CommanderBond.net
  1. James Bond's Box Office Viewed At Critic And Recession-Proof

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-28

    While the general consensus amongst critics so far for Quantum of Solace seems to be ‘good, but not quite as good as Casino Royale‘, that likely won’t be an issue in preventing the 22nd James Bond film from becoming a blockbuster at the box office.

    Calling Quantum of Solace ‘critic and recession-proof’, seveal box office trackers are predicting big numbers for the 007 film once it opens this Friday in the UK and on 14 November in the US–reports Reuters.

    Quantum of Solace is one of the few event pictures left in the year,’ said Brandon Gray, president of Box Office Mojo.

    ‘People responded very well to Casino Royale, and I think people’s affinity for Casino Royale will drive Quantum of Solace to a terrific opening,’ he said.

    He continued: ‘Quantum of Solace stands an excellent chance of outgunning Casino Royale because Casino Royale built up an audience base.’

    Screen International’s Jack Warner also agreed. ‘Bond is a very strong brand to build on,’ he said. ‘No one expects a sequel to do less well than the one before it. Casino Royale went down well critically and with audiences, and they will be looking to break that figure.’

    Despite the current economic crisis throughout the world, Bond is expected to emerge unscathed.

    ‘Movies remain the cheapest, or one of the cheapest entertainment events available, in terms of the type of things you get out of the home to do,’ said Gray. ‘Bond is well suited to ride out any kind of recession.’

    Do you have any predictions of James Bond at the box-office? Sound off here on the CBn Forums.

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for most up-to-date and complete coverage of Quantum of Solace.

  2. Bond Conquers The Chinese Censors

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-28

    James Bond has conquered the Chinese censors once again.

    Following the recent news that Quantum of Solace had been scheduled for a 5 November premiere in China, Variety reports that the film has been passed with no cuts made.

    As 007 fans will recall, Daniel Craig’s first Bond adventure, Casino Royale was the first Bond film ever played at Chinese theatres, after being forbidden for so many years. The film–which was also approved with no cuts–went on to become a strong success at the country’s box office.

    Sony’s Li Chow said the plan for were hoping to get Quantum of Solace on at least 1,000 screens across China, including both 35mm and digital. ‘We hope it will do well and can run until December, maybe Christmas,’ he said.

    Gala premieres for the Bond film are being planned for Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou.

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for most up-to-date and complete coverage of Quantum of Solace.

  3. Sony Australia Unveils Blockbuster 'Quantum of Solace' Promotion

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-28

    Sony Australia Unveils Blockbuster Quantum of Solace Consumer Promotion

    Win one of seven world-class Bond-style adventures Sydney – 27 October, 2008 – To celebrate the return of the world’s most enduring secret agent, Sony Australia has unveiled a blockbuster consumer promotion. For every $50 spent on participating Sony products, consumers will have the opportunity to win one of seven world-class Bond-style adventures.
    “James Bond epitomises sophistication, quality and international appeal, which is a perfect fit with the Sony brand,” said Toby Barbour, Head of Strategy and Brand Development, Sony Australia.

    “Sony Australia is combining technological innovation with entertainment content to deliver the energy and intensity of Bond like no other. From the latest XBR series Full HD BRAVIA LCD TVs with RGB Backlight LED, to our new Blu-ray players with BD-Live functionality, Sony’s leadership in high definition combines with one of the world’s most powerful movie franchises,” said Barbour.

    The promotion started on 27 October 2008 with daily draws over 62 days. In addition, thousands of daily prizes, including PLAYSTATION 3 consoles, 007 DVD Box sets, Adrenalin vouchers, Greater Union double-movie passes and BigPond Music download credit will be awarded. As an additional incentive, on selected Sony products, a range of exclusive gifts with purchase will also be offered.

    Ross Fielding, Executive Director, Telstra Product Management said the integration of Telstra mobile code technology boosted the competition’s interactivity.

    “This is one of the first examples of a major brand harnessing Telstra’s new mobile code technology, which is available free on a growing selection of Next G mobile phones. Using the Telstra Code Reader customers can easily scan QUANTUM codes featured on competition advertising to double their chances of winning Sony prizes. It’s an exciting response mechanism that bridges the traditional and emerging mobile advertising worlds to immediately connect consumers with campaign content,” Ross said.

    The seven main prizes, worth up to $30,000 each, include:

    UK Bond Adventure
    Visit the Beaulieu Car Museum in Hampshire (formerly MI6 Headquarters). Take an extreme ride along the Thames in a jet boat and enjoy dinner at the famous Rules restaurant, before suiting up in style at one of London’s famous Saville Row tailors.

    Italy Bond Adventure
    Travel to Italy to live the high life. Indulge in a famed Sienna spa, enjoy a guided visit to the “Bottini” Underground waterworks, dine at one of Italy’s top private wine cellars and relax in five star boutique luxury.

    LA Bond Adventure
    Receive an exclusive invitation and tour of a private car collection at the Galpin Aston Martin. Dine with a Hollywood stuntman followed by a set visit and live stunt demonstration to practise your own action hero moves.

    Monte Carlo Bond Adventure
    It’s the lifestyle enjoyed by movie stars, royalty – and secret agents. Experience a helicopter transfer from Nice airport to Monte Carlo, before trying your luck at the Grand Casino in Monte Carlo. Then, enjoy some relaxation with access to a marine day spa followed by lunch.

    Sydney Bond Adventure
    Get your adrenalin racing with a series of extreme adventures. Travel to Sydney for a prize pack including a helicopter sightseeing tour, an extreme boat ride of Sydney Harbour and a day behind the wheel of an Aston Martin Vantage. Then, relax with some fine dining and luxury accommodation.

    Las Vegas Bond Adventure
    Experience the thrills of the Las Vegas nightlife. Receive return Limo transfers to and from the airport, try your luck at the gaming tables with a croupier/gambling lesson, receive a race car driving experience and then get the best views of the Nevada desert with a Grand Canyon helicopter sightseeing tour.

    007 Cash Bond Adventure
    Receive an attaché case filled with $15,000 cash and design your very own custom Bond adventure.

    Double your chance of winning with QR codes

    For a double chance of winning, scan the associated QR Code on your mobile phone. Click the link on the mobile site home page to receive a unique code via SMS. For consumers who cannot scan the QR code, an SMS mechanism will also be available to unlock the password. Simply SMS the word ‘CODE’ to 1999BOND to receive an SMS back with a unique code. Consumers can then enter this unique code online to receive double the entries in the daily prize draws when purchasing Sony products.*

    For further information on this exciting promotion please visit www.sony.com.au/Bond.

    About QR Codes

    QR (or ‘Quick Response’) Codes are a new type of barcode designed to be read by mobile phones. Compatible 3G phones equipped with a camera and the correct reader software can scan these codes, revealing an interactive multimedia experience or redirecting the viewer’s phone to a URL.

    Sony’s partnership with Telstra gives Next G network customers a seamless competition experience in more places. Next G customers with compatible handsets need only launch Telstra’s pre-installed Telstra Code Reader from their My Place phone menu and point their mobile phone cameras at competition codes to access video-rich clues for free.**

    Telstra Mobile Codes were launched in July and already more than 1 million Australians have the free barcode reading software installed on their Next G mobile phones.

    Quantum of Solace

    Quantum of Solace continues the high-octane adventures of James Bond in Casino Royale. Principal photography began on 7 January 2008. The film was produced for EON Productions by Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, directed by Marc Forster and stars Daniel Craig as the legendary secret agent, James Bond. The screenplay was written by Oscar winner Paul Haggis (Crash, Casino Royale), Neal Purvis and Robert Wade. The release date only at the movies for Quantum of Solace will be Wednesday 19 November. For more information, visit www.QuantumOfSolace.com.au

    As always, make CommanderBond.net your one and only stop for all the latest James Bond news and coverage.

  4. 'Quantum of Solace' Soundtrack Now Available

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-28

    David Arnold’s soundtrack for Quantum of Solace is officially released today in the UK and US.

    Following up it’s early release on iTunes UK last week, James Bond fans can currently order the CD soundtrack online at Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com, retailing for £8.98 and $18.98, respectively.

    The J-Records 24-track soundtrack includes Arnold’s fifth 007 score along with the title track duet ‘Another Way To Die’ by Jack White and Alicia Keys.

    'Quantum of Solace' Soundtrack

    Quantum of Solace Soundtrack

    Order online:

    Stay up-to-date with complete James Bond coverage at CommanderBond.net–your #1 source for all the latest Quantum of Solace clips and news.

  5. Daniel Craig On 007: Completing The Circle In 'Quantum' And 'Royale'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-28

    WARNING: Spoilers

    An indepth interview with Daniel Craig has been posted online at Dark Horizons focusing on the making of Quantum of Solace and what could possibly follow in the future for 007.

    With Quantum of Solace picking up a mere five minutes after the events of Casino Royale, many James Bond fans have been curious as to whether or not Bond 23 will take this approach as well and continue the current storyline.

    Said Craig: ‘I think we’ve finished, we’ve tail ended these. These movies stand up alone. They’re two very separate movies, two stylistically separate movies but we’ve completed the circle in these movies. We can do anything.’

    ‘I’m just applying what I know and with working with someone like Marc,’ Craig continued, focusing on the level of emotional vulnerability seen in Bond this time around.

    Daniel Craig is James Bond

    Daniel Craig is James Bond

    Question: How were the stunts this time?

    Craig: We set the bar on Casino so we had to try and achieve and try and make these different but as good. And things have moved on. Special effects have moved on. We certainly didn’t want to make this a more CGI based movie but the plane sequence which insists that we have CGI. I think the freefall sequence was incredible to do because we went and learned to freefall. We had a conversation about the freefall sequence. I was like, “I’ve never seen a good one.” I think they’re always kind of [naff?] There’s obviously people freefalling and then they have a closeup of somebody with a hair dryer. That always seemed to me the way, and they always last about five minutes longer than they should. So I said, “It has to be quick. They have to look like they’re falling out of the plane.” And someone came up with the idea there’s this 200 mile an hour vertical wind tunnel where people go and learn how to freefall and you can do it. So Olga and I went and rehearsed for about a week on it and we stuck a camera, a guy cameraman with a small camera flying with a controller. We had 20 digital cameras around and I think just, you look at it, it was hell, but it looks like we’re falling out of an airplane.

    ‘We know about making movies. But it’s a Bond movie and I think all the subtleties are there which you see: the music, the style, the whole thing, they’re classically Bond. It’s just we’re f–king around with it. It’s enjoyable to do, but that doesn’t mean we won’t get more – – I feel now we’re in a situation where I do genuinely believe we can have a submarine base in the next one. I’d love it. We could. Now that’s going to be printed. “We’re going into…”‘

    When asked whether or not a new master villain organization such as SPECTRE was being created (Quantum, perhaps?), Craig said: ‘Well, I think we’ve set that up. There could be. I genuinely, I don’t like films that tie everything up at the end. I like an open ending. I want an audience to go away asking those questions and hopefully they’ll continue asking those questions into the next movie we do.’

    Daniel Craig is James Bond

    Question: Talk about going toe to toe with Olga during shooting?

    Craig: Well, there’s obviously a story about vengeance in this story but actually Bond isn’t on a mission of vengeance. I mean, he’s angry, he’s pissed off and all those things but actually he ties into this title which seems to work better and better the more I talk about it. He wants to find his quantum of solace. He wants to find the peace within himself because he lost somebody. Actually, Olga’s character is on a mission of vengeance and that’s why he can step back and say, “Okay, I’m going to help you out. I’m going to help you get your goal but understand I don’t think it’s the right thing to be doing. I think you’re going to screw yourself up.” In fact at the end of this movie, he gets the one man who’s most responsible for Vesper’s death and he doesn’t shoot him. So Olga’s character I just think is, there’s strength in it. Just like Gemma’s character, Fields, is so great because they get together and it’s lovely and it’s a bit of fun and it’s not because she gets killed.

    As for the early-stage reports that Quantum of Solace would feature an abundance of comedy (based off of some deadpan jokes made by Craig), he said: ‘I mean, I’m sorry. I probably say stupid things in interviews sometimes but I’m not nailing anything down. People kind of want to know exactly what’s going to happen in the next movie and I don’t know. Is there room for more comedy. Yes, there’s room for more comedy.’

    Visit Dark Horizons for the entire Quantum of Solace interview with Daniel Craig.

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for most up-to-date and complete coverage of Quantum of Solace.

  6. 'Quantum of Solace' – What The Critics Said (Part II)

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-28

    Devin Zydel

    The first press screening of Quantum of Solace was held on Friday, 17 October at the Odeon cinema in London with journalists from numerous media outlets attending.

    Anticipation for Daniel Craig’s second James Bond adventure was at an all time high following the unstoppable success that Casino Royale sparked almost exactly two years ago, becoming the best reviewed 007 film of all time

    CommanderBond.net has compiled together an exhaustive list of various media reviews of Quantum of Solace–the good and the bad.

    Read on to see if the 22nd Bond film lives up to expectactions… [Click here for Part I of this article]

    QUANTUM OF SOLACE

    WHAT THE CRITICS SAID (PART II)


    Quantum doesn’t disappoint–just don’t expect the brilliance of Casino Royale

    Covered in oil, the thick black fluid dripping from her naked body, the latest girl to fall for James Bond lies dead on a hotel bed.

    Sleeping with 007 has always been bad for a woman’s health. And MI6 Agent Fields is the latest Bond girl to meet with a sticky end in Quantum of Solace, in a scene that brilliantly evokes the death of Shirley Eaton in Goldfinger.

    Two years after Casino Royale, Bond is back. Hundreds of fans queued around London’s Leicester Square for last night’s world premiere of the 22nd Bond movie.

    And the spying theme wasn’t confined to the big screen–security stopped anyone from entering the Odeon with a mobile phone.

    Even as Jack White and Alicia Keys’ theme tune, Another Way To Die, rolled, guards patrolled the aisles watching for illicit recordings.

    If security was high, expectations were higher. Could Daniel Craig equal his last Bond outing? Nearly. He just falls short, but 007’s licence to thrill is still intact.

    Quantum of Solace is a leaner, meaner animal, rammed with shoot-outs, a boat chase and even an aerial dogfight. And our hero is an angry, embittered man out for blood.

    Read on…

    The Mirror


    Craig’s ice-cool Bond is the guy to leave you shaken and stirred

    ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

    The chips are down following Daniel Craig’s radical reinvention of British superspy 007 in the back-to-basics Casino Royale. The question is: what do we do now?

    Well, what they’ve done is provide the first direct Bond sequel, a taut, lean thriller which manages to shave a good half hour off the running time of the celebrated 2006 comeback.

    Director Marc Forster, who made his name with Monster’s Ball and Findng Neverland, provides richer characterisation–we’re beginning to see what makes Bond tick so violently–and also manages to make implausible scenarios starkly realistic. Without a gadget in sight.

    It helps that he’s got the team behind the last two Jason Bourne movies to provide the action–there’s double the destruction wrought in Casino Royale, kicking off with a sublime pre-credit car chase alongside Lake Garda with Bond’s Aston minus the driver’s door.

    Seeking the faceless killer behind the death of Vesper Lynd, 007 discovers he can trust no-one–not even MI6 or the CIA–and is left to pursue a solitary trail from Italy to London to Haiti, where he first meets his nemesis Dominic Greene (Amalric).

    Firmly dodging the villainous Bond stereotype, the devious Greene does not have a bleeding eye, pincers for hands or a third nipple. He’s French. And like the rapacious Gallic utility companies, he’s got his eye on everybody’s water supply.

    Taking the fizz out of his Perrier is Camille (Kurylenko), an unlikely ally for Bond who intends to use her connection with Greene to get to exiled Bolivian General Medrano (Joaquin Cosio), the man behind the brutal death of her family.

    Read on…

    Sky Movies


    Latest Bond shakes and stirs, but where’s the old humour?

    ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆

    Among the main pleasures of an uneven Bond movie is Dench’s wonderful performance. She is more in evidence here than in her previous Bond movies and has a relationship with 007 that is maternal and flirtatious. Nothing flusters Dench’s M. In one tremendous scene, we see her running her bath and dabbing at her face with wipes as she gives orders to operatives around the world to curb Bond’s movements.

    Gemma Arterton is also good value as Agent Fields at the British consulate in Bolivia, a siren with a touch of St Trinians about her, saying “oh gosh” when she sends one of Greene’s henchmen flying.

    There is a tension at the heart of the movie. On the one hand, this is an out-and-out action flick. On the other, Forster (the director of arthouse hits such as Monster’s Ball and Stranger Than Fiction) is trying to show us the paranoia and loneliness of a homicidal spy’s life. The set-pieces are supposed to be exhilarating but also reveal Bond’s anger and bereavement. One of the film’s most ingenious scenes is when Bond interrupts the villains during a performance of Tosca at the Bregenz Festival House in Austria. While the performers are singing about love and vengeance on the stage, Bond is in the wings, fighting with Greene’s henchmen. Opera plots are often far-fetched and illogical. We shouldn’t be surprised that Bond movies are the same. At their best, they provide us with the same excitement and escapism.

    Quantum of Solace doesn’t seem like a major entry in the Bond canon. Well under two hours long, it’s shorter and more frenetic than most of its predecessors, and an often-jolting experience to watch. Loose ends about. What it does have, though, above all, is vigour. The franchise hasn’t run out of juice quite yet.

    Read on…

    The Independent


    This latest offering is not as groundbreaking as the 2006 prequel

    Her Majesty’s secret service agent has turned from a loved-up puppy to a ruthless killing machine.

    Nursing a broken heart, he is out to seek revenge for the death of his lover Vesper Lynd (Eva Green) with a licence to kill.

    This is a fast and furious Bond–high on action and exotic location, but still mean and moody (he still does not care if his vodka martini is shaken or stirred).

    For one thing he is too busy punching and kicking the living daylights out of everyone who crosses his path. One of the first scenes sees an angry Bond dripping with sweat in a car chase and sets the tone for the rest of the movie.

    “You look like hell. When was the last time you slept?” asks M. There’s no response from Bond. Need I say more.

    No-one can be trusted, and no-one and nothing is going to stop the new bullish and brutal Bond from exacting revenge.

    Read on…

    Express and Star


    A pacy, visually imaginative follow-up to the series relaunch

    ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

    Quantum Of Solace picks up moments after the credits rolled at the end of Casino Royale, with Daniel Craig’s bereaved and blooded Bond in Siena, wrecking his Aston Martin in a pre-credits car chase complicated by thick traffic, twisty mountain roads and emotional Italian drivers. In his car-boot, with a bullet in his leg, is Mr White (Jesper Christensen), a higher-up in the cartel (Quantum) which employed and then killed the baddie of the earlier film, and who Bond blames for the death of the girl he loved last time round. Mr White is taken to be grilled by M, just as the local horse race (the palio) is taking place (obviously, the filmmakers saw the documentary The Last Race too), only for the villain to sneer that MI6 and the CIA obviously know nothing about Quantum’s many well-placed agents, whereupon someone presumably trustworthy pulls a gun–and Bond is back in action, leaving wounded enemies and allies behind as he barges through crowds, runs up stairs, dangles from scaffolding and dodges swinging girders to get his man.

    In an era marked by franchise bloat, it’s entirely admirable that Quantum of Solace is the shortest Bond movie to date–it drops a great many of the long-running series mannerisms (callous quips, expository lectures, travelogue padding, Q and Moneypenny) as it globe-trots urgently from Italy to Haiti to Austria to Italy again to Bolivia to Russia with stopovers in London and other interzones. The major gadget on offer is a neat trick with a mobile phone, which the film trusts us to follow without a pompous lecture on how it works, and there’s a nod to traditionally absurd Bond girl names in Gemma Arterton’s Agent Fields–she refuses to give her real, silly, embarrassing name which we only find out from the end credits (it’s not Gracie or London). Everything in this movie is edited as if it were an action sequence, which means that when the set-pieces come they have to go into overdrive to stay ahead of the game, with Bourne veteran Dan Bradley staging more brutal, devastatingly fast fights and chases. We get striking locations (including primaeval caves and a South American desert) and absolutely gorgeous, stylised art direction–but there’s little lingering on the backdrops, since a brief establishing shot is usually enough to set up the nimble, nifty, explosive action that takes place against them.

    Previously, the Bond films have been a series, but this is an actual sequel–an approach Ian Fleming used in his books, but which was dropped from the movies because the novels were filmed out of order. This makes for a film which hits the ground running, but also means we get less to latch onto emotionally since Daniel Craig became the complete 007 over the course of Casino Royale, and here just has to be set loose. The sparks struck between the wounded hero and scarred heroine Camille–whose revenge-driven sub-plot owes a lot to July Havelock, the girl from the story For Your Eyes Only–don’t match those between Craig and Eva Green last time round because this Bond is human enough to start worrying about how regularly his girlfriends get killed. The slinky, sultry Olga Kurylenko is in fact so fixed on murdering her enemy that it’s possible she technically doesn’t even count as a Bond girl–she’s good, but doesn’t get the breakout showcase Green landed in Casino Royale. However, for the diehard romantics, Bond does tenderly hug a dying male friend before disposing of his corpse in a dumpster (‘he wouldn’t care’) and gives Camille handy tips on professionally assassinating the extremely unpleasant would-be dictator who slaughtered her family.

    Read on…

    Empire


    This polished follow-up ticks all the right boxes mayhem-wise. Shame the film as a whole is such a downer.

    ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆

    “This man and I have unfinished business,” seethes James Bond through gritted teeth at the end of Quantum of Solace. The same might well be said for actor Daniel Craig, whose bold re-interpretation of Ian Fleming’s legendary spy in 2006’s Casino Royale left us all wondering where the series would go to next.

    The answer, in Marc Forster’s stylish contribution to the long-running franchise, is all over the shop. 007’s pursuit of the mysterious organisation who turned the late Vesper Lynd into a traitor sees him travel from the sewers and rooftops of Sienna to an arid desert in Bolivia to the busy straits of the Panama Canal and an elegant opera house in Austria. What we wouldn’t give for his frequent flyer miles, even if they would entail using Virgin Atlantic–one of several promotional partners whose goods and services get an ostentatious name-check.

    All this to-ing and fro-ing, however, does little to conceal the central weakness in this 22nd official Bond movie–a convoluted plot even a criminal mastermind would have trouble unravelling. Okay, we know that it has something to do with Dominic Greene (French actor Mathieu Amalric), a nefarious entrepreneur who plans to take control of South America’s dwindling water supply. What we’re not so sure about is why James should waste his time on such an unworthy adversary, or what it has to do with a still-baffling title no one even bothers explaining.

    Read on…

    MSN

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for most up-to-date and complete coverage of Quantum of Solace.

  7. Alex Jennings Reads 'Casino Royale' On BBC Radio 7

    By Matt Weston on 2008-10-28

    With Quantum of Solace receiving its world premiere tomorrow evening, there’s never been a better time to return to where the James Bond legacy began.

    Ian Fleming's 'Casino Royale'

    Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale

    This week, award-winning English actor Alex Jennings (Babel, The Queen) reads from Ian Fleming’s debut 007 outing, Casino Royale, on BBC Radio 7.

    Episode 1 has already aired, but it can still be downloaded from the BBC Radio 7 website.

    The remaining four 30-minute episodes will be broadcast each day this week at 9:30 a.m., 8:30 p.m. and 1:30 a.m. the following morning. If you miss one, they can be downloaded for seven days from the first broadcast.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for the most up-to-date literary 007 news on the web.

  8. 'The Best of Bond… James Bond' CD Collection Released

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-28

    The ‘Best of Bond… James Bond’ CD collection of 007 title themes is released today just in time to mark the forthcoming debut of Quantum of Solace in theatres.

    Bond fans have the option of choosing between the regular CD or CD+DVD formats. Both feature
    23 tracks plus a bonus in the previously unreleased James Bond Theme track credited to John Arnold.

    New additions include Madonna’s ‘Die Another Day’, Chris Cornell’s ‘You Know My Name’ and k.d. Lang’s ‘Surrender’. The title theme from Quantum of Solace, ‘Another Way To Die’ by Jack White and Alicia Keys, is not featured.

    The line-up of Bond themes includes:

    CD

    1. James Bond Theme – John Barry Orchestra
    2. From Russia With Love – Matt Monro
    3. Goldfinger – Shirley Bassey
    4. Thunderball – Tom Jones
    5. You Only Live Twice – Nancy Sinatra
    6. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service – John Barry Orchestra
    7. We Have All The Time In The World – Louis Armstrong
    8. Diamonds Are Forever – Shirley Bassey
    9. Live and Let Die – Paul McCartney and Wings
    10. The Man With The Golden Gun – Lulu
    11. Nobody Does It Better – Carly Simon
    12. Moonraker – Shirley Bassey
    13. For Your Eyes Only – Sheena Easton
    14. All Time High – Rita Coolidge
    15. A View To A Kill – Duran Duran
    16. The Living Daylights – A-Ha
    17. Licence To Kill – Gladys Knight
    18. GoldenEye – Tina Turner
    19. Tomorrow Never Dies – Sheryl Crow
    20. Surrender – kd lang
    21. The World Is Not Enough – Garbage
    22. Die Another Day – Madonna
    23. You Know My Name – Chris Cornell
    24. Bonus Track – James Bond Theme – John Arnold (previously unreleased)

    DVD

    1. A View To A Kill – Duran Duran (music video)
    2. For Your Eyes Only – Sheena Easton (music video)
    3. GoldenEye – Tina Turner (music video)
    4. The Living Daylights – A-Ha (music video)
    5. All Time High – Rita Coolidge (music video)
    6. Goldfinger – Shirley Bassey (Live at Royal Albert Hall, 1974)
    7. Documentary: The Music Of James Bond

    The official press release follows:

    Capitol/EMI to Release ‘The Best of Bond… James Bond’ in Expanded CD, CD/DVD & Digital Album Formats on October 28

    As 007 fans eagerly await the November 14 U.S. opening of MGM’s new James Bond film, Quantum of Solace, Capitol/EMI announces an expanded CD, CD/DVD and digital release of ‘The Best Of Bond… James Bond’ on October 28. The CD and digital album both feature 23 musical standouts from the Bond franchise’s 46 years plus a previously unreleased bonus track, and the CD/DVD includes five music videos, a filmed concert performance and more.

    Just as James Bond has evolved over time, so have the films’ memorable themes. ‘The Best Of Bond… James Bond’ collects an impressive selection of classic and contemporary Bond themes by many of popular music’s top stars, including Paul McCartney and Wings’ “Live and Let Die,” Madonna’s “Die Another Day,” Duran Duran’s chart-topping “A View To A Kill,” Shirley Bassey’s “Goldfinger,” Tina Turner’s “GoldenEye,” kd lang’s “Surrender,” Sheryl Crow’s “Tomorrow Never Dies,” Chris Cornell’s “You Know My Name,” Carly Simon’s “Nobody Does It Better,” and Tom Jones’ “Thunderball,” among many others. John Arnold’s previously unreleased “James Bond Theme” closes the collection.

    EON Productions/Danjaq, LLC, is owned by the Broccoli family and has produced twenty two James Bond films since 1962, including Quantum of Solace. The James Bond films, produced by Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, make up the longest running franchise in film history and include the recent blockbuster films GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies, The World is Not Enough, Die Another Day and Casino Royale. EON Productions and Danjaq LLC, are affiliate companies and control all worldwide merchandising of the James Bond franchise.

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest James Bond news.

  9. 'Quantum of Solace' Game – Ordering Details

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-27

    Activision’s debut 007 game, Quantum of Solace, is now available for pre-order at Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com.

    The James Bond title will be released stateside on 4 November 2008, while the UK version is due for release a few days earlier on 31 October (the same day the film opens in that country).

    All six platforms that Quantum of Solace will be released on–PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Nintendo Wii, Playstation 2, Nintendo DS and Windows PC–are listed for pre-order.

    Article originally posted: 22 July 2008
    Last updated on: 27 October 2008

    Playstation 3

    • UK Release Date: 31 October 2008
    • UK Retail Price: £49.99
    • Order – Amazon.co.uk
    • UK Release Date: 31 October 2008 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • UK Retail Price: £49.99 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • Order – Gamestation UK (Collector’s Ed.)
    • US Release Date: 4 November 2008
    • US Retail Price: $59.99
    • Order – Amazon.com
    • US Release Date: 4 November 2008 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • US Retail Price: $69.99 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • Order – Amazon.com (Collector’s Ed.)

    Xbox 360

    • UK Release Date: 31 October 2008
    • UK Retail Price: £49.99
    • Order – Amazon.co.uk
    • UK Release Date: 31 October 2008 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • UK Retail Price: £49.99 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • Order – Gamestation UK (Collector’s Ed.)
    • US Release Date: 4 November 2008
    • US Retail Price: $59.99
    • Order – Amazon.com
    • US Release Date: 4 November 2008 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • US Retail Price: $69.99 (Collector’s Ed.)
    • Order – Amazon.com (Collector’s Ed.)

    Nintendo Wii

    Playstation 2

    Nintendo DS

    Windows PC

    Keep watching the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest news and complete coverage of Activision’s Quantum of Solace.

  10. 'Quantum of Solace' Cast And Crew Video Interviews

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-10-27

    Just days before the theatre debut, catch up with the key cast and crew members of Quantum of Solace in a series of newly released video interviews.

    The following actors and crew members from the 22nd James Bond film briefly discuss their involvement as well as working alongside others:

    • Marc Forster – Director
    • Barbara Broccoli & Michael G. Wilson – Producers
    • Mathieu Amalric – “Dominic Greene”
    • Gemma Arterton – “Agent Fields”
    • Anatole Taubman – “Elvis”
    • Dame Judi Dench – “M”
    • Giancarlo Giannini – “Rene Mathis”
    • Jeffrey Wright – “Felix Leiter”
    • Jesper Christensen – “Mr. White”

    Marc Forster – Director

    On Locations…

    ‘There were a couple of locations I felt that were very, very one-of-a-kind. You know, there was the observatory in Chile, which I thought was a very unique location. The architecture and look of it set in the desert I really loved. I also loved that idea of having Bond in the desert because it would sort of isolate him from everything and you would feel like he is by himself, set in the desert. I think it would reflect Bond’s state of mind.’

    Watch online at YouTube.

    On Daniel Craig…

    ‘Initially when I first met him, we just spoke generally about Bond and got to know eachother and I just got this feeling that the two of us could work together really well and once I agreed to do the film and we sat down and started working on the script I proved to be right because he was so smart and so intelligent and we both saw eye-to-eye. We both had similar sensitivities towards the character and what the character should do and how he should act and react towards things. It was a very positive working relationship.’

    Watch online at YouTube.


    Barbara Broccoli & Michael G. Wilson – Producers

    On James Bond…

    ‘You know, in Casino Royale, he sort of started off as this military machine who was kind of hellbent on destruction. And of course, he met Vesper who stopped him in his tracks and he opened up emotionally to her and fell in love and was actually considering giving it all up to try and have a normal life. And with her death and her betrayal he decides at the end of that movie, when he says “the bitch is dead”, he just totally shuts down emotionally. This movie is about the conflict he has. The personal conflict within him versus the challenge to go out and find out who was behind it. And I think the emotional journey he’s on, by the end you really feel that he’s regained his humanity.’

    Watch online at YouTube.

    On Daniel Craig…

    ‘Ian Fleming wrote a very complex character in James Bond. So much so that the character’s been able to morph through the various actors who have played him and through various generations. In the books, he internalizes his feelings a lot and that is something that I think Daniel is able to portray, how Bond is feeling and thinking, without really saying very much.’

    Watch online at YouTube.

    On Mathieu Amalric…

    ‘He was the first person we met and we said “OK. That’s done. Got him.” And usually that’s one of the big problems, to get the right villain. And we hadn’t had anyone particular in mind. We didn’t have a specific view in mind. He just walked in and he mesmerized us. He’s just mesmerizing. In person and on the screen. He’s just extraordinary. One of the most extraordinary actors you could ever work with.’

    Watch online at YouTube.


    Mathieu Amalric – “Dominic Greene”

    ‘The bad and the good are inside James Bond because from Casino Royale, to be 007 it’s because you killed two persons. Is he an assassin or is he a secret agent? You feel that inside of Daniel Craig. He plays that. A sort of intimate struggle.’

    Watch online at YouTube.

    Gemma Arterton – “Agent Fields”

    On Her Role…

    ‘I play Agent Fields and she works for the consulate. She’s sent to just to send Bond on his way back home, but she ends up getting charmed by him and she sort of gets caught up in Bond’s business without really knowing what’s going on… and ends up in a sticky situation.’

    Watch online at YouTube.

    On Daniel Craig…

    ‘I was sort of nervous at first because I thought I’m a bit younger than Daniel and I think I’m one of the youngest Bond girls ever. And that’s quite intimidating. But when you’re actually there doing it, it’s quite fine and he’s a really nice down-to-earth guy.’

    Watch online at YouTube.


    Anatole Taubman – “Elvis”

    ‘Elvis is a weird character. He is just really something else. He loves his clothes, but he’s always a bit off with his taste, never really on. It’s never like “Wow! He looks really dashing!”, it’s more like “Wow! Um… OK…” So he’s always a bit off and worried about his look and very vain and in love with himself and overdramatic and thinks he’s all that, but he’s not all that. So yeah, Elvis is a very colourfu tapestry and it makes Mathieu (Amalric), who is my king in the film, Dominic Greene, it makes him shine more. And he can be proficient and subtle and precise.’

    Watch online at YouTube.


    Dame Judi Dench – “M”

    On The ‘M’/007 Relationship…

    ‘He’s kind of a loose canon in her eyes and has to prove really that he is somebody that she can trust. And that he trusts her.

    Watch online at YouTube.

    On Daniel Craig…

    ‘We knew eachother and you know, when you know an actor, it makes it that much easier. You understand how they work and they understand you can kind of shortcut things. He’s hugely good fun and unbelievably concentrated. It’s a great mixture.’

    Watch online at YouTube.


    Giancarlo Giannini – “Rene Mathis”

    ‘My character is the same as he was in Casino Royale. Mathis was ambiguous in that movie. It was difficult to understand if he was a good guy or a bad guy. The audience, even Bond, didn’t really know. But I think that a true spy is always more intriguing if he remains ambigous.’

    Watch online at YouTube.


    Jeffrey Wright – “Felix Leiter”

    ‘There’s a parallel between Felix and Bond in that they both share a common sense of right and wrong. Not necessarily based on an institutional idea, but based on their own morality and so in that way there’s a bonding between them. Felix acts out of that sensibility as opposed to the company line. I suppose that works to the advantage of everyone at the end of the day or maybe that’s giving too much away…’

    Watch online at YouTube.


    Jesper Christensen – “Mr. White”

    ‘This is sort of the second instalment of what happened in Casino Royale. That film ends by Bond shooting me in the knee and he has learned his lesson that you don’t kill people before you ask the questions. And this films starts five minutes after.’

    Watch online at YouTube.

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for most up-to-date and complete coverage of Quantum of Solace.