CommanderBond.net
  1. 'My Word Is My Bond': Sir Roger Moore's Memoirs

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-16

    A recent press release has confirmed the title of Sir Roger Moore’s upcoming memoir, My Word Is My Bond.

    Back in October 2007, in a note circulated to several publishers, Sir Roger announced plans to write his autobiography just days before his 80th birthday.

    The book will be ghostwritten by Gareth Owen, Sir Roger’s personal assistant. He said: ‘Turning 80 is a milestone, a time to reflect. It’ll be a frank and fun book, but he’s not interested in digging the dirt.’

    Earlier rumoured to have an opening bid of £1 million for world rights to the memoirs, HarperCollins has since been announced as the publisher.

    ‘For the first time, he will share his recollections of playing some of the world’s most famous roles, his fears of serious illness, including his own bout with prostate cancer (which he beat), and how his neighbour Audrey Hepburn got him involved in Unicef, a charity he is still involved with today,’ HarperCollins said in a statement.

    A specific release date for My Word Is My Bond is yet to be announced.

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net for all the latest coverage of these upcoming memoirs by Sir Roger Moore and all the latest literary 007 news.

  2. Shooting At Lago Di Garda In April

    By Tim Roth on 2008-01-16
    Locanda Punta San Vigilio

    Locanda Punta San Vigilio

    As first reported by CBn
    back in October, the German speaking magazine

    Gardasee-Zeitung
    had reported that the Lago die Garda, a throughout Europe
    famous mountain lake in Italy, could possibly serve as a location for Bond 22.
    CommanderBond.net can reveal today that scenes for the latest James Bond film
    will indeed be shot on the shores of Lago di Garda.

    The magazine claimed in October that a sequence will be filmed in the Locanda
    Punta San Vigilio, the villa of the Italian noodle manufacturer Giovanni Rana,
    as well as in the Grand Hotel Fasano in Gardone. Whether these specific
    locations will be used has not been confirmed so far, but CBn has learned
    that scenes for Bond 22 will be shot in the
    villages of Limone and Tremosine in
    the last two weeks of April, right before
    shooting in Bregenz begins.

    Lago di Garda is the largest lake in Italy and is located in the north of the
    country. The lake and its shoreline are divided between the provinces of Verona
    (to the south-east), Brescia (south-west), and Trentino region (north). The lake
    is a major tourist destination, with a number of hotels and resorts along its
    shore.

    CommanderBond.net will keep you updated with all the latest news and details
    on Bond 22.

  3. Charlie Higson Continues Work On 'Young Bond 5'

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-15

    While things have been relatively quiet in the world of Young Bond lately (although it’s to be expected when compared to release of both Double or Die and Hurricane Gold last year), author Charlie Higson is still working along on the fifth adventure, due out this September.

    The Young Bond Dossier reports that Higson made a recent appearance at a Puffin event showcasing their books lined up for 2008. The author was ‘forcibly dragged to the presentation’ since he is still working on the currently untitled Young Bond 5.

    Due for release on 4 September 2008, Young Bond 5 will reportedly feature the Royal Family, Windsor Castle as well as James Bond’s expulsion from Eton after an incident with a maid. It currently has a working title of The Shadow War.

    Higson previously said regarding the novel’s ending: ‘We see where he’s going to go in his future and what’s going to happen to him. He learns a quite a few nasty lessons in the book, about life, and people, and who you can trust and not trust.’

    ‘It’s not going to be a particularly happy ending, I don’t think. It’ll be interesting to see how kids react to that.’

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest Young Bond coverage.

  4. Literary 007 Reviewed: Ian Fleming's 'Casino Royale' (Part II)

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-15
    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    This is Part II of a new review series. Click here for Part I.

    With 2008 celebrating the centenary of Ian Fleming, it seemed as good a time as any to launch the newest CommanderBond.net review series: Literary 007 Reviewed.

    As several CBn Forum members are already aware, every two months a James Bond adventure is chosen for members of the Blades Library Book Club to read. Proceeding in chronological order, the club began with Fleming’s Casino Royale back in March 2003 and we are now progressing through the John Gardner Bond adventures.

    Ian Fleming's 'Casino Royale'

    Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale

    It therefore seems logical to start this new series at the beginning with Casino Royale. What follows are selected reviews from the Book Club Forum members. For further details on the club or to post your own review of Casino Royale, simply click here.

    Literary 007 Reviewed: Casino Royale

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… sharpshooter

    In Sydney for a holiday some seven years back ago, I visited a bookstore. Havent had read the Fleming books, I searched and found the Coronet series editions, I purchased Casino Royale – mostly on the great cover artwork. I recall why Casino Royale is my favourite James Bond novel. Even if novel surpassed it, Casino Royale – Ian Fleming’s first James Bond novel typed in 1953, ignited it all.

    In the rather slender read, we have Agent 007 as a fallible human being who learns from his experiences, notably the infamous carpet beating. Bond is a believable human being the reader relates to, who happens to be a secret agent. Bond does not always win his battles at first. To quote Bond #4 Timothy Dalton, who is regarded as Fleming’s Bond, “You can’t relate to a superhero, to a superman, but you can identify with a real man who in times of crisis draws forth some extraordinary quality from within himself and triumphs but only after a struggle. Real courage is knowing what faces you and knowing how to face it.”

    The basis for Bond’s character is all made here. It is a dark and complex book. After all he endures, he is ready to get up and go for it again. His mood when it comes to women, which he claims are for recreation, his taste for heavy living comprising of alcohol and heavy smoking, the cars, the cards, and the internal thoughts of his distaste for killing, yet it is his job. The novel is a step back into a bygone era, yet it remains the timeless definitve take on agent.

    The book is a espionage thriller. Bond is the underdog. He encounters Le Chiffre, essentially his maker – the ultimate villain. He has Bond tortured, yet Bond does not kill him. He makes Bond consider resignation, early on in his career. Bond in deep thought considers who is good and evil, concluding Le Chiffre served a devine purpose in his motivation to hunt down people like him. Bond must get serious in this spy game.

    The cold hearted blunt government’s motives for this are re-enforced when he is betrayed by Vesper Lynd. The following events that follow the card game can be labelled boring and uneventful by some. It is essential to create Bond’s sense of suspicion and distrust of people.

    Fleming’s descriptive, journalistic style serves him well. He enjoyed the finer things in life, therefore he creates quality and craftsmanship so Bond is equipped with the best in the field. It creates a gloss on the story. It also creates the feeling of a travelling loner, with enough spare time to know what he wants. This continued for the duration of his books, but had to begin somewhere. The first appearance of such a style considered snobbery by some.

    The novel is the blueprint of the series and the man himself.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… MHazard

    One of my favorites of the series from the beginning “the smell of a casino…is nauseating” to the end “yes, I said was, the bitch is dead”. Also essential reading to fully understand On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and how the character has grown in the interim. Personally, I don’t think Fleming writes a Bond novel as good until he hits From Russia With Love.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… Nicolas Suszczyk

    There’s about 40 Bond novels written by Ian Fleming and other autors, but you can’t beat the first James Bond novel.

    Casino Royale introduces us to the world of James Bond, an MI6 agent recently promoted to the 00 status, with the codename 007. His mission is far different from the film adventures and posterior novels: there, he doesn’t needs to use his famed 00 code, which gives him a licence to kill. Bond’s mission is to run Le Chiffre down. Le Chiffre is a SMERSH (acronym for Smiert Shpionom, “Death to Spies”) treasury, who has been gambling to baccarat with the organization’s funds. M’s mission for Bond is quite simple, and everything depends of luck: He has to bet against Le Chiffre in a baccarat game at the Casino Royale in Royale-Les-Eaux. But Le Chiffre is previously informed of Bond’s activities, and attempts to kill him every time.

    007 survives the numerous attacks of Le Chiffre, and is assisted by Deuxième Bureau agent Rene Mathis, CIA agent Felix Leiter, and agent Vesper Lynd. James Bond defeats Le Chiffre and dines with Vesper, but both are captured. Bond survives an horrendous torture before two SMERSH hitmen kill Le Chiffre for his betrayal. Thay don’t kill Bond, but they carve a cyrilic letter in his hand with a knife to identify him as an enemy agent, causing Bond to fall unconscious. Bond recovers in an hospital and decides to spend the rest of his life with Vesper, who hides a deep secret: one day, she commits suicide with an overdose of pills and leaves a note revealing that SMERSH captured her lover and force her to work for them.

    Of the novels I’ve read of Bond, Casino Royale is the quintessential book, as we learn some tips of Bond’s past. Particulary good is one of the chapters called “The Nature of Evil”, in wich Bond tells Mathis when he first killed a man to obtain his 00 code. Vesper is a superbly written character, although the film version is even better. We know that for Bond there will be many girls, but Vesper is his first real love, even more important, I think, that Tracy Di Vicenzo in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. We can really see how emotionally touched is 007 when he discovers her dead body. “The bitch is dead”, he comments after realizing her betrayal, altough the spy will visit her grave in future novels, showing us that he really can love and has a very big heart.

    The villian Le Chiffre is not very menacing or frightening, but his torture methods are really cruel. It’s so deep in him the intensity of this first mission that he will ask himself if it really worth saving the world, only to be animatd by Mathis, a great character who will also return in another novel: From Russia, With Love.

    What Bond did I saw while I read it? I really imagined Pierce Brosnan because he’s my favourite Bond, altough when I re-read some parragraphs of the novel recently I truly imagined Daniel Craig as Bond and Eva Green as Vesper, and that shows how good was the effect of the 2006 film version.

    On the last thing, the novel lacks of all the exotic locations of futures adventures, but it has a truly grat description of the atmosphere of a french casino in the opening sentence: “The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning…”

    Casino Royale is an outstanding Bond novel, and you will not be dissapointed. Absolutely amazing.

    Rating: 10/10

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… Double-0-Seven

    Note: This review was written before the release of the 2006 James Bond film starring Daniel Craig.

    Yesterday while at my local Chapters book store I decided to have a look for some Bond books. Of Ian Fleming’s novels they only had Casino Royale and From Russia With Love in stock. I was originally going to wait and buy the movie tie-in edition of Casino Royale and read it while counting down the final few weeks until the films release, but it was only eleven dollars so I decided I might as well pick it up. I would have also picked up From Russia With Love, except it was twenty dollars and I thought that was a little expensive for a paperback, but I’ll probably pick it up next time I’m there.

    Anyway, I started reading Casino Royale as soon as I got home, and I couldn’t put it down. I read the first half of the book before deciding to take a break from reading, and then finished the other half tonight. Usually I never finish books this fast, as I usually only read a few chapters of a book a day, but this book was just too good to stop after only a few chapters.

    I found the whole book enjoyable, and each page kept making me want to read more and more. The whole card scene was fantastic. The torture scene was very brutal and well written, and I had heard about how much Vesper meant to Bond, but never realized how much she really meant to him until actually reading it for myself.

    Overall, I think this is definately my new favorite Bond book. I’m also a lot more excited for the film now than I already was, and can’t wait to see how close the second half of the film is to the book.

    I’ll definately be reading it again before the movie comes out.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… Double-O Eleven

    Note: This review was written before the release of the 2006 James Bond film starring Daniel Craig.

    This most recent re-reading was, of course, in preparation for the upcoming movie, but I think I’ve re-read this book right before every Bond film came out as a way of grounding myself in a time period before James Bond was a household name and before Fleming had even established him as a continuing character. Casino Royale was not the first Bond novel I read. I started off with Goldfinger, Doctor No, Live and Let Die, and The Man with the Golden Gun before I located a copy of Fleming’s premiere novel in a bookstore. The year was 1986, and Fleming’s books were thankfully then in print in the U.S., right before the start of a mysterious dark age. Although I was already a Bond fan based on reading those four books (I even liked The Man with the Golden Gun at that time, which I now consider Fleming’s least), my experience with Bond’s first literary outing sold me forever on Ian Fleming as one of the greatest popular writers in the English language.

    Of all the Fleming Bond novels, Casino Royale is the one I’ve re-read the most often. This isn’t because it’s my personal favorite. That honor belongs to On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. It’s because 1) it’s short and easy to leap into and polish off in two days or less, and 2) it is Genesis and a reminder of where it all started, and what it was like “in the beginning” when there were no expectations and no points for comparison.

    And what a strange beginning it is! There isn’t any novel in the Fleming canon like it. Only You Only Live Twice seems close in moody and style. Compare, say, the style of the very next book, Live and Let Die: fast-paced adventure and action moving quickly from location to location. Now look at the static and somber nature of Casino Royale. Although short and brisk, it is a heavy book where the atmosphere speaks much more than the story. From the famous first paragraph until the famous end line, the prose of Casino Royale is one of heavy sensation: taste, smell, sight. You can almost choke on it.

    But this is also a stark novel. Fleming embellishes his writing with sophisticated and intoxicating prose, but the book nonetheless feels as if it is stripped bare. Emotions are subdued, almost nullified. Business is carried out with lethal seriousness. The meals are sumptuous, the decor glistens, but the game played here is not for shilly-shallying about or plot padding. The story cuts right to the bond and exposes the nerves. The characterization is minimalist in design, especially that of Bond. This is primarily where Fleming’s first novel stands so far away from the others, where Bond turns into a more vivid and fascinating character. The supporting cast is also stonier than in later novels, with the exception of Felix Leiter, who add a nice touch of levity to an otherwise stone-faced serious story.

    And who is this man, James Bond, Agent 007, licensed to kill? Looking at Casino Royale isolated from everything else that followed it, and trying to imagine reading the book in 1953, I find that a tricky question to answer. He’s cold and brutally efficient. He has inner feelings, warming up eventually to Vesper, but believes that survival depends on shutting them out… turning back into a ruthless machine. He is Her Majesty’s hired killer. And his sexism is a touch shocking, although it leads to the most memorable closing line of the books as Bond once again becomes the cold, professional device in the service of the government. There are some intriguing back story details revealed about Bond, such as the two assignments which got him is Double-O designation. I especially found the killing of the Japanese cipher clerk in the RCA building fascinating; Fleming could have crafted a short story all on its own about this incident. In fact, the short story “The Living Daylights” seems to have aspects of it. Bond comes most to life not in his scenes with Vesper, but in his talk with Rene Mathis in the hospital. Here is where I can most clearly see the characterizations to come in Fleming’s later work as Bond ruminates on his job… only to have Mathis sum up Bond’s philosophy for him: the punishment of the wicked. Fleming had the unusual ability as an espionage writer to include both the moral confusions of the spy’s world with the good vs. evil excitement of the heroic thriller.

    Considering the importance placed on the villains in the subsequent books and films, the featured villain of Casino Royale is a non-entity. Le Chiffre is, like his name, nothing more than a number, a cipher. He exists as a silent opponent across the green felt of a baccarat table, a pair of stubby pink hands that deal cards, and a mind that deals death if anything gets in its way. Even with the now-obligatory speech scene, the only scene Le Chiffre gets to dominate, the character appears essentially secondary to the story, a villain plot device along with the shadowy assassins of SMERSH. The real adversary of the story is luck itself, as personified in the baccarat game, one of Fleming’s signature sequences. Although he would pen more Bond vs. Villain confrontations using a game (bridge, golf, canasta), this is the quintessential one and the best handled. I am amazed every time I read it of Fleming’s deft handling of the building of tension as the stakes raise higher and higher, and the way he can encapsulate so much power into the speaking of simple words like “banco” and “suivi.” Even to somewhere unaware of the baccarat rule (good thing Bond gives a brief primer to Vesper beforehand), it’s easy to follow what is going on and what is at stake.

    The torture scene is another Fleming trope that he would never quite duplicate with the same savagery–perhaps something for which we should be thankful! The masochism of this scene is nearly unbearable, and Fleming achieves it without using explict words for what is happening. Quite a feat.

    Structurally, Casino Royale is a bizarre book. The finale takes places two-thirds of the way in. The villain is dead, his scheme stopped. What is there left to do? the reader might wonder. I certainly asked that when I first read it. And this lengthy coda with Bond and Vesper’s romance and it tragic close does seem to go on a bit longer than it should. But the shock of the finale and Bond’s sudden cruelty to Vesper’s memory (does he believe it, or is he protecting himself?) tends to erase gripes about the sudden shift in pacing. It does leave the book on an unforgettable note. It isn’t “the spy story to end all spy stories” as Fleming thought (hell, it was just the beginning!), but it is one of the most moody and strange one ever written. Wherever one might stand on its quality regarding the other books in the series, this is a novel that leaves a startling impression.

    Keep your eyes on the CBn main page for further reviews of Ian Fleming’s James Bond adventures in the upcoming months.

  5. Ian Fleming Publications Reveals Limited Edition First Day Cover

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-14

    Following up the release of the Royal Mail James Bond stamps as part of the centenary celebrations this past week, Ian Fleming Publications have revealed their own limited edition First Day Cover on their website (click here to view).

    New 'Casino Royale' cover artwork

    New Casino Royale cover artwork

    This special First Day Cover incorporates the six 007 novels by Fleming that are currently featured on the stamps issued by the Royal Mail: Casino Royale, Dr No, Goldfinger, Diamonds are Forever, For Your Eyes Only and From Russia with Love.

    Furthermore, the envelope features artwork by Michael Gillette from the forthcoming Penguin hardback release of Casino Royale, which CommanderBond.net first revealed a few days ago.

    Bond fans will notice a few differences in the Casino Royale artwork to be featured on the hardback release and that which is on the IFP First Day Cover envelope. These include some colour variations, the removal of earrings and dress sequins for the envelope and also changes in the text (the envelope features a spade, diamond, club and heart).

    Each cover costs £20 including UK postage. International postage will be added according to weight. The covers will be available to order by credit card through Ian Fleming Publications shortly. To purchase by cheque now, please email [email protected] for an order form.

    Keep your eyes on the CBn main page for all the latest news on the Ian Fleming centenary events taking place throughout 2008. To keep track of all the upcoming 007 releases, events, television shows, and more–just keep your eyes on the CBn Calendar, located on the right panel of our main page.

  6. SPOILERS: 'There is a connection there, yes…'

    By Tim Roth on 2008-01-13
    Daniel Craig

    Daniel Craig

    Film website Rotten
    Tomatoes
    has scored the first interview with Daniel Craig since Bond 22
    started filming 10 days ago. The following extracts
    contain some spoilers, so if you don’t want to know anything about
    Bond 22
    ‘s
    plot, better not read this article.

    First of all, according to Craig, there is no title yet, not even behind the
    scenes. When Rotten Tomatoes suggested in
    an ironic way "The Lady Expects Too Much" as title, Daniel Craig laughingly asked, "Really, is that the rumour?
    That’s quite good. I should write that one down…"

    The more interesting part of the advance publication of the full interview
    focused on the plot. Craig said, "It carries on from where the last one stopped.
    We set up in the last one that there’s this organisation that is destabilising
    the world’s economy because they want to take it over, and that’s his job now,
    to go out and stop them." This statement corresponds with statements from an old
    Daniel Craig interview in
    2006. Back then, he said, "We have a group of people in
    Casino Royale
    that are led by Le Chiffre; at least we think they’re led
    by Le Chiffre. They’re trying to destabilize the world with money, they’re using
    money as the tool… They don’t care who they kill or who they displace. And we
    don’t know who the top man is yet. Hopefully we’ll find out who that is in the
    next Bond movie." Quite.

    Matthieu Amalric

    Matthieu Amalric

    Craig also commented on the casting of Mathieu Amalric as Dominic Greene: "I’m
    over the moon with his casting. I met him very briefly on

    Munich
    but I didn’t do any scenes with him.
    Now I’ve got to know him on
    Bond 22
    […]
    and thought it was amazing." When asked if Amalric was going to play the heavily
    cited Algerian boyfriend of
    Vesper, Craig stated, "There is a connection there, yes…"

    Also, Craig revealed that he did not have to shoot any action scenes so far.
    "We start that next week so I’m sure I’m going to be walking wounded for the
    next six months from next week." He feels very happy about the choice of Marc
    Forster as director: "The fact that Marc Forster’s come in to direct it just
    makes my job a lot easier. He’s taken care of a lot of stuff that I just don’t
    have to think about and I’m just getting on with acting."

    And, he says, the pressure of taking on the mantle of James Bond gets no
    easier. "I don’t know if I’ll ever feel comfortable with it," he said, "I mean,
    it’s James Bond. I don’t know if I’ll ever get to that place and get Zen about
    it; it’s not that kind of role. But I’m enjoying what we’ve shot so far and I’m
    planning to enjoy as much as I can of this filming process. Because, otherwise,
    why do it? I think the pressure is plain to see. We’ve got to make it as good if
    not better than the last one, and that’s the thing that matters. I don’t think
    you can say there’s ever less pressure when you make a $200 million movie." Check out Rotten
    Tomatoes
    for the full article.

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest news and details on Bond 22.

  7. Swedish 'Devil May Care' Announced

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-13
    'Devil May Care'

    Devil May Care

    After the international publishers for Devil May Care, the upcoming James Bond centenary novel by Sebastian Faulks, were announced on the official website last month, further details are starting to come in.

    From Sweden With Love alerted us today that the title for Faulks’ new 007 novel will be I Djävulens Tjänst in Sweden (which roughly translates to ‘In the Service of the Devil’).

    The publisher will be Forum and the novel is due for release in May 2008. Cover artwork is forthcoming.

    According to Faulks, Devil May Care is set in 1967 when ‘Bond is damaged, aging and in a sense it is the return of the gunfighter for one last heroic mission.’

    Devil May Care will be published by Penguin Books in the UK and its territories (under the new Penguin 007 imprint) and by Doubleday in the US on 28 May.

    CommanderBond.net will keep you updated with all the latest news and details on Devil May Care. To keep track of all the upcoming 007 releases, events, television shows, and more–just keep your eyes on the CBn Calendar, located on the right panel of our main page.

  8. The First Podcast of 2008 is Born!

    By @mrpauldunphy on 2008-01-12

    2007 is dead. It’s 2008 now. And we have to get used to it *sigh*.

    So, with this terrible truth in mind and my voice completely back to normal, I came up with something to help you get used to the horrible change in digits.

    That something is this month’s edition of the CommanderBond,net Podcast.Evan Willnow
    Paul Dunphy 20 minutes of Bondian bliss to help you start the year the way Fleming intended. Probably. And talking of Fleming, he comes up a lot this month, because 2008 is his year. I steal Chris Wright’s gig (sorry Chris) and give you an audio round-up of what’s planned for Fleming’s Centenary and what treats we can expect to be flung in our direction from Eon and Activision among others, and I give you all the latest Bond 22 developments and literary news from around the globe.

    If you’re unsure which version of the Podcast to download, I wholheartedly advise you download the Podcast in the “Enhanced” format, as listeners have the added benefit of “Willnowvision”, in which Evan Willnow has enhanced the silky strains of my voice with flashy pictures and sexy chapters and stuff.

    Until next month, my lovelies!

    If you’re subscribed via iTunes under your Podcast section, click the ‘Update’ button to have the new episode downloaded automatically. If you have iTunes installed Click here to subscribe, or you can find more details on how to do this here.

    We ask that you take a few seconds whilst you’re downloading to review the podcast on iTunes or Digg this article (link at the bottom of the page in with a snazzy new graphic button), to spread the word to other 007 fans. And it makes me feel all warm inside!

    Download Enhanced version (Presented in Willnowvision).

    Download Standard version.

    You can download all episodes directly from the bottom of this page, if you can’t be bothered faffing around through iTunes.

  9. Michael Gillette Illustrates New UK Fleming Hardcovers

    By righty007 on 2008-01-12

    Last November, CBn reported that Ian Fleming’s 14 James Bond novels are due to be reprinted in new hardcover editions, as part of the celebration of Ian Fleming’s centenary this year. According to Ian Fleming Publications, the First Day Cover, also “features artwork by Michael Gillette from the forthcoming Penguin hardback edition of Casino Royale.”

    Dr. No Cover LALD Cover You Only Live Twice Cover
    CLICK for a preview of all of the covers on Michael Gillette’s official blog.

    According to Gillette’s official website, “originally from Wales but now based in San Francisco, Michael Gillette who has worked for some of the world’s biggest clients (Urban Outfitters, Capitol Records, Greenpeace, Levi, etc.) as well as taking on many a smaller project (including tee designs for Airside, various apparel, exhibitions, limited prints, etc.)”

    Keep your eyes on the CBn main page for all the latest news on the Ian Fleming centenary events taking place throughout 2008. To keep track of all the upcoming 007 releases, events, television shows, and more–just keep your eyes on the CBn Calendar, located on the right panel of our main page.

  10. James Bond Put On Hold For Xbox Live As 'GoldenEye 007' Stalls

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-12

    Earlier this week, CommanderBond.net reported that the highly popular James Bond video game, Nintendo 64’s GoldenEye 007, was rumoured to be moving into development for the Xbox Live Arcade.

    Unfortunately, K1Bond007 reports that the Bond game has hit a bump in the road.

    As previously pointed out, this rumoured transition to Xbox Live was to be treated with some discretion since Nintendo–the original publisher of GoldenEye 007–was not mentioned to be in negotiations with Microsoft, Rareware, MGM Studios and Activision (who now holds the rights to the Bond video games) at the time.

    As a result, this new version of GoldenEye 007 has been sidelined due to financial difficulties regarding a deal between Nintendo and Microsoft. The game would have featured the same graphics (despite earlier reports of updates in this category), would have seen less playable characters due to licensing issues with certain actors, and an all-new Xbox Live multiplayer mode.

    Until next time it seems…

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net for all the latest news and coverage regarding all the James Bond 007 video games.