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  1. Casino Royale – Official Website Report #7

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-28
    Teaser Poster

    Official ‘Casino Royale’ Teaser Poster

    The official Casino Royale website blog has been updated by ‘Yarborough.’ Coverage this time centers on underwater action in the Bahamas, and Ivana Milicevic, who plays Valenka in Casino Royale.

    The harshness of weather is again on the discussion board for this seventh update on the official 007 website. This time, however, they involve the underwater locations of the Bahamas. Ivana Milicevic, who plays the bodyguard/girlfriend of Le Chiffre in the film, has been doing some diving off of his yacht for a sequence in the film.

    According to Milicevic: ‘That whole experience was freezing cold because I had a lot of underwater stuff swimming in my Bond girl bathing suit and I’m basically free diving… Read the entire report here on the official website.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

    Related ‘Casino Royale’ Articles

    Casino Royale Main Page

    Casino Royale Latest News

    Casino Royale International Release Dates

    Casino Royale Cast & Production Updates

  2. 'For Your Eyes Only' Celebrates 25 Years

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-27

    25 Years ago, on 24 June 1981 in the UK and 26 June in the US, the twelfth James Bond film, For Your Eyes Only was released. With the tagline, ‘No One Comes Close To James Bond 007’ and a cast filled with such actors as Carole Bouquet, Julian Glover, and Topol, the film proved to be major success, grossing over $190 million. CBn looks back at some of the reviews of this Bond film. The good, and the bad…

    ‘…the real standout is Bond’s steeled attitude: his mind clearly renewing his “license to kill,” giving us Roger Moore at his most vengeful..’

    Christopher Null, FilmCritic.com

    ‘More of the outlandish silliness of a few other Bond issues is mercifully absent, replaced by a greater emphasis on believable thrills.’

    John J. Puccio, DVDTown.com

    ‘For Your Eyes Only’ by: James Berardinelli

    ‘With For Your Eyes Only, Roger Moore’s fifth appearance as Bond and the twelfth entry in the long-running series, 007 enters the 1980s with a return to the “glory days” of the ’60s. Realizing it would be tough to top the technical glitz of Moonraker, the film makers wisely chose not to try, opting instead for a retro-Bond adventure that takes the intrepid superspy back into familiar territory: KGB involvement in a plan that centers on classified British secrets.

    But that’s not the only aspect of For Your Eyes Only that looks more to Bond’s past than his future. Blofeld, the constant nemesis during the Connery years, makes a brief return appearance, and the film opens with 007 visiting the grave of his dead wife, Tracy. Regarding familiar faces, M isn’t in this movie (Bernard Lee having died just prior to the start of filming), but Q (Desmond Llewelyn) and Moneypenny (Lois Maxwell) are. Also, KGB general Gogel (Walter Gotell), who first came on board during The Spy Who Loved Me, has a small part. (Gogel was in every film from Spy through The Living Daylights.)

    Bond’s mission this time, “for [his] eyes only”, is to locate and, if possible, recover Great Britain’s ATAC equipment — a ship-based weapons system that allows the user to take control of the country’s nuclear submarines, ordering them to attack any target. ATAC was on board a freighter that sank in the Ionian Sea, and Bond has at least one major rival, a sly villain named Kristatos (Julian Glover), who’s after it as well. Joining 007 on his quest is Melina (French actress Carole Bouquet), the daughter of a scientist killed by Kristatos, who has vowed revenge against her father’s murderers. Also along for the ride is the good-natured smuggler Columbo (Topol), who Kristatos set up as a fall guy.

    Locations in For Your Eyes Only vary across Europe. On a per-minute basis, there are more stunts and chases in this film than in any previous 007 adventure, and some are quite spectacular. There’s a car chase, a shoot-and-dodge race down icy slopes and through a bobsled run, a tense mountain-scaling sequence, and nearly as much underwater action as in Thunderball. For Your Eyes Only has its share of breathtaking moments. As for the music — suffice it to say that John Barry is missed.

    Alas, Julian Glover’s Kristatos won’t be remembered as one of the great 007 bad guys. While the actor’s ability is beyond question, it’s usually not talent that makes for a memorable Bond villain, and Glover just isn’t over-the-top or nasty enough. (One wonders if the film makers might have done better keeping Blofeld around for more than the pre-credits sequence.) Locque (Michael Gothard), Kristatos’ henchman, is as dull as his master — he looks evil, but in the wake of Jaws, comes across as rather pathetic.

    Like Diana Rigg in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, Carole Bouquet is one of the few Bond girls who can actually act (although she doesn’t get much chance to show it). Lynn-Holly Johnson plays a young skater who’s infatuated with 007, but this particular subplot, played for comedy, never works, and is occasionally painful to endure. Fortunately, it doesn’t eat up much screen time.

    In the final analysis, For Your Eyes Only is a solid adventure, although it could have been better. There’s enough action to hold those with even a short attention span, and Roger Moore’s deft charm hasn’t yet begun to wear thin (that starts with the next film, Octopussy). By the end of the ’80s, Bond would be viewed as something of a relic, but at least the decade opened with an enjoyable outing.’

    James Berardinelli, Movie Reviews

    ‘In the de rigueur chase sequence, the movie asks the question: Are two fast motorbikes with on-board machine guns more than a match for Bond as he escapes with just a pair of skis? If you don’t know the answer, this has to be your first Bond movie.’

    Steve Rhodes, Internet Reviews

    ‘One of Moore’s best turns as 007.’

    Scott Weinberg, EFilmCritic

    ‘For Your Eyes Only’ by: Roger Ebert

    For Your Eyes Only is a competent James Bond thriller, well-crafted, a respectable product from the 007 production line. But it’s no more than that. It doesn’t have the special sly humor of the Sean Connery Bonds, of course, but also doesn’t have the visual splendor of such Roger Moore Bonds as The Spy Who Loved Me, or special effects to equal Moonraker. And in this era of jolting, inspired visual effects from George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, it’s just not quite in the same league. That will no doubt come as a shock to Producer Albert (Cubby) Broccoli, who has made the James Bond series his life’s work.

    Broccoli and his late partner, Harry Saltzman, all but invented the genre that Hollywood calls “event films” or “special effects films.” The ingredients, which Bond popularized and others imitated, always included supervillains, sensational stunts, sex, absurd plots to destroy or rule the world, and, of course, a hero. The 007 epics held the patent on that formula in the late ’60s and early ’70s, but they are growing dated. For Your Eyes Only doesn’t have any surprises. We’ve seen all the big scenes before, and when the villains turn out to be headquartered in an impregnable mountaintop fortress, we yawn. After Where Eagles Dare and The Guns Of Navarone and the hollow Japanese volcano that Bond himself once infiltrated, let’s face it: When you’ve seen one impregnable mountaintop fortress, you’ve seen ’em all.
    The movie opens with James Bond trapped inside a remote-controlled helicopter being guided by a bald sadist in a wheelchair. After Bond triumphs, the incident is never referred to again. This movie involves the loss of the secret British code controlling submarine-based missiles. The Russians would like to have it. Bond’s mission: Retrieve the control console from a ship sunk in the Aegean. The movie breaks down into a series of set pieces. Bond and his latest Bondgirl (long-haired, undemonstrative Carole Bouquet) dive in a mini-sub, engage in a complicated chase through the back roads of Greece, crawl through the sunken wreck in wet suits, are nearly drowned and blown up, etc. For variety, Bond and Bouquet are dragged behind a powerboat as shark bait, and then Bond scales the fortress mountain. A fortress guard spots Bond dangling from a rope thousands of feet in the air. What does he do? Does he just cut the rope? No, sir, the guard descends part way to tantalize Bond by letting him drop a little at a time. The rest is predictable.

    In a movie of respectable craftsmanship and moderate pleasures, there’s one obvious disappointment. The relationship between Roger Moore and Carole Bouquet is never worked out in an interesting way. Since the days when he was played by Sean Connery, agent 007 has always had a dry, quiet, humorous way with women. Roger Moore has risen to the same challenge, notably opposite Barbara Bach in The Spy Who Loved Me. But Moore and Bouquet have no real chemistry in For Your Eyes Only. There’s none of that kidding byplay. It’s too routine. The whole movie is too routine.’

    Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times

    ‘Formula, fun Roger Moore Bond.’

    Steve Crum, Video-ReviewMaster.com

    ‘The Bond series’ most superb action assembly, plus a terrific performance from Roger Moore’

    Jeffrey Westhoff, Northwest Herald

  3. CBn Reviews 'GoldenEye'

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-26

    Over the last several months, members of the CBn Forum have been reviewing all the James Bond 007 films in the “Countdown Threads“. If you wish to join in on the forum discussion all you have to do is register. Now here are some selected reviews, varying in opinion, of GoldenEye

    ‘GoldenEye’ by Turn

    Half a good Bond film and half that seems to underachieve making for a good, but less than entirely satisfying film for me.

    I thought there was trouble when the gunbarrel began with the underwhelming Eric Serra theme that rendered the song almost unrecognizable when it needed a bombastic rendition and Brosnan fires in a stiff motion. What followed, though, amounted to one of the best stunts (the bungee jump) and teasers in the series UNTIL they couldn’t leave well enough alone by making Bond fly into the plane. And here I thought the Moore era ended a decade ago.

    The beginning of the film proper was rousing with the return of the good old DB5. Nice to see Bond in the casino and Xenia is simply one of the most fantastic Bond women ever. But things drag somewhat after that. The Severnaya scenes seem to drag and there seems to be a lot of time taken to reestablish Bond for a new audience.

    The scenes in Russia are fine, especially the meeting in the Soviet graveyard, one of the most atmospheric Bond scenes yet. But I have to admit I am probably the only person who finds the tank scene underwhelming. It’s like an outtake from the Blues Brothers with just a lot of destruction as Bond uses a mode of transport he’s never used as the main emphasis of the chase.

    The train scene is good until Bond uses the all-too-convenient laser watch to escape. Didn’t Connery use that device 12 years before? Shouldn’t Bond be a little more creative than that? Then we get the BMW which really has no purpose except EON got a good deal in promoting it to waylay other costs.

    The assault on the stronghold was good. I especially love the scene where Bond arms the Bond with bullets flying around his head and he merely shrugs as if they were pesky flies. The fight with Trevelyan is one of the series’ best. But the very end is somewhat lame, but at least we’re spared the juvinile double entendre.

    As far as characters go, they are also mixed. Bean makes a decent villain even if his motivation is a bit thin. I am amazed at how many people like the Natalya character. She’s okay, but nothing great. She reminds me a lot of Kara from The Living Daylights, but is more annoying and opinionated. When I think of the character I am reminded more of the incessant whining and yelling than anything else.

    Wade is useless, whereas Zukovsky is at least interesting here. Orumov is a good character and Xenia steals the film. Brosnan does a good job here although you feel he has a few things to work out. He exceeded my expectations, though, on his first try.

    So, GoldenEye is a very mixed bag with the bad dragging down some really good elements to make the film less than I wish it would or could be. But it’s gotten somewhat better over the years for me.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by tdalton

    GoldenEye, Pierce Brosnan’s first film as 007, may go down as the only Bond film in the franchise that has little, if anything, to do with the character of James Bond. The character of James Bond is “outbonded” in this film by the outstanding Sean Bean, who turns out to be the only part of the film that keeps it from surpassing Die Another Day as the worst in the series.

    Considering that Pierce Brosnan was considered for the role in 1987, eight years before the release of this film, it’s amazing how young he still looks, and how wrong he would have been for the role (from an age perspective) back in ’87. Even in 1995, Brosnan still appears to be a bit young for the role, but to his credit, he does fit the bill quite well in the follow up, Tomorrow Never Dies.

    Ultimately what keeps this film from being great is that it takes an incredibly long time for the plot to get going. First of all, it’s amazing how Bond just happens to be in Monte Carlo at the beginning of the film when all of Janus’ nefarious schemes begin to go down. There is no reason given for Bond being there, other than cutting out at least a half hour of detective work on the part of Bond.

    Other errors that detract from the film are contained within the PTS, where Trevelyan is shot at point-blank-range by General Orumov, yet somehow manages to survive both that and the destruction of the facility. It’s not possible for Orumov to be using blanks, as later in the sequence he uses the same weapon on one of his troops, fatally wounding him. Basically, the producers made a very big mistake here and hoped that the audience wouldn’t catch it.

    But now, back to the main problem with the film. Over the course of the entire film, Pierce Brosnan is “outbonded” by Sean Bean every step of the way. With the exception of the whole nefarious plot to rob the banks of London, everything else about Bean’s portrayal of Trevelyan just simply screams James Bond. He is ruthless when it’s called for, he does a fantastic job of delivering the one-liners that his character is given, and he just overall captures the essence of Fleming’s Bond, something that Pierce Brosnan was unable to do with this film. Bean will probably go down as the biggest missed opportunity in the history of the franchise, as I believe that we would have experienced a true golden age for the Bond franchise had he been given a chance to step into the role.

    With the whole issue of Sean Bean put aside for a moment (which is hard to do, since he overshadows the film even when he’s not on screen), attention should be turned to Natalya, played quite well by Izabella Scorupco. Really, the entire film revolves around her character, often forcing Bond to take a back seat to her. Without her presence in the film, Bond would not have survived to the end, it’s just that simple. Without her screaming in his ear in the helicopter, it’s unlikely that he would have woken up in time to hit the ejector seat. Without her piloting the helicopter at the end of the film to rescue him from the satellite dish, both he and Trevelyan would have suffered very much the same fate. Sadly, while her character is quite good, she marks the beginning of the Bond equals that would plague the Brosnan Era.

    GoldenEye is also, perhaps, the most self-aware Bond film in the series. Constant efforts are made to remind the audience of who James Bond actually was, or at least how the current production team perceived him to be at the time. Every step of the way, it felt as though the writers were forcing characters into positions to make some kind of social criticism of the Bond character, from M’s “dinosaur” and “relic of the Cold War” remarks to Moneypenny’s radical update, which was used to remind Bond that his past encounters with the Moneypenny character would no longer be considered appropriate for the post-Cold War Era.

    One part of the film that I did enjoy, however, was Eric Serra’s score. While it is widely bashed as being the worst of the scores, I find it to be very refreshing and it fits in with the tone of the film quite well. It would have been nice to see Serra get another chance at a Bond film, and to see how he would have grown into the job. Also, the writing team of U2’s Bono and The Edge team up with Tina Turner for a fantastic title song.

    Overall, GoldenEye just isn’t a very good film at all. There are several major plotholes that are not addressed, and there is just not enough going on to hold the attention of the audience. And, the fact that Sean Bean completely steals the show from Pierce Brosnan and proves that it should have been him in the role instead, help to take away from what had the potential to be a great film. One can only imagine how great this film could have been had it been Timothy Dalton or Sean Bean as Bond versus Anthony Hopkins as Trevelyan. Either one of those combinations would have been outstanding, but the film that the audience was ultimately given was lackluster, at best.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by DLibrasnow

    In what will surely shock some on CBn (who are under the mistaken impression that I dislike Pierce Brosnan) let me now proceed with my lovefest review of his first James Bond movie – GoldenEye.

    After a six-year absence it was with breathless excitement that I sat there in a darkened movie theater at the Mall of America in Minnesota waiting for that familiar gunbarrel sequence focusing on one of my favorite television and movie actors.

    What followed was a great couple of hours with the best femme fatale in a 007 movie since 1983s Fatima Blush. Famke Janssen was so much fun as Xenia that she dominated the screen in every scene in which she appeared.

    Brosnan throws himself into the role with vigor. With something definitely to prove after being denied the role eight years earlier he gives a rousing and thoroughly entertaining performance as the British secret agent. Brosnan never looked better and it’s only a shame that he failed to live up to his initial promise with his subsequent movies.

    Judi Dench gives the series, and all the tired old-boy M-scenes of previous movies, a shot in the arm with a fresh take on the part of Bond’s boss. The dialogue was crisp and crackling and although the novelty has since worn off back in 1995 it was a welcome change.

    One of my favorite young British actors Sean Bean (of the Sharpe series and ‘Stormy Monday’) appeared as the main villain. It was great to finally get a good, involving fight back in the 007 movies as the two agents threw themselves around the lofty inclines of a radio transmitter.

    Which brings me to – secret villains base. It’s not quite a hollowed out volcano, but hiding the transmitter under a lake was a nice touch. The actual location has since appeared in a number of movies and television shows but at the time of GoldenEye‘s release it was exciting to see a return to the world of secret villains super-lairs.

    One element I really liked was the score from Eric Serra. It was fresh, different and toe tapping good. Serra thankfully used the James Bond Theme sparingly (unlike some idiots I could mention) and I really enjoyed it.
    Overall a good, solid James Bond movie that allowed the viewer to have a fun, entertaing ride along with the actors.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by Tarl_Cabot

    A superior film to Brosnan’s more recent outings but it still ranks #16 [out of them all] for me because of some incoherent script issues, a weak score, a horrible song(the worst)and a a great pre-title savaged by cheesy special effects in place of a real stunt performed.

    Brosnan makes a good debut but he’s a little erratic in his approach. It seems like he doesn’t want to be too serious (Dalton) but he does anyway, and it seems he doesn’t want to be too campy, (Moore) but he makes some one lame liners so it seems he really seems to want to be SuperBond -everyone’s all purpose 007.It’s a fair effort but the film never allows him to knock it outta the park. Still, a pleasnant Bond film, especially after a 6.5 year hiatus.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by A Kristatos

    It was a tough choice for me to choose which Brosnan movie I liked better, Tomorrow Never Dies or GoldenEye. For me, GoldenEye finishes a tad behind Tomorrow Never Dies for third place amongst the Brosnan Bonds, probably due to the ultra modern and very unBondlike Eric Serra soundtrack, and an over-the-top ending to the PTS (Bond freefalling to catch an out of control airplane? Puhleeze!). Both movies are very similar in that they both feature strong villains and Bond girls. Both utilize their locales very well. And both films helped revitalize the Bond franchise amongst the general public, even though I find both Timothy Dalton movies very well regarded.

    Utimately, the Serra composed GoldenEye soundtrack just sounded completely misplaced in a Bond movie, though Run, Shoot and Jump was one of the best action cues of the entire series, and the Natalya romantic theme was also very well done. The rest of the soundtrack (with the exception of the recomposed tank chase scene music) was rubbish.

    In short, GoldenEye was everything one would expect in a Bond movie. Great villains (Sean Bean is terrific in this film), fights, girls (with the exception of the most highly annoying Xenia Onatopp), chases and humor make this movie very good. Also, a terrific debut by Pierce Brosnan as James Bond really gave the series the shot in the arm it needed, as Brosnan portrayed Bond with the perfect balance of humor, toughness and charm. If only the soundtrack could have leaned toward the more traditional “Barrylike” sound that David Arnold scored for Tomorrow Never Dies. GoldenEye then would have been truly golden for me.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by Moonraker

    A great Bond movie. It introduces Bond to the 90’s in a great way. The 5 year gap gave the producers enough time to get it right. The characterization and the action is great and the story line is believable. The score is horrible and ruins the impact on alot of scenes (car chase). Other than that it is a great Bond film.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by Qwerty

    While this film it often looked upon as the magnificent GoldenEye that brought Bond back to the 90’s and Brosnan into the role, I think, because of those reasons, it is sometimes overrated.

    The plot of the film is a good one, the idea of two 00’s fighting against eachother as the good and bad of the film is a top idea and it is executed rather well. The GoldenEye satellite is also a great idea and it puts a nice spin on the usual superweapon that is just supposed to fire a laser, rockets, etc. Top marks there.

    The casting is all around pretty good. Pierce Brosnan gives a good performance as James Bond, continuing in his next film as well. Sean Bean and Famke Janssen are terrific villains as well, even though the over-the-top Xenia easily steals the show. She’s all the more better because of it. I thought Natayla was an okay Bond girl, albeit rather average, and not one that really stands out like some of the others do.

    I’ve come to like Eric Serra’s techno-laden score more as time goes by, there are some great cues in it, such as The GoldenEye Overture used throughout. The main titles along with Tina Turner’s magnificent opening song are easily some of the best as well. The film had to bring Bond back into the 90’s with style, and it certainly accomplished that. I do enjoy the film greatly, but there are others which I consistently rank higher.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by BondIsMoore

    Plot: GoldenEye. One of my personal favourites. This was the film that introduced me to Bond. I think everybody knew of Goldfinger but when I saw this I was blown away. The story is very personal and rich. Here, we have the main villian being not only an ex double O but a close and personal friend of Bond. The GoldenEye weapon was also a very realistic threat and not too far fetched (Moonraker). The story moves quick and doesn’t waste time reintroducing everyone to the new generation of Bond characters (M) and the story continues to be strong right until the end. The 006 charater was a great figure to hold Bond up against. It was a glimpse to what maybe Bond may become if he gave in to his personal wants (greed, money, power). This film made Bond human again and made people realize that Bond was back!

    Acting: Pierce Brosnan’s first outing is probably the second best(Connery) introduction of a new Bond. He was very real and tough but still charming. He was a great choice which helped resurrect a dying series. Judi Dench really reinvented M and made the charater a little more caring and not so pissed off all the time. Sean Bean is amazing as Alec and Famke Janssen was sexy as Xenia Onatopp. Izabella Scorupco was porbably the most real Bond girl since Octopussy and she is also very hot!

    Score: I love the score. It’s very different then any other Bond. The main theme is awesome and probably my favourite theme next to A View To A Kill.

    Why this is in my top 5: This is #4 because it’s just a great action film. Great characters, great plot, great acting, great score, etc. They could of taken out Bond and put Jack Baur in, it still would be a great film! Thank you GoldenEye for making me a Bond fanatic.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by trumanlodge89

    “Were you expecting someone else?” No, Pierce, not at all, but you were about 5 years too late. GoldenEye is a great throwback Bond film with the right mix of realism and fantastic elements. Great villian, quirky henchmen and a hot Russian girl; what more could one ask for in a Bond flick?

    Our man Broz opens his Bond career in grand style. The jump off the dam is the second coming of Roger’s ski escape in The Spy Who Loved Me. Absolutly great sequence. And the PTS doesn’t let down. (although, where did that mountian come from?) Here is Bond being Bond. A simple mission, with the quips (pithy comebacks) and the clever escape.

    Note to EON producers: Alec Trevelyan is a real Bond villian. Gustav Graves is not. The scene where 006 is revealed as Janus is one of the best moments in the series. The dialogue is so good in this scene (it is in the whole movie, in fact).

    Xenia Onatopp is a character Ian Fleming would’ve loved. A gorgous Russian who got VERY excited when killing. This is an original character. A man who feels no pain (nor pleasure) loses a lot of credibility after it is done 3 times (Thunderball, Tomorrow Never Dies and The World Is Not Enough).

    My main beef with this movie is the music. Two pieces of music work in this movie. The title song and the tank chase. I give Serra credit for trying something new, but its BOND. You don’t screw around with the formula too much in one movie. If you want a new sound, try to ease it in gradually. The opening sequence (post titles) is the worst music to ever be featured in a Bond film. And dont get me started on the end credits. That song wasnt even an original. Tina Turner does a great job on the title track, writen by Bono and The Edge. The lyrics make little sense, but what title theme does?

    They need to start making Bond movies like this again.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by K1Bond007

    I’ll be the odd man out here and list GoldenEye as my second fav. This film is just overall fantastic and one of the best for a mix of everything the film version of James Bond is. Easily Brosnan’s best. A great pre-title credit teaser with Bond transfering from the motorbike to an airplane after going off a cliff. The tank chase, the race between Xenia and Bond at the beginning, the fight(s) between Trevelyan and Bond etc. I have major respect for this film for bridging James Bond to the future – to our modern day. This film could have gone so horribly wrong, but it successfuly made a shift for Bond to the post-Cold War era while staving off Bond becoming “a relic of the Cold War.”

    ‘GoldenEye’ by Double-Oh Agent

    Bond is back! And in 1995, never had those three words sounded so good. After a six-year absence due to problems dealing with MGM’s owner, 007 hit cinema screens once again, this time with a new Bond in the shape of Pierce Brosnan, and suddenly all was right with the world.

    While GoldenEye retained many elements that had made the Bond series a huge success over the years, some things were changed–most notably a new boss, only this “M” was a woman. Judi Dench took over the role of MI6 chief, Barbara Mawdsley, and she had some pointed things to say about her best agent that also cleverly put all those political correctness crazies in their place. In effect, she was saying: “In this film, Bond may be updated for the 90s, but the important things that are essential to his character like gambling, drinking, womanizing, etc. would stay the same.” Ian Fleming would have been proud.

    The bad: Not a whole lot but I would have to say Eric Serra’s score was a disappointment. While I don’t hate it, it just doesn’t work in the film. I actually prefer listening to the score on my stereo than listening to it while watching the movie. There are some good tracks, however, that do work. The best of these is Run, Shoot And Jump–a great action song. I only wish there was more of it to hear. Perhaps the biggest problem with the score is the virtual lack of The James Bond Theme throughout. 007 makes a return to the silver screen for the first time in six years and we have to strain our ears to pick out snippets of his theme song? Please. And then we get a James Bond car–with Stinger missiles, I might add–but it’s only on-screen for two minutes! And no shots of the gadgets being used? Why make a big deal of the car at all? It’s all a bit of a letdown. Where the producers could have shown that stuff in the movie, I don’t know, but as it’s presented, it’s all just a big tease.

    The good: Pierce Brosnan IS James Bond in this movie. While his acting is a little off in a couple of places–namely at MI6 headquarters–the rest of the film, he is rock solid and easily quells anyone’s fears of his ability to play Bond. (The makeup department could have trimmed his hair a little shorter though.) Sean Bean’s Alec Trevelyan is a great villain. The idea to have the bad guy be a former double-oh agent (006) was inspired. I especially like the bit about Trevelyan disarming Bond’s timing devices after Bond is captured. “Still press here do I?” And their climactic fight is particularly brutal and hard-hitting, rivaled only by Bond vs. Grant on the Orient Express in From Russia With Love and Bond vs. Peter Franks in the elevator in Diamonds Are Forever.

    The Bond girls are, in a word, beautiful. Famke Janssen’s Xenia Onatopp is over the top but deliciously so. She is so beautiful and sexy that many a man might still be willing to face the possibility of death to get between her crushing thighs. Janssen seems to be enjoying herself and gives it her all in the role and her performance is all the better for it as she steals most every scene she is in. She’s definitely one of the more memorable henchmen/henchwomen in the series. Izabella Scorupco’s Natalya Simonova, meanwhile, is no shrinking violet either. Her brains and willingness to get involved in the action are also memorable. Originally distrustful of Bond, she quickly switches to his side and her occasional banter with Brosnan over his care of various transportation is funny, particarlarly her questions: “Do you destroy every vehicle you get into?” and “What is it with you and moving vehicles?” Scorupco and Brosnan have good chemistry and she is very likable. I just wish the producers would have kept her hair her natural blonde color. While she is good looking as a brunette, she is absolutely gorgeous as a blonde. But I guess her being a brainy computer expert would be more believable (stereotypically anyway) as a non-blonde.

    Alan Cumming gives a funny and solid performance as computer wiz Boris Grishenko and Dench is good as “M”. I also have to add that it is very nice to see the appearance of Bill Tanner in the film in the guise of Michael Kitchen. While the character may not quite be what Fleming created or the actor in the role, it is still the closest we have gotten to it in the series so far and just the fact that Tanner is in the film is good enough for me.

    The plot is good and holds together well and the use of locations, namely Monte Carlo and St. Petersburg, Russia, is great. And the stunts, oh my, the stunts, are incredible. We get not one, but two fantastic stunts in the pre-titles sequence. The bungee jump off the dam is simply pure Bond and I love the part where Bond is trapped in the chemical factory surrounded by Russian guards. How he gets out of that is really clever with a nice touch added via the squeaky wheel. The tank chase is fantastic and absolutely hilarious as Bond’s indestructible vehicle destroys everything in its path. The part where Bond stops the tank to allow a Russian police car to run into it and then promptly straightens his tie is classic.

    And lastly, Bond’s fights with Xenia and 006 are great. The fight with Xenia is quick but hits all the right notes while the fight with Trevelyan is a down and dirty, drawn-out affair that one should have when former good friends are turned vengeful enemies. My only complaint with the latter fight is that it is shot so tightly that it is kind of hard to see what all is going on sometimes. Other than that, I it’s all good and I can’t wait to see more fights like that.

    GoldenEye was a triumphal return for 007 and ensured that the most successful movie franchise in history would continue well into the future. But Brosnan was only getting started with GoldenEye. In his ensuing films he would get more comfortable in the role. However, it was his first Bond movie that was the best. GoldenEye? No. This was GoldenBond.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by Tiin007

    GoldenEye is definitely the best Bond movie out there. Brosnan had no trouble fitting into the role- his acting is superb. Natalya is an amazing Bond girl who, unlike many Bond girls, actually fits into the plot. The diverse group of villains is probably the best in the series. Sean Bean is perfect for the role of friend-turned-enemy Trevelyan. He reminds me so much of Bond- I often think that this is exactly what Bond would be like as a villain. Xenia is a great femme fatale. I especially love her “unique” way of killing her victims. Boris and Oromuv are also good baddies who help make the movie more interesting. Valentin is a pretty unique character- an ally that has a grudge against Bond (no, Q doesn’t count!). Jack Wade, though I would’ve preferred Felix, at least has some personality unlike previous allies (i.e. Chuck Lee). The score is ok, although at points the music sounds a little too sad. The best part about the movie is how Bond is not only successfully adapted to the 90s, but also feels like the same old Bond we’ve come to know and love. The movie has a modern yet classic feel. This action-packed adventure is a fine example of what a Bond movie should be.

    ‘GoldenEye’ by 00-FAN008

    It’s everything a James Bond film should have; an action-packed opening sequence, a new line of cool gadgets, a chase scene… with a tank! Not to mention, perhaps one of the greatest James Bond villians of all time; 006. It’s a James Bond stew. Pierce Brosnan looks damn fine in a suit, a tux… overall, he looks fine in the shoes of 007. It will be hard to find a better replacement.

    Tina Turner also has a wonderful opening song that sets the mood of the film very well. Although I’ve heard people say that some of the music by Eric Serra doesn’t suit the film, I would have to disagree. It suits the film very well, like the “GoldenEye Overture”, which is very reminiscent of the scene in which Alec confronts Bond in the statue park. Like the film GoldenEye, Serra’s music is dark, powerful, and enjoyable overall.

    GoldenEye‘s conclusion in in league with From Russia With Love’s train fight sequence. This is another area where Serra’s music fits in so well; it perfectly reflects the intensity of the situation. I also thought that the satelite dish was the ideal location for the climax. It honestly could not have been any more exciting.

    The only real thing lacking in GoldenEye would have to be use of the BMW Z3, James Bond’s new car. We only get to see it a few times, and when we do get to see it, the fancy new missiles Q has installed are not exposed to blow up any bad guys. Even though James Bond never uses the Z3 in any action sequences, we were still happy to see the return of the Aston Martin DB5, as well as an exciting tank chase sequence, which is perhaps one of the greatest moments in Bond cinematic history.

  4. Casino Royale Set Report & Photographs Online

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-24

    As production continues on the 21st official James Bond film, Casino Royale, Badtaste.it have scored an exclusive insider report, complete with photographs from the 007 set in Venice, Italy.

    An excerpt of the report follows:

    Day Two: We spent the whole day in Campo San Barnaba (remember the place where Indiana Jones came out of the catacombs under Venice in The Last Crusade? Yep, just there). Eva Green was there as well; she walked from the bridge to the Campo [small square], sporting the same red dress as the day before and holding a briefcase made of metal; then she walked along a Calle, down to the “Toletta” bookstore….

    Badtaste.it

    Visit Badtaste.it for the entire set report as well as the exclusive photographs from the 007 set.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

  5. The Sylvan Whittingham Mason / Jonathan Whittingham CBn Interview

    By Charles Helfenstein on 2006-06-22

    James Bond films have been written by a wide variety of screenwriters, from those famous for their adaptations, Charles Helfensteinsuch as Richard Maibaum, to humorists like Christopher Wood, and even children’s authors like Roald Dahl.

    The first man to write a James Bond screenplay was Jack Whittingham, an Oxford-educated journalist and World War II veteran who had much more in common with Ian Fleming and James Bond than any of his Bond screenwriting successors.

    Whittingham’s early screenwriting on Kevin McClory’s ill-fated Thunderball became the center of a legal battle that would rage on for decades.

    Commanderbond.net recently spoke to Jack Whittingham’s heirs, daughter Sylvan and son Jonathan, about the genesis of Thunderball, the subsequent trial, their Beatles’ connections, and an unmade film about Ian Fleming.

    The Sylvan Whittingham Mason/Jonathan Whittingham CBn Interview

    Q: Your father had a long history of writing spy stories, from his first credited screenplay, Q Planes (1939) up through to the ’60s with Danger Man and James Bond. Was he a big fan of the spy genre?

    SWM: He did have a sneaking admiration for spies in the same way that some of us do for the big bank or train robbers. I wasn’t aware that this was a huge thing with him though I do still have his little Minox spy camera that was used in one of the films.

    Whilst I was growing up during the years 6 to about 11 he was in fact doing several films with children. Mandy, Hunted and The Divided Heart were a run of them and he often used to read his days work to us as a bedtime story. QUOTE: never heard my father say a word against Ian Fleming.One of our birthday parties was recorded for children’s voices and used in a scene in the Divided Heart. He also wrote a screenplay of The Prince and the Pauper for Disney.

    I remember Greville Wynne coming to see us in Malta and my father found him most interesting and had many conversations with him. But maybe you are right, as the last screenplay he wrote was based on the Penkovsky papers which was never filmed and which seems to have disappeared as I can’t find the screenplay among his papers. He was terribly enthusiastic about and engrossed in that subject and had enormous admiration for Penkovsky who he said was a true communist who had become disillusioned with the KGB and was horrified at how they were sorting away money and buying shares to become rich, and doing things like staying in luxurious hotels with mistresses and throwing expensive perfume on the carpet. He said it was because of Penkovsky risking his life to warn John Kennedy that the Cuba missile attack was thwarted. In fact, as I recollect, Col. Penkovsky was able to give Kennedy the information that the Russian ships in the vicinity did not have the launching equipment to fire the missiles so that Kennedy was able to make his strong stand.

    JW: Jack also was (jokingly, I hope!) concerned that his involvement with Penkovsky at that time would bring him to the attention of the Russian’s. He even spotted a submarine from his house on Malta, which was somewhat remote, and became convinced that they were about to hijack him and take him back to the USSR for a grilling!

    Q: What are your earliest memories of your father’s involvement with James Bond and Thunderball?

    SWM: My earliest memories would be at about the age of 15 when I was still at boarding school. My father went to New York and the Bahamas to meet Ian Fleming and co., and he used to send me the most wonderful postcards from these exotic places. They were huge and colourful and larger than life compared to the ones we had in England at that time and I was quite proud of what he was doing but, being a very shy child I didn’t tell many people. However, I enjoyed my school friends being envious of these glamorous postcards from the Rainbow Room or some exclusive club in the Bahamas.

    I remember that he came back from the Bahamas and was very ill. He had had a coronary heart attack whilst water skiing and went straight to hospital for three weeks and was not allowed any excitement. This had to be kept very quiet because “heart troubles” were the kiss of death for anyone working on a film in those days. Probably still are nowadays!

    I remember an air of excitement while he was working on the screenplay. Long, long story conferences on the telephone; going to visit Kevin McClory at his new wife’s elegant house in Cheyne Walk and seeing movies of sharks in tanks. Kevin was a very colourful and fun person to be around in those days, full of practical jokes. He would see someone he knew in a restaurant and, on the basis, that you don’t normally look at who is serving you, would borrow a uniform and pretend to be the waiter at that table and spill things everywhere till they actually looked at him and realised who it was.

    IMAGE: l. to r. Detective Kelly, Kevin McClory, Jack Whittingham and Leigh Aman (Lord Marley)

    He borrowed someone’s black tie and tails to go water skiing in once, and he had a friend called Detective Kelly in New York whom he got to arrest people as a joke. I am attaching a mug shot of l. to r. Detective Kelly, Kevin, Jack, my father and Leigh Aman (Lord Marley) that Kevin asked Kelly to arrange to have taken ’for fun’.

    In his Memoirs of a Libel Lawyer the eminent and distinguished Peter Carter-Ruck, talks of being, exhaused, after a very long flight from London, trailing round Miami with Kevin and ending up at a bowling alley!

    “I had arrived in the late afternoon after leaving my home in Hertfordshire at 7 o’clock that morning. Kevin and his wife Bobo Sigrist took me in his open Cadillac all over town. By 10 o’clock that night I asked if we could stop for a meal and, after a talk, and bacon and eggs at one of the motels, I really felt like turning in after a twenty-hour day. It was then suggested that we should go to a bowling alley, by which time I was so tired that, taking up one of the bowls, I threw it so badly that it landed in the adjoining alley. Bobo Sigrist was approached by an American who asked her ‘Where did you pick up these two jerks?’ I finally went to bed at 2 o’clock in the morning having been up for 24 hours”

    On another occasion, Peter was met at the airport in Nassau by Kevin in his new amphibian car and, without any warning, driven at high speed straight into the water and across the bay.

    JW: My first memory was sitting at the kitchen table building a plastic model of a Lancaster Bomber. Jack came in and started asking me all sorts of questions about crews on bombers, their tasks, numbers etc. I was quite chuffed to be put in such a position of importance by him. I was however also disappointed to discover that the Lancaster was by then totally out of date and what Jack really wanted was information on crews for the postwar Bombers, such as the Vulcan and Victor Bombers, which by then employed smaller crews and much more sophisticated avoidance of detection techniques.

    Later on at Charterhouse, the Thunderball court case hit the papers and for a brief spell I enjoyed a position of begrudged envy and respect. It didn’t last. In fact it backfired when some boys took the side of Ian Fleming and then life returned to normal!

    Jack used to write in his study facing the garden. As children we learned to tiptoe around the house, or retreat to the furthest corners of the garden when he was working. His routine would involve getting up quite late, enjoying a leisurely breakfast and disappear into his “cave” around 10.00am. His first drink of the day often started around eleven. After lunch he would work for a while and then take a nap during the afternoon. Apart from a break for supper he would then work steadily until very late at night. As a writer he was plagued by the need to come up with fresh ideas and it took a huge toll. He would consume a lot of alcohol and horrendous amounts of tobacco. He kept a pet budgerigar from time to time that lived in a cage next to his desk. However they were always free to fly around at will, and became quite tame. He had one called Charlie. Charlie would sit and snooze propped up against Jack’s neck. Jack would sit at his desk waiting for his “muse”, a glass of gin in his left hand and the neverending cigarette in the other. Every so often Charlie would wake up and take a stroll down Jack’s arm to the well of gin at the end of Jack’s arm, take a sip and then make his weary way back up Jack’s arm and resume dozing. This would be repeated on a few more occasions until Charlie could barely make his way back up the arm. Then he would very quietly whisper or coo into Jack’s ear. Then Jack would begin to write!

    I met Kevin once during the early days when everything was exciting and looking promising. I must have been about 12 or 13 then. We went to a basement flat up in London to meet Kevin. I noticed that he had a rather intriguing model frogman which I seriously coveted. I let it be known to Jack that I would like to have that frogman which he promised to ask Kevin about. Either he forgot or Kevin declined. When Kevin contacted me in the 1980s I humorously reminded him that I was still waiting for the frogman. He apologised. I am still waiting!

    Q: After the novel debuted and they both had heart attacks, it appeared that your father and Ian Fleming were still cordial, leaving it up to the
    lawyers to settle the plagiarism issue. How would you characterize your
    father’s relationship with Ian Fleming?

    SWM: I never heard my father say a word against Ian Fleming. Jack understood the situation between Kevin & Ian though he chose to support Kevin because he felt it was the right thing to do. He had a good regard for Ian and they never fell out. In fact they were supportive of and concerned for each others health as can be born out by the following letters:

    From Jack Whittingham to Ian Fleming:

    The White House
    Oxshott
    Surrey

    6th May 1961

    Dear Ian

    I do hope that you are mending well, doing all you are told, and none of the forbidden things you would like to be doing! My main consolation was morphine, and I’m not too sure that I haven’t been hooked!

    Following the suggestion in your letter, I have asked Freddie Holdaway, who is the legal adviser to my agents – Christopher Mann – to get in touch with your lawyers,and this has been done. But very understandingly, he was told that you are not to be in contact with the outside world for a while.

    I am recovering slowly and impatiently and hope to be off on my travels for a new film at Whitsun.

    Best wishes for a complete and speedy recovery.

    Yours

    Jack

    From Ian Fleming to Jack Whittingham:

    As from the Clinic
    4 Old Mitre Court
    Fleet Street, EC4

    10th May 1961

    Dear Jack

    I am horrified to hear that you have been on morphine and not only that, but that you are already contemplating your next stint at Whitsun. Is this really wise, or can you take the new thing on in a fairly leisurely fashion? It seems to me that you are getting back into your professional stride a bit quickly!

    I am so glad that your legal adviser is now in touch with my solicitor. I don’t wish to sound ominous or to pre-judge anything, but I do think from what I hear from the legal cohorts on our side, that a graceful composure of such differences as you and I may have between each other might be wisdom.

    However, as I say, this is all on the ‘Old boy’ wave and the main thing is that we should both be in good heart (!) again as soon as possible.

    Again with warm thanks for your kindly letter

    Yours

    Ian

    They also shared a love of fine wines and cigarettes and both indulged in them to excess. Both were warned to stop these activities because of their health. I remember being told by my father that Ian Fleming had persuaded his doctor to agree to his having one drink only a day. His doctor said it must be a standard measure and just one. My father was highly amused because Ian had told him that he had done some research and found out that the strongest drink in the world was a Green Chartreuse and so that was the one drink he was having per day!

    QUOTE: I remember an air of excitement while he was working on the screenplay.

    My father was devastated at the news of Fleming’s death. I was with him in the South of France when he received the phone call and he visibly sunk down and put his hands over his face.

    JW: I concur entirely with Sylvan’s view of their relationship. I think Jack was rather in awe of Fleming, being an Eton man.

    Q: When the Thunderball case came to trial in 1963, you were working for the law firm that represented your father and Kevin McClory. Was the firm confident they would prevail? Did you attend any of the trial?

    SWM: I had gone to work for Peter Carter-Ruck’s firm, Oswald Hickson, Collier & Co via the Alfred Marks Employment agency in September 1961. It was just before my eighteenth birthday and it was my first job. I was an assistant Dictaphone secretary to one of the Partners.

    They were many high profile and famous people that the firm was acting for, and I used to go home in the evenings and report on who I had seen and so on to my parents. This brought the firm to my father’s attention. He investigated and the net result was that the whole case was taken to Oswald Hickson’s due to which Peter remained a constant and loyal friend until his death in 2003.

    IMAGE: Jack Whittingham & Charles Crichton on the set of HUNTED,  July 1951

    Once my father was a client, I funnily enough found it embarrassing. Peter Carter-Ruck who had never even noticed me before, started to stop me in the corridor; put his hand on my shoulder, and ask me how my father was. I felt others were jealous that I was being singled out and instead of trying for a raise on the £7.00 per week I was being paid at the time (as I might have taken the opportunity to do in later years), I left after a few months and went to work with my father on a film in Rome. Thus I cannot answer your question as to whether the firm was confident about the outcome of the case. I think we all felt that because we were in the right, that we would win, although I have learned through bitter experience that this isn’t necessarily always the case in law. As Peter CR once told me in later years, “The only thing you can be sure of, when embarking on litigation, is that it will be expensive!”.

    I did attend the Injunction for the book, but not the main court case. I think space was limited as to how many people you could take in with you at the High Court, and my father tended to take his secretary or my mother with him each day.

    We sat in a smallish court for the initial Injunction of the book. There may have been about 10—twenty people there. I think it took about two days. My father and Kevin were very disappointed that they were not able to halt the distribution of the novel which gave them no credit for the two years invested in this project. I remember the Jonathan Cape lawyer saying that the books were already stacked up in the shops and it was impossible to withdraw them at that stage. It was agreed that a piece of paper with the credits on would be inserted into each book for the first edition, and credits given on any further editions. However, I have two first edition of Thunderball and there is no slip of paper inserted in either. This first edition is the only place you won’t see a credit for my father’s contribution. Everywhere else, be it film, novel, DVD etc the credit is included.

    My father was suffering terribly with his heart at this time. He used to have a lot of angina attacks. He would clutch his chest and we would all hold our breaths as we waited for the pills that thinned the blood and took the pain away to work. I was very worried about him at this time.

    Q: The Thunderball case is incredibly complex, and you’ve tried to set the record straight with your website, using original documents and letters rather than guesses and rumors. What would you say is the public’s biggest misconception about the development of Thunderball?

    SWM: I suppose the main misconception from the public is that Thunderball did not begin as one of Fleming’s novels. I have met very few people who know that it was based on the original screenplay and not the novel.

    Secondly, I feel that the industry’s judgement that McClory mainly, and perhaps my father too were somehow “interlopers” or cashing in some way is a complete misconception; very sad and yet understandable. What people don’t understand is that, although Fleming’s novels were very popular with a certain genre in 1959, they were all turned down as potential films because they were too “sadistic, violent and unbelievable! Also, the tongue in cheek humour that makes the films so palatable was absent in the books”. In the late ’50s, drab kitchen sink drama was the genre, and Fleming had just about given up on any idea of films – he was even tired of the books and wanted very much to travel.

    Even though I, and my family, are no fans of Kevin McClory due to his treatment of our late father, I have to say, in all fairness, that it was he who originally got the ball rolling in this department. He would not take no for an answer. It was his idea to use a screenwriter to write a “believable”, “non sadistic” and “not too violent” screenplay using the character of James Bond with Fleming’s permission. Once this screenplay had been expertly crafted by my father using the various ideas that McClory and Fleming and indeed Ernest Cuneo had contributed, the big fish in the shape of Saltzman and Broccolli moved in and having read my father’s screenplay, were now interested as they could see how it could work.

    The problem facing Ian Fleming was that he did not think that Kevin was experienced enough or responsible enough to carry the vehicle onwards. His way of easing Kevin out by bringing out the novel with no credit for the huge contribution and amount of work that had been done already on the original film (story boards drawn up, budgets planned – they were casting for Bond!) was badly judged and came back to haunt him as we all know.

    Another misconception is the public not realising how far along the first film of Thunderball was into production when Fleming scuppered it.

    However, the biggest misconception which is the misconception that upsets us most of all, is the one where people have claimed that Jack “due to financial problems, backed out of the Main court Case and sold his part of the rights to Kevin McClory”. I quote from a letter that I send out recently which addresses this issue.

    “These totally untrue, inaccurate and unsubstantiated remarks are extremely damaging to our late father’s excellent and unblemished professional reputation.“

    The facts are that he was, at that time, considered one of the top ten British screenwriters who, having completed a very successful and financially rewarding run of films with Ealing studios had gone out on his own as a freelance writer, and, was at that time being woed by Walt Disney himself who wanted to put him under contract. QUOTE: My father said, at the time... that Kevin McClory had absolutely 'everything to gain'... whilst my father had 'everything to lose'.(see Thunderball years“ on my website sylvanmason.com which contains complimentary comments about this and about his talent from Ian Fleming)

    He had absolutely no ’financial difficulties’ whatsoever, and we as a family were enjoying a substantial lifestyle due to him being at the pinnacle of his career, however, as the Thunderball case grew larger and larger and with 999 documents as evidence, threatened to become one of the longest running court cases in history with legal costs that could prove astronomical; and as he had NO RIGHTS at all in the screenplay, having assigned them 3 years previously on completion of the screenplay, to Kevin McClory in a fairly standard Film Institute contract which (sadly for our family bearing in mind that Video and DVD had yet to be invented) assigned “all rights of whatsoever nature” to Kevin McClory; he was advised to step down as co-plaintiff which would carry legal responsibility for costs should they lose, and carry on as prinical witness to support Kevin who he felt had been wronged.

    My father said, at the time, and it might help you to understand his predicament to know, that Kevin McClory had absolutely “everything to gain” from this court case due to having financial backing by a South African millionaire friend, and his new wife Bobo Seigrist—heiress to the Hawker Siddely aircraft corporation, whilst my father had “everything to lose”. He had no rights in the screenplay should they win, and 50% liability for the costs should they lose. With two children in expensive boarding schools, he took the advice to drop co-plaintiveness status, and carried on loyally supporting Kevin as principal witness in spite of the same heart problems that Fleming was experiencing at the time. Problems which they amicably shared letters about during the case, and which killed them both in the end.

    My father who was described, even by Kevin McClory, who later abandoned him after the case, as “the most honorable man he had ever met” was very torn between his friendship and affection for Ian Fleming and his loyalty to Kevin whose plight he defended because he felt it was the right thing to do, in addition to the fact that his professional reputation was also at stake

    If he was going to take any “money” he could have done so, when it was ’allegedly’ alluded to by the other side in letters which I still have. That would have been far more lucrative but my father would never have contemplated that.

    Q: When Thunderball was finally released in late 1965—James Bond had reached the peak of his popularity. Did your father feel happy that something he had helped in its infancy had become so popular, or did he feel somewhat left behind?

    SWM: My father was bitterly disappointed that, after the Court Case in which he supported Kevin to no great advantage to himself, Kevin simply turned his back on him and went ahead with making Thunderball without him, and without even notifying him. In spite of the enormous success and financial rewards that Kevin was to have with the film of Thunderball which he eventually co-produced with Saltzman & Broccoli, he never contacted my father again—perhaps because he was too embarrassed that he had “sold out” to Saltzman & Broccoli—who knows?

    Because of this absence of contact, my father was not aware that Richard Maibaum & John Hopkins has been contracted to write a screenplay based on the novel that was based on the orginal screenplay. He presumed that Kevin would use their original one. Again it is understandable that Richard Maibaum would have been engaged as he had worked on previous films but it was a terrible shock for my father to find this out at a screening of the film. In addition the sole “based on an original screenplay credit” which my father is given in the film itself was left off the posters leaving only the “original story” credit which is shared with McClory and Fleming thus weakening the fact of his contribution and strengthening Kevin’s!

    JW: I went to a screening of Thunderball with Jack and my mother. I don’t remember where or when. I do however remember that Jack was quite depressed by the time the lights went up again. I didn’t understand at all why this would be so. Margot made some conciliatory comments about the credits but to no avail.

    After Jack died I went to Malta to be with Margot for a while(1972). We spent quite a lot of time reminiscing about Jack. Margot explained to me how angry and bitterly disappointed he had been with Kevin’s failure to fulfill what she claimed was a promise by Kevin to include Jack in the production of Thunderball ( by which I mean the further writing of the screenplay) in return for Jack’s loyalty to Kevin during the court case. She was very clear about it. In hindsight perhaps, one can see that Kevin was in a tough spot if he was ever going to see Thunderball on the screen. Saltzman and Broccolli certainly owed Jack nothing. However, if nothing else, Kevin should have been straight with Jack. He wasn’t. His later expectations of help from Jack’s children didn’t sit well with either of us. It still doesn’t.

    Q: Britain was the cultural center of the universe in the 1960s—and you had connections to the two biggest phenomenons: James Bond because of your father, and the Beatles because of Dezo Hoffman, as well as your own singing and songwriting career. What are your memories of that period when the world couldn’t get enough of England’s entertainment exports?

    SWM: Gosh—where would I start. Well, having been brought up in “Show Business” I was not that unused to being involved and around celebrities I suppose, so it was not that unusual for me that I would come across them. It really all became most exciting in the mid-sixties. My memories of ’64 are firstly of fashion. We were fashion mad and had to have the season’s latest thing. I remember vividly my ultra mini skirts and Mary Quant “kinky boots’. You couldn’t get to the upper deck on a routemaster bus without everyone on the ground floor seeing your knickers on the way up. I remember going to Florida in 1967 with my ex husband to record Gary Player, the golfer who was making an LP. We were invited to a smart soiree thrown by friends of Gary. I had realised that the mini skirt had not yet hit America en force and certainly not Florida so had selected the longest one I possessed. Still the hostess of the party could not contain herself and actually lifted up my skirt to see what I was wearing underneath! Tights had also not yet hit the States!

    I used to spend at least an hour putting on my make-up and doing my hair. Nowadays, (if I do it), it takes all of 30 seconds! The Dusty Springfield eyes and false eyelashes took up the most time.

    It was quite commonplace to see celebs at the nightclubs we frequented. I remember getting Paul McCarney’s autograph at the Ad Lib and seeing Ringo at the Aretusa in the same week.

    As far as music was concerned, you were either a Beatles Fan or a Stones follower – for me it was the Beatles.

    I remember leaving the cinema with my current beau having just seen Dr No, and everyone including us jumped into their cars and screamed off as if they were driving Aston Martin’s, and I know I felt like a Bond heroine. We all had to be (or to be seen to be) “Cool” in those days. Unlike today, it was not “cool” to show emotion or be impressed with anything. Everyone wore dark glasses. Everyone seemed to smoke pot!

    The thing that was so amazing about those days was how easily one could get a job or follow any path one wanted to. Having decided I was bored with the very good job I had at the Baker Street Advertising Agency where I had become Copy Chief’s secretary after only 3 weeks in the typing pool, I applied to work in Moyses Stephens florist; to put the records on at Annabell’s nightclub; and I also sent a tape of my singing and guitar playing to Cyril Stapleton’s Radio Luxembourg Talent Search where I came in the final six. IMAGE: Photos of home of Barry Mason & Sylvan Whittingham Mason bought from George HarrisonThree weeks later I had written and recorded a pop record having had absolutely no experience whatsoever of singing in public and a month later was appearing on “Thank Your Lucky Stars” and other pop TV shows.

    Most of us were also quite promiscous—that was cool too! The pill became available in 1960; there was no dire warnings about sexually transmitted diseases that you get nowadays, and in addition, we all thought that we were on the brink of nuclear destruction so “Make Love not War” was the young’s battlecry. I was actually taught how to build a fall-out shelter or seal off a room against fall-out, during my last term at boarding school!

    JW: I was living in a bed-sit in Kingston-on-Thames when “Sergeant Pepper’s” came out. Mike Harrison, Daryl Jackson and myself sat around till midnight smoking dope and listening to the album. Mike had a brilliant idea. “George Harrison lives in Esher. I know where. Let’s take him a joint and tell him what a great album it is”. So we did! He actually let us into his house and we sat around smoking more dope until he very politely suggested, at dawn, that perhaps we should depart as he was tired. His wife Patti was there and the two Psychedelic artists who painted his fireplace and Lennon’s Rolls. George was extremely gracious considering that we were intruders. We discussed the upcoming fishing season!. It was quite bizarre. By coincidence, Sylvan and her then husband Barry Mason, bought George’s house shortly thereafter.

    I was in a local band doing John Mayall covers mostly. We were called “Satan’s Disciples”. We had one gig. Friday night at the local Anglican Church Hall. As soon as we started someone would turn off all the lights. Since we now could not see what we were doing, Punk Rock was born. I had a 1940 Austin all painted up with RAF roundels and a giant “SATAN’S DISCIPLES” in gold letters across the back. The phone number of the lead guitarist’s family home was underneath. His father was a prominent doctor in the area. He was not amused to get midnight calls enquiring where the chickens or virgins were going to be sacrificed. My father hated that car. He was always making rude comments about it. When he and Margot left England for Malta, however, he had no way to get to the airport. I drove them there, Satan’s Disciples and all!

    Q: A few years after he had been involved with two lawsuits against Ian Fleming, your father was approached to adapt John Pearson’s biography of Fleming for a film. Your father’s status as one of Britain’s best screenwriters aside, wasn’t this an odd choice considering the litigation? Do you know any details of the production and why the film never got made?

    SWM: I suppose it was an odd choice. It had never occurred to me. He was approached by someone at The Sunday Times—the name John Junor springs to mind? It was a very good screenplay. My father portrayed the Bond persona stepping out of Ian Fleming’s body as he sat on a train on the trans Siberian railway whilst working for Reuters.

    I know that there was a limit on the time that The Sunday Times held the rights, which eventually ran out. I remember my father saying that the main obstacles to the film going ahead were Ian’s wife Ann who would never like the way she was portrayed, and who thoroughly disapproved of the books anyway. Anyway, it was decided that they could not proceed with it whilst Ann was alive. Incidentally, according to Dad, M stood for “Mother”.

    IMAGE: Sylvan Whittingham Mason with her father, Jack Whittingham

    Q: A lot of people were introduced to James Bond through their fathers. I would imagine for you and your brother it would be impossible to view a Bond film without thinking about your father (“dad would have loved that”, “dad would have written a better script than that”, etc.) Is it easy or difficult for you to watch Bond films?

    SWM: It is very easy for me to watch anything with Sean Connery in it!! but I, personally, have never felt any of the other Bonds came close to him and so only really enjoy the first five. I think one always feels that the first Bond you see is the real one.

    My brother and I have absolutely no problem otherwise watching the films. We are thrilled to have a historical link with them. We are proud of our father’s contribution. We have no hard feelings whatsoever as to what happened except for, as said, regarding Kevin McClory. We believe that the Saltzman and Broccoli team have done a fantastic job all the way along and were the right people to do so, and we wish Barbara every continued success with the next series.

    We are also very grateful to you for letting us put our view forward.

    Yours sincerely

    Sylvan Whittingham Mason

    JW: I agree with Suilven. I would also add that I loved the Fleming books. They were the perfect escape for a testosterone maddened 16 year old stuck in a male only boarding school . However I am glad to report that I have evolved past 16 years old. Apparently there are thousands of men in their fifties who have not! I find this quite amusing. Seriously, I stopped reading the books after Fleming died. I could not accept that a pseudo writer could step into the role. My opinion of the films is the same. I enjoyed the early ones but have never seen a Bond film since the 1980s. I make no connection between Jack and any of the modern Bond material. It is very easy for me not to watch Bond films. My greatest nightmare is that the same people who now run the world are also still Bond fans. Now that is scary!

    Best regards.

    Jonathan Whittingham

  6. Mads Mikkelsen On Le Chiffre And Casino Royale

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-22

    Mads Mikkelsen, who is to play the villainous Le Chiffre in the upcoming James Bond film, Casino Royale, spoke today to FilmFocus about playing a Bond villain and co-star Daniel Craig.

    ‘It’s Bond!’ said the actor. ‘I don’t know the films that well, I saw some of them when I was a kid, but it’s so much fun. I’m part of a legend. Orson Welles played Le Chiffre before me; that’s huge! There’s nothing that can prepare you for [the scale of the production.] It’s just such a different world.’

    On the character that he is playing, Mikkelsen said, ‘Le Chiffre is a greedy bastard who wants a lot of money… He’s not trying to take over the world; he’s just a greedy bastard like the rest of us! I think people can relate to him. He’s a baddie, basically, but we always tried to put a little dualism into the character. Of course, he doesn’t have that camera time, that screen time, to really go with that, but it’s definitely there.’

    And what of co-star Daniel Craig? ‘Daniel is a fantastic Bond and I think he’s actually going to be the Bond for this generation. People are really underestimating him but they’re going to be surprised. It’s going to be a great film.’

    Read the full interview with Mads Mikkelsen here. Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schik, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

  7. Casino Royale – Official Website Report #6

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-21
    Teaser Poster

    Official ‘Casino Royale’ Teaser Poster

    The official Casino Royale website blog has been updated by ‘Yarborough.’ Coverage this time centers on the Bahamas and Caterina Murino, who portrays ‘Solange’ in the film.

    This time, according to the report, the cast and crew are off to the One & Only Ocean Club at the beautiful Bahamas, a stand-in location for Madagascar in some scenes of Casino Royale. This is where Bond eventually tracks down a lead which will bring him to the Casino Royale.

    Bond also encounters Solange, played by Caterina Murino, who sums up their onscreen relationship as: ‘sex chemistry – we have nothing else, we are not going to be friends and we are not going to invite him to drink tea.’And finally, what about Bond 22? The producers are staying silent. Read the entire report here.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

  8. Sir Sean Connery AFI Special On USA Network

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-21

    Sir Sean Connery was awarded the American Film Institute’s (AFI) Lifetime Achievement Award on Thursday, 8 June 2006. This being the 34th Lifetime Achievement awarded, it is one of the highest honours in film. The award was presented at a gala tribute in Los Angeles.

    James Bond fans will be able to watch the entire show on the USA Network on Wednesday, 21 June 2006. It will air at 9:00 PM (EST) and again, three hours later at 12:00 AM (EST). Full details available here.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

  9. New Casino Royale Czech Set & Location Photos

    By Heiko Baumann on 2006-06-20

    As production continues on the 21st official James Bond film, Casino Royale, CBn is able to bring you several new photographs from the Czech set of the 007 film thanks to Alex from Switzerland.

    Featured are shots of the Casino Royale entrance, James Bond’s brand new Aston Martin DBS, Hotel Splendide, Karlovy Vary, Castle Loket and the Loket marketplace, the hospital at Plana, the Bentley that will pick up Bond and Vesper Lynd and more…

    Night Filming at Karlovy Vary Night Filming at Karlovy Vary

    Night Filming at Karlovy Vary

    Hotel Splendide Hotel Splendide

    Hotel Splendide

    The Bentley that will pick up James Bond and Vesper Lynd Casino Royale entrance

    The Bentley that will pick up James Bond and Vesper Lynd and the Casino Royale entrance

    The Aston Martin DBS The Aston Martin DBS

    The Aston Martin DBS

    Castle Loket Castle Loket Loket Marketplace

    Castle Loket and the Loket marketplace

    The hospital at Plana

    The hospital at Plana

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

  10. Crashing An Aston Martin In Casino Royale

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-06-19

    As production continues on the 21st official James Bond film, Casino Royale, The Sun reports today on what became of three of the brand new Aston Martin DBS’s, which are featured in the film.

    Three of the Aston Martin’s provided for the film, estimated to be worth over £500,000 together, were wrecked during filming when they were ‘flipped on their roofs during shots for a high-speed Alpine chase’ at the Millbrook Vehicle Proving Ground in Bedford. According to a source from the film, ‘These are easily the most amazing James Bond cars yet. They look incredible and cost a fortune. Unfortunately we had to smash three to pieces … And in the style of 007, our stunt driver walked away without a scratch.’

    Visit The Sun to view a photo of two of the smashed Aston Martin cars.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.