CommanderBond.net
  1. Beenox Behind Activision's Bond Game For Nintendo Wii

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-03

    It was first reported on CommanderBond.net back in August 2007 that new James Bond video game licence holder Activision had enlisted the talents of the Treyarch, Beenox and Vicarious Visions studios to develop their first 007 game, which is expected to be released late this year (and speculated to be based off of the Bond 22 film).

    The Wiire reports today that Beenox studio is currently working on developing the James Bond game for the Nintendo Wii console.

    Said Thomas Wilson, Creative Director for developer Beenox: ‘Right now we’re working on a James Bond Wii title in conjunction with Treyarch and we’re rolling with it because we’re really good at what we’re doing and Activision doesn’t want to send their ports anywhere else.’

    He continued: ‘One thing we want to make sure of if we’re making the Wii version is that we absolutely want the controls to be top notch. Although we don’t fully control the original development content because it’s in collaboration with Treyarch, that’s one thing that we can do–make sure we put out a strong Wii title.’

    Besides the Wii console, Activision’s first 007 game is also planned to be released on the other next-generation consoles, Windows PC and hand-held platforms.

    Bizarre Creations are reportedly on work on the second Bond game from Activision, which will possibly be a racing game.

    CBn will keep you updated with all the latest news and details regarding the upcoming James Bond games from Activision.

  2. Welcome to Austria, Mr. Bond

    By Heiko Baumann on 2008-01-03
    Feldkirch

    Feldkirch

    Talk about Austria as shooting location for the 22nd still unnamed James Bond
    movie first came up in July, when CBn
    reported that an Eon team
    with producers Barbara Broccoli, Michael G. Wilson and director Marc Forster had
    visited the Floating Stage at the Festival site in Bregenz.

    Vorarlberg Online
    and various Austrian and Swiss media report today that
    both Bregenz Festival speaker Axel Renner and local production manager Leonard
    Gmuer of Unicorn Films have confirmed that both the Floating Stage in Bregenz for
    a major scene and the previously
    rumoured
    nearby small town of Feldkirch for a minor scene have been chosen.
    However, both say that still no contracts have been signed, but that this would
    be only a matter of a few minor details and a few days.

    Floating Stage with 'Tosca' Set

    Floating Stage with ‘Tosca’ Set (Image copyright Bregenz Festival, Karl Forster)

    As previously reported, a
    casting of extras will take place. Now the details for this have been announced:
    1,200 to 1,500 extras for the Bregenz shooting and 25 to 30 extras for the
    Feldkirch shooting are wanted, the casting will take place at the
    Kornmarkttheater in Bregenz on January 18th, 19th and 20th, each day from 9.00
    AM to 5.00 PM. They are looking for a "mixed audience, from 18 to 70", dress
    code from "well dressed" to "tres chic" (dressed for a theatre visit), as the
    extras will have to impersonate a real Festival audience. A bit of stamina and
    patience is required, as shooting will take place on several nights in the
    timespan from 28th April to 10th May 2008. Also wanted are athletic types who
    could act as security people, and the producers are also looking for cars, so
    people can bring pictures of their cars to the casting. Applicants will have to
    fill in a questionnaire and a picture of them will be taken and then, everything
    left to do is waiting and hoping. "People are people" says Leonard Gmuer, "Not
    only local residents but also people from nearby Germany and Switzerland are
    invited to take part."

    Gmuer can’t promise that people will actually be able to catch a glimpse of
    Daniel Craig, as he will be protected and it has to be secured that he’ll be
    able to work concentrated. But he will certainly be shooting scenes on location.
    As it is common use, he’s not allowed to tell any details, but he revealed that
    Bregenz will be Bregenz in the movie and not double for any other place. Welcome
    (back) to Austria, Mr. Bond.

  3. 'Bond 22' Filming Begins

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-02
    Daniel Craig

    Daniel Craig

    Start the countdown. Today marked the official beginning of principal shooting at Pinewood Studios for Daniel Craig’s next James Bond adventure, the still untitled Bond 22.

    While Bond baddies Mathieu Amalric and Anatole Taubman have already been confirmed by director Marc Forster, according to Variety, a studio executive revealed that Jeffrey Wright, who made his debut as Felix Leiter in 2006’s Casino Royale will be returning for Bond 22.

    Furthermore, producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli and the studios are reportedly on the verge of casting a female lead and will make a decision within two weeks.

    Anatole Taubman
    Mathieu Amalric
    Joaquin Cosio

    Bond 22 Baddies: Anatole Taubman, Mathieu Amalric and Joaquin Cosio

    In mid-December, Empire magazine reported that British actress Gemma Arterton was locked in for a ‘fairly major’ Bond girl role in the film–this has yet to be confirmed by Eon Productions.

    As earlier reported on CommanderBond.net, shooting for Bond 22 was planned to take place at the Barbican, Europe’s largest multi-arts and conference venue, sometime this week.

    In related news, director Marc Forster has stated in an interview with Swiss online magazine 20min.ch that he intends a running time for the finished film of exactly 120 minutes – and not a minute longer.

  4. George MacDonald Fraser (1925-2008)

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-02

    George MacDonald Fraser, who is credited for the screenstory and screenplay on the 1983 James Bond film Octopussy, has died at the age of 82, reports the BBC News.

    The Carlisle-born journalist turned author, who served as a solder in Burma and India during World War II and was appointed an OBE in 1999, died Wednesday, his publisher said.

    Fraser died following a battle with cancer, said Nicholas Latimer, director of publicity for Knopf, which will release Fraser’s latest work The Reavers in the US this upcoming April. Latimer was unable to provide details of where Fraser died. He lived on the Isle of Man, off the coast of northwest England.

    Besides Fraser’s contributions to 1983’s Octopussy through his screenplay, he also reportedly suggested the filming location of India to the producers (which ultimately became one of the main aspects of the film). His non-Bond screenplays include Royal Flash and The Three Musketeers.

    While Fraser’s connection to the world of 007 exists through Roger Moore’s sixth Bond film, his worldwide appeal was due to the popular Flashman adventure novels.

    The first of ultimately 11 novels, Flashman, was published in 1969 and introduced the rogueish and womanising anti-hero, Sir Harry Flashman, to the world. The character played a pivotal role in several of the 19th century’s most historical moments and always managed to emerge unscathed and covered in glory. The final novel was published in 2005.

    Fellow author Kingsley Amis called him ‘a marvellous reporter and a first-rate historical novelist.’

    The former news editor on the Herald (where Fraser served as a deputy editor), 83-year-old Bob Brown, described MacDonald Fraser as ‘a highly competent journalist. He was a smashing bloke, amiable, friendly and first-class company,’ he said.

    Murray Ritchie, 66, was taught journalism by MacDonald Fraser on the Dumfries Standard in the 1960s. ‘He was a brilliant journalist,’ he said. ‘He was a superbly gifted writer, he wrote with such clarity, and was a good leader writer and editor.’

    He added: ‘Way back in the ’60s he was seen as the journalist of his generation in Scotland.’

    Fraser’s final novel, The Reavers, is a a historical tale featuring espionage and intrigue during the reign of Elizabeth I.

    To read more about George MacDonald Fraser, check out his 2002 memoir, The Light’s on at Signpost.

    CBn wishes to extend their condolences to the family and friends of George MacDonald Fraser.

  5. Literary 007 Reviewed: Ian Fleming's 'Casino Royale' (Part I)

    By Devin Zydel on 2008-01-01
    Ian Fleming

    Ian Fleming

    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… Zographos

    “I’ve got the corpses of a Japanese cipher expert in New York and a Norwegian double agent in Stockholm to thank for being a Double O. Probably quite decent people. They just got caught up in the gale of the world…”

    It would not be very long before James Bond himself got caught up in the gale of the world, both figuratively and literally. His first adventure details his mission to destroy a Russian paymaster named Le Chiffre, who has embezzled Soviet funds into whorehouses. All the elements of the Bond mystique are laid out: the martinis, the girls, the guns, the cars, the villains, and most important of all, 007 himself. From the first scene in the casino, he is portrayed as a cold, methodical secret agent who lives for the present. Casino Royale is entirely realistic, a rare feat in the world of 007, and is based on a real World War II operation.

    The mission begins with Bond’s arrival to the seaside gambling town of Royale-les-Eaux, France, where he intends to bankrupt Le Chiffre at the casino, in the hopes that Le Chiffre will be permanently “retired” by his Russian employers. Prior to this duel, Bond makes contact with his three allies: René Mathis, the cheerful Deuxième Bureau agent, Felix Leiter, a CIA man sent to cover the NATO angle, and Vesper Lynd, the beautiful Section S agent, sent by Head of S to ensure that the operation runs smoothly. Though Vesper is the driving force in the last third of the book, she is fairly bland and fails to fulfill to her role. As Bond later realizes, she “gave little of her real personality away”. To aggravate matters, she spends a large portion of the time in tears. Nevertheless, Bond’s struggle with Vesper provides some of the most striking, dramatic writing the series has ever seen.

    After several days of preparation, in which Bond’s cover is mysteriously blown and he is nearly killed in a clever assassination attempt, he is ready to take on Le Chiffre at the casino tables. It is apparent as Bond describes the game of baccarat to Vesper and the reader that Fleming knows precisely what he is talking about. This infinite care for detail becomes a cornerstone of the series, later to be repeated with the Moonraker bridge game and the Goldfinger golf match. The duel begins and Bond and Le Chiffre play silently, menacing each other with body gestures. However, some people refuse to play by the rules, and Le Chiffre has devised a trick or two to give him an edge in the game.

    Not surprisingly, Bond emerges the victor, and he and Vesper go out for drinks. But the celebrations are interrupted when Vesper is kidnapped by Le Chiffre and his men. Bond’s high-speed pursuit leads to a car crash and him being taken to Le Chiffre’s villa for interrogation. In one of the most haunting torture scenes to ever grace a thriller novel, Bond is brutalized with a cane carpet beater. Every little detail of the torture is faithfully described, more than making up for that fact that Le Chiffre is not a particularly interesting or menacing villain to begin with. Bond’s agony ends with a superb twist and Le Chiffre and his men are eliminated.

    Though the villain is dead, only two-thirds of the book have passed. Bond is in the hospital recovering from his injuries. He tells Mathis that he is considering resigning. In an unusual scene of self-doubt, he suggests that the world needs villains like Le Chiffre in order to know what “evil” really is. Mathis, ever the optimist, laughs off Bond’s sophistries and tells him that he will soon change his mind. After several weeks of recovery, Bond regains his health and travels with Vesper to a French seaside inn for a vacation, where he considers marrying her. It is here that the final disaster occurs and Mathis’s prediction comes true.

    It can be simply put that Casino Royale IS James Bond. Never is his character so focused and gripping. Never is Fleming’s prose so astonishing. Though let down by supporting characters, this is the perfect book to discover what James Bond is truly about.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… Dr. Noah

    It’s a great book, very readable, though lacking the “larger than life” feel of the other Fleming books.

    It also has a very odd structure. It’s basiclly in three parts, part one is both the build up to, and the baccarat game itself, part two is the kidnapping of Vesper and Bond’s torture, while part three is Bond’s love affair. The structure more or less works (I’d have liked Bond to express his disaffection with his job at the begining of the book, making it a full sub-plot rather than being tacked on towards the end.)

    I’m actually suprised at how much of the book is in the movie, i.e., most of the plot points, characters and car chases make it over to the movie.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… Tehuti 004

    The Original

    Well, this is the first Ian Fleming book, and obviously the first book ever in which there was James Bond.

    Now, most of the Bond movies and novels all follow the combination of, girls, gadgets, cars, villains with an obscene plot. But funnily, this novel doesnt have half of these. There are no gadgets, only the sidearm, there is one female without the whole story who does anything, there is a car chase, which is quite long, and there is the villain, Le Chiffre, with a plot to get aload of money.

    Well, just from reading the title of the books, you can tell that is revolves around gambling. Which it does. There is an excellently described showdown with Bond and Le Chiffre in the Casino, and it does, I admit, keeps you on the edge of your seat.

    Now, James Bond = Aston Martin? Well, in this case, no. But James still drives a very British car, a Bentley, now I won’t bore anyone or attempt to spoil the book. So I wont say anymore.

    The “Bond girl” is Vesper. She is described very well when she enters the book. She has a mystic about her, which is revealed at the end. She is very much a big part in the book from the very beggining.

    All in hand, this was the book to set the standard by, and well, it certainly set the standard. A great read, and obviously a classic.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… Gri007

    This is an excellent book to start what is a literature phenomenon.

    I have just finished reading Casino Royale the second time round and just forgot at how quick the story takes place and evolves. To me it is a story that makes one keep turning the pages.

    You get to know a little bit about Bond’s past with the Secret Service. It is a very realistic book and the torture seqeunce is fantastic.

    Well done Mr. Fleming for introducing us all to the best spy in the world.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… superracer0022

    What a great start for a book series that began a phenomenon.

    Not what I expected from watching the Barry Nelson TV-Movie version (THANK GOD). I’m not saying that the movie was bad it is just there were some things I didn’t like about it.

    After reading the book I was very relieved that it was not very similar to that version (and as I expected it is not similar to the David Niven version either). Bond is shown much more normal in the book, from him getting tortured to him actually loosing at baccarat. Fleming did an amazing job with all of the distict characters, and one thing that I found interesting was that by just reading this book I was able to play a game of baccarat, for it does such a good job of explaining the game to the reader.

    There were several things in the book that reminded me of different movies (the traps in his room to detect intruders -> Dr. No, the torture, however not really similar, reminded me of Die Another Day in showing a more human side of 007). Bond is also shown much more darker in how he is not very proud of being a Double-0 for it means he has killed somebody in cold blood. The end of the book was an extreme suprise to me.

    I was very pleased with this book, and there were times when I would stay up past 12 reading it. It shows a completely different side of the James Bond world, and gives an idea of how he was originally envisioned.

    The book is a definite classic, and exceeds all exspectations of a Bond Movie Fan.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewd by The Richmond Spy

    I actually read it for the first time today. My goal was to read several chapters a day and get it done in a a few days, but I was hooked and had to finish it!

    What can I say? It was great. I loved the vivid descriptions of the scenery and situations (especially when Bond had the gun to his back). I could see the setting at the end of the book in my head very clearly. The ending was very surprising, yet painful.

    (I pictured Daniel Craig, Jeffrey Wright, and Eva Green in my head while reading!)

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… Double-Oh Agent

    “The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning.” With these words, Ian Fleming began his career as a novelist and was on his way to creating arguably the greatest fictional character of the 20th century.

    While British secret agent James Bond 007 is more famous for appearing in films on the silver screen, he nevertheless got his start and honed his character on the printed page. That start occurred with Fleming’s breakthrough debut novel, Casino Royale.

    In the first chapter Fleming sets the groundwork for what will be a battleground of green felt, playing cards, and casino chips. It is here that the reader gets the first inkling that this book will be different than any he has read before. That is punctuated by the final paragraph of the chapter.

    “His last action was to slip his right hand under the pillow until it rested under the butt of the .38 Colt Police Positive with the sawn barrel. Then he slept, and with the warmth and humor of his eyes extinguished, his features relapsed into a taciturn mask, ironical, brutal, and cold.” And that is describing the hero of the piece.

    From there, Fleming goes back in time to Bond getting his assignment. Many of the recurring characters are there: the wonderful Moneypenny, the stern boss “M”, the loyal aide Bill Tanner. They all add a nice office background for Bond, the man with a license to kill. Later we meet up with two more people who would go on to be great friends of Bond–Rene Mathis, a Frenchman, and Felix Leiter, an American, and after reading their banter back and forth it’s easy to see the bond (no pun intended) forming in their respective relationships.

    The rest of the cast of characters are an eclectic bunch indeed. They include the lovely but troubled Vesper Lynd, the disgusting Le Chiffre, the drug-addicted Basil, the slimy Corsican, and the mysterious Adolph Gettler. All the characters are well written–particularly the main players: Bond, Vesper, Le Chiffre, Leiter, and Mathis.

    As for Bond, he is tough, moody, opinionated, and chauvanistic. He takes his job seriously and has little time for women. At first glance, he doesn’t sound like the type of hero one would root for. But as the book goes on and the reader learns more about him, one can see that there is more to Bond than meets the eye. You begin to like him and care about him and want him to succeed. (Of course it doesn’t hurt that the people he’s going up against are much worse than he is).

    The plot is simple and straight-forward and without the far-reaching world-endangering scenarios of some of the later novels and the films. Le Chiffre’s head is on the proverbial chopping block as his employer, SMERSH, has discovered that he has embezzled funds to supplement his ownership of several French brothels. Now, with time running out, he has one last chance to recoup the lost money and save himself and he plans on doing that at the gaming tables of Casino Royale. That brings in Bond who is sent by Her Majesty’s government to ensure that Le Chiffre does not succeed in his quest and thereby remains out of SMERSH’s good graces.

    The major part of the book deals with the two men’s one-on-one battle at the baccarat table. The scenes are well written and paced. Tension fills the air with every page. Nowhere is that more prevalent than when Bond bancos Le Chiffre and immediately feels the hard barrel of a weapon in the small of his back courtesy of The Corsican. How 007 gets out of his predicatment when all around him are oblivious to his situation is funny and well done.

    Bond eventually manages to come out on top but his luck proves to be fleeting as Vesper is kidnapped and then Bond is captured by a desperate Le Chiffre. That leads to perhaps the best portion of the book whereupon Bond is tortured at the hands of the villain with an ordinary house-cleaning instrument. After reading the sequence one will never be able to look at a carpet beater the same way again.

    At the end of the torture scene, just as Bond is on his last bits of strength, Fleming rescues 007 in an ingenious and ironic way. It’s one that the reader never sees coming and yet he doesn’t feel cheated.

    The final third of the novel deals with Bond’s recuperation and love affair with Vesper. It is touching and curious at the same time as Vesper seems to be two different people during this section. It isn’t until the final pages that we finally learn the whole truth and everything falls into place–Bond’s world crashing down with it. It is at the end of this book that we get the complete Bond, the Bond that will continue on throughout the rest of the series. That point is emphasized with the final line in the book which is just as inspired and perfect as the opening line, but one that I won’t quote here.

    In Casino Royale, Fleming set out to write the spy story to end all spy stories. That may not have happened as he went on to write 13 more novels, but he nevertheless wrote a great one–one that prove to be a solid introduction to the world’s most famous secret agent.

    ‘Casino Royale’ reviewed by… rafterman

    I don’t normally like to reread my novels. I much prefer to rewatch films. I’ve rewatched the Bond films countless times. I know them, but I’ve only read my Flemings once. Having just read Casino Royale for the second time, I’m amazed by how good it really is. Better than I remembered. It’s the first and easily one of the best in the series. Not all of the elements are here yet, though. Casino Royale is a small story. About a secret agent, a big guy and a card game. There’s little of the sweep, no globe hopping, no gadgets for the film fans and just one girl, but what is here is the atmosphere. The character of James Bond is presented to us in minimal, but necessary details. That is the wonder of Fleming, he creates a world, one with the element of the bizarre, one highly detailed. Here we have Bond give instructions on the perfect drink, check his room for intruders by examining hairs stretched across door frames. Here is a Bond who curses the inclusion of a woman in his mission. A man who claims it’s not hard to attain a double oh, as long as you are willing to kill for it. Fleming sets us down into the world of smoke and cards, fast cars, cruel men and women.

    It’s all about the detail. Everything is described in just right amount of words and it feels as if this just flowed out of Ian’s typewriter without a bit of reworking.

    It’s a cruel world and James Bond is a cruel man, bored by the soft life, driven by the need for action. A man who puts his all into everything he does. With this first novel Fleming brought the character to life and it’s just a shame the novel has not been truly brought to the screen. Casino Royale is epitome of James Bond.

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

  6. IMDb Updates With 'Bond 22' Release Dates

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-12-31

    While it is wise to note that the only Bond 22 release date thus far confirmed by Eon Productions is 7 November 2008, the IMDb has been updated with some further dates for Daniel Craig’s second James Bond film.

    As initially reported by CommanderBond.net back in September, Bond 22 was slated for release (according to the IMDb) on 7 November in the UK, US, Brazil, Denmark, Sweden and Turkey. Germany and the Netherlands are scheduled to get the film one day earlier on the sixth.

    Most recently, France and Belgium are listed as getting a 5 November release while 007 fans in Australia will have to wait until the 13th. The full listing from the IMDb:

    • Belgium – 5 November 2008
    • France – 5 November 2008
    • Germany – 6 November 2008
    • Netherlands – 6 November 2008
    • Brazil – 7 November 2008
    • Denmark – 7 November 2008
    • Finland – 7 November 2008
    • Spain – 7 November 2008
    • Sweden – 7 November 2008
    • Turkey – 7 November 2008
    • UK – 7 November 2008
    • USA – 7 November 2008
    • Australia – 13 November 2008

    Once again, keep in mind that this release information should be considered unofficial until confirmed by Eon / Sony Pictures Entertainment. In the case of Casino Royale, several international release dates for the film were switched around a few times before the film premiered in November 2006.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest coverage and details on Daniel Craig’s upcoming James Bond film.

  7. Celebrate New Year's Eve Like James Bond

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-12-30

    NEW YEAR’S EVE GALA 2007-2008 in DC
    JAMES BOND 007 – LICENCE TO THRILL

    New Year’s Around The World Gala – the Ultimate NYE Party!
    Monday, Dec 31, 2007 at the SHERATON NATIONAL
    VIP / Presidential Seating 7:00PM, Regular Admission 9:00PM
    Hosted by Euronet International

    “Licenced To Thrill For Your Eyes Only”

    Welcome to the ultimate 2007-2008 New Year’s Eve Gala in Washington DC. This exhilarating New Year’s evening of extravagance, suspense and festivity in DC is ‘Licenced to Thrill’ all James Bond fans. For Your Eyes Only, stimulate your senses with a profusion of fragrant cuisine, intoxicating libations and exotic entertainment in visually stunning Bond locations from Around The World. International Secret Agents and Spies get an all time high partying at this thunderball in the following James Bond Destinations!

    • IRELAND – A Bagpiper Welcome from Dublin
    • MADAGASCAR – Never Say Never Again in Casino Royale
    • RIO DE JANEIRO – Rendezvous with Manuela at Rio Samba Carnival
    • ICELAND – Die Another Day with Jinx
    • LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN – Nobody Does It Better in Dr. No’s Lair
    • ENGLAND – MI6 London Debriefing: The World Is Not Enough
    • INDIA – Octopussy’s All Time High in Bollywood
    • RUSSIA – The Spy Who Loved Me in Moscow
    • USA – Thunderball Live Feed to 2008 New Year’s Eve Countdown in Times Square, New York

    GALA FEATURES:

    Thrilling Entertainment

    • Golden Girls and Samba Dancers
    • Strolling Magician, Juggler, Contortionist and more
    • Spy Hand Writing Analyst, Caricaturists Drawings
    • Mock Casino Gambling with Prizes
    • Ice Bar with Martinis – Shaken Not Stirred
    • Special Theme Cocktails in Each Party Area
    • Open Premium Bars
    • Free Flowing Champagne All Night
    • Fragrant Internationally Themed Buffet Stations
    • Delectable Dessert Stations and Chocolate Fountains
    • Midnight Champagne Toast
    • Party Hats, Tiaras, Noisemaker Favors
    • Hotel Rooms Only $99
    • FREE Self Parking
    • Best Service In-Town, No Long Lines
    • 3 Distinct Tickets Levels (Regular, VIP and Presidential)

    Music From Around The World

    • 18-Piece Big Band Orchestra – Highlighting Eight Decades of Ballroom and Popular Hits
      Washington DC’s Top DJs
    • DJ Art – 70’s, 80’s, 90’s & Rock ‘n Roll
    • DJ Moh – Bollywood, Bhangra, Middle Eastern, Hip Hop
    • DJ Hazzard – Salsa, Merengue, Soca, Calypso, Reggae & Reggaeton
    • DJ Danchik & DJ Chris Burns – Russian Hits, Euro Dance Music & House

    NO DATE NEEDED:

    Gala attracts singles, couples and groups of friends alike!

    VENUE:

    Sheraton National
    900 S. Orme Street
    Arlington, VA 22204

    Parking: COMPLIMENTARY SELF PARKING

    TICKETS AND DETAILS:

    http://www.euronetinternational.com/NewYearsEveDC/

    DEBONAIR GENTELMEN, YOU are James Bond for this night – Walk into the room, suave and smooth, fast and cool! Come as your favorite Bond character. Sip on a martini shaken not stirred poured from our martini ice luge in the Ice Bar. Find your Midas touch in Casino Royale. Set your sights on a glamorous lady and make a move on her heart with your exclusive license to thrill charm!

    FABULOUS LADIES, put on your divine diamonds and your glamorous gown to become a Beautiful Bond Beauty for the night. Come as your favorite Bond Character and with Bond in your presence, tease and tantalize him with your charisma. Set your gold and honey trap and dance into the fire to be that woman who will make 007 never say never again!

    Inhale savory aromas wafting from international buffet stations tempting your taste buds to sample each colorful dish. Open Bars with premium liquors, free flowing champagne, martinis poured from ice martini luges, or tropical concoctions liven up your spirits and gets your toes tapping to famous hits from our Orchestra and DJ’s. You’ll be delighted by our court jester, astounded by the tricks of our strolling magician, and awed by our contortionist. Enjoy mesmerizing performances in each locale and feel like a superstar when our roving photographer takes your photo. Stop by Casino Royale and chitchat about 007 trivia with other players or get a masterpiece of your fabulous self by our caricaturists. As midnight approaches, get your party favors and champagne and gather in designated party destinations for the Times Square to Countdown to Midnight with other revelers to welcome in 2007.

    So, whether you’re the MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN or a dazzling lady with GOLDEN EYES, we have something for you!

    TICKETS AND DETAILS:

    http://www.euronetinternational.com/NewYearsEveDC/

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for all the latest on James Bond 007 events happening around the world.

  8. Forster Confirms Amalric And Taubman

    By Tim Roth on 2007-12-30
    'Bond 22' director Marc Forster

    Bond 22 director Marc Forster

    In an elaborate interview with Swiss newspaper

    Sonntagszeitung
    , Bond 22 director Marc Forster has revealed some tidbits
    about the upcoming Bond 22. While the first part of the interview mainly
    focusses on Forster’s latest project The Kite Runner, the second part is
    all about Bond.

    Most importantly, Forster confirmed that French Mathieu Amalric and Swiss
    Anatole Taubman are signed for the roles of the two major villains of the film.
    Asked whether Switerzland was a shooting location, Forster said, "For a long
    time, there were two, three locations we could not decide on. But finally, the
    script developed into a direction where Switzerland would not fit, so it was not
    an option anymore. Still, I managed to cast Anatole Taubman as the second major villain".

    Forster also commented on the question, if the casting of Taubman had anything
    to with his nationality, as both Forster and Taubman grew up in Switzerland.
    Forster: "Not at all. Anatole was really really good in the audition. I hadn’t
    even heard of him before."

    Forster also said that he would have loved to have Bruno Ganz portray the
    main villain. Ganz is a Swiss actor, best known for his role as Adolf Hitler in
    the highly praised German film The Downfall (2004) about the last days of Hitler
    in his Berlin bunker. "Still, Bruno Ganz could only have been the main villain.
    But we already signed Mathieu Amalric for this role".

    Asked about his first impressions on working on a Bond film, Forster said
    that "the producers have supported me in nearly everything I wanted to do so far.
    Some of my ideas were, however, too expensive. It’s not true that James Bond
    films have an unlimited budget." Forster also repeated his remarks from a recent
    New York Times interview. “When
    James Bond started in the 1960s, travelling was something really exotic. The
    world has become smaller. When Bond travels to a beach full of palm trees nowadays, it
    nearly looks banal. In a way, the most interesting remaining journey for Bond is
    the journey into his mind. We go deeper into Bond himself.” – So will Bond have
    a split personality? – Forster: "There will be some elements of this, yes."

    Start of principal shooting is, according to Forster, January 3, 2008.

    Keep watching CommanderBond.net for the most up-to-date James Bond news on the web.

  9. Double OBE For James Bond Producers

    By Heiko Baumann on 2007-12-29
    Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson

    Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson

    HM The Queen has been graciously pleased to give orders for appointments to the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, and on the Queens New Years Honours 2008 list of those to be Ordinary Officers of the Civil Division of the said Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE), two (at least for Bond fans) familiar names can be found: Barbara Dana Broccoli and Michael Gregg Wilson.

    The half sibling producers of the James Bond movies will both receive their award for services to the film industry.

    OBE medal

    OBE medal

    Another recepient of an OBE will be 94 years old veteran cinematographer Douglas Slocombe, who has worked on a great number of movies since the 1940s, among them the “unofficial” 1984 Bond movie Never Say Never Again and the Indiana Jones movies.

    'Never Say Never Again' cinematographer Douglas Slocombe

    Never Say Never Again cinematographer Douglas Slocombe

    Among those honoured are also Australian singer Kylie Minogue, who’ll receive an OBE, Ian McKellen who’ll become a member of the Order of the Companions of Honour and Jethro Tull lead singer Ian Anderson, to become Member of the Royal Victorian Order.

    CommanderBond.net Team would like to express their Heartfelt Congratulations.

    The full Queens New Years Honours 2008 list can be downloaded here:
    http://www.honours.gov.uk/lists/2008honours.aspx

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest James Bond news.

  10. Shooting At Barbican Venue Next Week

    By Tim Roth on 2007-12-28
    'Barbican Venue

    Barbican Venue


    The Times
    reports today that scenes for Bond 22 will be shot at the Barbican,
    Europe’s largest multi-arts and conference venue presenting a diverse range of
    art, music, theatre, dance and education events, located near London Wall.

    At the Barbican, a sign has gone up giving warning that next week it will be
    the venue for the filming of a scene from Bond 22. The sign also says that a
    scene will be filmed containing a man talking on a mobile phone. Filming will
    take place in the so-called Sculpture Court. Daniel Craig will not attend
    filming there.

    No exact date is given, but Bond 22 is said to start shooting on January 04th, 2008.

    Keep your eyes on the CommanderBond.net main page. We’ll keep you updated with all the latest news and details on Bond 22!