IPB

Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

2 Pages V   1 2 >  
Reply to this topicStart new topic
> Craig Gears Up For 'Bond 22', Actor in training for January start date
Gernot
Midshipman



Group: Crew
Enlisted: 1 May 2002
From: Vienna, Austria






Actor in training for January start date


http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol...ll&offset=0

from Martyn Palmer
The Times

QUOTE
Daniel Craig can pinpoint exactly the moment his world changed. He was sitting in a hotel room in Switzerland when the producer Barbara Broccoli – the keeper of the James Bond flame who had selected Craig to become the new, postmodern 007 amid a storm of scepticism – rang with the news that the box office for Casino Royale was looking good. Very good.

“It was surreal,” he recalls. “Just surreal. The numbers kept going up and up and up and it was like, ‘That’s it! We’ve done it.’” Those numbers did in fact keep soaring, to nearly $600 million (300 million), making it the most profitable Bond film to date. Add to that a host of international reviews that hailed his performance as a triumph, and you certainly have a reason to celebrate.

Suggest that he might have uncorked a bottle of vintage champagne, perhaps, and his face – the one that looks like it was hewn out of a chunk of rock – creases up into a smile and those piercing pale-blue eyes light up as if they’re powered by halogen.

“You’re joking, aren’t you! Champagne? No way. I had a couple of very large vodka martinis. I went to the bar and it was like, ‘Three please! Shaken, stirred or however you want to serve them.’”

As he knocked back Bond’s favourite tipple, Craig could certainly be forgiven for flipping a two-fingered salute in the general direction of the doubters who said that he was the wrong man for the job. “Yes, when it came out and people liked it, believe me, there was no one happier,” he says. “But I wasn’t going to say, ‘F*** you.’ Because there was no need.”

Craig now has the kind of career that few achieve – he’s a box-office star with street cred, and there aren’t many of those around. From Bond he went straight on to film The Golden Compass, the first part of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, in which he plays the rugged Lord Asriel, equal parts explorer and scientist.

The Golden Compass, with a budget rumoured to be $150 million (72 million) or more, will open next month to a fanfare of publicity and could even outdo Bond in takings. If it’s a success, then Pullman’s two other books will be filmed, and Craig will find himself starring in two of cinema’s biggest franchises. “I know,” he groans with mock despair. “Who’d have guessed?”

At one point, it did indeed seem very unlikely. When it was announced in 2005 that he was the new 007, websites were set up with the express purpose of rubbishing a man who hadn’t yet shot a single scene. One organised a petition calling for him to be replaced, and another raged that he was too, er, blond to be Bond.

“The stuff that people were saying [he adopts a whiny voice]: ‘Oh, he can’t do it.’ I’ve just spent six months doing it, I’ve done it. And it’s funny but, I think because of the furore that was going on, some people were going to come along to see how rubbish it was, so we had that on our side. I wanted people to see the film and be surprised, I wanted them to say, ‘We didn’t know it could be like that.’ But, to be honest with you, all of that was a defence mechanism, so I didn’t have to think about all the s*** that was going on. I was determined to keep my mind on the game.”

We meet in the Soho offices of Craig’s publicist. He’s wearing jeans and an open-necked shirt and he looks remarkably fit – he’s started training again in preparation for Bond 22 (as yet untitled) – although not quite as buffed up as he was for Casino Royale.

I mention the now famous scene in which he emerges from the sea in Casino Royale looking like a poster boy for a muscle magazine. “Yeah, I know,” he interrupts, laughing. “Arrghh! I was big for the last one, and it wasn’t a mistake, it was a definite statement. This guy, when he takes his shirt off, should look like he could kill someone.

“After it finished, I stopped training. I got drunk for three months! No, I didn’t, but certainly relaxed for three months and ate what I wanted, and then it’s hell because as soon as you get back in the gym, you have to work all that off, and it takes much longer than it does to put it on. Last time I did a lot of weights to bulk up because I had to do it quickly. This time I’m going to do more boxing and more running. I need to be physically strong for Bond and, as much as I looked in great shape, I got a lot of injuries, probably due to the fact that I wasn’t doing enough running and jumping, which is what I needed to do in the film. I won’t look physically much different, but I won’t be as ‘no neck’ as I was last time.”

The year since Casino Royale was released has been packed: Craig has travelled around the world, made another two films (Flashbacks of a Fool and Defiance) and attempted to adjust to his new life. The promotional tour for Bond was a whirlwind of airports and hotels, accompanied by his girlfriend, producer Satsuki Mitchell.

“I couldn’t get through it without her,” he says. “You’ve got to have a sense of perspective and she gives me that. It’s a strain on a relationship because we are never in one place and there’s never a lot of time. I have to fight for that, and for my family.” Craig was married, briefly in his twenties, to the actress Fiona Loudon, and they have a teenage daughter. Now he seems settled with Mitchell, whom he met in 2005 when she was a producer on The Jacket.

“It’s a struggle, but I couldn’t do it without having that closeness to somebody,” he says of maintaining his stability during the pressures of the past year. “Being on your own would be sad, sick and weird. I don’t trust myself. I need that balance, it’s crucially important. And we’ve been to some amazing places. I remember one night we were in this sky bar at the top of a beautiful hotel having a drink looking out over Beijing and just being blown away.

You have to have someone to share this stuff with. We got a private viewing of the Sistine Chapel. A fantastic guy took us around and told us the history of all the paintings. How cool is that? I said to Sats, ‘We have to remember this.’”

It is, of course, very cool. But when you are James Bond, it comes with the territory, such as the men’s magazine GQ recently naming him the Best Dressed Man in Britain. “Oh yeah,” he groans. “I mean, that’s very nice and everything, but now when I take the rubbish out wearing a pair of flip-flops, shorts and a T-shirt, some paparazzo will snap me and that’ll come back to haunt me.”

Craig is now in a world where, just as doors open to a life of wealth and privilege, others close behind you – you are fted all over the world, but a pint down at your local is likely to turn into an unseemly scrum with phone cameras flashing all around you. He laments the loss of the latter, but knew that was part of the price he would have to pay. “You know, if I'm up for it, fine. I have to keep hold of my sense of humour, because you can lose it very quickly and you start retreating into yourself; then you can’t go anywhere unless you are with armed guards, and the whole thing becomes ridiculous. So you have to smile about these things.

“But I tell you, trying to take pictures of me when I’m having a piss is not welcome and never will be. And yes, that’s happened.”

Born in Chester, 39 years ago, Craig grew up in Liverpool. He attended the National Youth Theatre at 16 and then the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. In 1996 he starred in the highly acclaimed BBC drama Our Friends in the North, a corruption and crime saga regarded as one of the best television dramas of recent times. That led to feature films, and along with Sylvia (playing poet Ted Hughes) and The Jacket, Craig has been sought out by directors such as Steven Spielberg (Munich), Sam Mendes (Road to Perdition) and Roger Michell (The Mother, Enduring Love). Craig himself continues to look for more edgy roles to play alongside the big-budget extravaganzas.

Earlier this year, he signed up to play a fading Hollywood star looking back on his youth in England in Flashbacks of a Fool, directed by his friend, Baillie Walsh. The film has a relatively small budget, but with Craig on board it was green lit and in production. “I think we probably could have done it [pre-Bond], but it would have been harder, and a struggle in a different way. It’s not going to be a huge money-spinner because it’s not that kind of movie.

“But to be able to make films like this is important to me. I have to be all these other things now and acting starts dropping down the list, which is bizarre. You go, ‘Hang on a minute, I just want to be an actor, I want to just turn up and do the gig.’”

In musical terms, The Golden Compass is stadium rock, set in a brilliantly conceived landscape with parallel worlds where people’s souls manifest themselves as animals known as Daemons. Craig’s Asriel is the uncle of Lyra (Dakota Blue Richards), the 12-year-old heroine of the story. “It clings on to the story of Creation, but it’s also about growing up, about being a human being and figuring out who you are, and becoming better because of that,” he says.

Pullman’s novels are controversial, too, because they feature a strong theological element that casts the Church as an oppressive organisation out to stifle individuality. Some Christian groups have condemned them, and it’s not clear yet how much of this will feature in screenwriter and director Chris Weitz’s epic.

Craig met Pullman on set and they have stayed in touch. “He feels passionately about the books, obviously, but also passionately about life. I’m a huge admirer of his, and I genuinely like him very much. My take is that there is a fundamental right to discuss all sorts of things, particularly at the moment with the way the world is. All we’re saying is faith always needs to be questioned.”

Now Craig is back into Bond mode, involved in every stage of Bond 22. Marc Forster will direct, and writer Paul Haggis (Crash, Million Dollar Baby) is finalising the script. Forster, who directed Monster’s Ball and Finding Neverland, isn’t an obvious choice. He’s just shot The Kite Runner and isn’t known for action and adventure.

“If we are going to do this, we have to create something that is going to last, that we are going to look at and say, ‘They were different,’” argues Craig. “It’s a risk, but the last one was a risk just because it was me getting involved, and we seem to have ridden that one out. So now we have to go to the next stage. I want to make sure the next two, three, four, whatever films I manage to do before they chuck me out, or before it goes tits up, sit nicely within this era.”

Craig’s enthusiasm is infectious. Bond has changed his life, in both good and bad ways, for ever. He has to deal with that, but there’s part of him that’s determined to cling on to where he comes from, and not let it all go to his head. “I mustn’t get complacent,” he says, “because if I start relaxing about all of this, then I’m going to turn into a dick. I don’t want to do that if I can possibly avoid it.”



Best regards from Vienna!

Gernot
www.JamesBond.de
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
James Blond
Midshipman



Group: Crew
Enlisted: 25 June 2006



That was a very interesting article, thanks for posting.



Vesper: "It doesn't bother you, killing those people?"
Bond: "Well I wouldn't be very good at my job if it did."
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
zencat
Commander GCMG



Group: Veterans Reserve.
Enlisted: 5 June 2001
From: Lagrimas Negras



Great job on the main pager...

He also hinted the movies title may be locked in.


I like how you left that for the end. I'm getting excited. smile.gif




Visit The Young Bond Dossier, now the OFFICIAL site for Young Bond news
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
Qwerty
Commander RNVR



Group: Commanding Officers
Enlisted: 26 June 2003
From: New York



Exciting news, to say the very least!




---------------------ɹooןɟǝɔuɐp
----------------------------------ǝɥʇ oʇ
-----------------------------------------dn uo
-------------------------------------------------ǝɯoɔ
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
Turn
Commander



Group: Veterans
Enlisted: 10 February 2002



I like his dedication and work ethic. He very easily could have taken the easy route, but he sounds like he's not ready to rest on his laurels. Hope I can say the same thing four or five movies from now.



"You didn't think I'd miss this performance, did you?"
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
killkenny kid
Commander



Group: Veterans
Enlisted: 16 August 2002
From: Brooklyn, New York



QUOTE(Turn @ 23 November 2007 - 21:14) *
I like his dedication and work ethic. He very easily could have taken the easy route, but he sounds like he's not ready to rest on his laurels. Hope I can say the same thing four or five movies from now.


Some how I think we will. thumbup.gif




"James, move your [censored]."
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
jaguar007
Lt. Commander



Group: Veterans
Enlisted: 12 February 2004
From: Portland OR



Of the BOnd actors, I really have respect for Craig and Dalton for the dedication they have to the craft.

I have respect to Moore just for being the good human he is.

I don't have as much respect for Brosnan because he seems to badmouth every role he is successful in (first Steele during its run and then Bond).

Connery is an icon.

Poor Laz made the biggest mistake in his life.






 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
sharpshooter
Commander



Group: Veterans
Enlisted: 2 July 2002



QUOTE
If we are going to do this, we have to create something that is going to last, that we are going to look at and say, They were different, argues Craig. Its a risk, but the last one was a risk just because it was me getting involved, and we seem to have ridden that one out. So now we have to go to the next stage. I want to make sure the next two, three, four, whatever films I manage to do before they chuck me out, or before it goes tits up, sit nicely within this era.


Loving these comments.



 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
blueman
Lt. Commander



Group: Veterans
Enlisted: 16 September 2005



QUOTE(jaguar007 @ 23 November 2007 - 20:15) *
Of the BOnd actors, I really have respect for Craig and Dalton for the dedication they have to the craft.

I have respect to Moore just for being the good human he is.

I don't have as much respect for Brosnan because he seems to badmouth every role he is successful in (first Steele during its run and then Bond).

Connery is an icon.

Poor Laz made the biggest mistake in his life.

Co-sign all this. Awesome how successful Craig is in the role after only one film, really looking forward to the next chapter of his Bond. thumbup.gif
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
JackoB23
Cadet



Group: Crew
Enlisted: 21 August 2007



"I want to make sure the next two, three, four, whatever films I manage to do before they chuck me out, or before it goes tits up, sit nicely within this era.


It sounds like DC is publicly embracing the role more now than he has let on in the past. He as always seemed a little reluctant about being Bond, but now he's hanging around until they "chuck" him out.



"...And now that you have seen a really evil man, you will know how evil they can be and you will go after them to destroy them in order to protect yourself and the people you love. You won't wait to argue about it. You know what they look like now and what they can do to people. You may be a bit more choosy about the jobs you take on. You may want to be certain that the target really is black, but there are plenty of really black targets around. There's still plenty for you to do. And you'll do it." - Mathis in Casino Royale, Chapter 20: The Nature of Evil
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
blueman
Lt. Commander



Group: Veterans
Enlisted: 16 September 2005



And, how refreshing for the actor returning to the role to NOT be bagging on the last film. PB could learn a thing or two from Craig about how to be media/fan-friendly IMO (sorry, had to go there as it's been at least a decade since a year after a Bond film's release, that film hasn't been trashed by the actor playing Bond, and IMHO that's significant and very very welcome).
 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post
JimmyBond
Commander



Group: Veterans
Enlisted: 1 January 2002
From: Texas



Yeah, I never liked how Brosnan always ragged on his Bond films.



Daniel Craig is a great 007

 
Go to the top of the page +Quote Post