James Bond Headliners of 2007

 

January 7, 2007

BOND YEAR BEGINS - by Stuart Basinger

Happy Bond Year to the readers of Dr. Shatterhand's Botanical Garden.  What a fantastic year 2006 turned out to be for fans of Ian Fleming's incredible creation and 2007 looks to be just as exciting.  After the negative reception of newcomer Daniel Craig exactly on year ago, the world has indeed accepted the newest and grittiest Bond actor of all.  As of this writing CASINO ROYALE has taken in over 1/2 billion dollars at the box office and has beaten out DIE ANOTHER DAY as the biggest grossing Bond film of all.

 

CASINO ROYALE HEADING TO DVD

News of the upcoming release of Casino Royale on DVD has made the rounds on the Internet.  The two DVD set will not only have the brilliant film but some incredible special features too.

 

CASINO ROYALE ON YOU TUBE

As much as I love to view the numerous video productions and television shows that are legitimately uploaded at You Tube, someone by the name of Sovario has uploaded the entire film of Casino Royale in 10 minute increments.  I love this film and cannot wait to see it again, however, this is not how I want to see it.  Not only is this illegal, but it hurts the fans in the long run because it forces ticket and DVD prices to go up.

If you have an account with You Tube, write to this person and tell him to remove the film.  He might just save himself from a very expensive lawsuit.

 

LIVING WITH BOND

With all the excitement of ROYALE, Daniel Craig has discovered that his life is not the same as it was over a year ago.  He has admitted, according to DIGITAL SPY, that he has started to become a recluse following the success of Casino Royale.  He has been mobbed wherever he goes recently, and now avoids attending his old hangouts because he is tired of being hassled.

"There's only a few places I can go and hope not to be bothered," Craig explained. "People tend to run up to me or generally they just shout at me. I tend not to go to too many bars now - but that's probably a good thing."

I would add that that is a good thing, Mr. Craig.  We need your talent to continue in the franchise you personally have helped resurrect.

 

"BEAM ME UP, Q"

Apparently Daniel Craig has a fascination about sci-fi and Star Trek.  If given the opportunity, he would love to act in a Star Trek episode or film.  Interesting that the film editor for CASINO ROYALE, Stuart Baird, was also the director on the last Star Trek feature - NEMESIS.

 

JUDGE SAYS TO DOCTOR "NO!"

A New York city judge has dismissed a $30 million (£15 million) lawsuit filed against actor Sean Connery alleging he was a rude and noisy neighbour.

State Supreme Court Justice Debra James threw the case out of court December 29, 2006, on a technicality after the plaintiff failed to rewrite the petition in the case.

Dr. Burton Sultan complained that Connery blasted loud music in his Upper East Side apartment and carried out a poor renovation job that attracted rats.  The lawsuit called the 76-year-old star a "rude, foul-mouthed, fat old man," which led the judge to order that the petition be rewritten in a more professional manner.

Connery and his wife, Micheline, denied the allegations and contended that Sultan was a "tyrant" who had tried to block them from making much needed repairs and who was trying to evict them from their apartment.

Sultan's lawyer said his client intended to appeal the judge's decision.

 

JUDI DENCH WORRIES OVER WORK

According to All Headline News, despite being one of the most acclaimed and awarded actresses in history, Dame Judi Dench still worries about getting her next role.

The 72-year-old star, who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth I in "Shakespeare In Love" after only being on screen for a total of eight minutes, says that these days she takes any work she gets.

The "Notes On A Scandal" star told the Los Angeles Times newspaper, "It's just wanting to be employed in my case. Trevor Nunn once said to me, "You're always in tears on the first night." And I said, "I'm so frightened that nobody's going to ask me to do the next thing." I get so fearful about that kind of thing. You know, when you get in your 70s, there's lots of other people waiting there, just here...And they're all waiting, waiting for just ... that ... little ... push."

Dench has built a healthy career, crossing over from the London stage, to British films before landing in Hollywood. She still goes back and forward between all genres.

Some of Dench's films include the "James Bond" series, "Chocolate", and "Mrs. Henderson Presents."

 

YOUNG BOND 3 HAS A TITLE

At Europe's largest bookstore, Waterstone's Piccadilly in London, fans were told the title for the newest Young Bond book -- "Double or Die."

The final title of the novel was left up to the fans in a publicity move that was kept a secret until Ian Fleming Publications announced a contest on Oct. 3, Commanderbond.net reported January 3rd.

The contest was a one-month online vote with the three choices. The choices were "Double or Die," "N.E.M.E.S.I.S." and "The Deadlock Cipher."

Author Charlie Higson also provided an extract on the official Web site explaining why he narrowed down his list to these three titles.

The initial press release for the book said it will see "James Bond pitted against the dangerous criminal underworld of interwar London, a world of illegal gambling dens, Cambridge spies and East End gangs."

 

 

January 9, 2007

CASINO ROYALE ON DVD - by DSBG

Sony Pictures announced yesterday that Casino Royale will be released on March 13th.  The two disc DVD will also be released on the new Blu-Ray format that enhances the visual experience in the HDTV standard.  This is great news for Bond fans in the United States and Canada since we will be getting the DVD long before our British friends across the pond who are slated to receive their Region 2 sets in late May.

Looking forward to it.

 

 

BAFTA NOMINATION FOR VESPER - by BBC

Bond star Eva Green is in contention for a Bafta award honouring exceptional young acting talent.  The 26-year-old French actress, who stars in Casino Royale, is nominated for the Rising Star Award.  She faces competition from Perfume star Ben Whishaw and The Wind That Shakes the Barley's Cillian Murphy.

 

Eva Green and Daniel Craig on location last year in the Bahamas.

 

Naomie Harris, who appeared in Miami Vice, and Emily Blunt, a Golden Globe nominee for The Devil Wears Prada, are also in the running for the award.

The Rising Star Award is in its second year, having gone to The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe actor James McAvoy in 2006.  The winner is decided by public vote, via text message and the website of Bafta sponsor Orange. It will be announced at the British Academy Film Awards ceremony on 11 February.

As well as starring opposite new 007 Daniel Craig in Casino Royale, Green has appeared in Bernardo Bertolucci's The Dreamers and will be seen in the forthcoming His Dark Materials adaptation The Golden Compass.

Congratulations and good luck, Eva.

 

 

PACKER, JAMES PACKER - MAY BE BIDDING FOR ASTON MARTIN - by Kirsty Simpson for The Age

What is a young billionaire do when his favourite car comes on the market?

According to the British press, he bids for it. James Packer — proud owner of a navy blue DB9 Aston Martin — is rumoured to be part of an Australian consortium vying for the luxury British marque.

If the historic Ashes triumph were not enough, Britain's Sunday Telegraph at the weekend hinted at another Aussie takeover — this time quoting unnamed sources saying that Mr Packer and a group of local investors were among several short-listed groups jockeying for the proud, if rarely profitable, British brand, being sold off by US owners Ford.

Ford put the company up for sale four months ago, with the market expecting a sale price of about $A1.5 billion. The legendary brand had never made a profit until 2005 and has gone bankrupt seven times in nearly a century of production. But car sales have been rising with the release of the "cheaper" $240,000 Vantage in 2005, boosting total sales to 4500 worldwide in 2006.

Mr Packer's office did not return phone calls. Car industry and business sources said they would be surprised if Mr Packer was interested in buying Aston Martin given the inherent risks of luxury car production.

Mr Packer, like his father before him, is discreet about his private investments — sometimes made through Consolidated Press Holdings — but is known to have holdings in the giant Ellerston cattle station, Perisher Blue ski resort, chemical and mining companies and financial services groups. He is also known to have an interest in other high-end brands, including cosmetics group Jurlique.

After his $70 million purchase of a stake in Sunland, the Palazzo Versace developer, last year, Mr Packer told The Australian Financial Review: "There is becoming more and more evidence that there are several brands in the world in property that you can use to brand a property and it will sell at a considerably higher price — up to 50 per cent higher — like a shirt will sell for more if it has got a brand on it."

I just hope he has better luck than Ford did.

 

 

January 15, 2007

BAFTA NOMINATIONS FOR 'ROYALE' - by DSBG

"The Queen" and "Casino Royale" led the nominations for the British Academy Film Awards announced Friday, with Helen Mirren among the nominees for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II and Daniel Craig cited for his performance as James Bond.

"The Queen" received 10 nominations, including best film, outstanding British film of the year, best direction (Stephen Frears), best screenplay (Peter Morgan) and best supporting actor (Michael Sheen).

"Casino Royale" bagged nine nominations, followed by "Pan's Labyrinth" with eight, "Babel" with seven, and "The Departed," "United 93" and "Little Miss Sunshine" with six each.

The awards ceremony will take place Feb. 11.

The list of nominees is as follows (Casino Royale nominations are listed in bold):

FILM
BABEL - Alejandro González Iñárritu/Jon Kilik/Steve Golin
THE DEPARTED - Brad Pitt/Brad Grey/Graham King
THE LAST KING OF SCOTLAND - Andrea Calderwood/Lisa Bryer/Charles Steel
LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE*
THE QUEEN - Tracey Seaward/Christine Langan/Andy Harries

 

THE ALEXANDER KORDA AWARD for the Outstanding British Film of the Year
CASINO ROYALE - Michael G Wilson/Barbara Broccoli/Martin Campbell/Neal Purvis/Robert Wade/Paul Haggis
THE LAST KING OF SCOTLAND - Andrea Calderwood/Lisa Bryer/Charles Steel/Kevin Macdonald/Peter Morgan/Jeremy Brock
NOTES ON A SCANDAL - Scott Rudin/Robert Fox/Richard Eyre/Patrick Marber
THE QUEEN - Tracey Seaward/Christine Langan/Andy Harries/Stephen Frears/Peter Morgan
UNITED 93 - Tim Bevan/Lloyd Levin/Paul Greengrass


THE CARL FOREMAN AWARD for Special Achievement by a British Director, Writer or Producer in their First Feature Film
ANDREA ARNOLD (Director) - Red Road
JULIAN GILBEY (Director) - Rollin' with the Nines
CHRISTINE LANGAN (Producer) - Pierrepoint
GARY TARN (Director) - Black Sun
PAUL ANDREW WILLIAMS (Director) - London to Brighton

 

THE DAVID LEAN AWARD for Achievement in Direction
BABEL - Alejandro González Iñárritu
THE DEPARTED - Martin Scorsese
LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE - Jonathan Dayton/Valerie Faris
THE QUEEN - Stephen Frears
UNITED 93 - Paul Greengrass

 

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
BABEL - Guillermo Arriaga
LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE - Michael Arndt
PAN'S LABYRINTH - Guillermo del Toro
THE QUEEN - Peter Morgan
UNITED 93 - Paul Greengrass

 

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
CASINO ROYALE - Neal Purvis/Robert Wade/Paul Haggis
THE DEPARTED - William Monahan
THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA - Aline Brosh McKenna
THE LAST KING OF SCOTLAND - Peter Morgan/Jeremy Brock
NOTES ON A SCANDAL - Patrick Marber

 

FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
APOCALYPTO - Mel Gibson/Bruce Davey
BLACK BOOK (ZWARTBOEK) - Teun Hilte/San Fu Maltha/Jens Meurer/Paul Verhoeven
PAN'S LABYRINTH - Alfonso Cuarón/Bertha Navarro/Frida Torresblanco/Guillermo del Toro
RANG DE BASANTI (PAINT IT YELLOW) - Ronnie Screwvala/Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra
VOLVER - Agustín Almodóvar/Pedro Almodóvar

 

ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
CARS - John Lasseter
FLUSHED AWAY - David Bowers/Sam Fell
HAPPY FEET - George Miller


ACTOR in a LEADING ROLE
DANIEL CRAIG - Casino Royale
LEONARDO DICAPRIO - The Departed
RICHARD GRIFFITHS - The History Boys
PETER O'TOOLE - Venus
FOREST WHITAKER - The Last King of Scotland

 

ACTRESS in a LEADING ROLE
PENELOPE CRUZ - Volver
JUDI DENCH - Notes on a Scandal
HELEN MIRREN - The Queen
MERYL STREEP - The Devil Wears Prada
KATE WINSLET - Little Children

 

ACTOR in a SUPPORTING ROLE
ALAN ARKIN - Little Miss Sunshine
JAMES MCAVOY - The Last King of Scotland
JACK NICHOLSON - The Departed
LESLIE PHILLIPS - Venus
MICHAEL SHEEN - The Queen

 

ACTRESS in a SUPPORTING ROLE
EMILY BLUNT - The Devil Wears Prada
ABIGAIL BRESLIN - Little Miss Sunshine
TONI COLETTE - Little Miss Sunshine
FRANCES DE LA TOUR - The History Boys
JENNIFER HUDSON - Dreamgirls

 

THE ANTHONY ASQUITH AWARD for Achievement in Film Music
BABEL - Gustavo Santaolalla
CASINO ROYALE - David Arnold
DREAMGIRLS - Henry Krieger
HAPPY FEET - John Powell
THE QUEEN - Alexandre Desplat

 

CINEMATOGRAPHY
BABEL - Rodrigo Prieto
CASINO ROYALE - Phil Meheux
CHILDREN OF MEN - Emmanuel Lubezki
PAN'S LABYRINTH - Guillermo Navarro
UNITED 93 - Barry Ackroyd

 

EDITING
BABEL - Stephen Mirrione/Douglas Crise
CASINO ROYALE - Stuart Baird
THE DEPARTED - Thelma Schoonmaker
THE QUEEN - Lucia Zucchetti
UNITED 93 - Clare Douglas/Christopher Rouse/Richard Pearson

 

PRODUCTION DESIGN
CASINO ROYALE - Peter Lamont/Simon Wakefield
CHILDREN OF MEN - Geoffrey Kirkland/Jim Clay/Jennifer Williams
MARIE ANTOINETTE - K K Barrett/Véronique Melery
PAN'S LABYRINTH - Eugenio Caballero/Pilar Revuelta
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST - Rick Heinrichs/Cheryl A Carasik

 

COSTUME DESIGN
THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA - Patricia Field
MARIE ANTOINETTE - Milena Canonero
PAN'S LABYRINTH - Lala Huete
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST - Penny Rose
THE QUEEN - Consolata Boyle

 

SOUND
BABEL - José García/Jon Taylor/Chris Minkler/Martín Hernández
CASINO ROYALE - Chris Munro/Eddy Joseph/Mike Prestwood Smith/Martin Cantwell/Mark Taylor
PAN'S LABYRINTH - Martín Hernández/Jamie Bashkt
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST - Christopher Boyes/George Watters II/ Paul Massey/Lee Orloff
UNITED 93 - Chris Munro/Mike Prestwood Smith/Douglas Cooper/Oliver Tarney/Eddy Joseph

 

ACHIEVEMENT IN SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
CASINO ROYALE - Steve Begg/Chris Corbould
CHILDREN OF MEN - Frazer Churchill/Tim Webber/Michael Eames/Paul Corbould
PAN'S LABYRINTH - Edward Irastorza/Everett Burrell
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST - John Knoll/Hal Hickel/Charles Gibson
SUPERMAN RETURNS - Mark Stetson

 

MAKE UP & HAIR
THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA - Nicki Ledermann/Angel De Angelis
MARIE ANTOINETTE - Jean-Luc Russier/Desiree Corridoni
PAN'S LABYRINTH*
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST - Ve Neill/Martin Samuel
THE QUEEN - Daniel Phillips

 

SHORT ANIMATION FILM
DREAMS AND DESIRES - FAMILY TIES - Les Mills/Joanna Quinn
GUY 101 - Ian Gouldstone
PETER AND THE WOLF - Hugh Welchman/Alan Dewhurst/Suzie Templeton

 

SHORT FILM
CARE - Rachel Bailey/Corinna Faith/Tracy Bass
CUBS - Lisa Williams/Tom Harper
DO NOT ERASE - Asitha Ameresekere
HIKIKOMORI - Karley Duffy/Paul Wright
KISSING, TICKLING AND BEING BORED - David Smith/Jim McRoberts

 

THE ORANGE RISING STAR AWARD (nominees announced on 8 Jan 2007)
EMILY BLUNT
EVA GREEN
NAOMIE HARRIS
CILLIAN MURPHY
BEN WHISHAW

 

Other award nominations have been announced in the last few days such as Best Costume Design for Lindy Hemming by the Costume Designers Guild.  Stuart Baird for Best Edtiing by the American Cinema Editors and for Casino Royale was nominated as Best International Film by the Irish Film and Television Awards.

Is it possible that Oscar may even honor OO7?

Daniel Craig's chances of bathing in Oscar glory indeed look bright this year, as millions of gamblers seem convinced the actor is a top punt for the award, according to Daily India.com.  Bookies all around the US and the UK have splurged thousands on Daniel winning an Oscar, reports The Sun.

The shortlist for February's Oscars is not even announced until next week. But Dave Stevens, from bookies Coral, said: "We've had to slash Daniel's odds after we took so much money."

One Londoner wagered 1,000 pounds at 3/1 on Casino Royale winning an Academy in any of the categories.

If the Academy Awards fails to nominate Casino Royale in any category, I'm throwing my shoe through my TV.

 

 

January 24, 2007

COMMENTARY: I HATE OSCAR - by Stuart Basinger

Well the nominations have been announced and the world is now plunged into a month of glitter and vanity.  The major studios will do their best to wine and dine the members of the Academy Awards as they cast their votes for the BEST OF category.  On February 25th on your local television station, the red carpet will roll out for the self-proclaimed kings and queens of cinemaland.  We will be dazzled by their outfits, their speeches, and their political angles, - - and we will be bored.

We have the usual suspects for nominations this year.  There's Leo DiCaprio, Meryl Streep, and Martin Scorsese.  We also have a few surprises, such as the film Borat for Best Adapted Screenplay (Huh?).  However, the big surprise for many OO7 fans is that Casino Royale did not get nominated for any Oscars.  Not one, nada, zip, zero nomination.

How can they do this to a great Bond film that has been nominated for nine BAFTAs?  The answer is 'easy'.

The Academy Awards is not about who is the best at their work, but merely about making more money.  Investors from around the world will pour their hard earn money into new film projects, if it has an Academy Award winning name attached.  We all know that Marin Scorsese is a talented director.  So is Clint Eastwood and Stephen Freers.  We appreciate the work of Peter O' Toole, Judi Dench, Helen Mirren and Alan Arkin.  Yet who qualifies as 'Best'?

Bottom line, there are actors and film technicians who will never have the opportunity to don a tux and walk the Oscar carpet.  Yet without these people, Hollywood would seize to function.

I would have loved to have seen Casino Royale nominated in any Oscar category.  I certainly would be in front of my television February 25th and I would have endured every agonizing moment waiting for the winning announcement.  But truth is that I most likely will be throwing my shoe through the TV as the Oscar ceremonies begin.

Bond films have been nominated for Academy Awards before.  However, only two have won - Goldfinger for Best Sound Effects and Thunderball for Best Visual Effects.  

Diamonds Are Forever was only nominated for Best Sound Effects and Live and Let Die for Best Original Song.  

The Spy Who Loved Me has received the most nominations thus far with Best Art Direction/Set Decoration, Best Original Music, and Best Original Song.  Moonraker was nominated for Best Visual Effects. 

It has been 25 years since a Bond film was nominated for any Oscar.  In 1981, Sheena Easton performed her song For Your Eyes Only during the Academy Awards.  That same ceremony, Albert R. (Cubby) Broccoli received the distinguished Thalberg Award for his contribution to film.  Cubby was honored, the song was not.

That brings us to Casino Royale.  The most artistic and well acted Bond film to date.  Snubbed by the Academy.  Or was it?

Stories are circulating around the Internet that Sony Pictures did not push Casino Royale to be considered for nomination.  If this is true, why did it happen?  Another possibility is that Eon may have dropped the ball when it came to the nominations.  Perhaps they were too busy with the BAFTAs.

Whatever the reason, Oscar has kept the trend of keeping Bond out of the coveted Oscar circle.  A circle that is small with members who pat themselves on the back saying to each other, "I'll remember you this year if you remember me next year."

On the other hand, the Bond films are in a unique group as well.  The films, actors and technicians can all claim to be part of the forgotten club which boast some famous names like Alfred Hitchcock, Cary Grant, Richard Burton, and Peter O' Toole (unless he wins this year - though I doubt it).

Daniel Craig, who will no doubt one day win the coveted award, said it best earlier in 2006 and I would like to emphasize that it was not about the Oscar.  However I will no doubt use it here to reflect my feelings about the Royale snub - "Screw em'."

(Insert sound effect of shoe crashing though TV screen).

 

 

January 25, 2007

THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN - SINGS! - by DSBG

When I first met Christopher Lee back in 1999, I was amazed as to how young he looked considering he was 77 at the time.  He was  guest of honor at a classic monster convention in Washington, DC.  He was there to sign copies of his biography titled Tall Dark and Gruesome.  However, he had yet to begin his next chapter in his acting career in movies like The Lord of the Rings and Star Wars II: Attack of the Clones.

Flash forward eight years later and the man with the golden gun is now the man with the golden voice.  Mr. Lee has recently released a CD compilation of hit songs which include:  The Impossible Dream, Oh What a Beautiful Mornin', High Noon, The Little Drummer Boy, Silent Night, and My Way.

 

 

"As far as I'm aware," he said, "no other man of my age has sung on an album."

The CD is titled "Revelation" and you can purchase it at Amazon by clicking on the album cover above.

 

Mr. Lee proves that life does not end at 65.  At 85 he continues to work on various projects.

 

 

February 12, 2007

CASINO ROYALE WINS A BAFTA - by PR Inside

James Bond movie Casino Royale failed to live up to hype at the BAFTAs, winning just one of the nine awards it was nominated for.
Despite nods in the Best British Film category and for star Daniel Craig in the Best Actor category, the latest installment in the superspy franchise had to settle for Best Sound.  Chris Munro, Eddy Joseph, Mike Prestwood Smith, Martin Cantwell, and Mark Taylor created the film's unique sound.

But Craig insists it was an achievement just to be nominated - particularly in a role rarely recognised by awards.  Speaking on his way to the ceremony in London, the actor said, "Win or lose, it's going to be a good night." There was some consolation for the film's cast and crew - Casino Royale starlet Eva Green lifted the Orange Rising Star award, as voted by the British public.

Casino Royale should receive the often overlooked Alfred Hitchcock Award for superior entertainment and commercial success but never honored by its peers.

 

 

Daniel Craig Hires Body Double

February 28, 2007 - NOW Magazine

Daniel Craig reportedly hired two body doubles to escape an over-zealous fan at the Oscars. The handsome Bond star was apparently so nervous about being cornered by the female enthusiast, he enlisted the help of two look-a-likes.

"Daniel was extremely well looked after and security was at an all-time high,' a source tells the Daily Star. "He has had one woman from New Orleans trail his whereabouts every time he is in America. She always pushes to get hold of him and threatened to handcuff herself to him. So two decoys who looked just like him were hired for extra protection."

At least it seems Daniel, 38, was able to relax during the evening. He was seen enjoying champagne, beer and martinis with his girlfriend Satsuki Mitchell, 29, at the star-studded Vanity Fair party at Mortons in Beverly Hills.

I wonder if this obsessed fan frequents this site from time to time?



Happy Birthday Daniel And Other Bond Alumni

February 28, 2007 - by DSBG

The following Bond celebrities will be adding another candle to their cakes this week:

Never Say Never Again composer Michel Legrand is 75 on February 25th and the newest OO7, Daniel Craig, will be 39 on March 2nd.

All the best to both of you from this website.



A WONDERful Role For Eva Green?

February 28, 2007 - DSBG

Rumor has it that Eva Green is being considered for the lead role in Warner Bros. film adaptation of the DC Comic superhero 'Wonder Woman'.

Produced by Joel Silver the film has yet to hire a director.

I personally feel this is one role Eva will not touch since.



Timothy Dalton - The Morning Interview

February 28, 2007 - DSBG

On You Tube is a nice interview with former Bond actor, Timothy Dalton. Dalton was promoting his latest film "Hot Fuzz" and was asked about his opinion on Daniel Craig's interpretation of OO7. You can link to the interview by clicking here.

Mr. Dalton is such a gentleman during the on-camera interview. I have such great respect for him.

 

 

Casino Royale (2006) DVD Review

March 20, 2007 - by Stuart Basinger

Here is the good news - the release of Daniel Craig's debut as OO7 is a two-disc DVD and the actual transfer of the film is beautiful. Obviously they opted to compress the film as little as possible in order to get a sharper image on disc one and the sound is fantastic that at times I had to adjust the volume before I disturbed my neighborhood.

Now for the bad news - the extras on disc two can only be summed up with one word 'fair'. There just is not enough extras to satisfy a Bond fans interest. Two 30 minute documentaries were produced, "Becoming Bond: An intimate look at how Daniel Craig stepped into the role of the 6th James Bond" and "James Bond: For Real: Inside look at action and stunts of film."

Although I love watching behind the scenes on any film, and Royale is no exception, but the idea of adding the same upcoming trailers that plagued the opening of disc one is ridiculous. Where are the actual trailers to Casino Royale? Where is the director and producers commentary track? Where are the deleted scenes?

To add insult to injury, whose idea was it to offer "Bond Girls Are Forever" again? I bought this special DVD when Die Another Day was released in 2003. Although they have gone and updated it with 5 minutes of added interviews with Eva Green and Caterina Murino, I still feel ripped off.

As for the production value of the two-disc, the black and white menu vignettes are just plain weird. They made me feel that the producers of this DVD did not put much effort into it. Why did they not go and produce eye candy CGI animated graphics like the ones for the Ultimate Bond set? Anyone seeing this film for the first time will probably get the wrong impression and think it was directed by Ingmar Bergman. I felt very uneasy seeing an extreme close-up of Eva and Daniel lips.

If Sony was planning to impress us with this set, they failed. I can only guess that they will release an extended version in a year or two, probably before Bond 22 (see Spiderman 2.1 trailer). Unfortunately for them I will probably view that version on Netflix and not opted to buy it.

Overall grade: B-

Dear Sony, please see the teacher after class.

 



Casino Royale (1967) Deluxe DVD In The Works

March 19, 2007 - Classic Horror Film Board

Sometime this year, the 1967 comedy CASINO ROYALE is to be reissued on DVD with a new, in-depth documentary telling the story behind the story of this Sixties spy spoof. As one person put it, "the documentary...promises to be a lot more entertaining than the film if the lawyers don't get too carried away in the editing!

Looking forward to it providing this information is true.

 

 

 

Tarantino Claims Casino Royale Success

March 23, 2007 - In The News

Legendary director Quentin Tarantino has claimed that producers stole his idea for the remake of Bond film Casino Royale.

Starring actor Daniel Craig, the latest 007 film proved a huge hit with fans and won acclaim for Craig, who many people first doubted had what it takes to play the suave secret agent.

Tarantino said he wanted to make a more gritty and less glamorous Bond film with previous 007 actor Pierce Brosnan but was told that it was unfilmable, the Mirror newspaper reports. But just months later production began on Casino Royale, with the emphasis on a tougher Bond and his role as a killer.

"I resent that none of them gave me a shout-out that I'm the one got them making Casino Royale," he said.

Movie mogul Harvey Weinstein is also said to have put forward Tarantino's name to 007 bosses.

Tarantino claims: "They told him, 'We're afraid Quentin's going to make it too good and f*** the rest of the series'."

He has previously made no secret of his desire to be involved in a Bond film. "I've always wanted to do it," he admitted in 2004.

Tarantino rose to film after directing the cult films Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill and has gone on to have a prolific career in Hollywood including numerous acting, writing and producing roles.

However, Dr. Shatterhand has gone into his archives to dig up the real truth behind Tarantino's Royale ambitions.

Sky News reported on October 8, 2003 that Quentin Tarantino wants to make a James Bond film and believes he could 'do it the right way'. The Kill Bill director said he was trying to acquire the rights to make a new version of Casino Royale, the first James Bond novel.

"I wanted it to be the follow-up to Pulp Fiction and do it with Pierce Brosnan," he said.

Tarantino said he wanted the action to take place after On Her Majesty's Secret Service, in which Bond's wife Tracy is killed.

"From what I know of Brosnan, I think he'd want to go in the direction I'd want to take Bond," said Tarantino. "However I'm not sure the producers of the series would agree."

Sci-Fi Wire on April 6, 2004 wrote that Tarantino felt there was only "a thin chance" that he would win the project, and said he would concede to update the 1952 novel for the present day. "If I owned the material, I would set it in the '60s, but I'm sure I'd have to do it now."

According to Ireland Online on May 6, 2004, Tarantino wants Uma Thurmond as a Bond girl. The thing is that Uma doesn't like the idea of being just another girl for Bond, so she's said she'll only ever do it if she gets to kick 007's butt."

And the fans would have kicked your butt, Mr. Tarantino. Uma is no Vesper Lynd.



Pinewood Fights To Keep Bond 22

March 23, 2007 - Guardian Unlimited

Top brass at Pinewood Studios are fighting to keep the next James Bond shoot in the UK following reports earlier this week that the Casino Royale follow-up may go to Prague.

However, the UK studio faces stiff competition from Barrandov Studios, where part of Casino Royale was shot. Representatives of the Czech facility have reportedly already been in talks with Sony Pictures and MGM. Neither studio nor Bond producers Eon Productions would comment this week.

Pinewood's famed 007 stage has been rebuilt after it was destroyed by fire last July and now offers even more extensive facilities than before. While the Czech Republic does not currently offer tax incentives, it is an attractive venue because it is cheaper than the UK and boasts attractive locations and highly skilled crews.

In addition, Prague-based Barrandov recently unveiled a 4,000 sq m stage that can hold its own against anything Pinewood has to offer.

According to ScreenDaily, Barrandov spokesman Tomas Zelazko told the Czech press this week that Bond producers said they were "very satisfied" with the Prague portion of the Casino Royale shoot.

Bond 22 is one of the most sought-after productions in the Hollywood pipeline after Casino Royale's record-breaking success for the franchise. The film has grossed more than $590m (£300m) worldwide.

The upcoming project is set to go before the cameras early next year in time for a November 2008 worldwide release.

Tough call. Pinewood has always been the home to OO7, but when the producers can get the same results for millions less, you do the math.

 

 

 

Danny Biederman's Spy Exhibit Ships Out

April 2, 2007 - Wes Britton

Maxwell Smart's shoe phone, Jim West's blue suit, Agent 007's gun, Emma Peel's leather pants and John Steed's bowler hat are among the 400 items selected from Danny Biederman's SPY-Fi Archives to be exhibited in "The Incredible World of SPY-Fi" opening aboard the Queen Mary April 7, 2007. The exhibit is expected to inexplicably dematerialize in September.

"About the same time the Queen Mary was making her way to Long Beach on her Last Great Cruise in 1967, TV spy shows were capturing Americans' imaginations," commented Queen Mary President and CEO Howard Bell, "so this exhibit, capturing four decades of our favorite spies and their impressive gadgets, is perfect for our eclectic year-long celebration of the 40th Anniversary of the Queen Mary's arrival in Long Beach."

Get Smart, The Wild Wild West, The Avengers, Mission: Impossible, James Bond and The Man from U.N.C.L.E. were among Hollywood's interpretations of the Cold War, the CIA and the whole intriguing world of intelligence. Among those caught up in the "spy fiction" craze was Danny Biederman—now a Hollywood screenwriter, author and consultant specializing in movie and TV spy fiction—who realized at an early age that collecting spy show memorabilia was safer than actually being a spy.

Today, Biederman's collection contains more than 4,000 items and spans 50 years—from the 1959 Alfred Hitchcock spy thriller North by Northwest," to such recent fare as Austin Powers and Alias. Whether it was a ten-foot-long storyboard from I Spy, James Coburn's secret agent wardrobe from Our Man Flint, or Dean Martin's gas-spewing camera from the Matt Helm movies, Biederman grabbed it before it could be lost or destroyed.

"I salvaged these historic artifacts from the darkest, dustiest corners of old Hollywood soundstages and studio back lots," Danny Biederman explained. "The amazing stories and offbeat trivia that accompany the pieces have been just as fun to collect, and really bring the items to life in this exhibit."

It's not an every day occurrence to get up close to something as deadly as Dr. No's tarantula or a Mission: Impossible self-destructing tape, but thanks to Danny Biederman, it will be possible in this unique new exhibit aboard the Queen Mary.

RMS Foundation staff, along with Pancho Barnes Enterprises (which recently produced the Lights! Camera! Glamour! Exhibit of the work of George Hurrell for the Queen Mary's Sun Deck Gallery) are producing this exhibit in conjunction with Danny Biederman. Previous venues for exhibits from the SPY-Fi Archives include The Pentagon, The Strategic Air Command, the National Atomic Museum and, appropriately enough, the Central Intelligence Agency. In fact, the forward to Danny Biederman's book, The Incredible World of SPY-Fi (Chronicle Books), was written by the former Director of the CIA's Office of Technical Service, Robert W. Wallace.

Admission for the SPY-Fi exhibit is included in the Queen Mary First Class Passage ticket at $27.95 for adults, $24.95 for seniors and military and $16.95 for children 4-11. First Class Passage also includes the Self-Guided Shipwalk Tour with the Ghosts & Legends Show and two, one-hour historic guided tours. For those who only wish to visit the new exhibit, the ticket is $10.00 per person. Secret agents with proper ID will be admitted free. Attraction hours are 10:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. daily with the box office closing at 5:30 p.m.

Located at the south end of the 710 Freeway at 1126 Queens Highway, Long Beach, CA 90802, the Queen Mary has emerged as a favorite attraction, hotel, meeting facility, world-class entertainment destination, unique spot for dining and shopping – and one of the world's most haunted sites. For more information, call (562) 435-3511 or go to www.queenmary.com or www.spyfiarchives.com.

You might say they have a 'boat-load' of spy memorabilia.

 

 

 

Barry Nelson - First James Bond Actor Dead At 89

April 14, 2007 - The Guardian

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Barry Nelson, an MGM contract player during the 1940s who later had a prolific theater career and was the first actor to play James Bond on screen, has died. He was 89.

Nelson died on April 7 while traveling in Bucks County, Pa., his wife, Nansi Nelson, said Friday. The cause of death was not immediately known, she said.

After graduating from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1941, Nelson was signed to MGM after being spotted by a talent scout. He appeared in a number of films for the studio in 1942, including ``Shadow of the Thin Man,'' ``Johnny Eager'' and ``Dr. Kildare's Victory.'' He also landed the leading role in ``A Yank on the Burma Road,'' playing a cab driver who decides to lead a convoy of trucks for the Chinese government.

Nelson entered the Army during World War II and went on the road with other actors performing the wartime play ``Winged Victory,'' which was later made into a movie starring Red Buttons, George Reeves and Nelson.

After the war, Nelson starred in a string of movies, including ``Undercover Maisie,'' ``Time to Kill'' and ``Tenth Avenue Angel.''

He is the answer to the trivia question: Who was the first actor to play James Bond? Before Sean Connery was tapped to play the British agent on the big screen in 1962's ``Dr. No,'' Nelson played Bond in a one-hour TV adaptation of ``Casino Royale'' in 1954.

Nelson switched to the stage during the 1960s and 1970s, appearing on Broadway in ``Seascape'' ``Mary, Mary'' and ``Cactus Flower.'' He earned a Tony nomination in 1978 for his role in ``The Act,'' which also starred Liza Minnelli.

``He was a very naturalistic, believable actor,'' said his agent, Francis Delduca. ``He was good at both comedy and the serious stuff.''

Among his other film credits were ``Airport'' and ``The Shining,'' and he also appeared on such TV shows as ``Murder, She Wrote,'' ``Dallas'' and ``Magnum P.I.''

More recently, Nelson and his second wife (they married in 1992) spent a lot of time traveling. He planned to write a couple of books about his time on stage and in Hollywood.

Nelson is survived by his wife. He did not have any children from either marriage.

Rest in peace.

 

 

OO7 Is Number 1 Action Hero

April 20, 2007 - The Daily Record

James Bond is the greatest action hero ever, according to a survey. The superspy first hit the big screen in 1962 when Scot Sean Connery played 007 in Dr No. Daniel Craig became the latest Bond last year in Casino Royale.

In the poll, Indiana Jones was second, Superman third, and 24's Jack Bauer came fourth.

Top female action hero was Buffy the Vampire Slayer, who came seventh overall. Lara Croft was next female, at 11. Busty Lara was also voted the action star Brits most "want to be". The Matrix was the best action film, followed by Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade, in the poll for the launch of a cruise ship.

The Matrix beat out Indiana Jones? The world most surely is coming to an end.

 

 

 

Sean Connery Given The All Clear

April 21, 2007 - Top Cancer News

You may not have known it but actor Sean Connery has been fearing cancer for the past two decades.

The Scottish Connery, 76, has been seeing doctors for 20 years so growths in his throat could be monitored. Fearing the worst -- cancer -- Connery wanted to stay on top of things.

Results from a recent medical appointment reveal Connery has been given the all-clear, according to his brother Neil who is also plagued by throat polyps.

Some were concerned about Connery's absence from a New York Tartan Week charity show he was scheduled to host two weeks ago. Apparently, there was nothing to worry about. He was just just getting his check-up, and he later assured fans he is in good health.

"It is something which needs to be followed through," says his brother. "You have to have yearly checks and that is why Sean went to the hospital, just to make sure everything was all right."

Connery's father died of throat cancer at age 69. Connery himself was rushed home from filming in Africa in 1993 due to throat problems. He later received radiotherapy treatment.

Now maybe Connery will sign up for the Indy IV film.

 

 

 

British Airways Eliminates Richard Branson

April 21, 2007 - by David Millward for The Telegraph

In Soviet Russia anyone who fell out of favour with the ruling elite was airbrushed out of history. Now it appears British Airways has adopted the same approach towards its corporate nemesis, Sir Richard Branson.

The Virgin Atlantic chairman, who makes a brief cameo appearance in Casino Royale, the latest James Bond film, is somehow missing from the version shown on British Airways flights. In the cinema version, Sir Richard is seen passing through a security arch at Miami airport. However on BA flights, while he can be seen from the back, the scene when he turns round and faces the camera has gone. Even the slightest glimpse of a Virgin plane was enough for the scissors to come out and when it could not be avoided, the distinctive Virgin tail fin has been painted over.

This is not the first occasion that BA has been sensitive about the appearance of its rival on screen. Scenes filmed in Virgin's premium cabin were cut out of The Wedding Date before it was deemed suitable for BA passengers.

While companies can pay large amounts to place their products on blockbuster films, this did not apply to Sir Richard or his planes in Casino Royale. "We were phoned with a request from the film's producers to get a plane into Prague, which masqueraded as Miami airport, at very short notice. We were delighted to do so." It is understood that the producers had been in prolonged negotiations with BA and only turned to Virgin at a late stage.

The decision to cut Sir Richard from the film was taken by BA's in-flight entertainment team, which vets films on grounds of taste and suitability before allowing them to be shown.

The fractious relationship between the airlines dates back to their legal battles on both sides of the Atlantic in the 1990s. After an apparent thaw, hostilities appeared to resume last summer when Virgin was identified as the "whistle blower" that triggered a price-fixing investigation in Britain and the United States.

A BA spokesman confirmed that changes had been made to Casino Royale. "All films are screened .... we want to ensure they contain no material that might upset our customers."

Corporate censorship at its best.

 

 

 

Best Bond News In Months

May 28, 2007 - by Stuart Basinger

It has been months since some really good James Bond news has graced the Internet and this week screenwriter and director, Paul Haggis, has been lured back into the Eon camp to polish the Bond 22 script.

Haggis who is a two-time Oscar winner and gave us the splendid film Crash, was hired back in 2005 to polish the Neil Purvis and Robert Wade script for Casino Royale. His input was so gratifying that one only needs to compare Royale to the juvenile junk that ended up being Die Another Day and The World Is Not Enough to see how much polishing he really did do.

Haggis is currently hard at work on other film projects but hopefully he will be bringing more Ian Fleming into OO7's personality than before. No title has been announced, but this fan is still holding out for "Shatterhand" as a possible contender.

And speaking about Ian Fleming, May 28, 2007 marks his 99th birthday celebration. Next year will certainly be a highlight as fans will toast his centennial.

One can only ponder how the character of Bond would have evolved if Fleming survived his 1964 fatal heart attack?

 

 

 

True Bond Documentary

May 30, 2007 - PR Newswire

His name was Popov, Dusko Popov. Not a household name like James Bond, Sean Connery or Roger Moore,but nevertheless, he was the spy who came in from the cold that author Ian Fleming reputedly based 007, his legendary secret agent on. On Friday, June 22 beginning at 8 p.m. (et/pt), Encore presents TRUE BOND, an original special on Fleming's inspiration, followed by a 52-hour Bond-A-Thon featuring 16 classic Bond films, including Dr. No, The Spy Who Loved Me, Goldfinger, From Russia With Love and Thunderball, among others.

On December 2, 2005 this website reported on the story about Dusko Popov, written by Mario de Queiroz for Inter Press Service. What follows is that same story.

Was there ever a real superspy like James Bond, Her Majesty's secret agent with a licence to kill? A resounding "No" was the answer given by Dusan "Dusko" Popov, himself the real character who inspired writer Ian Fleming to create agent 007.

"I doubt whether a flesh and blood Bond would last 48 hours as a spy," Popov declared to a group of Italian journalists in 1981, shortly before his death at his residence outside Cannes, on the Mediterranean C- te d'Azur in France.

After nearly half a century of amazing exploits on the big screen, the saga continues to captivate a faithful public of all ages. Many languages now accept the terms "James Bonds" or "007s" as synonyms for the secret services, even though they originated in fiction.

Fiction? Yes, but with reality for a backdrop, because the person on whom Fleming based his character was actually a secret agent for British intelligence, although he himself was not British but a wealthy Yugoslav lawyer, born in 1912 in the Serbian town of Titel.

An expert baccarat player with a reputation for seducing beautiful women, he achieved his greatest success as a spy in Portugal.

During World War II (1939-1945), the British secret agent codenamed "Tricycle" was sent to neutral Portugal to carry out a nearly impossible mission: to infiltrate the highly efficient Abwehr, the German military counterespionage unit headed by Admiral Wilhelm Walter Canaris.

Lisbon and its elegant residential suburbs of Estoril and Cascais were at that time crawling with spies from both sides of the conflict. The Allies were closely watched by the International Police for the Defence of the State (PIDE), the secret police, but they could move about freely, thanks to a pragmatic direct order from Portuguese dictator Antonio de Oliveira Salazar (1932-1968).

Corporatist fascism had taken power in Portugal in 1926, and the regime sympathised openly with the four similar regimes in Europe: Spain under Francisco Franco (1939-1975), Germany under Adolf Hitler (1933-1945), Italy under Benito Mussolini (1922-1943) and Hungary under Miklos Horthy (1920-1944).

However, Salazar had no alternative but to turn a blind eye to the presence of numerous Allied spies, because of the constant threat of a British invasion of the strategic Azores islands, situated in mid- Atlantic between Europe and the Americas, and the additional possibility of occupation of Portugal's colonies in Africa by Britain.

The Palace Hotel, with its lush gardens, exudes an air of impressive luxury. It faces the Estoril Casino, recalling the golden era when dethroned monarchs, deposed dictators, Allied secret agents, Jewish refugees and Nazi spies rubbed elbows in the corridors while Europe burned up in a ferocious war that cost 50 million lives.

On Aug. 30 this year "the whispering hotel," as it was called during the war, turned 75 years old. Its spacious rooms served as home to the Spanish royal family in exile starting in the 1930s, celebrated English economist John Maynard Keynes, French aviator and writer Antoine de Saint Exupéry, and the Hungarian Jewish sisters Eva and Zsa-Zsa Gabor, who went on to become Hollywood movie stars.

When the war ended, the hotel provided a luxurious refuge to Hitler's major allies and monarchs expelled from several countries. Among the best known were Horthy, King Carol II of Rumania, King Umberto II of Italy, Archduke Franz Josef von Habsburg-Lothringen of Austria, Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg and Prince Aleksandar of Yugoslavia.

Famous spies who stayed at the hotel included Spanish double agent Juan Pujol García, who conceived Operation Fortitude to convince the Germans that D-Day (the Allied invasion of occupied Europe that marked the beginning of the end of the war) would take place in Calais, not in Normandy.

Notorious British double agent Kim Philby, who has been described as the spy of the century, was also a guest at the hotel. He deceived the British for four decades, and ended his days in Moscow as a retired agent of the KGB (the intelligence service of the former Soviet Union).

Popov differed from his fellow spies in that he lived a life of luxury, drove fast cars, seduced beautiful women and bankrupted Germans - especially spies, diplomats and PIDE "advisors" - at the Estoril Casino. It was at the Palace Hotel that Fleming, also an agent of the British Naval Intelligence Service headed by celebrated Admiral John Henry Godfrey, met Popov. A decade later, Fleming launched his famous character.

In Fleming's first book, "Casino Royale" (1953), Dusko Popov could discern pieces of his own story at the Estoril Casino and the Palace Hotel. Popov and Fleming even worked together and occupied rooms next door to each other in the Palace Hotel in 1941. This closeness had the effect of magnifying the legend that 007 was based on the Yugoslavian double agent of the Abwehr, codenamed "Ivan", who was really in the service of His Britannic Majesty and whose mission was to discover the Reich's plans against the Allies.

Fascinated by Popov and by the temptation of the casino, which, he admitted, was just too strong, Fleming wanted to emulate his new Yugoslavian friend and colleague. He, too, tried to drive Nazi gamblers into bankruptcy in baccarat. He lost his shirt, and Admiral Godfrey himself had to pay his debts. This fact can be found in the records of the Estoril Casino to this day.

During the war, Popov was considered to be one of the most important British agents operating in the nest of spies in Portugal. In the last half century many people have got to know James Bond, but few have ever heard of Dusko Popov, the agent who, months in advance, managed to discover the Japanese plan to attack Pearl Harbour, the United States' naval base in Hawaii.

Popov travelled in person to the United States with a stack of documents in his briefcase, which he took to the New York office of the then director of the Federal Bureau of Investigations, J. Edgar Hoover. However, the director not only ignored the whole affair but also forbade Popov to go to Hawaii to carry out a double-cross mission against Germany.

Border police recorded his last exit from Portugal towards the end of the 1940s, but the possibility remains that he may have used his various passports in false names to re-enter the country. The last information about his life places him in peaceful retirement in the swanky French resort of Cannes, where he died at a well-preserved 69 years of age.

In his book "Crime, Espionagem e Poder" (Crime, Espionage and Power), Brazilian journalist and writer Flavio Moreira da Costa recaptures several moments of the spy's life. Moreira da Costa reveals that the puritanical Hoover, on hearing that Popov's pseudonym "Tricycle" was derived from his penchant for sleeping with two women at once, dismissed him as "an immoral playboy." However, his original codename "Scout" was changed when he appointed two sub agents under him (hence referencing the three-wheeled cycle).

According to Moreira da Costa, the very real Popov replied, with an honesty that could never have come from the lips of the film character James Bond: "I'm not a spy who turned playboy, but a man who always lived that way and became a spy."

TRUE BOND will be followed by a 52-hour Bond-A-Thon featuring the action thrillers that made Sean Connery, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton and George Lazenby famous. Other notables who appear in some of the Bond-A-Thon films include Kim Basinger, Benicio Del Toro, Rowan Atkinson, Jane Seymour, Yaphet Kotto, Carey Lowell, Jill St. John, Donald Pleasance, Ursula Andress and Britt Ekland.

The 52-hour marathon of James Bond films beginning at 8 p.m. Friday, 6/22 through Sunday, 6/24.

Friday, 6/22
-- True Bond (documentary) at 8 p.m.
-- Dr. No at 9 p.m. - (Sean Connery, Ursula Andress, Joseph Wiseman)
-- The Spy Who Loved Me at 11 p.m. - (Roger Moore, Barbara Bach, Curt Jergens)

Saturday, 6/23
-- You Only Live Twice at 1:10 a.m. - (Sean Connery, Akiko Wakabayashi, Donald Pleasence)
-- Moonraker at 3:10 a.m. - (Roger Moore, Lois Chiles, Michael Lonsdale)
-- On Her Majesty's Secret Service at 5:20 a.m. - (George Lazenby, Diana Rigg, Telly Savalas)
-- Licence to Kill at 7:45 a.m. - (Timothy Dalton, Carey Lowell, Benicio Del Toro)
-- True Bond (documentary) at 10 a.m.
-- Never Say Never Again at 11 a.m. - (Sean Connery, Klaus Maria Brandauer, Kim Basinger)
-- The Man With the Golden Gun at 1:20 p.m. - (Roger Moore, Christopher Lee, Britt Ekland)
-- Octopussy at 3:30 p.m. - (Roger Moore, Maud Adams, Louis Jourdan)
-- Live and Let Die at 5:45 p.m. - (Roger Moore, Yaphet Kotto, Jane Seymour)
-- Goldfinger at 8 p.m. - (Sean Connery, Honor Blackman, Gert Frobe)
-- For Your Eyes Only at 10 p.m. - (Roger Moore, Carole Bouquet, Topol)

Sunday, 6/24
-- A View to a Kill at 12:15 a.m. - (Roger Moore, Christopher Walken, Grace Jones)
-- The Man With the Golden Gun at 2:30 a.m. - (Roger Moore, Christopher Lee, Britt Ekland)
-- The Living Daylights at 4:35 a.m. - (Timothy Dalton, Maryam D'Abo, Jeroen Krabbe)
-- From Russia With Love at 6:50 a.m. - (Sean Connery, Daniela Bianchi, Robert Shaw)
-- Dr. No at 8:45 a.m. - (Sean Connery, Ursula Andress, Joseph Wiseman)
-- Diamonds Are Forever at 10:40 a.m. - (Sean Connery, Jill St. John, Charles Gray)
-- True Bond (documentary) at 12:45 p.m.
-- Goldfinger at 1:45 p.m. - (Sean Connery, Honor Blackman, Gert Frobe)
-- You Only Live Twice at 3:45 p.m. - (Sean Connery, Akiko Wakabayashi, Donald Pleasence)
-- Licence to Kill at 5:45 p.m. - (Timothy Dalton, Carey Lowell, Benicio Del Toro)
-- Thunderball at 8 p.m. - (Sean Connery, Claudine Auger, Adolfo Celi)
-- From Russia With Love 10:15 p.m. - (Sean Connery, Daniela Bianchi, Robert Shaw)

Should make for a very long weekend for die-hard Bond fans.

 

 

 

Sean Connery Retires For Good

June 13, 2007 - Reuters

Sad news for fans of Sean Connery, after months and months of speculation and haggling, Connery confirms that he will not reprise his role as Harrison Ford's pop in the fourth installment of "Indiana Jones."

"I thought long and hard about it, and if anything could have pulled me out of retirement, it would have been an Indiana Jones film. I love working with Steven [Spielberg] and George [Lucas] and it goes without saying that it is an honor to have Harrison as my son. But in the end, retirement is just too damned much fun."

Sorry to hear that Mr. Connery. Life at the movies will never be the same.

 

 

 

Casino Royale Director Moves On

June 13, 2007 - Reuters

More sad news for Bond fans, film director, Martin Campbell, is attached to direct "36," a remake of a 2004 French-language thriller.

The Paramount Pictures project revolves around two detectives who try to solve a series of armored car robberies in the hopes of landing a promotion promised to whoever catches the perpetrators.

Robert De Niro, who is producing the project, had been attached to star. But sources said the script will be overhauled so that it focuses on two detectives in their 30s. The original film, "36 quai des orfevres," starred veteran actors Daniel Auteuil and Gerard Depardieu.

New Zealand-born Campbell directed last year's Bond movie "Casino Royale" as well as 1995's "GoldenEye." His credits also include "The Legend of Zorro" and "The Mask of Zorro." It has been widely speculated for months that Campbell might return to direct Bond 22. He is currently preparing the Fox thriller "Unstoppable."

Martin Campbell is going to be sorely missed.




Marc Forster (Finding Neverland) To Direct Bond 22

June 19, 2007 - by Diane Garrett for Variety

Bond producers have chosen a 007 newbie as the latest steward of their action franchise.

Marc Forster, best known for intimate dramas such as "Finding Neverland" and "Monster's Ball," will direct the 22nd James Bond film for Sony. He will soon begin working with scribe Paul Haggis on a draft of the screenplay by Neil Purvis and Robert Wade.

Pic, which will again star Daniel Craig as Bond, is slated for a December start at Pinewood Studios in London. Columbia will release it worldwide on Nov. 7, 2008.

Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli are producing for Sony and MGM.

Craig debuted as Bond in "Casino Royale," which generated nearly $600 million at the box office worldwide. It was directed by Martin Campell, who also helmed "GoldenEye," the first Bond movie starring Pierce Brosnan.

Forster directed DreamWorks' upcoming adaptation of "The Kite Runner" and recently helmed "Stranger Than Fiction" for Sony.

"I have always been drawn to different kinds of stories, and I have also always been a Bond fan, so it is very exciting to take on this challenge," Forster said, adding that the latest direction of the Bond character opens up "a host of new possibilities" for him as director.

This marks the first time a German born film director will helm a Bond movie.

From Monster Ball's to Bond's Ba..., eh, never mind.

 

 

70 Years Of Pinewood Studios

July 5, 2007 - DSBG

Pinewood Studios, the home of James Bond, will be releasing their limited edition book titled "Pinewood Studios: 70 Years of Fabulous Filmmanking". It will feature a complete visual history of the famed British movie studio. The book is due to be published in July.

It is truly amazing that the Bond films make up more than half their history.

 

 

Mark Ronson Wants To Bond With Amy Winehouse

July 6, 2007 - Bang Media International

The producer-and-DJ, Mark Ronson, is a huge fan of the spy films and has jokingly warned close friend Amy - who he worked with on several tracks on her hit album 'Back To Black' - he will end their friendship if he doesn't produce her Bond song.

He told XFM radio: "It's my dream to produce a song for a James Bond film so I told Amy that if she gets offered the Bond thing then she'd better let me produce the song, or I'll never talk to her again!"

Amy, 23, is being lined up to record the theme for the next 007 adventure, tentatively titled 'Bond 22', by composer David Arnold.

Arnold, who composed the last three Bond songs, loves the 'Rehab' singer's husky voice and thinks she would the perfect choice to lend her vocals to the next title track.

He said: "Amy Winehouse made the best record of last year. I haven't asked her yet but I think she'd be good, although Bond songs can be a bit of a war zone.

"The next film will be in 2008 and we're almost finished with the script. The books are all done now so this one is going to be an extension of what happens to Bond, continuing the story from 'Casino Royale'."

One source has reported that Dame Shirley Bassey thinks Amy Winehouse would make a great Bond singer.





Daniel Craig's Humble Beginnings

July 6, 2007 - DSBG

It appears that Daniel Craig had earned his acting union card by playing Mr. Marmite in a Reading, England supermarket - and he's still a big fan of the British yeast extract spread.

Craig reveals he used to wear a "Marmite jumper" and surprise shoppers with his over-the-top upbeat take on the tangy black paste at the beginning of his acting career. He says, "I was Mr. Marmite - that's how I got my equity card... At the Reading Save-a-Centre."

Craig still spreads Marmite on his toast in the morning when he's at home in London - especially the new brand, which features Guinness. He adds, "It wakes you up, like, 'Welcome to the day! I've just put axle grease in my mouth."

Hmm, isn't this how George Lazenby got into the business? Except his commercials were for Big Fry.





Warhead Unearthed?

July 6, 2007 - Contact Music

A completed screenplay of Warhead , a movie that would have returned Sean Connery to the screen as James Bond in 1977, has been discovered by British writer Robert Sellers, together with pre-production sketches and photographs, according to Scotland on Sunday.

The screenplay, it noted, was co-written by Connery himself as well as thriller writer Len Deighton and Kevin McClory, who worked with Bond creator Ian Fleming on the screenplay for Thunderball. Connery would also have served as executive producer.

The story about the fate of Warhead is to be told in a new book, The Battle for Bond, due to be published this week, the newspaper said. Sellers was quoted as saying that his source "actually had the original script. ... This wasn't a proposal or a suggestion, this was an actual script, a full-fledged, finished screenplay." He added: "You had an underwater base that rises out of the sea, you had helicopter attacks on the Statue of Liberty. ... It would have been the most extravagant Bond film ever."

This script floated around during the mid to late 1970s and was copied and sold at collectible shows during the 1980s. I have a copy of this script but the original title on the front page is JAMES BOND OF THE SECRET SERVICE - First Draft 1976. Looking forward to the new book by Mr. Sellers.





Pussyfooting Around With Honor Blackman

July 6, 2007 - by Virginia Mason for Halifax Today

The voice is unmistakable. She utters one word in that husky, seductive tone for which she has become famous and instantly it is recognisable. "Hello," she says and I think for a second that she will follow it with: "Mr Bond... Do you want to play it easy or the hard way?"

Aficionados of 007 will instantly recall these immortal lines from the 1964 blockbuster Goldfinger and that they were spoken by the gun-wielding and cheekily-named Pussy Galore.They will probably go as far as to proclaim that this Bond Girl played by the delectable Honor Blackman was perhaps the best Bond Girl of all time.

More than four decades later she still remains legendary and here I am chatting to her. Honor – an unbelievably youthful 79 – will be entertaining Calderdale audiences with her one-woman show, Word of Honor, this Sunday at Hebden Bridge Picture House, part of the Hebden Bridge Arts Festival. But it will not be her first visit to the town. In 1949, long before the glorious teaming with Sean Connery, she starred in the classic film A Boy, A Girl and A Bike (also an early outing for Diana Dors and Anthony Newley) which featured Hebden Bridge as a backdrop.

"Oh, don't ask me too much about Hebden because it was a 100 years ago," she says with a laugh. "I do love Yorkshire though because the people are so wonderful. I do think northern audiences are definitely warmer than anywhere else."

I think a decent amount of time has passed now before I ask about Pussy Galore – albeit almost apologetically.

"No I never get tired about talking about the role because I will always be grateful for it. Why not?" she says. "I'm flattered that people still talk about it and that they say I was one of the best Bond Girls, although to be honest I'm not really sure I want to be described as a Bond Girl because I'm no bimbo. Never have been. There was a lot more to the role of Pussy Galore than that."

She talks of on-screen chemistry between her and the legendary Mr Connery, whom she describes as the best Bond ever.

"Well I know I'm prejudiced but don't you think so?" she asks. I confess I would have to plump for Pierce Brosnan. "Really? Oh no, Sean had everything. He looked the best and he was so, so sexy. On top of that he's a brilliant actor, handsome, the whole package."

I ask cheekily if they got on well.

"We had one hell of a good time together I can tell you," she says with that deepy, throaty laugh again. "And, no, I am not going into details."

Honor was born in London and trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama after persuading her father to let her have lessons. It was on the back of her success as Cathy Gale in The Avengers that Bond supremo Albert Broccoli cast her as Pussy Galore and by the time Goldfinger hit the screens she was 36 (she remans the second oldest actress to play a Bond Girl.)

More recently she's starred as the outrageously seductive Penny Husbands-Bosworth in Bridget Jones Diary and is still heavily involved in the theatre. Honor is currently starring as Fraulein Schneider in Cabaret in the West End.

On the day we chat, Prime Minister Tony Blair has left Downing Street for the last time and as a committed Liberal supporter from the 1960s, Honor reveals she is quietly celebrating.

"I'd be throwing a party if I weren't on stage," she says before launching into a scathing attack on the war in Iraq. "But no I am not sorry to see that man go. From someone who knows, believes me, that man is a marvellous actor and that's not what you want in a Prime Minister."

Her outspoken views on the monarchy are also well documented (she's a member of Republic, the campaign for an elected head of state). Honor turned down a CBE in 2002. But wouldn't she love to be addressed as Dame Honor?

"It just would have been hypocritical to accept it, so I felt I couldn't. I tried to keep it quiet but the blasted newspapers got hold of it," she says before apoligising for saying "blasted newspapers."

But Helen Mirren was anti-monarchy before she suddenly did a U-turn and accepted her gong, I persist.

"Well maybe it had something to do with the role she played," she says mischeivously.

She admits she loves the theatre and "being spoilt and allowed to take up the stage", would love more TV work (roles like Laura West in the hit series The Upper Hand) and has no intention of retiring.

"I would just be bored and get fat."

Spare time means more theatre (as an audience member) and her other passion – football.

"I love Manchester United because they are simply the best, although I do confess I used to follow Newcastle. But I'll let you into a little secret – that's because I had a thing for Alan Shearer."

As sexy as Sean, I venture?

"Oh no, darling. There's never been anyone like Sean."

I guess there is no love loss between her and Tony Blair.

 

 

Daniel Craig In On-Set Accident

July 12, 2007 - Daily Mail

On the big screen he is suave ladykiller James Bond. But Daniel Craig was not so perfect on the set of his new movie The Golden Compass - just ask one unfortunate crew member. News reaches us from the set of the fanstasy thriller that, during one of Craig's scenes, an accident left one poor crew member in hospital with a broken arm and collarbone.

Craig, who plays a character called Lord Asriel in the film - which also stars Nicole Kidman, Eva Green, John Hurt and Kevin Bacon - was running through a cobbled street in the pouring rain in Oxford when he veered toward a rickshaw that was carrying the cameraman. The rickshaw swerved to avoid the actor and the crew member tumbled out and crashed to the ground. He was immediately rushed to hospital, where he was treated for a series of broken bones.

A source revealed: "The poor guy had no chance. He was filming Daniel running down the street in a certain action scene. The poor guy was in agony and Daniel immediately went to help him, he could see he was very hurt indeed. He was scraped up quickly and an ambulance was called. Obviously such an incident would hold the making of the film up because it is the producers' priority that their staff are well."

The movie is in the final stages of being filmed now and 39-year-old Craig is set to begin working on his next project Flashbacks Of A Fool. He will then move on to his second stint at being James Bond in what is currently been given the working title of Bond 22.

Whoever said making movies was easy?

 

 

James Bond Has A Date With The Devil

July 12, 2007 - Ian Fleming Publications

"In his house in Jamaica, Ian Fleming used to write a thousand words in the morning, then go snorkelling, have a cocktail, lunch on the terrace, more diving, another thousand words in late afternoon, then more Martinis and glamorous women. In my house in London, I followed this routine exactly, apart from the cocktails, the lunch and the snorkelling."

Sebastian Faulks, one of Britain's most admired novelists, was announced July 11th as the author of a brand new James Bond novel, to be published next year by Penguin Books in the UK and Doubleday in the US.



The book, entitled DEVIL MAY CARE, will be published to mark the centenary of Ian Fleming's birth - 28th May 2008.

Ian Fleming Publications Ltd announced in July 2006 that a new Bond book had been commissioned and now, after a year of speculation, the author and title are revealed.

Sebastian Faulks comments, "I was surprised but flattered to be asked by the Fleming Estate last summer if I would write a one-off Bond book for the Ian Fleming Centenary. I told them that I hadn't read the books since the age of 13, but if, when I re-read them, I still enjoyed them and could see how I might be able to do something in the same vein, then I would be happy to consider it. On re-reading, I was surprised by how well the books stood up."

He continues, "I found writing this light-hearted book more thrilling than I had expected. I hope people will enjoy reading it and that Ian Fleming would consider it to be in the cavalier spirit of his own novels and therefore an acceptable addition to the line."

Fleming's last Bond book, Octopussy and the Living Daylights, was published in 1966. Forty two years later and in keeping with tradition, Devil May Care is set in the Cold War and the action is played out across two continents, exotic locations and several of the world's most thrilling cities.

Alex Clarke, the editor at Penguin, comments, "Penguin UK is delighted to be publishing Devil May Care in May 2008 to mark the centenary of Ian Fleming's birth. When we heard that Sebastian Faulks would be taking up the mantle, we knew instantly there could not be a more fitting celebration of the most iconic spy in literature and film - Bond, James Bond. Not only has Sebastian picked up from where Fleming left off, but he has also brought his own exquisite prose to the cocktail party - and, in so doing, has written a tour de force that will thrill and satisfy every kind of reader and every kind of James Bond fan."

He continues, "Devil May Care will be a superb addition to the James Bond publishing legacy. Penguin UK publishes all 14 of Fleming's Bond novels, the Charlie Higson Young Bond series, as well as Fleming's children's classic Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. To mark the centenary, we will be creating a special James Bond imprint, Penguin 007 - within which Devil May Care will be published in May 2008. Visit www.penguin007.com"

Sebastian Faulks is best known for his French trilogy, The Girl at the Lion d'Or, Birdsong and Charlotte Gray. Birdsong is regularly voted one of the nation's favourite books and Charlotte Gray was filmed with Cate Blanchett as Charlotte. The trilogy has sold almost four million copies in the UK. In all, Faulks has written ten books, including eight novels, the most recent of which, Engleby, was published to widespread acclaim in May this year

Like Fleming, who was a journalist for Reuters and the Sunday Times, Faulks was a journalist for the Daily and Sunday Telegraph, he was the first Literary Editor of the Independent and later became Deputy Editor of the Independent on Sunday.

Corinne Turner, Managing Director Ian Fleming Publications Ltd comments, "We had had Sebastian Faulks in mind for our centenary novel for quite some time. I have always enjoyed and admired his novels, but it wasn't until I read On Green Dolphin Street that it occurred to me that he would be perfect for Bond. He has an ability to write totally convincingly in whichever period or genre he chooses, and that particular book made me think he might enjoy exploring the world of Ian Fleming and James Bond. I knew that it would have to be something very special to tempt him to have a go, and at the time didn't make an approach. However, when we came to think of authors for our centenary novel and his agent, quite independently, suggested Sebastian, it was just meant to be.

"The Fleming family were delighted with the typescript when we received it. Barbara Broccoli, to whom we gave a sneak preview, said if I had told her the family had found an old manuscript of Ian's in the basement, she would have believed me. Sebastian couldn't have written a better book to celebrate Ian's 100th birthday."

Devil May Care is published to mark the Ian Fleming Centenary. The book is at the centre of a larger programme of celebratory events that will run throughout 2008.

Faulks remains with his usual publisher, Random House, and comments, "I am sure Penguin will do a great job with this book, but I would like to stress that Random House remain my publishers. Hutchinson and Vintage have done a fantastic job for me over the last 20 years and I will stay with them for as long as they will have me -- for another 20 years at least, I hope."

Break out the martini glasses, James Bond is back - in the 1960s!

 

 

 

ComicPussy

July 13, 2007 - Daily Express

Having toughened up the character of James Bond for Casino Royale to huge critical acclaim, Daniel Craig has surprisingly revealed that the next Bond outing will mark a return to the comedy that Roger Moore brought to the franchise in the Seventies.

Craig, 39, says of his forthcoming second outing as 007: “They [the producers] just want more gags. The next one’s going to be a lot funnier. Octopussy and Pussy Galore style gags. They’re all great names – but that’s the thing, the Bond jokes will be flipped on their heads.”

The Cheshire-born actor is keen to make Bond his own creation and that will apparently mean showing a softer, less macho side to the character.

“Bond is supposedly the most male moment [in film] but to me he’s never been macho. That Bond is something that Sean Connery created in Dr No,” he says.

“I don’t know Sean but I wouldn’t want to meet him in a dark alley – he was a big strong guy and he had a big male presence about him.

“Everybody was in an uproar when he was going to be James Bond. He got flak because he was basically an Edinburgh bricklayer. And everyone who read the books thought how can he possibly do it? But he created a style that was unique and kind of sexy.”

Not that Daniel wants to imitate Connery or any other preceding Bond, adding: “There’s no point in trying to compete with every Bond that came before. You manage to make it your own.”

Comedy moments in Bond films can be very difficult. Roger Moore did very well with them in The Spy Who Loved Me, but the jokes became ridiculous in Moonraker, Octopussy, and A View to a Kill. Please Eon Productions, don't make it too silly.





Miranda Frost Warms Up To Daniel Craig

July 13, 2007 - Daily India

Rosamund Pike may have starred as a Bond Girl alongside Pierce Brosnan, but it's his successor Daniel Craig that she's totally bowled over by. Pike played double agent Miranda Frost in the 2002 Bond movie Die Another Day and reveals that making the movie was one of the best experiences of her life. And she admits that she's extremely impressed with current Bond Daniel Craig after he gave a stellar performance in his debut 007 flick 'Casino Royale'.

"Daniel looks good running, swimming, drinking, driving, playing cards - all elements of a fabulous Bond," she says.

Hmm, could it be possible for Rosamund Pike to be back as another Bond girl just like Maud Adams did in 1974 and 1983?

 

 

Man Claims Ex-Wife Stole His OO7 Artwork

July 26, 2007 - Daily Mail

A James Bond fan's ex-wife helped herself to his artwork collection, including original designs for Ian Fleming's novels, a court has heard. Colin Larkin, of Lavenham, Suffolk, claims that after their brief marriage ended, Kelly Harte walked away with almost 60 of his artworks.

At London's High Court Miss Harte admitted she had 31 items from her ex-husband's collection. But Miss Harte, of Keighley, West, Yorkshire, insists he gave them to her.

Mr Larkin, the author of the Encyclopaedia of Pop Music, says the works are worth hundreds of thousands of pounds.

Miss Harte at first denied she had any of the missing artwork. She told Mr Larkin in an e-mail that it was "fitting" that anything he had ever given her had "ended up on Keighley's council tip", the court heard. However, she later agreed she had 31 items from her ex-husband's collection, although she insists he gave them to her and his court bid to get them back is an "abuse of process".

In March this year, a senior court official ruled Miss Harte had no realistic defence to her ex-husband's claims and entered a summary judgement against her. But Mr Justice Underhill has opened the way for Miss Harte to put her side of the story at a full trial at a date to be fixed. The court heard how the couple married in April 2000, but their relationship broke down after only a few months.

Mr Larkin claims that, during a brief reconciliation in 2002, she took from his home 58 art works, part of his much larger collection of original designs for books published by Pan. Mr Larkin says he was informed in 2004 by an art dealer that Miss Harte had approached him to ask him about the sale of 33 Pan cover designs. He claims his ex-wife told the dealer she had bought the art works "many years previously at a car boot sale".

Ouch! This is going to be a painful process.



Is Goldfinger Really The Best OO7 Film?

July 26, 2007 - by Nigel Kendall for The Time Online

For many people Goldfinger is the quintessential Bond film, the one that established a formula that is still going strong 43 years later. The third of the Sean Connery Bond films, this was the first to feature a pretitle sequence irrelevant to the plot of the main film; the first to have a real theme song belted out over the opening credits; the first to feature Q by name, and the first with the gadget-packed Aston Martin DB5, still the most famous film car of them all.

With its snappy script, sight-gags and one-liners, Goldfinger was the first Bond to go blockbuster, and yet if you scratch the surface, you find it’s not a “typical” Bond film at all.

Made at a time when the producers Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman still didn’t really know if they had a lasting success on their hands, Goldfinger takes the notion of the infallible secret agent, established in Dr No and From Russia with Love, and plays it completely against type.

This is the dirty secret at the heart of Goldfinger: JAMES BOND IS COMPLETELY INCOMPETENT THROUGHOUT. Don’t believe me? Consider, if you will, the bare bones of the plot.

In Miami, Bond is ordered to observe the antics of Auric Goldfinger (Gert Frobe). Instead, he lets his indiscipline get the better of him and interferes, which costs a young woman, Jill Masterson, her life.

Hauled over the coals by M, whose intervention with the Miami Beach Police prevents Bond from being arrested and jailed, 007 then embarks on a short game of cat-and-mouse with Goldfinger. This ends when Bond gets Masterson’s sister killed by a maniac with a flying hat, and is easily captured and forced to beg for his life as a laser threatens to separate him from his manhood. “Do you expect me to talk?” he asks, hopefully. “No, Mr Bond, I expect you to die,” comes the immortal reply.

So, by the halfway point of the film, Bond’s interfering, aimless ways have resulted in the premature death of two sisters and a humiliating capture by an overweight buffoon.

But what of the car, the great Aston Martin, fitted with oil-slicks, a bullet-proof screen, circular saws, machine guns and an ejector seat? What of it? After a brief chase in which Bond is prevented from making an escape by an arthritic pensioner with a machine-gun, Britain’s top secret agent is dazzled by oncoming headlights and crashes his world-beating gadget into a brick wall. How pathetic is that?

Worse is to come. Captured, beaten and humiliated, what does our hero do next? Perform a heroic escape? Alert the outside world to the dangers of Goldfinger’s evil plan? Not a bit of it. When he’s not sipping Mint Juleps on the balcony of Goldfinger’s Kentucky ranch, he’s slipping notes into the pocket of a gangster who – along with the note – then gets flattened in a car crusher. So comfortable does Bond appear in captivity that the CIA minders (it is by now obvious that our moronic hero cannot achieve anything alone) decide not to intervene and leave him to enjoy his cocktails.

And so it goes on. Bond never escapes, and the film’s climax finds him, still a prisoner, helplessly trying to disarm a nuclear device. It takes the intervention of a kindly CIA man to show him the off switch. In the course of the film, Bond’s only moment of efficiency comes from killing his nemesis, right at the end.

It’s a miracle that Britain’s bumbling saviour made it that far at all, since Oddjob, the smiling villain with the evil hat brim, has previously come close to making mincemeat of him. One can only ascribe Bond’s continued nonchalance to the fact that he’s permanently drunk, snorting back the brandies in London, hitting the Juleps in Kentucky and enjoying “liquor for three” on Goldfinger’s private jet. When Q shows him the Aston Martin’s tracking system, Bond is delighted: “Allow a man to stop off for a quick one en route,” he exclaims. What’s really astonishing about Goldfinger is Bond’s ability to hold a Walther PPK straight with two litres of spirits permanently coursing through his system.

Wow! I guess that leaves Octopussy as the film where Bond is not completely incompetent. He does not cause the death of any female companion. He successfully steals the real egg from the bad guys during the auction. He does not destroy any of Q's gadgets, and he succeeds in stopping an atomic bomb from exploding without the assistance of a bomb expert.

 

 

Women's Impact Report: Barbara Broccoli Reinvents OO7 With Success

July 31, 2007 - by Adam Daltrey for Variety

It's a law of nature that when the children take over the business their father built up, there's a good chance they'll mess it up. Fortunately, no one told Barbara Broccoli. Along with her stepbrother Michael G. Wilson, she inherited the James Bond franchise from her legendary father Cubby after he passed away in 1996, and has taken it to even greater heights.

The remarkable success of "Casino Royale" last year means Broccoli has reinvented Bond not just once, with the commercially blockbusting Pierce Brosnan incarnations, but twice.

The second achievement is the more impressive of the two. Brosnan was still Cubby's choice, somehow the perfect summation of his vision for the role -- dark and suave, Celtic and wisecracking. But Daniel Craig was the inspiration of the younger generation, controversially blond, rugged, rough around the edges and the purest actor ever picked for the job. Gone were the jokes, the gimmicks and gadgets. In came something grittier, darker, more emotional, more dramatic -- and more real.

It was audacious, and it worked. Broccoli proved herself far more than just the lucky daughter of a brilliant father: She was a great producer in her own right, worthy of the family name. Yet she remains diffident about her achievements, shunning the spotlight that she feels should rightfully shine on the talent.

Perhaps that's where her family background shows. Having been born into the Bond franchise, she never had to promote herself in order to get the movies made, which has enabled her to remain an unusually private person in an industry of showmen and hucksters.

Vocation: "Whatever it takes to keep the Bond franchise healthy."

Recent breakthrough: "Casino Royale" -- not just for its box office, but for being the most critically acclaimed of the 21 Bond movies, earning nine BAFTA noms.

Career mantra: "We have a responsibility to change and move with the times." (Ugo.com)

Role model: Cubby Broccoli. "My father had a very simple philosophy, which was: Don't shortchange the public. Give them what they want, and put the money on the screen." (Crave Online)

What's next: Bond 22, directed by Marc Forster, due November 2008.

Long live the Queen!

 

 

John Gardner - Dead at 80

August 6, 2007 - by Richard Kay for The Daily Mail

Like the tough hero of his novels, James Bond author John Gardner, who died August 3rd at the age of 80, was built of stern stuff.

So it was no surprise that his first act after collapsing near his home in Basingstoke last Friday was to telephone his daughter, Alexis.

"He told me he'd had a bit of a turn and thought he'd fainted," says Alexis. "Two doctors happened to be passing and - typical of him - he said he didn't need an ambulance. Then he took a turn for the worse and was rushed to hospital."



Despite treatment, Gardner, who wrote 14 James Bond novels after Ian Fleming's death and beginning in 1981, died of suspected heart failure.

His passing comes after he left the U.S. having spent a fortune on treatment for cancer - a homecoming which led to the rekindling of romance with his university sweetheart Patricia, whom he split from in 1949.

Gardner went on to marry - his wife of 45 years, Margaret, died in 1997 - but remembered Patricia by using her maiden name for Suzie Mountford, the heroine of his recent World War II thrillers. The connection led to the couple getting engaged for a second time three years ago.

This website was honoured by an interview with Mr. Gardner many years ago. That interview can still be found in our Question Room section. Rest in peace, sir.

 

 

Animal Rights Activist Go After Bond 22

August 12, 2007 - by Richard Owen for The Times Online

James Bond has battled his way out of many a tight spot in the past but a potent foe awaits him in his latest adventure. Can he survive a campaign by animal rights activists who claim that horses will be killed or maimed in the making of the latest 007 film?

The next Bond film is to reach its climax in a chase against the background of the Palio, the centuries-old and controversial bareback horse race in the historic Tuscan hill town of Siena.



The cameras start to roll this Thursday, when the Palio is due to be run. Animal rights campaigners seized on the disclosure to protest that the film would glamorise a race that was “a relic of medieval brutality”. They say that 50 horses have been killed since 1970, with many others injured.

The next Bond, the 22nd in the 007 canon and a sequel to the phenomenally successful Casino Royale, has yet to be given a title and is referred to simply as Bond 22. Directed by Marc Forster, it again stars Daniel Craig as Bond, with Judi Dench as M.

The plot is being kept under wraps. However, the town council at Siena has given permission for a climax in which Bond chases the villain through the steep and narrow cobbled streets and then pursues him across the rooftops and through the underground medieval aqueducts, while the horses thunder round the Campo, the main square.

The film-makers have agreed to “strict conditions” obliging them to treat the race with “full respect”, according to Il Giornale. They are forbidden from showing any violence “involving either people or animals” that may occur. This week’s filming will focus on the race, with scenes involving actors inserted later. There will be 14 cameras placed at strategic positions around the arena but helicopters have been banned.

The brief and intense Palio, run on packed sand in the Campo, is not a tourist attraction but a fiercely cherished part of the Sienese way of life dating back to the 11th century. It is preceded by weeks of build-up and colourful pageantry, with each horse representing one of the 17 contrade, or city guilds.

Three years ago animal welfare activists called for it to be banned when an eight-year-old chestnut bay died of a broken neck after it collided with another horse on the notorious San Martino bend. Television viewers witnessed the horse being dragged away by its hind legs.

The Italian AntiVivisection League said that continuing to hold the Palio was “madness”. Eleonora di Giuseppe, spokeswoman for the Italian Federation of Equestrian Sport, said yesterday that using the Palio in a Bond film would glamorise a race “in which horses are exposed to unacceptable risks”.

She said that Italy’s historic traditions were to be valued “but the problem is that the Palio, like other local festivals, is not subject to central state controls. We want a national law that will guarantee standards of animal safety. We are not living in the Middle Ages, we are living in 2007.” She said that in former times heavy horses more suited to the course were used “but now they use thoroughbreds”.

Margherita D’Amico, an animal rights campaigner, said the race was barbaric. “I have nothing against traditions but some are outdated. There was a time when young men were castrated to preserve their soprano voices – but we don’t do that any more,” she said.

The Palio is held twice a year, on festivals dedicated to the Virgin Mary – July 2, the Feast of the Visitation, and August 16, the day after the Feast of the Assumption (Ferragosto), the Italian August bank holiday. The Campo is always packed with tens of thousands of spectators in an atmosphere bordering on hysteria. In the morning the horses are blessed in their contrada’s churches. The race runs for three laps of the Campo and the winner is awarded a palio, a banner of painted silk. Palio races are also run in other Italian cities such as Ferrara, where last year three horses had to be destroyed and police used teargas to control rioting. The race was annulled.

When Tony Blair attended the Siena Palio in 1999, Andrew Tyler, director of Animal Aid, commented: “It is a primitive spectacle that appeals to the worst instincts in human nature.”

Bond 22, made by EON Productions, was originally due for release in May next year – the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth – but has been delayed until November 2008. The screenplay is by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and Paul Haggis, who also wrote the screenplay for Casino Royale from the book by Fleming. Craig has hinted that the new film continues the storyline of Casino Royale in that Bond “goes out for revenge”.

I guess the producers are not horsing around this time.

 

 

Sean Connery Turns OO77

August 25, 2007 - by Stuart Basinger

Happy Birthday, Sean Connery.

77 years ago, Thomas Sean Connery was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1930. 
Unless you have been living under a Rock, this Extraordinary Gentleman has Just Cause to be called Untouchable.  Not to be caught On the Fiddle, Mr. Connery has performed in films since the early 1950s, when life could be like The Wind and the Lion one day and The Name of the Rose the next, but for him, there was No Road Back.  Some films resulted in working The Longest Day but with rehearsal and Playing By Heart, some films were like Five Days One Summer.

He is the type of actor who would climb The Hill of opportunity and prevail when it became A Bridge Too Far.  People from Cuba to The Presidio have come to admire his Highlander expertise, but he always knew his Family Business.

He was not the first choice for his most famous role, James Bond OO7, but he was not The Next Man either. He felt the Bond role was an Entrapment after many years and chose some roles that came across as Wrong Is Right.

For many decades he has been a leading star, a Rising Sun, a Meteor of a personality and above all else, a Man Who Would Be King. The Queen knighted him Sir Sean Connery several years ago, unfortuantely he was not the First Knight.  Something I would Ransom he would not take Offence to since he has always taken us to Another Time, Another Place.

Happy Birthday, Sir Sean.

And to think I did that without using any Bond titles.

 

 

Under The Microscope

August 27, 2007 - by Wes Britton

Author Wes Britton of spywise.net brings to the Internet a unique opportunity for all OO7 fans. A PDF file of O.F. Snelling's classic examination on Ian Fleming's literary creation.

For the first time since its original publication in 1964, the classic study once known as James Bond: A Report is now available anew in this electronic format! When it first appeared, the book sold over 2 million copies, but has long been out of print. No longer – and this nugget now includes an introduction by Snelling he intended for an updated version in 1980. Truly, an important read for all James Bond fans!

“The O. F. Snelling 007 Letters.” From 1979 to 1994, O. F. Snelling shared a remarkable correspondence with Ronald Payne, Snelling’s literary executor and the subject of the popular “Untold Tales of 007” articles at this website. Now, Ron shares selected letters from his erudite friend discussing the changes in the 007 universe, his thoughts on spy movies and thriller writers, and much more!

The “O. F. Snelling Archives” can be found in “The James Bond Files” section. What else will you discover at SpyWise.net?

“Spies on Film” offers insider interviews on spy movies of the past, present, and future, including a brand-new behind the scenes look into The Champagne Spy, the award winning documentary now making its rounds in international film festivals.

“Spies on Television and Radio” remains an indispensable resource on all aspects of espionage on the small screen. Our newest feature is author Marc Cushman’s insider story about “The I SPY Movie That Never Was.” What would have happened if Robert Culp and Bill Cosby had made an I Spy feature film on their own terms?

“Spies in History and Literature” explores both fact and fiction with directories and bibliographies, memoirs of former intelligence officers, as well as interviews with spy writers.

And, of course, you can find out more about Wes Britton’s classic books on espionage and news on Wes’s media appearances and interviews!

Snelling's book is well worth the effort to download and printout. Besides, it's free.





Paul Haggis: The Man With The Golden Pen

August 27, 2007 - by Stuart Basinger

Screenwriter and director Paul Haggis has recently surfaced to promote his unique film "In the Land of Elah" when he was asked several crucial questions on Bond 22.

"I’m on page 22. It’s a lot of fun."

Haggis, who won the Academy Award for his brilliant film "Crash", also polished the script for the Daniel Craig OO7 entry "Casino Royale". He has been hard at work tweaking the latest exploits of Her Majesty's secret agent, James Bond in the yet to be title Bond 22. "Casino Royale" was the last Ian Fleming novel to be adapted for the screen by Eon Productions and speculations have been mounting lately if the producers plan to inject more Fleming into the next film.

"It’s an original and it’s not based on any book or short story or anything that Ian Fleming had done. Although it is based on Ian Fleming ideas", Haggis adds. "And it starts right after the last one, two minutes after Casino Royale."

The reporter goes on to ask if there is any truth about the producers wanting more comedy in Bond 22.

"That’s not true. They were misquoted, I’m sure."

Haggis also mentions that he has a good deal of freedom writing the script and that film director, Marc Forster, is very supportive.

Not based on anything Ian Fleming has done, yet it is based on Ian Fleming ideas? How ambiguous is that!



New Bond Deal For Corgi

August 27, 2007 - by Samantha Loveday for Toy News Mag

Toy maker seals worldwide deal for James Bond classic movie archive. Corgi International has inked a master toy and collectible replica agreement with EON Productions for the James Bond classic movie archive.

The deal runs through until 2010 and includes the next film - which is due for release in 2008 - and subsequent movies released during the course of the term.

Corgi will be able to release both mass market product ranges, as well as core collectables on innovative product lines that include action figures, vehicles, electronic role play, die-cast, high specification remote control (under the Popco brand) and high-end replicas (under the Master Replicas label).

"Corgi has had a long association with the James Bond licence, and as a licensee for over 40 years on die-cast, we truly believe that we have reached an agreement where we can use our expertise in both the mass and collectable markets to release products to a fan base that is both core and aspirational," explained Michael Cookson, Corgi CEO.

"Our product range wil commence before the movie release in 2008 with classic movie product and replicas and continue with some strong and innovative mass market lines. We are proud to continue our association with such a franchise."

I sure hope the next batch of Corgi Bond vehicles live up to the word quality. The last few years have been dismal. Can we have some newer cars such as Scaramanga's AMC Matador or a larger version of the Acrostar from Octopussy?

 

 

Paul Haggis: 'My Bond Is Different'

August 28, 2007 - by Larry Carroll and Jeff Cornell for MTV

When last we saw 007, he was dealing with a dead girlfriend, a bruised ego and the bullet he had just placed in the leg of the mysterious Mr. White.

On November 7, 2008, James Bond will pick up the action once again — that is, if Oscar-winning screenwriter Paul Haggis can ever finish the script.

"I'm on page 20," grinned the affable mastermind behind not only "Casino Royale," but such Oscar-baiting flicks as "Crash," "Million Dollar Baby" and "Letters From Iwo Jima." "I'll let you know [more] when I get to page 100, and hopefully by page 110 I'll be finished."

Having found a second wind after the universal acceptance of both Daniel Craig and Haggis' brutal, more realistic relaunch of the character, the writer revealed that he's attacking the script for the 22nd Bond film — which doesn't yet have a title — with certain thoughts in mind.

"I really loved [Ian Fleming's] books, and I really loved those movies, the ones that were really true to his books," Haggis said of the beloved author. "[The new script] is an odd mix between his stuff and [English espionage writer John] le Carré's stuff that I'm channeling; I'm mixing them both up."

Haggis confirmed that the new flick will pick up at the palatial estate on Italy's Lake Como that belongs to Mr. White (Jesper Christensen), where we'll continue to watch 007 display his effective interrogation techniques on the wounded associate of the late Vesper Lynd. "Two minutes after ['Casino Royale'] — boom — we're into this movie," Haggis explained. "That's where we pick it up."

A lifelong Bond fan, Haggis also expressed excitement over the boundary-breaking selection of "Finding Neverland" helmer Marc Forster as director — a marked departure from the journeymen typically employed on past 007 films. "He got my vote when they were looking for a director," Haggis said. "He's been terrific to work with, and he's a great visualist. He's leaving me alone to do the story, and I think he's gonna shoot a hell of a movie."

The writer, whose gripping drama "In the Valley of Elah" is already building Oscar buzz for this winter's ceremonies, added that his script will further explore the notion of a more human, flawed super-agent. "Bond is just pure imagination, you just get to have fun," he said of the difference between writing "Royale" and something like "Crash." "But some things are similar — you see, my Bond is different than all the other Bonds. But my Bond is an actual assassin; when he kills somebody, he does it with a knife, and it's bloody, and he pays a price. He denies that he has to pay a price, but he does."

"When he sees a woman who has just witnessed something horrific and she's sitting in the shower, he just doesn't go in and [have sex with] her like the old Bond would've done," Haggis laughed. "He sits there with her, and she says, 'I can't get the blood out from under my fingernails!' and so he helps her get the blood out. That's my Bond, a different Bond, who's much more like [my usual] guys, these heroes. Yes, it's escapism and it's fun. But I try to ground him in realism."

As such, Haggis considered walking away from the Bond franchise after "Royale," thinking he'd better get out while such realism was successful and before the temptation to put Bond in invisible cars (à la "Die Another Day") kicked in. "That's why I was really worried about doing the second one. I didn't think I could do as good a job," admitted Haggis, who did reportedly turn down an offer to direct the flick. "But they talked me into [writing] it, and I'm back to try and do the best I can."

As far as additional revelations go, Haggis did admit that he recently suggested a title to the series producers ("I said, 'I think this is going to be a good title,' and they said, 'Um-hmm.' "), that he'd like to bring back Jeffrey Wright as Felix Leiter ("Wasn't he great? Yeah. I would really hope that he'd be in this one"), and that he won't say whether gadget-guru Q will re-emerge after a "Royale" absence.

"I'm not supposed to talk about anything, but I can tell you this: Everybody says they know where the ending is, and they're wrong," Haggis teased, in response to reports of some early filming at a horse track in Siena, Italy. "Everybody knows about the Bond girls, and they're wrong."

Asked specifically about rumored "Black Blook" actress Carice van Houten, Haggis replied, "Who's that? Oh, no, she's not going to be in this movie."

Finally, we asked Haggis what his favorite Bond film of all-time was — a question that, in retrospect, seems like as much of a no-brainer as asking Bond how he'd like his martini. " 'Casino Royale,' " Haggis laughed. "Of course!"

I said it once and I'll say it again, the smartest thing the producers did for Bond 22 was rehiring Haggis.

 

 

Bond 22 Is Bourne Again

September 5, 2007 - by Borys Kit for The Hollywood Reporter

Ever since the "Bourne" movies have come on the scene, the makers of James Bond have been in the line of fire for having a dusty, lethargic spy on their hands -- "Casino Royale" notwithstanding.

But it looks like EON Prods., Columbia Pictures and MGM might be kicking it up a notch for the next Bond film.

Taking a page from the "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em" handbook, the production has hired "Bourne Supremacy" and "Bourne Ultimatum" action designer Dan Bradley as the film's second unit director.

Bradley plotted out and directed the acclaimed fight sequences and car chases as the stunt coordinator and second unit director of the two Paul Greengrass-helmed "Bourne" sequels and will service the working-titled "Bond 22" in much the same capacity. The producers want him to continue and build on the more realistic and gritty approach to the veteran British spy begun in last year's "Casino Royale."

While no date has been set, "Bond 22" is eyeing a start date in the winter.

Bradley is coming off of working on the latest Indiana Jones movie. His recent credits as second unit director include the two "Spider-Man" sequels, "Superman Returns" and "Seabiscuit." He is repped by ICM.

Hiring people from various successful film franchises is nothing new. Robert Watts who was Location Manager on You Only Live Twice went on to help produce for George Lucas and Steven Spielberg in the Indiana Jones films.


Tarantino Rears His Ugly Head, Again

September 5, 2007 - Ireland Online

Quentin Tarantino has attacked James Bond filmmakers for turning down his offer to make Casino Royale.

The cult director is desperate to try his hand at a 007 film, and claims he came up with the idea to remake Casino Royale, only for producers to use it without him.

Tarantino tells British magazine Total Film: "I never saw Casino Royale because I was so mad at those guys. They said publicly that Casino Royale was un-filmable. The minute I said I would do Casino Royale, it's on all the websites and it is the film that people want to see. They should have said thank you."

Enough already. Go make Kill Bill Vol. 3.

 

 

Bond Girl May Come From Israel

September 20, 2007 - Israel 21

The makers of the next Bond film will be arriving in Israel soon to look for the next Bond girl to star alongside Daniel Craig, the current 007, in the 22nd film in the series.

According to Israeli news site, Ynet, the producers are looking for a beautiful dark-skinned woman with a Latin look and perfect English to fill the role.

Israeli casting agents have been asked to send in photographs and resumes of sultry Israeli actresses with good acting skills to play the 'Spanish' Bond girl. Veteran casting director Bruria Elback will be in charge of Israeli casting, which is due to begin shortly. Auditions for the new James Bond movie, which has still not been named, are being held in many countries across the Mediterranean. The film will be shot mostly on location in Itay and will be directed by Mark Forrester.

Mazel tov!



Craig Learns To Ski

September 20, 2007 - by Kiran Pahwa for India Top News

Daniel Craig is hitting the slopes to learn how to ski for a ‘major’ action sequence in the new Bond film. The Brit star is determined to follow in the footsteps of George Lazenby, Roger Moore, and Pierce Brosnan who all thrilled with ski sequences in their respective 007 movies.

A source revealed that the new 007 movie, till now known simply as Bond 22, will be largely snow-bound for the first time since ‘On Her Majesty’s Secret Service’, so its essential that Craig knows how to ski. The source also added that much of the movie will be in the Swiss Alps.

In the meantime, Bond bosses are also busy looking for the main Bond girl. They are reportedly on the lookout for a Latina actress in her late twenties.

Attention: Bond 22 is now offically called "SNOWBALL"



Bond Producers Say No, No, No, To Amy Winehouse

September 20, 2007 - Daily Express

Troubled star Amy Winehouse has been ditched as the favourite to record the next Bond theme tune. The internationally acclaimed singer had been lined up by movie producers and composers to perform the signature tune on the 22nd 007 movie, starring hunky Daniel Craig as Bond. But film production company EON have pulled back, evidently in reaction to 23-year-old Winehouse’s personal problems, including a drug-induced collapse.

She had been singled out to be the voice of the new Bond movie – and even a possible cameo role – after bosses were bowled over by her mature tones on her hit album Back to Black. The album featured her number one single Rehab, which features the lyrics: “They tried to make me go to rehab, but I said, no, no, no”

Several months ago composer David Arnold, who has penned the soundtrack to the last four Bond movies, gushed: “Amy Winehouse had the best record of last year. I haven’t asked her yet, but I think she’d be good.”

But a source at EON said: “A month ago Amy was thought to be a shoo-in for the theme tune to Bond 22. Her voice and musical style was in perfect sync with what Bond is all about.

“There was even talk of her having a cameo by performing the theme tune in a smoky club Bond visits – but that’s out of the window now.

“After all the reports of hard drug use, self-injury and domestic violence, it’s fair to say the bosses here just aren’t keen on the idea.”

The soul diva’s self-destructive spiral has prompted her worried mother to speak out. Janis Winehouse warned that Amy may not live to see her next birthday if she cannot conquer her demons.

In the aftermath of a bloody drug-fuelled bust-up between Winehouse and husband Blake Fielder-Civil just weeks ago, Janis, a 52-year-old pharmacist, said: “Amy is playing Russian roulette with her health, family and musical gift.”

Winehouse was reportedly near death last month after taking a cocktail of ecstasy, cocaine, ketamine and marijuana. She later quit rehab before a very public brawl with Blake.

The rejection by Bond producers will compound her disappointment after failing to scoop the prestigious Mercury Prize earlier this month. She was pipped to the post for the £20,000 award by “new-rave” band Klaxons.

Mercury organisers were left guessing whether she would attend following a run of no-shows. But fresh and tanned from a holiday in St Lucia with Fielder-Civil, she gave a show-stopping and emotional rendition of Love is a Losing Game.

Host Jools Holland said she had “one of the best voices of anybody of all time”.

When the winners were announced, she shrugged her shoulders before making a swift exit.

She may yet prove her critics wrong, however, after being nominated in four categories at next week’s 12th annual Mobo (Music of Black Origin) Awards. Winehouse is up for best UK female, best R&B act, best video, and best song at the contest, to be held at the O2 Arena on Wednesday.

Her mother is a pharmacist and her daughter is high on drugs?! Go figure!



Mr. White Will Be Right Back

September 20, 2007 - Daily Express

Danish actor Jesper Christensen has confirmed that he will be back as Mr. White in Bond 22.

Mr. White was part of the shadowy terror-funding network that Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen) worked for. Mr. White killed Le Chiffre during Royale's infamous torture scene, and was later seen absconding with the British funds that Vesper Lynd had stolen. Casino Royale ended with Bond ambushing White at his lakeside villa, shooting him in the knee before finally introducing himself as "Bond, James Bond."

Writer Paul Haggis has also confirmed that Bond 22 will start right where Casino Royale ended.

Break a leg, Mr. Christensen. Oh sorry, Bond has already done that.


License to Learn About Bond

September 23, 2007 - Hofstra University Cultural Center

The Hofstra Cultural Center is presenting a symposium on James Bond - Bond, James Bond: The World of 007 - to take place Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, November 6, 7, and 8, 2007.

Invited guests include:

Robert Davi (Joseph G. Astman Distinguished Conference Artist), an actor and Hofstra alumnus who has appeared in more than 60 movies and played Franz Sanchez in Licence to Kill. In addition, he played FBI Agent Bailey Malone for four and a half years on NBC’s Profiler.

Raymond Benson (Joseph G. Astman Distinguished Conference Scholar) is an author, composer and stage director, who wrote The James Bond Bedside Companion as well as novelizations of Bond screenplays and was commissioned to write six original Bond novels. He was also the vice president of the James Bond 007 Fan Club and is on the board of directors of the Ian Fleming Foundation.

John Griswold, author of Ian Fleming's James Bond: Annotations and Chronologies for Ian Fleming's Bond Stories.

Lee Pfeiffer, author, editor and publisher of The Essential James Bond: An Authorized Guide to the World of 007, James Bond's London and The Art of James Bond. He is also a documentary producer who produced The Goldfinger Phenomenon and The Making of Thunderball, The Making of Goldfinger and The Thunderball Phenomenon.

Lois H. Gresh, technical communications director of the Department of Science, Technology, Engineering and Math at the University of Rochester, and co-author of The Science of James Bond (with Robert Weinberg).

Deborah Lipp, author of The Ultimate James Bond Fan Book: Lists, Facts, Anecdotes, Trivia and Much More.

Symposium events include:

*Panels and presentations include the following:

• Raymond Benson on “The James Bond Phenomenon”
• “Bond’s Weapons, Gadgets and Cars - Science, Fantasy, Commerce”
• “Bond Girls Grow Up”
• “A Bond Pot-Pourri,” featuring the presentations “The Psyche of a Bond Collector;” “Enigma Variations: The SPECTRE in Ian Fleming’s Thunderball and Terence Young’s Film;” and “Helm, Matt Helm: A Comparison of James Bond and His Chief American Rival”
• “Playing a Bond Villain”: actor Robert Davi interviewed by Lee Pfeiffer
• “Writing Bond” - panel discussion featuring authors, Raymond Benson, Lois Gresh, John Griswold, Deborah Lipp and Lee Pfeiffer (to be followed by a book signing)
• Cocktail hour and dinner, featuring a piano medley of Bond music by Raymond Benson.

*Pre-Symposium Film Screenings of Bond Films

• October 16: Dr. No (1962) and Casino Royale (2006)
• October 23: On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969) and Live and Let Die (1973)
• October 30: Thunderball (1965) and Never Say Never Again (1983)
• November 6: The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) and Golden Eye (1995)
• November 7: Licence to Kill (1989) - with an introduction by Robert Davi and Die Another Day (2002)

Films will be shown from 6 to 11 p.m. The October 16 and 23 screenings will be held at the Multipurpose Room East, located in the Mack Student Center on Hofstra’s North Campus. The October 30, November 6 and 7 screenings will be at the Guthart Cultural Center Theater, located on the first floor of Hofstra’s Axinn Library on the South Campus.

*Post-Symposium Concert: Licence to Swing: the Music of James Bond Friday, November 9, 2007 at 8 p.m. A concert featuring the songs and music from the James Bond films, as part of the Joseph G. Astman International Concert Series. Pianist Ted Howe and his quartet, with special guest vocalists, will take you on an exciting jazz excursion into the timeless music of 007. Featuring selections by such composers as John Barry, Lionel Bart and Anthony Newley, you'll thrill to new adaptations of familiar James Bond themes including "From Russia With Love," "Diamonds are Forever," "You Only Live Twice" and many more.

For more information on Bond, James Bond: The World of 007 call the Hofstra Cultural Center at (516) 463-5669 or visit www.hofstra.edu/culture.

Hofstra University is a dynamic private institution offering more than 140 undergraduate and 155 graduate programs in liberal arts and sciences, business, communication, education and allied human services, and honors studies, as well as a School of Law. With a student-faculty ratio of 14-to-1, professors teach small classes averaging 23 students that emphasize interaction, critical thinking and analysis. The Hofstra community is driven, dynamic and energetic, helping students find and focus their strengths to prepare them for a successful future.

I also have information from another source that there will be a short discussion on James Bond fan films.

 

 

Actress Lois (Miss Moneypenny) Maxwell - 1927-2007

September 30, 2007 - Associated Press

Lois Maxwell, who starred as Miss Moneypenny in 14 James Bond movies, has died, the British Broadcasting Corp. reported Sunday. She was 80.

The Canadian-born actress starred alongside Sean Connery in the first James Bond movie, "Dr. No," in 1962 as the secretary to M, the head of the secret service.

 

Lois Maxwell in a publicity pose from the 1964 James Bond film GOLDFINGER



She died Saturday night at Fremantle Hospital near her home in Perth, Australia , the BBC cited a hospital official as saying.

Bond star Roger Moore said she was suffering from cancer.

"It's rather a shock," Moore, who had known her since they were students at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1944, told BBC radio.

"She was always fun and she was wonderful to be with," he said.

Born Lois Hooker in Ontario , Canada , in 1927, she began her acting on radio before moving to Britain with the Entertainment Corps of the Canadian army at the age of 15, the BBC said.

In the late 1940s, she moved to Hollywood and won a Golden Globe for her part in the Shirley Temple comedy "That Hagen Girl."

After working in Italy , she returned to Britain in the mid-1950s. In addition to her 14 appearances as Miss Moneypenny, she also acted in Stanley Kubrick's "Lolita", Robert Wise's The Haunting, and worked on TV shows including "The Saint," "The Baron, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased)," and "The Persuaders!," the BBC said.

She also appeared in a lackluster 1967 spy spoof "Operation Kid Brother" with Sean's younger brother Neil Connery.

She was 58 when she appeared in her final Bond film, 1985's "A View To A Kill." She was replaced by 26-year-old Caroline Bliss for "The Living Daylights."

Her last film was the 2001 thriller called "The Fourth Angel," alongside Jeremy Irons.

The last of the big three, Bernard Lee, Desmond Llewelyn, and Lois Maxwell helped create a legacy. Rest in peace, Miss Moneypenny.

 

 

Bond Girl Michelle Yeoh Becomes French Knight

October 4, 2007 - AFP

Malaysian-born action star and former Bond girl Michelle Yeoh beamed with delight when she received France's top civilian honour in a ceremony on Wednesday.

The French ambassador to Malaysia, Alain du Boispean, presented Yeoh with the chevalier (knight) of the Legion of Honour at his embassy residence in Kuala Lumpur.

Yeoh, 45, a former Miss Malaysia, shot to international fame when she co-starred with Pierce Brosnan in the 1997 James Bond film "Tomorrow Never Dies" as a tough but beautiful Chinese spy. She then starred in Ang Lee's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" -- a Chinese-language martial arts epic that was an international hit -- and "Memoirs of a Geisha" based on the best-selling novel by Arthur Golden.

"Deep down I am a small town girl ...who has been living a magical dream," said Yeoh.

The actress is currently filming "Mummy 3, Tomb of the Dragon Emperor" and she is next year planning to film an environmental documentary in Malaysia.

The Hong Kong-based actress is engaged to Formula 1 Ferrari motor racing team boss Jean Todt, a previous Legion of Honour recipient. The pair also have Malaysian titles. Yeoh received an honorary knighthood with the title "Datuk" from the sultan of her home state, Perak. Todt is a "Datuk Seri" courtesy of the sultan in eastern Terengganu state.

Congratulations from this website.



His Interest In OO7 Never Dies

October 4, 2007 - by Sarah Linn for San Luis Obispo

For Alan Stephenson of Arroyo Grande, it’s all about those three little words: “Bond. James Bond.”

Stephenson has been collecting James Bond memorabilia since age 7 or 8, before he saw a single movie about the dapper, cunning British agent or read any of Ian Fleming’s best-selling novels.

Alan Stephenson shows off a portion of his massive James Bond collection.



Today, his collection features more than 5,000 pieces, including action figures, props, costumes and a model of the volcano lair from “You Only Live Twice” —complete with miniature henchmen and rockets.

“Every time something with a logo comes out, I have to have it,” the 47-year-old said with a laugh.

Part of Stephenson’s collection will be on display Oct. 13 at Museum Royale, a James Bond-themed fundraiser for the San Luis Obispo Children’s Museum.

Guests can scope out Agent 007’s Aston Martin while enjoying casino tables, poker and putting tournaments, a martini bar and auctions, said museum Executive Director Roy Mueller.

“Sometimes, adults like to have fun,”Mueller said, adding that guests are encouraged to wear cocktail attire or dress as their favorite Bond characters.

Organizers hope to raise $500,000 before the museum opens its doors in mid- December.

Ever since a bikini-clad Honey Ryder walked out of the waves in 1962’s “Dr. No,” moviegoers have loved Bond. The popular spy character has inspired dozens of novels and 21 official movies grossing more than $4 billion. He’s the embodiment of sex, gunplay and glamour, clad in a crisp tuxedo with a Walther PPK in one hand and a martini (shaken, not stirred) in the other.

Stephenson’s first exposure to Bond came from his brother, 10 years his senior. He saw his first Bond movies as double bills at a Los Gatos movie theater, driving 15 miles each way with his mom.

“God love her. She’d sit through three or four hours of these things with me — and I know she didn’t enjoy them,” Stephenson said with a laugh.

One of the early items in Stephenson’s collection, he recalled, was a toy car purchased with weed-pulling money and “a little advance on my allowance.” Marked $3.50 on the box, the car is now worth$300.

“My brother was of the generation and the mindset that whatever toys you had, you eventually blew it up with firecrackers,” Stephenson recalled. “I thought … ‘I’m going to collect the stuff, and I’m going to preserve it.’ ”

Among his prized possessions are a pedal car produced for 2002’s “Die Another Day,” the title firearm from 1974’s “The Man With the Golden Gun,” and the ultra-rare volcano play set, made in the 1960s in France.

Stephenson scoured collector sites and contacted France’s James Bond fan club before finding the set on eBay.

“When they saw my bidder ID come up, (the other buyers) stopped,” he recalled. “They knew this thing had been an obsession.”

Stephenson’s love of pop-culture paraphernalia even extends to his job. Eighteen months ago, he joined the staff of Kompolt Online Auction Agency, a San Luis Obispo firm that organizes auctions for charities and celebrity sellers. For instance, the company helped sell a Harley-Davidson motorcycle owned by Jay Leno to raise money for victims of the 2004 tsunami in Asia.

Stephenson said he brings “the mindset of a buyer” — one who’s willing to acknowledge the sillier aspects of his hobby. He even owns a dinner jacket covered with plastic James Bond figurines.

“Although this collection is massive and I can quote stuff like some people can quote baseball scores, I’m a little more irreverent than some Bond fans,” admitted Stephenson, who counts children’s blankets, beach towels and a paint-by-numbers kit among his finds. He sometimes jokes about Timothy Dalton being his favorite Bond — a no-no for hard-core Sean Connery fans.

What does Stephenson love so much about the Bond movies? First, there’s the humor — throwaway one-liners that have become an action movie tradition. He also relishes the decadence of a world in which luxury cars and high-tech gadgets abound and villains’ schemes border on goofy.

“It’s the sense of getting your money’s worth,” Stephenson said. “There’s a kind of opulence and expense to the films that comes through on the screen.”

Way to go Alan. What a great way to show off your OO7 collection and help a good cause at the same time.



Model James Bond Car Fetches £1,000

October 4, 2007 - Press Association Ltd.

A prototype model of James Bond's Aston Martin from the Casino Royale film has sold for more than 80 times its original price. The resin cast sold for £1,050 in the first auction of its kind of original Corgi toys and models.

A James Bond fan bought the Aston Martin DB5, which had a sale price of £11.99 when it launched in 2006. It was part of an auction of 572 lots of Corgi models and toys.

Items on sale at the event at Bonhams auction house in Solihull, West Midlands, included pre-production prototypes, Corgi "firstborns" - the first completed models off a production line - and limited edition models with 001 certificates. The oldest model in the auction dated back to 1997.

Darren Epstein, executive vice president at Corgi International, said the firm previously had a policy of keeping hold of its pre-production models and the first items off its production line.

"However, 50 years on, our archive is bursting at the seams and, at this point, we feel it's only fair to offer these pieces to people who will truly treasure and appreciate them rather than keep them locked away in a vault," he said.

Corgi now produces more than 300 types of collectable models every year.

I wonder if Alan Stephenson is the buyer?



The Bond Girl Who Got Away

October 4, 2007 - by Tim Lusher for The Guardian

It was a grey February day in 1995. Lois Maxwell and I were sitting in the deserted restaurant of her local Somerset pub, toying with an overcooked lunch of breadcrumbed cod fillets and peas, washed down with vodka and tonic. Intrigued by news that the former Miss Moneypenny had moved to a sleepy West Country town and now owned a firm that traded in crowd-control barriers, I had gone to meet her. She was living in a tidy cottage on a street called Broadway. Ever the trouper, she got the joke in quickly. "I always said I'd end up on Broadway," she said, wistfully swirling the ice cubes in her empty glass. "I just never thought it would be in Frome." Maxwell - who died on Saturday in Australia - delivered the line with the same wry playfulness that she used in her 14 fleeting but memorable Bond cameos. When I asked her which 007 she had found most attractive, she said: "If I could have had my fantasy, I think I would have been married to Roger and had Sean as a weekend lover." It probably wasn't an improvised answer, but it sounded fresh and smart. In reality, she had been happily married to a television executive but, after his death in 1973, returned to her native Canada with their two young children, where she set up a textiles firm that left her with huge debts. She had just moved back to England to live close to her daughter. She seemed a bit broken by years of money worries and loneliness. She was furious about her long-running column for a Canadian newspaper being dropped. "As though you lose your mind at 65," she said indignantly. "They don't do it to men, and that is what is annoying." It also still rankled that the Bond film producer Cubby Broccoli hadn't agreed to her idea of making spymaster M a woman and promoting her as Moneypenny, years before Stella Rimington was appointed head of MI5, only to see Judi Dench later land the role. She talked about writing her autobiography, but her heart clearly wasn't in it, despite insisting: "My life has never been dull, ever." It rang true. You could imagine Miss Moneypenny retiring to Frome, but not the more adventurous Lois Maxwell, who moved to Perth, Australia, in 2001 to be near her son's family. She had run away from home at 16 to join the Canadian army, been an amateur racing driver in Italy, earned a pilot's licence and - she claimed - had once armed herself with an M-16 to see off pirates while sailing in the South China Sea. "I'm pretty handy with a machine gun," she told me proudly. She remained the Bond girl who got away.

Nobody did her better.

 

 

Roger Moore Receives Hollywood Star

October 14, 2007 - Associated Press

LOS ANGELES: Best known for playing James Bond on the big screen, Roger Moore now has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in front of an address that includes the spy's signature 007.

Moore, who turned 80 on Sunday, received his permanent spot on Hollywood Boulevard on Thursday, accompanied by friends and family, including long-time friend David Hedison, who played Felix Leiter with Moore in 1973, and former girl from UNCLE, Stephanie Powers,

Moore made seven Bond films, starting with "Live and Let Die" in 1973 and ending 12 years later with "A View to a Kill." The British actor paid homage to the number of women he kissed on-screen adapting Ian Fleming's leading man.

Moore joked about his range of acting talent, "Left eyebrow, right eyebrow."

And added, "Sadly, I had to retire from the Bond films," Moore said. "The girls were getting younger or I was just getting too old."

Moore has done some acting in film and television since leaving the Bond franchise. He has raised funds for UNICEF in underdeveloped countries and received a Commander of the British Empire award from the British government in 1999. He also was awarded a knighthood in 2003 for his work with UNICEF.

Moore's star sits in front of 7007 Hollywood Boulevard, an ice cream parlor that boasts it is the birthplace of the hot fudge sundae.

Pierce Brosnan and Moore are the only former OO7s who have Hollywood stars on the Walk of Fame. Sean Connery has his handprints in cement at Grauman's Chinese Theater. George Lazenby and Timothy Dalton are the only former OO7s who do not have those honors.

I find it sad that it took this long for Roger Moore to get this honor. But than again there are so many actors, who are no longer with us, that have not had this honor bestowed upon them.

 

Did Daniel Craig Sign Up For Four More OO7 Films?

October 26, 2007 - by Stuart Basinger

The news was pouring all over CommanderBond.net and MI6 Friday morning like a welcomed deluge after a long drought. The Hollywood Reporter let loose a small bit of information from a presser with MGM chairman and CEO Harry Sloan on the status of the MGM Studios.

Journalist Paul Bond (no relation to our favorite spy) wrote that Sloan had 'signed Daniel Craig to do four more James Bond films'.

While this may appear as great news, the reader should refrain from breaking out the Peking duck and Russian caviar too soon. The article was primarily about the pending Writer's Guild strike and the effect it will have on future MGM productions. Bond 22 to name a few.

Sloan only mentions Daniel Craig's contractual agreement as a passing remark with other MGM franchise productions it is hoping to get off the ground such as Death Wish, Fame, and The Thomas Crown Affair.

The remark in the article is passive and even comes across trivial. As if Sloan had made this announcement before and he was just reiterating the facts again for those who had not heard.

There is also the possibility that Craig's contract is still set at three films with an option for a fourth. The same contractual agreement both former OO7's Roger Moore, and Pierce Brosnan were handed at the beginning of their tenures.

Time will tell but in the meantime the fans should remain calm and try not to speculate. The truth may end up being a major disappointment if the alleged rumors persist.

Either way the anti-Craig Bond fans are crying in their martinis.

 

 

The Girl With The Golden Voice

October 29, 2007 - by Rav Singh for News of the World

LEONA LEWIS is set to be a Bond girl — after film bosses ditched troubled AMY WINEHOUSE and asked Leona to record the theme tune for the new 007 movie instead.

Junkie Amy was first in line but film production company EON dumped her last month after her drink and drugs benders.

They reckon the X Factor winner— whose single Bleeding Love is set to top the charts this week — is the girl with the golden voice and want her to perform the signature tune for the film.




Known only as Bond 22, it will star DANIEL CRAIG as 007 and is due out next year.

A pal said: "Leona's beaming from ear to ear at being asked to be part of such a huge movie.

"She thinks it's a real honour to follow in the footsteps of some of the world's biggest female names including SHIRLEY BASSEY, SHERYL CROW, MADONNA and TINA TURNER."

The 22-year-old's record company BMG said: "Leona's management are in talks with various movie producers at the moment for a number of projects."

It's been a whirlwind year for Leona who was a pizza waitress before she shot to stardom on The X Factor. She told me: "A year ago I was preparing for one of the live heats. I was so nervous. I never knew I was going to win."

Her debut single A Moment Like This was the Christmas No 1 and smashed the world record when it was downloaded 50,000 times in the first half hour.

Bleeding Love is set to be the fastest-selling single of 2007, and I'm sure she'll pip Take That's Rule The World to the No 1 slot tonight. Her debut album Spirit is out on November 12.

It would be interesting to see what David Arnold would do with her voice.

 

 

Kiss Kiss Bang Bang #4

November 7, 2007 - by The James Bond International Fan Club

The latest KKBB magazine has hit the news stand and it promises to deliver unpublished photographs including Charlie Higson and the Young Bond series.  Sebastian Faulks and his new novel Devil May Care.  The next OO7 film starring Daniel Craig.  The 'Bond Girls Are Forever' event at Pinewood Studios featuring Royale Troixemière - an in depth cover of the Bond event including the preparation, the pandemonium, the premiere and the party from those clapping their hands to those rattling their jewellery.  

 

 

Plus,  James Bond: A Legacy Of Excellence – panel discussion on revitalising the Bond brand with Daniel Kleinman, David Arnold and Charlie Higson.  Please feel free to visit their website at www.007.info.

One of the best magazines on James Bond.  Collect them now because they will be worth something years from now. 

 

 

Activision Reveals Second Bond Project In Development

November 8, 2007 - by Matt Martin for Game Industry Biz

Activision CEO Bobby Kotick has said that the company is committed to revitalising the James Bond brand - "one of the greatest videogame franchises of all time" - while revealing the publisher has two projects based on the license in development.

The publisher secured the Bond licence in 2006 after Electronic Arts ended its deal with MGM Interactive for the rights to create titles based on the James Bond films.

"Bond is one of the great videogame franchises of all time and that really was a result of Golden Eye," commented Kotick at a BMO Capital Markets conference.

"I think the key to re-energising the Bond franchise is going to be ultimately the highest possible game quality."

For Kotick, EA's Bond titles – which included GoldenEye: Rogue Agent and From Russia With Love – suffered because the publisher had too broad a portfolio, leaving the brand neglected.

"It suffered a lot because it wasn't a focal point of Electronic Arts' efforts over the past five years and they have such a broad portfolio of franchises that this one didn't get the attention it deserved," said Kotick.

"We have our best development studios working on the product, we have a second team working on another Bond product and we're putting great resources against it," he added.

Rumor has it that Daniel Craig is a BIG video game player with Halo being his favorite.  He allegedly said that he originally did not want to have anything to do with his image being part of the OO7 video game franchise but was told "Tough, you're doing it."

 

 

Hofstra Gives James Bond Fans License To Thrill

November 13, 2007 - by Raymond J. Keating for Newsday

Who knew that James Bond, the suave British secret agent with a license to kill, had so many ties to Long Island?

The world of Bond, James Bond, was dissected at a Hofstra University conference last week. Assorted experts addressed all things Bondian.

The life and novels of Bond's creator, Ian Fleming, were explored, including the differences between the literary Bond and the film Bond.

I've been a fan of the 007 movies, but I never picked up Fleming's novels until this conference hit my radar screen. After reading the first four books, which were published between 1953 and 1956, I found a more complex Bond than what's usually on the big screen. While hard-nosed, he also was vulnerable and loyal.

Joseph Allegretti, a professor of business and religious studies at Siena College, correctly pointed out during the conference that Fleming's first novel, "Casino Royale," was really a character study of Bond.

In addition, these early novels were far more rooted in the Cold War politics and political incorrectness of the time than the depoliticized Bond who showed up later on the silver screen.

Raymond Benson, an American writer who penned official James Bond novels to keep the series going, noted that spy fiction had been around a long time but Fleming created the "fantasy spy genre."

Interestingly, Fleming in turn had to give some credit to President John F. Kennedy, according to Benson. The Bond novels hadn't sold too well in the United States until JFK listed the Bond books as among his favorites. Then sales took off.

Even beyond hosting this two-day symposium, however, Long Island is a bit of a Bond hot spot. A good number of the presenters were local.

William S. Kanas, a Westbury lawyer, made the case that the Bond girls are far more ... ahem ... developed characters than is normally assumed. Clive Young, an entertainment journalist from Rockville Centre, spoke about and provided clips from some amusing Bond fan films (including Stuart Basinger's Moonraker '78). And Hofstra business professor Bruce Charnov gave the real-life history behind the Little Nellie aircraft (actually a Wallis Autogyro) flown by Bond in "You Only Live Twice."

Most striking, an actor who played one of the great Bond villains grew up on Long Island, and even graduated from the now-defunct Seton Hall Catholic High School (currently the Patchogue campus for St. Joseph's College) and Hofstra. Robert Davi played the drug warlord Franz Sanchez in "License to Kill" (he also just directed a new non-Bond film called "The Dukes").

At the conference, Davi offered engaging stories about how he got into acting, and how the Bond part fell into his lap. One night a writer and a producer of Bond films separately saw Davi on television, and later both agreed that he should be the next Bond villain - before Davi even knew about it.

With another story, Davi illustrated the long and deep cultural attraction of James Bond. He is a good friend of one-time action-movie star and now California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. After Schwarzenegger's mother saw Davi in "License to Kill," she started complaining to Arnold that he'd never done a Bond film.

Of course, when thinking about Bond villains and Long Island, a columnist might be tempted to make some comparisons to local political leaders or activists. How about the greed of Goldfinger compared to politicians seeking ever more money to spend through higher taxes? Or, does Hugo Drax's plan to eradicate humans from the face of the Earth say something about the green movement's annoyance with more people building new homes and businesses?

Where is our James Bond, springing into action to stop such villainy? Well, at least, we have the books and movies to enjoy. And for now SMERSH hasn't taken over the Suffolk County Legislature.

According to Clive Young, "[I] showed the clone factory segment from the opening tilt-up of the building until the car roars off into the distance, and it went over very well. I introduced it explaining how it took 25 years to be completed and commented that it was a true time capsule, joking, "Here's an experiment you can try at lunch--wander around Hofstra until you find their power plant, then knock on the door and ask if you can come in for the afternoon, unsupervised, with a video camera, some friends and a lotta guns. (big laugh from the crowd) Then look at your watch and see how long it takes Homeland Security to pick you up."



Keeping Abreast With Jane Seymour

November 13, 2007 - by Sharon Churcher for The Daily Mail

Jane Seymour has admitted that she had breast implants before going topless for a hit comedy film. The 56-year-old British-born actress has frequently denied having plastic surgery, insisting that the figure she famously displayed in the 2005 comedy Wedding Crashers was entirely due to her 'genes' and a 'sensible' diet.

In the film she played an older woman, which involved the first topless scene of her career as she seduced young actor Owen Wilson.

But in an interview being published in America next week, she reveals that after giving birth to twins 11 years ago, she decided to have implants, although they were unusually small by Hollywood standards.

"My plastic surgeon had to special order them," she told People Magazine. She discloses that she also had a 'minor' eyelift.

She said: "It was more than a decade ago. Genetically, I had baggy eyes and photographers said they didn't want to spend money endlessly having to eradicate them."

Ms Seymour, who became a US citizen two years ago, first came to public attention in 1973 as Tarot-reading Bond girl Solitaire in Live And Let Die. She is currently appearing in Dancing With The Stars – the US version of Strictly Come Dancing – in which she is competing against Spice Girl Mel B and other celebrities who are mostly half her age.

Whenever she has previously been asked about plastic surgery, she has insisted that she is un-nipped and un-tucked.

"I've never said I won't," she observed recently, "but until I see a full facelift that doesn't look like one, or Botox or cheekbone implants that look natural, I doubt I'll be interested.

"I'm sure an expert would say I need an enormous amount of work, but then you look at actresses such as Judi Dench or Helen Mirren – if they have had work, it's so subtle you'd never know."

After breastfeeding the twins, by her fourth husband, producer-director James Keach, she reveals that she reluctantly changed her mind.

"It was very sad," she told the magazine, which reports that she wanted to regain the curves that brought her to fame as a Bond girl when she was 22.

She also says she once tried Botox. "It was the worst thing," she said. "As an actress, I need my expressions."

After being cast in Dancing With The Stars, she considered having liposuction, but decided against it, she claims, adding that she is still opposed to facelifts.

"I look at a lot of my friends and they don't look like themselves," she said.

After one female told me many years ago, "After 30, gravity takes over."

 

 

Potential Bond Girls And Villain Revealed

November 14, 2007 - Stuart Basinger

Oh, what's a spy to do?  Poor Daniel Craig has his work cut out for him as he helps to decide on which lovely actresses will grace the silver screen next to him in the next James Bond film.  

According to The Daily Mail, four Latino girls will be chosen for scenes that take place in Panama.  At the moment the ladies with a license to thrill vying for the parts are Cléo Pires, Moran Atias, Juliana Paes, Rita Guedes, and Guilhermina Guinle.

 

From left to right: Cléo Pires, Moran Atias, Juliana Paes, and Rita Guedes take aim at OO7's heart.

 

Cléo Pires was born in Rio de Janeiro on October 2, 1981.  Just three years after Eon Productions completed filming on Moonraker in her hometown.  She has been an actress on Brazilian television in a show called "Cobras & Lagartos".

Model and actress Moran Atias was also born in 1981 but on the other side of the Atlantic.  Moran is from the town of Haifa, Israel.  Currently she is working on the Adam Sandler film "You Don't Mess With The Zohan" due out in 2008.  Ms. Atias can speak five languages fluently.

Juliana Paes was born on March 26, 1979 in Rio de Janeiro.  She posed for Brazilian Playboy in 2004 and has been named one of the 100 Most Beautiful People In The World by People Magazine.  Presently she is considered the biggest sex symbol in Brazil.

Rita Guedes was born shortly after the release of "Diamonds Are Forever" on January 2, 1972 in Catanduva, São Paulo, Brazil.  She has also posed for Brazilian Playboy and was a co-star with  Cléo Pires on "Cobras & Lagartos".

Guilhermina Guinle was born August 26, 1974 in São Paulo, Brazil at approximately the time when Christopher Lee was hunting down Roger Moore in "The Man with the Golden Gun".  Ms. Guinle is a television actress and currently playing the part of Alice in "Paraíso Tropical".

 

Guilhermina Guinle plans to have a ball on Bond 22.

 

Most likely there are several others but so far these are the five contenders on the short list.  In the meantime, actor Rafael Edholm is on the short list for the part of a villain or perhaps 'the' villain.

 

Actor Rafael Edholm may be the next villain to plan diabolical destruction.

 

According to the Internet Movie Database, Mr. Edholm born in Sweden in 1966, went to the United States when he was 19 years old and stayed for 10 years.  Worked as a doorman when he was discovered by film director Oliver Stone.  Realised that the modeling business was too shallow, moved back to Sweden, met his wife Görel Crona at a club and later married.

Whatever the case this film is lining up some of the most attractive people in the business.

 

 

Done Deal For Bond Villain

November 17, 2007 - by Roger Friedman for Fox News

Daniel Craig had better look out. I’m told that Mathieu Amalric, the probable Oscar nominee from Miramax’s “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” is James Bond’s next villain. That was the word Thursday at a lunch for “Diving Bell" director Julian Schnabel and Amalric.

According to Friedman, Mathieu Amalric is OO7's next target.


Even though sources insist it’s true, Amalric would neither confirm nor deny. Since his “Diving Bell” character communicates through blinking, we thought of asking him to do just that — one for yes, two for no — but thought better of it. Anyway, expect a formal announcement shortly. This is a done deal.

For the untitled Bond movie’s director Marc Forster, Amalric is a brilliant choice. He’s a youthful looking 42-year-old overnight sensation, an independent French film director who only started seriously acting in films at age 30 and has suddenly been thrust into a hot career. So what does he want to do? “I want to direct my next film,” he told me over lunch at Brasserie Ruhlmann in Rockefeller Center in New York City.

Of course, it was hard to finish a conversation with Mathieu (pronounced Matthew) because women, one after another, wanted to come over and “just say hello.” Then, you know, they don’t leave.

“It’s like a dream,” Almaric said to me between visitations.

So who is this guy? Mathieu Amalric’s got a very French father who lives in Corsica with his second wife, and a Polish-Jewish-French mother in Paris.

He looks a little bit like a young Roman Polanski, which makes sense because the mother comes from the same village as "The Pianist" director.

And even more ties: Polanski’s beautiful wife, Emanuelle Seigner, plays Amalric’s ex in “Diving Bell.” (The film also features the sensational Marie-Josee Croze.)

He got the part of French Elle magazine editor Jean-Dominique Bauby thanks to producers Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall, who produced Steven Spielberg’s “Munich.” If you remember, Amalric was the breakout actor from that movie. He played the rich, young French arms dealer who worked with his father (Michael Lonsdale) from their chateau. When Schnabel was looking for an actor to play the part of Bauby, who was rendered paralyzed from a stroke but still managed to write a book, Kennedy and Marshall suggested Amalric.

We shall see.

 

 

Fan Film "Shamelady" Is Finished

November 20, 2007 - by Stuart Basinger

It has taken three long years to complete but Eric Saussine's epic OO7 fan film is now available for downloading. This labor-of-love will not disappoint the many fans who have waited patiently for this day.  For quite sometime there have been teasers and trailers available at YouTube and at Constellation Films for viewing and each new version entices the average Bond fan's appetite.  

The film stars Serge Rotelli as James Bond, George Kaplan as Jacques Descarpes (wasn't that the alias name Cary Grant got mixed up with in Hitchcock's North By Northwest?), and Irina Bogomolova as Anna Raykova.  

The supporting cast includes Shirley Lambert as "M", Simon Hamilton as Tanner, and Lucy Atkinson as Moneypenny.  There appears to be no one playing the part of "Q" but fear not, the film contains an exciting chase with Bond's Aston Martin DB5.

 

 

As an added surprise, the film also includes Bond's arch rival terrorist organization SPECTRE.  So hurry on over to Constellation Films and check out what I predict will be the most ambitious OO7 fan film ever produced, and that comes from someone who has made one.

While you are there you can check out the behind-the-scenes and another OO7 fan film in the works -  SHATTERHAND.

Hmm, I wonder where he got that title from?

 

 

REVIEW: There Is Nothing To Be Ashamed About "Shamelady"

November 21, 2007 - by Stuart Basinger

It will be approximately another year before Eon Productions releases their next James Bond film and, if you are like me, the wait can seem like eternity.  However, there is a quick fix that the average OO7 fan can enjoy until then.  No, it is not a new video game or a rival film with Sean Connery reprising his famous role.  It is none other than a 'fan film'.

Constellation Films has finally released their epic production SHAMELADY.  After three grueling years of production and post-production, this James Bond fan film to end all James Bond fan films has done more than blown away the bad guys.  It has literally raised the bar for any other future OO7 fan film to be more stylish and slick.

SHAMELADY is directed by Eric Saussine, a professional musician who dreamt of producing his own not-for-profit OO7 film back in 2004.  He founded his production company Constellation Films in order to produce fan films such as SHAMELADY.

In September 2004, Saussine, phoned his friend Pierre Rodiac, former president of the French James Bond fan club . Eric wanted to adapt Casino Royale, the only Ian Fleming James Bond novel that was not seriously adaptive by Eon, holder of the movie rights.  Rodiac began writing a synopsis and the two worked alternatively on it for about a year.

Unfortunately for Eric and Pierre, Eon Productions announced that they were beginning pre-production on their newest Bond adventure Casino Royale starring Daniel Craig.

Saussine reacted to the news and decided to preserve the general casino plot, change the names of the villains, the bad guy’s plan, a few scenes and re-introduced SPECTRE and Ernst Stavro Blofeld.  The new script was written in a couple of months and Eric changed its title to SHAMELADY.  Filming began in 2005 and finished in late 2007.

 

Serge Rotelli as James Bond OO7 takes aim at his adversary.

 

Saussine brought in actors Serge Rotelli to play James Bond and Irina Bogomolova as Bond girl Anna Raykova.  The actor playing villain Jacques Descarpes is George Kaplan.  Kaplan is not his real name but Saussine changed his name in the credits to protect this actor's real life profession.

SHAMELADY opens with evil terrorist organization SPECTRE sabotaging and destroying Western interest in Iraq and England.  James Bond, who is first seen in the arms of a beautiful brunette by the name of Linda, is sent to meet with a double-crossing SPECTRE agent who is willing to sell top secrets to MI-6.  Things go wrong with the exchange and Bond soon realizes that his arch rivals are back in business.

 

Jacques Descarpes oversees a special meeting of SPECTRE agents in SHAMELADY.

 

Sent to Normandy to square off against Descarpes in a winner-take-all roulette game, Bond meets up with two attractive female agents, Anna Raykova and Joan Jansen.  One of them turns out to be a traitor who will lead our favorite spy into a clever car chase, with his famous Aston Martin DB5, and into the underground labyrinth of Descarpes mansion where he tortures Bond with electrical leads.

Without giving too much away, Bond and Descarpes face off against each other with a great fight scene that reminds the viewer of the opening pre-credit 'Thunderball' fight.  This eventually leads to an exploding ending involving a small aircraft and a land-to-air missile.

Is SHAMELADY entertaining and fun?  Absolutely and I will tell you why it is so entertaining.

Fan films have become a unique entertainment on the Internet within the last several years.  Films such as BATMAN: DEAD END and GRAYSON have shown the public what every fan would like Hollywood to do.  A film that is worth paying our hard earn money to see.  When Hollywood falls short from this goal, the fan then picks up his home video camera, calls up his close friends, and begins to make the film he or she would like to see.

 

Linda played by Claudia Baqué is Bond's first conquest in SHAMELADY.

 

Call it a catharsis but the Internet is filled with artistic amateur filmmakers, and some of them are very good.

That's not to say SHAMELADY does not have its technical flaws.  Some camera shots are slightly out of registration and a few frame compositions with the actors tend to be jarring to the viewer when juxtapositioned, but these are miniscule compared to the rest of the film.  This is after all a 'fan film' produced on a shoestring budget and believe me the film does not look like it was done cheaply.  Filmed on location in a casino in Luc-sur-Mer, Normandy is not your typical 'fan film' basement set.

The chemistry between the main actors is also key to its success.  Serge Rotelli who plays James Bond is very believable and Irina Bogomolova as Anna Raykova is very sexy.  Alice Suzan and Claudia Baqué add to the Bond girl repertory with some memorable moments that will make most red-blooded males return to this film for repeat performances.

 

Serge Rotelli and Irina Bogomolova take direction from Eric Saussine in SHAMELADY.

 

Saussine also knows how to have fun with his film.  In an earlier scene, Bond meets his superior 'M' played by Shirley Lambert and Chief of Staff Tanner played by Simon Hamilton.  On the wall of 'M's office is the portrait of the Duke of Wellington.  That portrait was stolen long before the first James Bond film "Dr. No" was produced in 1962.  As a joke, the portrait was seen in Dr. No's underground lair.  Now it graces the walls of MI-6.  Later in the film, Bond does a double take of a Roger Moore/Wellington portrait hanging in the villain's mansion.

Saussine also does his best to pay homage to Ian Fleming, Harry Saltzman and Albert R. (Cubby) Broccoli by having their names displayed during the opening gun-barrel icon.  Reminding us where the real source of inspiration comes from.  

There are scenes that will remind the viewer of classic scenes from 'From Russia With Love' and 'Goldfinger'.  Even sound effects lifted from 'Never Say Never Again' echo as the villain whips a broken lamp stand at our hero.  During the final aircraft scene, some shots from Octopussy were lifted to help fill in what would be impossible to film without refinancing Blofeld's volcano lair.  One can really see the love of the series that went into this production. 

 

A myriad of beautiful women are multi-layered during the title sequence.

 

The opening credits offers up the talents of David Arnold and Björk with a myriad of beautiful women multi-layered over casino motifs but the best part of his homage is the background music by John Barry.  Barry's music graced the earlier OO7 films and his music in SHAMELADY adds that most important ingredient that sadly no one else can reproduce.  Saussine lifted music cues not only from Barry's 'A View to a Kill', but 'Diamonds Are Forever', 'Octopussy', 'The Living Daylights' and a cell phone ringtone from 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service'.  Non-Bond music cues such as 'Somewhere In Time' are used for the love scenes with Joan Jansen and a cue from 'The Black Hole' is used during the SPECTRE conference meeting.

The film runs just over 56 minutes and depending on your computer's speed and Internet provider it could take up from approximately 20 minutes to several hours to download.  You will need a Divx player or a Divx patch for your Windows Movie Player to see the film.  But trust me, the wait is worth it.  You can download the film from Constellation Films for free.

Look for the next Constellation Film "SHATTERHAND" within the next year or two.

 

 

 

 

Speak Of The Devil, The Old James Bond Is On His Way Back Between The Covers

December 4, 2007 - by Dalya Alberge for The Times Online

A glimpse of James Bond’s literary makeover is offered today as Penguin unveils the jacket for its official new story about the spy.

A blood-red flower with the sensuous silhouette of a naked Bond girl as its stem has been created for Devil May Care, written by Sebastian Faulks, who took up where Ian Fleming left off four decades ago.

 

The provocative artwork to the new James Bond novel 'Devil May Care'.  The only unusual breakaway from the traditional covers is the added words 'writing as Ian Fleming'

 

Commissioned by Fleming’s family, the novel – intended to be a classic Bond set in exotic locations, with glamorous women and larger-than-life villains – will be published on May 28 to mark the centenary of the author’s birth. More than half a century after Fleming, who died in 1964, worked on the cover design of his first Bond book, Casino Royale– which he described as having “exquisite symmetry and absolute chastity” – Faulks told The Times that Penguin had produced a jacket for his Bond book that “looked stylish and exciting”.

Faulkes, author of Birdsong, said that he had written 80 per cent of his 007 novel in Fleming’s style. “I didn’t go the final distance for fear of straying into pastiche, but I strictly observed his rules of chapter and sentence construction.”

When Fleming’s estate announced last year that it had commissioned a Bond book, the spy writers John le Carré and Frederick Forsyth were tipped for the job. But Faulks’s Cold War novel On Green Dolphin Street inspired the family to approach him. Like Fleming, Faulks began his writing career as a journalist. When Faulks reread the Bond books he was struck by “the sense of jeopardy Fleming creates about his solitary hero, a certain playfulness in the narrative details, and a crisp, journalistic style that hasn’t dated”.

Devil May Careis likely to appear on the big screen, to judge by the enthusiastic response from Barbara Broccoli, who has produced more than a dozen Bond films. Had someone told her that it was a long-lost Fleming manuscript she would have believed them, she said.

The Bond girl depicted on the jacket is the British model Tuuli Shipster.

The market for Fleming first editions is so strong that Bloomsbury Auctions in London could be about to break the world auction record. On Thursday a first edition of Casino Royale is estimated to fetch £22,000.

Not bad but I still prefer the old fashion drawn artwork rather than the photoshop cut and paste.

 

 

 

Bond Villain Confirmed

December 5, 2007 - Empire Online

There were rumours last week that Sony was zeroing in on a villain for Bond 22 and that it was likely to be Mathieu Amalric, star of the upcoming The Diving Bell And The Butterfly. We can now 100% confirm it, having spoken to Almaric earlier today.

Mathieu Amalric will be plotting to kill OO7 in Bond 22.



Amalric would not be drawn on details of the character, but said that, yes, he will play the bad guy in the 22nd Bond movie. "I will, it’s true. I play the villain, yes. James Bond," Amalric said. "It has to do with childhood, you know? To be a villain in James Bond is just so funny. I never dreamt about that. It’s not what I want to do with my career. It’s just that I have kids and it’s so funny to do that. But it doesn’t mean that I’m not going to do a very small French film for free with my friends.”

He seems perfect Bond villain casting to us, possessing foreignness, a slightly crazed look in his eye and a lot of acting talent (watch The Diving Bell And The Butterfly to see for yourself). Eva Green has dropped hints in the past that the villain of the next film would be her boyfriend referenced in Casino Royale. Could that be who Amalric will be playing? And are we going to be getting peeks at Bond's childhood?

With the villain rumours now at an end, we can move on to guessing at the Bond girl. We're saying Bella Emberg or that nice Kate Garraway from GMTV, just to mix things up.

The real question is what is the villain's name?

 

 

 

New James Bond Video Game

December 13, 2007 - DSBG

Bond fans will have to wait another Christmas before they can sink their teeth into the next video game version of OO7's universe. This time the license has been picked up by Activision and apparently sublet to Treyarch, the company that has produced the Spider-man games.

The buzz is that the game will be a racing format, which brings to the memories of Bond fans the ill-forgotten OO7 Racing game. If you do not remember playing that game, you have not missed out on anything great.

The best of all the James Bond video games is 1996's GoldenEye. Produced by Rare and has been mimic since by other Bond games such as The World Is Not Enough and From Russia with Love.

The idea of another OO7 racing game sounds very daring and possibly a fatal move on Activision. Unless the people at Treyarch are working on something all together different the Bond video game franchise may suffer another poorly concieved game.

According to totalvideogames.com, Treyarch may not be the only company working on the new OO7 adventure. Bizarre, the company recently acquired by Activision, is rumored to be working on the driving portions of the unnamed Bond game. The game is supposed to be mix of the film Casino Royale and the upcoming Bond 22, and will have the Aston Martin. Bizarre may be working out the driving funtions of Bond's fantastical car, or they may be producing other classic Bond chases that have graced the silver screen. Is it possible to experience the 360 degree spiral jump from The Man with the Golden Gun or perhaps the two wheel tilt from Diamonds Are Forever?

Stay tuned.





Pierce Brosnan Sued

December 13, 2007 - Associated Press

A photographer is suing Pierce Brosnan for assault, battery and negligence. Robert Rosen accuses Brosnan of shoving him in a Malibu, California, parking lot.

Rosen says he was taking photos of Brosnan on October 26th when "suddenly and without warning" Brosnan struck him in the chest. Rosen says he wound up with "severe physical and emotional pain and injuries, including bruised ribs."

The pap says he wasn't chasing Brosnan and he did not invade his privacy.

Bizarre! He forgot to mention that he was taking photos of his family and children too.

 

OO7 In Rude Health With Daniel Craig, Says Roger Moore

December 31, 2007 - Agence France-Presse

LOS ANGELES - After 45 years, 21 films and countless vodka martinis, Hollywood's longest-running action hero -- James Bond -- is in rude health, according to the actor who knows 007 best: Roger Moore.

Afficionados might argue that nobody did it better than Sean Connery; but where history is concerned, nobody did it more often than Moore, who holds the record for playing Bond on film -- seven to Connery's six.

Yet Moore feels that the latest actor to take on the mantle, Daniel Craig, could end up rivalling his own 12-year reign by holding onto the role for at least another decade following last year's hit "Casino Royale."

"I have seen Daniel Craig in a number of films. He is a thundering good actor. The movie ('Casino Royale') showed me that he is one hell of an athlete," Moore told AFP in an emailed interview, following the US release of a new boxed set of Bond DVDs.

If the 39-year-old Craig was to play Bond for another 10 years, he would still be several years younger than the age Moore had reached when he starred in 1985's "A View To A Kill."

Moore, who was 58 when the movie came out, described the film as the least favorite of his Bond roles. "I was only about 400 years too old for the part!" he quipped.

Moore's most enjoyable Bond experience came in 1977's "The Spy Who Loved Me", memorable for a cast of villains that included "Jaws" played by Richard Kiel and gadgets that included a Lotus Esprit which doubled as a submarine.

"I think 'The Spy Who Loved Me' was the best, or rather the one I enjoyed doing the most," Moore said. "It had great locations. And I was exceedingly happy working with Lewis Gilbert, the director.

"We share the same sense of humor. I think it had the right balance of fun and suspense."

While fans of the Bond films regularly debate which actor proved to be the best incarnation of novelist Ian Fleming's protagonist, Moore revealed it is not something he has ever discussed with other actors who have played the spy.

Even when Sean Connery emerged from retirement in 1983 to appear in the 'unofficial' Bond film "Never Say Never Again" -- released in the same year as Moore's "Octopussy" -- the two actors did not discuss the subject.

That was partly due to a mutual friend, Michael Caine, advising them not to be suckered into participating in a media-driven "Battle of the Bonds".

"Sean and I never discussed our experiences ... not even with the leading ladies!" Moore said. "Actors don't really sit around discussing the parts they've played -- just in case someone says 'That was crap!'"

Moore said he understood why Craig underwent a physical transformation for "Casino Royale", bulking up to give his Bond a beefier appearance.

"People don't realize how physically demanding the role is," Moore said. "I'm still amazed how many people ask me to this day if I did my own stunts.

"I tell them if I did or Sean did or Pierce (Brosnan) did then we would have been physically dead by the end of the first reel of every film!"

Moore use to say he 'did his own stunts.  He would then go on by saying he 'did his own lying, too'.

 

 

 

James Bond Stamps Coming In 2008

December 31, 2007 - BBC News

The centenary of the birth of James Bond creator Ian Fleming is to be marked next month with six extra-long UK stamps, Royal Mail has said.
  Each stamp has been lengthened to show a number of different Bond novel covers, with first-class stamps featuring Casino Royale and Dr No.

The 54p stamps reveal the covers of Goldfinger and Diamonds Are Forever.  And the final 78p pairing, also launched on 8 January, has For Your Eyes Only and From Russia With Love.

Other Royal Mail stamp issues for 2008 will include celebrations of the classic Carry On and Hammer horror films, both of which will be available in June.

"Royal Mail's special stamps are a national institution, marking famous anniversaries, celebrating the greatest events and showcasing the best of British," said Julietta Edgar from the postal company.

Now there's something every Bond fan can lick into shape.

 

 

 

The Battle For The Soul Of Thunderball

December 31, 2007 - by Robert Sellers for The Times Online

It’s the most fascinating and controversial episode in the history of James Bond. So, why has nobody written before about the collaboration between the maverick Irish film producer Kevin McClory and Ian Fleming to make what would have been the first 007 film, back in 1960 – with Richard Burton as Bond, and Alfred Hitchcock directing? Instead, it led to Fleming being accused of plagiarism, a bitter court case, betrayals, deaths and broken lives.

Over the years, writers have been put off delving too deeply into the issues thrown up by this story because of the fear of lawyers descending. Cubby Broccoli, who launched the Bond series with Dr No, in 1962, along with Harry Saltzman, always tried to ignore McClory. Intrigued by this murky subject, I hoped to pursue my own book on it, but I had to get the facts right. The problem was, nobody really knew what the facts were; the truth has always been elusive.

Then one day, I found it. Or, rather, her: Sylvan Whittingham Mason, the daughter of Jack Whittingham, the man hired by McClory in 1959 to write an original James Bond screenplay after Fleming himself had tried twice and failed. Fleming was no screenwriter, as he confessed in a letter to McClory. “The trouble about writing something specially for a film is that I haven’t got a single idea in my head.” So it was Whittingham who produced the first 007 screenplay, Thunderball. My contact with Sylvan led to a significant discovery: several official-looking cardboard boxes. Inside were all the documents relating to the infamous 1963 plagiarism case involving Fleming: the actual papers used by McClory’s legal team, unseen for more than 40 years. And private letters, several hundred of them, written by Fleming, McClory and other important players in this sad tale.

McClory’s key lawyer, Peter Carter-Ruck, whose unrivalled client list included Winston Churchill, had taken charge of all these papers. When Sylvan helped to nurse him during a terminal illness, before his death in 2003, he passed them into her safe keeping. Just in time, too. He was hardly cold in his grave when many of the meticulously kept files from his cases were shredded. A fascinating and revelatory part of Bond history was nearly lost for ever.

Once Whittingham had completed his Bond screenplay, McClory took control of it and tried to raise finance; when the project eventually fell apart, Fleming journeyed to his Jamaican home, Goldeneye, to write his annual Bond novel. Once there, he found himself bereft of ideas. Under pressure from his publisher, he decided to take the easy way out and fashion a new novel from the discarded Thunderball script. Worse, he sought neither McClory nor Whittingham’s permission, and did not acknowledge them in any way, instead passing off the work as his own. This waseither utter naivety or mind-boggling arrogance. ConsideringFleming the man, one leans towards the latter.

Thanks to these newly discovered files, we now know that Fleming was warned such action could land him in court.

Ernest Cuneo, a legal adviser to Franklin D Roosevelt and Fleming’s closest American friend, saw only a judicial mine-field were he to publish Thunderball as his own. Fleming also asked a lawyer, Robert Fenn, in a letter, “to clear this copyright problem, otherwise we shall be faced with injunctions by McClory, which will be a great nuisance”. An understatement indeed.Despite these worries, Fleming still signed a contract with Jonathan Cape – a copy exists in the files – guaranteeing the publisher that Thunderball was an original work and violated no existing copyright. It seems inconceivable that an author of Fleming’s experience would have given such a warranty in the face of what he knew.

Nevertheless, this is exactly what he did, believing, perhaps, that his Establishment credentials – Eton, Sand-hurst, naval intelligence – lent him superiority over the brash, working-class McClory, and that he could simply get away with it. If so, he had totally misjudged the Irishman, and the consequences were monumental.

When he read an early copy of the Thunderball novel in March 1961, McClory was incensed. He applied to the High Court in London to ban it. Suntanned after returning from Jamaica, and wearing an immaculate blue flannel suit and a blue-and-white polka-dot bow tie, Fleming sat at the back of the courtroom, listening as he was accused of plagiarism. After 90 minutes, the judge decreed publication was too advanced to be stopped. “Quite ghastly,” Fleming said to waiting reporters. “I’m sure Bond never had to go through anything like this.” McClory had lost the battle, but he fully intended to win the war, and to pursue further court action against Fleming, who was by then a dying man.

For some time, Fleming’s friends had been concerned about his ill health and feared that his legal problems would serve only to exacerbate it. On April 12, a little more than two weeks after McClory’s failed book injunction, Fleming suffered a heart attack. During the regular Tuesday-morning conference at The Sunday Times, he suddenly keeled over and went so white that one of his colleagues was convinced he was dying. Fleming was rushed to the London Clinic, where he remained for a month. Doctors saw the heart attack as a warning and ordered that he moderate his smoking and drinking. But how could the creator of James Bond not live life to the fullest? Fleming ignored the advice.

Recovery was slow, but the letters reveal that the “spectre” of another trial was an intermittent worry at the back of his mind for the next two years. As the date approached, he wrote to a friend, William Plomer, to say he was winding himself up “like a toy soldier for this blasted case with McClory. I dare say that a diet of TNT pills and gin will see me through, but it’s a bloody nuisance”. The TNT pills were nitroglycerine, prescribed to prevent another heart attack.

On November 20, 1963, the Thunderball trial began in earnest. Could McClory prove that his copyright in the Thunderball story had been infringed by Fleming’s novel? Much was riding on the outcome, because, with the release of Dr No and From Russia with Love, starring Sean Connery, Bond was now a cinematic success. There was a lot of money, and some hefty reputations, at stake.

One must not underestimate the personal enmity between Fleming and McClory, clearly shown for the first time in the letters. Neither liked the other during the time they worked together, and they clashed frequently. In one correspondence, Fleming admitted: “I don’t particularly like Kevin personally, because I have never particularly liked Irish blarney.” The letters also reveal that Fleming was plotting behind McClory’s back to remove him from the Bond project. As for McClory, he labelled Fleming “cynical” and “a snob”. One suspects that half of McClory’s motive for his court battle was to put one over on the English Establishment, epitomised by Fleming.

The trial at the High Court became one of the media events of the year. Journalists lined up outside every day as the leading players in the drama made their entrances and exits. McClory was accompanied by Jack Whittingham, whose evidence that Fleming had scarcely contributed to the scriptwriting process was damning indeed. But at what price had it been given? For Whittingham, too, was in poor health: after an earlier heart attack, he suffered constant angina. Against doctor’s orders, he battled through the pain to attend every day of the case, loyally standing beside McClory. His reward was a dagger in his back.

Fleming, along with a friend, Ivar Bryce, would arrive each morning by taxi. There were also representatives of his publisher, Jonathan Cape, whose chairman can be shown for the first time to have been complicit in this deception. As early as January 1961, George Wren Howard was informed by letter of McClory’s copyright claim to the Thunderball story – but, in his sworn affidavit, he professed to know nothing about it. In other words, one of Britain’s most respected publishers lied under oath.

Fleming also defended his position that the novel was entirely his own work and that McClory had no right to it. In the end, however, it was demonstrated that there were 200 pages in which things had been lifted from the screenplay and put in the book. Fleming’s position looked hopeless; nevertheless, three days into the trial, he rejected one last bid to make a behind-closed-doors deal with McClory.

All the more strange, then, was what happened on the trial’s ninth day. McClory had just taken the stand when the hearing was unexpectedly and dramatically adjourned: Fleming had decided to settle. But why?

As Fleming had already suffered one serious heart attack, Bryce was worried about the effect the trial was having on his friend. What has not previously been revealed is that Fleming experienced two heart attacks during the case itself. So, after days of wrestling with his conscience, Bryce persuaded his friend to settle, rather than watch him endure the days to come. Fleming’s wife, Ann, was incensed, scrawling in her husband’s copy of Diamonds Are Forever, which had a dedication to Bryce, the words: “The man who betrayed Ian in the Thunderball case.” Fleming, too, was later to bitterly denounce Bryce’s actions. Yet, as Bryce was bank-rolling the defence, the decision was his to make.

Another much more controversial – and previously never revealed – reason for the quick settlement is the revelation that McClory may have had in his possession an incriminating letter against his opponents. Bryce’s decision to urge a settlement, so this theory goes, was to prevent the letter seeing daylight and causing public embarrassment both to Fleming and himself. Significantly, at the close of the trial, Fleming’s QC handed a letter

to the judge, saying: “I think it would be unwise for me to comment publicly on this letter.” After reading it, the judge observed: “All I can say about this is that I am very surprised to see it.” The contents and author of the letter were never made public.

More than likely, the reason for the settlement was the fact that McClory’s case was irrefutable. Fleming had underestimated his foe, never believing he had either the nerve or the financial muscle to go the whole course. McClory’s victory was considerable: £50,000 damages, costs paid and, most important, the film rights to Thunderball. In 1965, unable to get the movie off the ground on his own, he joined forces with Broccoli and Saltzman to co-produce it, and it remains the most financially successful Bond film ever made. He retained remake rights, resulting in 1983’s Never Say Never Again.

For years, McClory fought with the Bond producers to prove he had the right to his own 007 franchise. Most audacious of all were his claims that, because Thunderball was technically the first Bond screenplay, it influenced every subsequent 007 picture, meaning he had played a significant role in the creation of the cinematic Bond and thus deserved a share of the series’s estimated $3 billion profits. Had this been substantiated in court, it would have turned the movie-making world of 007 upside down, even threatened its existence. The claims were thrown out of a Los Angeles court in 2001.

McClory’s final battle was played out on November 20, 2006, with his disease-ravaged body. Despite earning millions from his profit share in Thunderball, he died virtually penniless, his fortune squandered on court cases and dodgy funding of things happening in the north of Ireland. His cremation took the form of a Viking funeral.

Whittingham was abandoned by McClory, despite promises that he would benefit from any eventual production of the Thunderball film. It was a particularly cruel betrayal considering the sacrifice the writer made during the trial to give his beneficial evidence. The two men hardly ever spoke to each other again. Whittingham died in 1972, his contribution to Bond forgotten.

As for Fleming, he left the High Court in 1963 a wounded and humiliated man. “I feel Bond would have done something to liven it up,” he said about the case. “Like shooting the judge.” Friends tried to cheer him up. In a letter, John Betjeman urged: “Write on, fight on.” But on August 12, 1964, nine months after the plagiarism trial, he suffered a huge heart attack and died. He was just 56. He died at the height of his earning powers, with his books selling in undreamt-of quantities. And, while he witnessed the popularity of the earliest 007 movies, he never lived to see his creation become a phenomenon, which was thanks to the unprecedented success, ironically, of the story that had caused him many of those health problems in the first place: Thunderball.

An incredible story that will continue to plague this series for decades to come.

 

 

 

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