Madeleine is the daughter of SPECTRE agent, Mr. White and his wife. In 1998, Lyutsifer Safin came to the White house in Nittedal, Norway to kill
Madeleine's father, the late Mr. White, killed Safin's family on behalf of terrorist group Spectre when Safin was just a wee lad, so he killed Madeleine's mother to get back at Mr. White. Madeleine got trapped under ice as she tried to escape this attack, but Safin saved her and became obsessed like a big weirdo.
Blofeld is also heard describing Madeleine as a "daughter of SPECTRE." Ultimately, nothing came of the idea. No Time To Die made no suggestion whatsoever that Madeleine and Blofeld were blood-related, and any lines that might've been interpreted as such proved wholly figurative.
Mathilde Swann is the daughter of Madeleine Swann and James Bond. Portrayed by child actress, Lisa-Dorah Sonnet, the character appeared in the 2021 James Bond film, No Time To Die.
So when James and Madeleine embrace for the first time in five years, and we see a young blue-eyed girl interrupt, we pretty much knew what was up. Though Madeleine told him that Mathilde wasn't his, she ultimately confirms that James is the father when she admits that their daughter does have his eyes.
Madeline suffers from amnesia when she wakes from the car accident that killed her sister. Her parents, husband, and small child are all strangers. As she accepts these people into her new life, she learns that her sister had a secret, one so dangerous that it could ruin her if it ever got out.
Madeline Swann is the daughter of Mr. White, a member of the criminal organization Spectre. As a young child in Norway, Swann witnessed the death of her mother at the hands of Lyutsifer Safin. Safin murdered Swann's mother as vengeance for Mr. White killing Safin's entire family under orders from Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
Madeleine is the daughter of SPECTRE agent, Mr. White and his wife. In 1998, Lyutsifer Safin came to the White house in Nittedal, Norway to kill Mr. White; who had murdered his entire family on orders from SPECTRE leader Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
Although they are both happy together, Madeleine knows Bond still has lingering thoughts about Vesper Lynd, whom she points out is buried close to them. She encourages to let her go, doing the same with her memory of Safin by writing “masked man” in French on a piece of paper and burning it.
Bond's first encounter with Oberhauser has the villain cry "cuckoo". This is a reference to Bond being a "cuckoo in the nest", the foreigner disrupting the happiness of Oberhauser's family life. Franz Oberhauser is supposed to be the son of the Fleming-created character, Hannes Oberhauser.
As for his character, issues of parenting, lineage, and the legacy of hate permeate Safin's every move. He blames Madeleine for the death of his family, even though she is not her father.
Madeleine Swann carries a deadly secret in No Time To Die. Could James Bond's lover be the secret daughter of Christoph Waltz's Blofeld? Madeleine Swann could be revealed as the daughter of Ernst Stavro Blofeld in No Time To Die - here's why.
Madeleine Swann is a fictional French psychiatrist originally affiliated to the Austrian Hoffler Klinik organization. She is also the daughter of the mysterious SPECTRE member Mr. White and the lover of Secret Intelligence Service (SIS/MI6) operative James Bond, becoming the mother of his only child.
In the following Bond film, Spectre, Ernst Stavro Blofeld reveals that Silva had worked with and been supported by SPECTRE, a worldwide criminal organization, along with Le Chiffre and Dominic Greene, the villains of Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace, respectively.
As the former 007 reflects at Vesper's tomb, he retrieves a piece of paper from his pocket. Bond had written the words "I miss you," which he then sets on fire and tosses in front of Vesper's tomb. This significant moment not only confirms that Vesper was Bond's greatest love.
Faced with the easy kill of Madeleine Swann under the ice, something makes Safin decide to save her. His later monologues imply that something connected them from that point onward and in his chat with James he reveals that they're the same. That they both love Madeleine.
Spectre Established Blofeld As The Overarching Villain Of Craig's Bond Era. In one of the biggest retcons in James Bond history, Spectre established that Ernst Stavro Blofeld was James Bond's adoptive brother, who was originally known as Franz Oberhauser.
The character first found out that she was expecting a child (which turned out to be twins) in the show's first season and is still pregnant in Season Four. Oh, and by the way, she's only five months pregnant.
There was a 17 year age gap between James Bond and Madeleine Swann, his love interest, this didn't work. The touchy-feely script was miserable and tedious.
Three days later in Rome, Sciarra's wife, Lucia attends his funeral, unaware that both Bond and her husbands employer Ernst Stavro Blofeld are also in attendance.
Safin got a sample of Madeline's DNA from a strand of her hair while he held her and Mathilde hostage. During their brawl, Safin scratched Bond, infecting him with nanobots genetically encoded to Madeleine, and therefore also to her child's DNA.
However, despite the couple's clear bond, Madeleine Swann spends much of the movie lying to the former MI:6 operative – specifically about the nature of his relationship with her daughter. Although it later becomes clear that Swann's child, Mathilde, is also Bond's, she initially denies the claim.
As an adult, Madeleine is found by Bond after her father's death and helps him on his mission to find and stop Blofeld. Along the way, the duo are abducted by SPECTRE operatives, and Madeleine is apparently taken prisoner and hidden away as a trap to try to force Bond to get trapped in a building rigged to explode.
He is later revealed to be the father of Madeleine Swann and that Quantum is revealed to be an affiliate of SPECTRE, a terrorist organization that was responsible for Quantum's foundation. He is also revealed to have murdered the family of Lyutsifer Safin with dioxin.
Stephanie Sigman talks to us about birthdays and her favorite Bond woman. The opening scene of Spectre, new Bond woman Stephanie Sigman promised me, “is going to be one of the most amazing opening sequences in a Bond film.” It's quite a promise, but she should know. She's in it.