) battles Napoleon LeRoach (voiced by David Scully) – a member of the Society of Meaningless Evil, Larceny, Lying and Yelling (S.M.E.L.L.Y.). • In Disney Channel's 2007–2015 and 2025–present TV series
Phineas and Ferb,
Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz (voiced by
Dan Povenmire) is occasionally seen as a member of the League Of Villainous Evildoers Maniacally United For Frightening Investments in Naughtiness (L.O.V.E.M.U.F.F.I.N.). Doofenshmirtz is not aware of the acronym until one of the other members points it out. They both were opposed by
Perry the Platypus (voiced by
Dee Bradley Baker) and other agents of O.W.C.A. (Organization Without a Cool Acronym). • In "Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy V", a 2002
season 3 episode of
Nickelodeon's TV series
SpongeBob SquarePants,
Barnacle Boy (voiced by
Tim Conway) turns to the dark side and teams up with Man Ray (voiced by
John Rhys-Davies) and The Dirty Bubble (voiced by
Tom Kenny) and they form an alliance called Every Villain is Lemons (E.V.I.L.). • In the
G.I. Joe toyline, cartoon and comic franchise, there exists an international terrorist organisation known as
Cobra, which is similar to SPECTRE. • The 2008 miniseries ''
Dr Horrible's Sing-Along Blog'' features a supervillain organisation called the E.L.E. (Evil League of Evil), whose unseen leader Bad Horse is feared by all the members. The main protagonist Dr. Horrible (
Neil Patrick Harris) attempts to join the League, and eventually succeeds in doing so. • The Japanese
tokusatsu series
Kamen Rider features a
Nazi-connected terrorist group known as Shocker (eventually revealed as shorthand for
Sacred
Hegemony
Of
Cycle
Kindred
Evolutionary
Realm in the 2005 film reboot
Kamen Rider: The First). Employing a vast range of genetically-modified agents known as "modified humans" and henchmen known as Shocker Combatmen, the organisation was headed by a mysterious figure known as The Great Leader (played by
Goro Naya) who mainly contacted his agents via voice (who is eventually revealed to be a hooded figure with two forms – a
Medusa-inspired humanoid with a head covered by snakes and a
cyclops). Shocker was eventually disbanded after one too many defeats at the hands of the show's protagonists and became known as Gel-Shocker after merging with an American criminal group known as Geldam. Gel-Shocker was eventually defeated as well, but subsequent entries of the franchise portrayed the Great Leader in various incarnations to lead various successor organisations, including Destron, Black Satan, the Delza Army, Neo-Shocker, the Badan Empire, Dai-Shocker (later reorganised into Super Shocker), and Space Shocker. The 2016 film
Kamen Rider 1 also features a splinter group known as Nova Shocker. The Great Leader also claims to have been the driving force behind two separate terrorist groups known as the Government of Darkness (also known as GOD) and Geddon, though it has never been confirmed. • The novel
19 by Roger Hall, published in 1970, is about an American unauthorised counter-intelligence group. Several regular intelligence services, though unsure if this rogue group actually exists, nicknamed it "19" because that number repeatedly came up, by apparent coincidence, in their investigations of what might have been 19's activities. When first told about 19 by a CIA friend, the narrator remarks that it sounds like SPECTRE gone straight (although it is misspelled "SPECTER" in
19). Rumor credits 19 with major roles in exposing
Kim Philby and
Rudolf Abel, among other achievements. ==See also==