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  1. 'This Never Happened to the Other Fellow:' Bond, Vesper, & Tracy

    By Guest writer on 2006-12-10

    The following article, written by Stephen Rowley, examines how the James Bond series has moved from a ‘post-Tracy’ 007 to a ‘post-Vesper’ 007 as a result of Casino Royale

    Note: the following article includes detailed spoilers for several Bond films and books, including the ending for both Casino Royale and On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. You have been warned.

    ‘This Never Happened to the Other Fellow:’ Bond, Vesper, & Tracy

    Written by Stephen Rowley

    The exciting thing about the newest Bond film, Casino Royale, is that it starts the cinematic James Bond series afresh. There has been much commentary on what this means for the Bond series going forward, centring on speculation as to whether this change in tone will carry into the next film. What I haven’t seen a great deal of discussion about, however, is what the events of Casino Royale, and the associated rebooting of the series, means for our understanding of who Bond is.

    This is odd, because it’s the ‘memory wipe’ (for want of a better way to put it) that really distinguishes Casino Royale from its predecessors. There have been a number of times in the series where particularly over the top film (like Die Another Day) has been followed by a more down to earth one (like Casino Royale). It first happened in 1969 when the action-filled but romance based On Her Majesty’s Secret Service followed the hollowed-out-volcano epic You Only Live Twice. Since then, there was For Your Eyes Only after Moonraker, and The Living Daylights after A View to a Kill. In all these instances, the Bond series made a point of following a particularly silly entry with a movie closer to the tone of Fleming’s writing. But to actually throw out Bond’s history is a first, and creates a seismic shift in who we understand Bond to be, by changing the crucial romantic relationship in Bond’s life.

    In most of the Bond novels, the women are not much less disposable than the smorgsbord of interchangeable women in the films. Yet there are two novels in which Bond’s romantic partner is much more important, and these become the relationships that define Bond’s character. The first is Casino Royale, the first Bond novel. In this, he falls in love with fellow agent Vesper Lynd during his recuperation from debilitating torture. At the time, Bond is disillusioned by his experience on the mission, suggesting to his colleague Mathis that the ‘heroes and villains keep changing parts’ and that his service to his country has been fruitless. In this state of mind he decides he will marry Vesper, but before he can do so, he finds their relationship transformed as she becomes distracted and secretive. Vesper commits suicide, leaving a note explaining that she loves Bond but had been working as an agent for his enemies. The book ends with Bond’s heart turning cold:

    He saw her now only as a spy. Their love and his grief were relegated to the boxroom of his mind. Later, perhaps they would be dragged out, dispassionately examined, and then bitterly thrust back, with other sentimental baggage he would rather forget. Now he could only think of her treachery to the Service and to her country and of the damage it had done. His professional mind was completely absorbed with the consequences–the covers which must have been blown over the years, the codes which the enemy must have broken, the secrets which must have leaked from the centre of the very section devoted to penetrating the Soviet Union.

    The final words of the novel are spoken by Bond to his headquarters: ‘The bitch is dead now.’

    It would not be until the tenth Bond novel, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, that Bond would again pursue the desire to marry one of his conquests. This time it is Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo (Tracy), the troubled daughter of organised crime boss Marc-Ange Draco. Bond and Tracy are married at the book’s conclusion, but as they drive away from the wedding, they are fired upon from another vehicle. Bond survives, but Tracy is killed: the book ends with Bond clutching her lifeless body to him. Once again Bond is penalised for letting his emotional guard down.

    When the film series started, the rights to Casino Royale were divorced from those for the rest of the series. The films instead started with Dr No, the sixth novel, so Bond’s relationship with Vesper was never part of his backstory. In the early films Bond’s character is necessarily defined by Sean Connery’s demeanour, rather than the internal monologue Fleming could use in the books. This inevitably made him a less human character, and this effect only became more pronounced as Connery’s swagger increased and the scripts became progressively more flippant. When Bond sleeps with women in the early Bond films, it’s often to gain information: this becomes something of a thematic motif through the first five films, with a number of variations on the theme. At the same time, the sixties films have an overriding arc that sees the gradual revelation of SPECTRE, a crime organisation that is behind the villains of most of the early films.

    These two strands build towards the film adaptation of On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, which became the climax of the linked plots of the sixties Bond films. The film is a remarkably faithful adaptation of Fleming’s original, and is justly considered one of the best in the series. Bond’s relationship with Tracy is surprisingly touching, with Diana Rigg’s Tracy more than Bond’s equal. The wedding is shown, and the film ends exactly as the book does, with Tracy murdered by Blofeld and his partner Irma Bunt. George Lazenby has his one really strong scene as Bond as he sits, dazed, cradling Tracy’s head and kissing her fingertips. It’s a shocking moment, in which genuine emotion suddenly intrudes into a comic book fantasy, and it seemed to traumatise audiences. Critic Molly Haskell wrote in the Village Voice:

    Their love, being too real, is killed by the conventions it defied. But they win the final victory by calling, unexpectedly, upon feeling. Some of the audience hissed, I was shattered.

    Yet the Bond producers seemed to be spooked by what they had done. The next film, Diamonds are Forever, brought back Connery and set the jokey tone that would define the series in the Roger Moore era. More importantly, though, it simply ignored the events of the previous film: Bond is still chasing Blofeld, but the fact that he killed his wife is never mentioned. At one point Moneypenny flirts with Bond by suggesting he bring her a diamond attached to an engagement ring. As Jim Smith and Stephen Lavington put it in their book Bond Films: ‘Surprisingly Bond doesn’t respond by shouting, “My wife was murdered at the end of the last film you heartless cow!” at her.’

    But Tracy’s memory would not be so easily suppressed. The fact that Bond had lost his wife hung like a cloud over the character, and Bond fans would cling to any mention of her. The loss of Tracy became the unstated motivation for any of Bond’s more sombre moments, and brief references to her were dotted through the films in the Roger Moore years. In The Spy Who Loved Me, Soviet agent Triple X starts telling Bond his own biography: she gets to his marriage and is cut off tersely by Bond. In For Your Eyes Only, Bond is shown in the opening sequence visiting Tracy’s grave. Of course, the same sequence then gives way to a silly action sequence in which Blofeld–Tracy’s killer–is offhandedly dropped from a helicopter down an industrial chimney. Nevertheless, the reference lingers over the film, which is unusually restrained by the standards of the Roger Moore films, and has led to readings of the film as a meditation upon Bond’s mortality and increasing age.

    When Timothy Dalton took over the role in The Living Daylights, there was a feeling that the character was being ‘re-set’ to some extent. A decisively younger actor was taking over the role, and the supporting part of Moneypenny was recast to a younger actress. Yet Bond’s history with Tracy didn’t disappear. If anything, Dalton’s gritted-teeth portrayal of Bond seemed more informed by his sorry history than ever before. The next film, Licence to Kill, confirmed this when Tracy was once again explicitly acknowledged, this time to explain Bond’s muted reaction at his friend Felix’s wedding: ‘He was married once… a long time ago,’ Felix tells his new wife.

    But that ‘long time’ was getting longer, and by the time of the Pierce Brosnan films, the producers publicly questioned whether Bond could still be thought to have lost Tracy. The references to some sort of loss in Bond’s past started to get increasingly vague. In GoldenEye, the villain remarks to Bond:

    I might as well ask if all those vodka martinis silence the screams of all the men you’ve killed… or if you’ve found forgiveness in the arms of all those willing women for the dead ones you failed to protect?

    This could be a reference to anybody, and indeed the next two Bond films (Tomorrow Never Dies and The World is Not Enough), made half-hearted attempts to give Bond new women to mourn. But there was only one Tracy.

    Which brings us back to Casino Royale. Now, for the first time, the screen Bond’s greatest heartbreak is Vesper Lynd, rather than Tracy. The subplot of Bond’s disenchantment with his job isn’t as pronounced, but certainly Vesper’s betrayal is seen to harden him: his definitive line from the book (‘the bitch is dead’) is in the film, although it’s something of a throwaway. The whole point of the film is to define the new Bond, and–as in the early novels–that new definition centres on his relationship with Vesper. Casino Royal swaps a post-Tracy Bond for a post-Vesper Bond.

    But the most intriguing question is this: has the re-boot given the producers to possibility of re-visiting the Tracy plotline, something akin to the way Batman Begins has given the producers of that series the opportunity to go back to the Joker? Casino Royale doesn’t wrap its plot up neatly, finishing with Bond picking up the trail of people above Le Chiffre (something he is able to do because of a last gesture by Vesper). It’s reminiscent of the way in which the early Bonds were structured, and it holds forth the hope that we might see a return to Bond films with some continuity of tone and plot from film to film. Enough time has passed since the early Bonds for new films to revisit the novels, and it would be wonderful to see a more Fleming-driven Bond series, one that built like the sixties films did to the great love, and tragedy, of Bond’s life. As good as the original On Her Majesty’s Secret Service is, I’d love to see a new version with a strong lead actor. Can the producers really let this new Bond carry on indefinitely without encountering Tracy again?

    Click here to visit Stephen Rowley’s official website: Cinephobia. Originally published at Cinephobia.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  2. Casino Royale Expected To Break Bond Box Office Record In Two Weeks

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-10

    It was previously reported on CBn that Casino Royale was estimated to become the highest grossing film in the entire James Bond 007 series–breaking the current record held by 2002’s Die Another Day. The Hollywood Reporter reveals that the record should be smashed within two weeks.

    With a worldwide total currently exceeding $376 million (the final total for Die Another Day was $431 million), Mark Zucker, distribution president at Sony Pictures Releasing International said to expect Casino Royale to break the record by ‘the weekend after next.’

    Contributing to Casino Royale‘s massive success at the box office are its several record-breaking openings around the world. Zucker additionally predicted that Casino Royale‘s international box office, which currently stands at $247 million, would surpass Die Another Day‘s final international total of $271 million by this week.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  3. 'You Know My Name' Included In Early 'Original Song' Oscar Nominations

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-10

    Chris Cornell’s ‘You Know My Name,’ the title song for Casino Royale is listed in the early nominations list for the ‘Original Song’ category for the 79th Academy Awards.

    Included with 55 other songs, the list will be trimmed down to the final three/four/five on 16 January 2007 when members of the Music Branch in both Beverly Hills and New York City will vote for their choices after hearing random clips of each song. The nominations will be announced on 23 January at 5:30am PST in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.

    As Coming Soon reports, ‘a song must consist of words and music, both of which are original and written specifically for the film in order to be eligible. A clearly audible, intelligible, substantive rendition of both lyric and melody must be used in the body of the film or as the first music cue in the end credits.’

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

    Pre-order the ‘You Know My Name’ CD single from Amazon.co.uk (£3.99)

    Pre-order the ‘You Know My Name’ CD single from Amazon.com ($11.99)

    Interview with David Arnold – Scoring Casino Royale

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  4. Friday Estimates Knock Casino Royale & Happy Feet From Top Two

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-09

    While the official numbers are to be announced regarding the box office for Friday, 8 December, the current estimates on Box Office Mojo are predicting that both Casino Royale and Happy Feet will finally be knocked out of the top two in the US.

    James Bond and the dancing penguins have ruled the US box office since both films opened on 17 November. While Casino Royale was #2 on the weekends, the film was nearly always in the top spot for each weekday box office.

    New competition from Mel Gibson’s Apocalypto, The Holiday, and Blood Diamond however, may knock Bond and the penguins out of the top two for this weekend. The current estimate figures are: Apocalypto with $4.9 million, The Holiday with $4.4, Happy Feet with $3.0, and Blood Diamond and Casino Royale with $2.6 each.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  5. Two Connery-Era Bond Girls Appear In Casino Royale

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-08

    Cameo appearances are a common occurrence in the James Bond series. Whether it is Michael G. Wilson in a blink-and-you’ll-miss-him role or Maud Adams in A View To A Kill, there is often someone to be on the lookout for. 2006’s Casino Royale is no different…

    In addition to the striking presence of Bond girls Eva Green, Caterina Murino, and Ivana Milicevic in Casino Royale, the film also features appearances by two Bond girls from the Sean Connery 007-era.

    When an early cast list for Casino Royale was released online earlier in the year, eagle-eyed Bond fans noticed the listing of Tsai Chin, who plays ‘Madame Wu’ in the film–a cardplayer seen in the main poker competition between Bond and Le Chiffre.

    Bond fans also know her as the character of ‘Ling,’ who is in bed with Bond in the pre-credits of 1967’s You Only Live Twice.

    The other appearance went unnoticed until after the film was released. Listed as ‘Card Player #3’ on the Casino Royale credits is Diane Hartford. In the film, she is the woman seated at the poker table during the game between Bond and Dimitrios in the Bahamas.

    Bond fans can also spot Hartford in 1965’s Thunderball. She is the woman Bond dances with at the Kiss Kiss Club, while trying to evade Fiona Volpe and the SPECTRE henchmen.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  6. Caterina Murino On The James Bond Series: Then & Now

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-07

    Caterina Murino was interviewed by The Courier Mail, where she speaks about playing the role of ‘Solange’ in Casino Royale, her thoughts on the James Bond series–then and now, working with Dame Judi Dench, and more…

    Speaking about her audition for the role, which ironically took place the day after she had fallen off a horse and broke several ribs, Murino said: ‘I went to the audition completely paralysed, under drugs. I don’t remember what I did.’

    Speaking on her last scene in the film, she said of co-star Dame Judi Dench: ‘She’s absolutely a great person. And I spent a lovely afternoon with her in front of my hammock.’

    ‘I wasn’t a very huge fan of Bond because I always thought it was a little chauvinistic. It’s a male movie. I think for the first time, women can also enjoy to watch a Bond movie. Daniel is such a great actor but a beautiful man also. Oh, yeah.’

    Click here to read the entire article online.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  7. Casino Royale Helps Push Sony Past $3 Billion Milestone

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-07

    Only a few weeks ago, CBn reported that Casino Royale had helped push the James Bond 007 franchise past the $4 billion milestone.

    Now, according to a press release from Movie City News, the worldwide box office success of Casino Royale has contributed to helping Sony reach the $3 billion milestone at worldwide box office…

    SONY PICTURES ENTERTAINMENT REACHES $3 BILLION
    AT WORLDWIDE BOX OFFICE FOR THE FIRST TIME

    Milestone is Only The Fourth Time in Motion Picture History
    Any Studio Reaches More Than $3 Billion Globally

    SPE Sets New Studio High for International B.O.;
    Studio is on Pace to Pass Industry-Wide Domestic Box-Office Record

    For the first time in its history, Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) will exceed more than $3 billion in worldwide ticket sales tomorrow, December 8th, it was announced by Jeff Blake, chairman, worldwide marketing and distribution for the Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group and vice chairman of SPE. This milestone achievement, reached with three weeks still to go in 2006, marks just the fourth time in motion picture history that any studio has reached the $3 billion mark in a single year.

    Internationally, the studio has already realized its best year of all time, with just under $1.5 billion and counting. Domestically, the studio has already passed more than $1.5 billion and is on pace to surpass $1.573 billion, the most any studio has ever generated at the box office in a single year in North America, a record held by Sony since 2002.

    2006 marks the third time in the past five years that SPE has been the #1 studio in domestic market share. As Sony finishes the year, the studio controls over 18% of all tickets sold in the United States and Canada. Led by The DaVinci Code the worldwide blockbuster that has grossed over $750 million at the box office, SPE has seen four films exceed more than $100 million in domestic box office–including Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Click, The DaVinci Code and Casino Royale–and five more have surpassed the $100 million worldwide threshold (Pink Panther, Monster House, Open Season, Underworld: Evolution, and Little Man).

    Commenting on the announcement, Blake said, ‘This is the kind of year that is pretty hard to top. Hitting $3 billion in worldwide box office is an incredible accomplishment in every way. The fact that we are reaching this peak by potentially passing the domestic industry box office record while at the same time enjoying our best year ever internationally is just a staggering achievement that makes us all very proud. This isn’t the result of just one film–our entire slate really worked this year, and credit for our success goes first and foremost to the extraordinary filmmakers and actors that brought us The DaVinci Code, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Click, Casino Royale, The Pink Panther, Underworld: Evolution, Monster House, Open Season, and so many others.’

    Blake also credited ‘the remarkable talent and hard work exhibited by our production, marketing, and distribution teams. Today, we’re celebrating and thanking everyone who played a part in the success of our 2006 slate worldwide.’

    The studio reached its landmark achievement in a year that featured a record 12 films opening at #1 and strong performances from all the labels under the Sony Pictures Entertainment banner: Columbia Pictures, Screen Gems, Revolution Studios, TriStar Pictures, and co-productions in association with MGM.

    SPE’s year began with Screen Gems’ Underworld: Evolution, which topped the box office and went on to gross more than $100 million worldwide. Two weeks later, Screen Gems’ When a Stranger Calls debuted at #1, followed by Columbia’s comedy The Pink Panther, which grossed over $150 million worldwide. In late April, TriStar delivered the horror hit Silent Hill, which opened #1 and went on to take in nearly $100 million worldwide, and the following week, the Robin Williams comedy RV led all releases in its first weekend and proved to have long legs at the box office by continuing to perform solidly throughout the summer, reaching $70 million domestically.

    In May, Columbia produced its biggest smash hit of the year: The DaVinci Code. The highly anticipated film delivered on every level, opening to $77 million domestically, reaching $217 million in the U.S. and an additional $538 million internationally–becoming the highest-grossing international blockbuster in Columbia’s history. The studio’s success continued throughout the summer, as the comedies Click and Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby both opened #1 and saw strong returns at the nation’s ticket booths. Also, contributing to the studio’s success this summer was the animated hit Monster House, which took in more than $135 million worldwide.

    Heading into the fall, the studio added three more #1 openings. First came Columbia’s Gridiron Gang, followed by the animated hit Open Season, the first film from Sony Pictures Animation, which has grossed more than $160 million worldwide, and Columbia’s The Grudge 2. Most recently, Columbia released the 21st James Bond adventure Casino Royale to more than $40 million–and the film has surpassed more than $300 million worldwide after just three weeks in release.

    SPE reaches the $3 billion mark with two films yet to debut in 2006: the romantic comedy The Holiday, in theaters tomorrow and The Pursuit of Happyness, starring Will Smith, set for December 15.

    About Sony Pictures Entertainment

    Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) is a subsidiary of Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Tokyo-based Sony Corporation. SPE’s global operations encompass motion picture production and distribution; television production and distribution; digital content creation and distribution; worldwide channel investments; home entertainment acquisition and distribution, operation of studio facilities; development of new entertainment products, services and technologies; and distribution of filmed entertainment in 67 countries. Sony Pictures Entertainment can be found on the World Wide Web at http://www.sonypictures.com.

    Press Release

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  8. Casino Royale Sets Best Bond Film Opening Day In Australia

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-07

    CBn had previously reported that premiere of Casino Royale in Sydney was thrilling fans, and the newest James Bond film is apparently have a similar effect on the box office.

    Variety reports that Casino Royale set a new all-time best opening day in Australia, taking in $1.15 million at 405 playdates.

    That first day taking, combined with other grosses around the world, helped to push Casino Royale‘s worldwide box office currently to $331 million–$100 million short of the final total 2002’s Die Another Day.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  9. Daniel Craig On Becoming Bond: 'It's A Phone Call, You've Got The Job.'

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-06

    While Casino Royale has broken box office records around the world and firmly established Daniel Craig as the new James Bond, the actor looks back on the not-so-easy path to becoming the newest 007–reports News.com.au.

    Craig reveals he was in Baltimore, taking a break from working on Invasion when he got the phone call: ‘Yes, I was in Baltimore with Nicole Kidman. Well Nicole wasn’t with me in the supermarket obviously.’

    It’s always an anti-climax, there’s nothing tangible or physical that happens to you–it’s a phone call, you’ve got the job. I was on my own because everybody was working so I phoned everybody I could and told them, “You’ve got to keep a lid on it” and then I went to a bar and had a great night. I just got smashed–I don’t remember getting home.’

    Getting assitance from a personal trainer was also on Craig’s agenda in preparation for Casino Royale. ‘There’s narcissism definitely, his shirt seemed to come off an awful lot in this movie, but I wanted to make it look realistic. I just wanted to make sure he looked right.’

    ‘I didn’t give it a huge amount of deep thought, I just knew I had to change myself physically whatever situation he was in. It’s just acting, a bit of acting,’ he said with a grin.

    ‘Unless we know that he can hurt himself or make mistakes then how can we believe he’s going to fall in love?’ says Craig when explaining how he felt about Bond in Casino Royale ‘I just approached it with that in mind.’

    ‘Daniel’s not your pretty-boy James Bond, he’s got a sexiness, he’s handsome in a tough, rugged way,’ said director Martin Campbell. ‘But more importantly he’s a wonderful actor and we did need someone, given that we’re more character driven in this, to actually be able to handle that role. In my view he’s probably the best actor that we’ve ever had in the franchise.’

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  10. 007 Goes Mobile With Casino Royale Game From Sony

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-12-06

    CBn previously reported that Sony would be launching a Casino Royale mobile game that would allow players to ‘acquire Agent 007’s style and wits as you take on life-threatening missions for Her Majesty’s Secret Service.’

    The game is now available at the official website. The following press release reveals further details…

    007 Goes Mobile with Casino Royale Game From Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

    James Bond fans can now experience the excitement of Columbia Pictures’ and MGM’s Casino Royale in the palms of their hands with the first 007 game for mobile phones available in North America. The action-packed game is the largest mobile game launch to date for Sony Pictures Home Entertainment and is available to Cingular, Sprint, Verizon, T-Mobile and Alltel subscribers. Customers can download the game from their carriers’ portal on the handset, or from the Sony Pictures web site (www.sonypictures.com/mobile).

    The Casino Royale mobile game features 14 levels, drawing gamers into Bond’s first 007 mission as he faces off with criminal mastermind Le Chiffre in a high stakes poker showdown. Featuring ‘007’s’ “Bond move,” the game lets users engage in hand-to-hand combat or employ an arsenal of weapons to take on even the fiercest enemies while escaping a series of dangerous encounters. The game loosely follows the story of the film itself.

    In the hit movie, which is currently in release worldwide, Daniel Craig stars as “007” James Bond, the smoothest, sexiest, most lethal agent on Her Majesty’s Secret Service in Casino Royale. Based on the first Bond book written by Ian Fleming, the story recounts the making of the world’s greatest secret agent. Martin Campbell directed the 21st adventure in the 44-year-old franchise, from a screenplay by Neal Purvis & Robert Wade and Paul Haggis.

    James Bond’s first “007” mission leads him to Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen), banker to the world’s terrorists. In order to stop him, and bring down the terrorist network, Bond must beat Le Chiffre in a high-stakes poker game at Casino Royale. Bond is initially annoyed when a beautiful British Treasury official, Vesper Lynd (Eva Green) is assigned to deliver his stake for the game and watch over the government’s money. But, as Bond and Vesper survive a series of lethal attacks by Le Chiffre and his henchmen, a mutual attraction develops leading them both into further danger and events that will shape Bond’s life forever. The film is currently in theaters worldwide.

    “Building from the success of the recent theatrical release of Casino Royale, we are excited to bring to life the thrilling film experience to gamers on the go,” said Eric Berger, Vice President of Mobile Entertainment, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.

    The game complements a suite of mobile content offerings around Casino Royale, including wallpapers and ringtones for the phone.

    About Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

    Sony Pictures Home Entertainment is a Sony Pictures Entertainment company. SPE is a subsidiary of Sony Corporation ofAmerica, (SCA), a subsidiary of Tokyo-based Sony Corporation. SPE’s global operations encompass motion picture production and distribution; television production and distribution; digital content creation and distribution; worldwide channel investments; home entertainment acquisition and distribution; operation of studio facilities; development of new entertainment products, services and technologies; and distribution of filmed entertainment in 67 countries. Sony Pictures Entertainment can be found on the World Wide Web at http://www.sonypictures.com.

    Press Release

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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