CommanderBond.net
  1. Why Lee Child Turned Down The Centenary Novel

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-06

    It was reported back in April 2006 that Lee Child would definitely not be writing the Ian Fleming Centenary novel, due for release in 2008.

    According to a new interview at K1Bond007, Child explains why he turned down the opportunity to write the novel…

    Twice over the period of five years they’ve asked me to write the series, no regrets really because I think it is a thankless task in terms of first financial remuneration, as the terms were more favourable to the Ian Fleming estate than to me, and secondly there is the technical and cultural aspect. I see this as an impossible job as it’s now 2007, around 50 years on from the world that James Bond first appeared in. The world has changed, and one of the reasons the world has changed is because of James Bond, this country has altered its cultural frame of reference because of things like James Bond, so any follow-up fifty years later would be somewhat self-referential, and reading the book would be like watching an ABBA tribute band–i.e. what’s the point?

    Lee Child

    Recently, CBn reported that Ken Follett, despite voicing his interest in the job, had not been asked.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest literary James Bond news.

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  2. Concert Planned To Honour Dr. No's Byron Lee

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-06

    According to a report from The Jamaica Observer, a concert honouring Byron Lee is set to take place in Kingston, Jamaica on Saturday, 30 June 2007.

    James Bond fans will best know Byron Lee and his band, the Dragonaires, as performers of the song ‘Jump Up’ in Dr. No, which can be heard during the scene at Puss Feller’s early on in the film.

    The over 50 years of service to popular music put in by Byron Lee, popularly known as ‘The Dragon’ will again come into focus with the staging of the Honour the Dragon concert, conceptualised by the Friends of Byron Lee Committee. The event will take place on the Lawns of King’s House on Saturday, June 30, 2007, beginning at 9:00 pm.

    “Byron Lee has demanded international respect for taking Jamaican/Caribbean culture to musical heights, a man of this cultural stature must be recognised with performances in his honour,” said member of parliament and member of the Friends of Byron Lee Committee, Olivia ‘Babsy’ Grange.

    Top artistes from Jamaica and the Caribbean region will honour the pioneering role that the legendary band, Byron Lee and the , played in establishing Jamaican musical talent to the world.

    Lee played a pivotal role in the explosion of Jamaican music in the 1960s and 1970s. From the band’s formation in 1956, their international break followed with a performance in the James Bond Film, Dr No (partially filmed in Jamaica); to the stir they created in 1964 at the New York World Fair, where the sound of Jamaica, ska, was taken beyond our shores. Artistes such as Jimmy Cliff, Ken Boothe, and Desmond Dekker accompanied the band. Lee also brought international acts to record in Jamaica, including Jeff Beck, the Rolling Stones and Paul Simon, through his position as head of the Dynamic Sounds studio and the associated label.

    Despite his ongoing battle with cancer, Lee (who spoke by telephone to this writer during the 2007 Jamaica Carnival season), says he remains committed to the music and the entertainment industry.

    Ticket information and artiste line-up will be announced shortly.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest James Bond news.

  3. Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award Shortlist Announced

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-06

    Each year, Ian Fleming Publications Ltd sponsors the Crime Writers’ Association Ian Fleming Steel Dagger; an annual award for the best thriller published in the UK. The winner author is awarded £2000 and also receives a unique ‘steel dagger’, which is handcrafted and based on the weapon used by Special Forces during World War II.

    K1Bond007 reports that the shortlist for this year’s award have been announced:

    • Alex Berenson – The Faithful Spy (Random House)
    • Harlan Coben – The Woods (Orion)
    • R.J. Ellory – City of Lies (Orion)
    • Gillian Flynn – Sharp Objects (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)
    • Michael Marshall – The Intruders (HarperCollins)
    • Michael Robotham – The Night Ferry (Little, Brown)
    • Karin Slaughter – Triptych (Random House)

    The Ian Fleming Steel Dagger judges are Seraphina Granelli, former Manager of Waterstone’s Piccadilly, Gordon Wise, Literary Agent, Mike Stotter, Editor of Shots Magazine, Mike Jecks, crime novelist, and Zöe Watkins, Publishing Manager of Ian Fleming Publications Ltd. The panel is chaired by Corinne Turner, Managing Director of Ian Fleming Publications Ltd.

    The winner is set to be announced on 5 July 2007.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest literary James Bond news.

  4. 'So You Think You Know James Bond' Coming To US In October

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-05

    So You Think You Know James Bond by Clive Gifford is set to be released in the US this upcoming October.

    Released in the UK last October, So You Think You Know James Bond feautures over 1000 questions about the 007 series and the man himself. It will be released in the US on 1 October and can be pre-ordered at amazon.com. The blurb follows:

    In which film did James Bond get married? What car equipped with an ejection seat and machine guns did James Bond drive in Goldfinger? Name the two films in which the memorable henchman Jaws appeared. What does S.P.E.C.T.R.E stand for? In which Bond film did Kojak star, Telly Savalas, play the part of the villainous Blofeld? Bond, James Bond–the world’s best known secret agent! From Sean Connery to Daniel Craig, from friends to enemies, from gadgets to music, find out if you’ve got all the information with this action-packed quiz book.

    Pre-order So You Think You Know James Bond from Amazon.com.

    Order So You Think You Know James Bond from Amazon.co.uk.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest literary James Bond news.

  5. Roger Michell Discusses Turning Down 'Bond 22'

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-04

    ‘I didn’t feel comfortable with the Bond process…’

    CBn reported previously in March that Roger Michell had turned down the chance to direct Daniel Craig’s second James Bond film because there was not a possible way to make all parties involved happy with the script.

    In a new interview posted in The Times, Mitchell further explains why he walked away from Bond 22.

    ‘Well, I did give up directing the Bond film. And it wasn’t quite $8 million but it was a lot of money. It was because in the end I didn’t feel comfortable with the Bond process, and I was very nervous that there was a start date but really no script at all. And I like to be very well prepared as a director.’

    The Bond people–who are lovely–are used to going into these massive productions in quite a chaotic way: ‘Oh, we’ll fix that later.’ I panicked about this. And it was starting to make me feel very, very unhappy about what I was doing and who I was. The more the money went up, the worse it made me feel,’ he says.

    ‘I felt a bit like the character in Landscape with Weapon [a weapons designer who pulls out of a massive payday after he gets cold feet about his work] and a little bit like Doctor Faustus, and just decided eventually that I’d be doing it for the wrong reasons. I’d be doing it for my friendship with Daniel Craig. I’d be doing it for the money. And not really because I yearned to do it.’

    Previously, Michell commented that the director’s chair for Bond 22 was ‘absolutely up for grabs.’

    CBn will keep you updated with all the latest news, rumours and details regarding Bond 22.

    Related Bond 22 Articles

  6. '007: A Literary Dossier' 2nd Edition Coming Soon

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-03

    3 June 2007 UPDATE: Paul Michael Kane has informed CBn that the release date of this second edition has been temporarily delayed due to other projects, but it is in line for an eventual release. Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest details. This article was originally posted on 23 July 2006.

    Paul Michael Kane will be releasing the second edition of his James Bond book, 007: A Literary Dossier in November of 2006. Visit the Young Bond Dossier for a picture of one of the images to feature in the book. The full press release follows:

    Author and graphic designer Paul Michael Kane today announced the second edition of his book 007: A Literary Dossier through his imprint PMK’s Imagination. The second edition features bonus material and all new artwork along with synopses of all 35 original James Bond novels, 7 movie novelizations and all spin-off novels to date.

    In February 2005, Kane released the first edition of 007: A Literary Dossier. The book, which premiered at the first New York City Comic Con, quickly sold out of its initial limited print run, prompting Kane to begin work on a second edition. The latest version will premiere cover art by the team of Dean Zachary and Mitch Foust as well as original, commissioned artwork depicting the literary incarnation of the title character James Bond, created by Ian Fleming in 1953.

    The second printing will be an unlimited release and feature synopses of not only the original James Bond novels, but of every movie novelization and spin off novel produced to date. Included in this edition will be Charlie Higson’s Young Bond book, The Moneypenny Diaries and more.

    Kane is proud to announce that the second edition of 007: A Literary Dossier has a planned release date of November 2006 which will coincide with the premiere of the new Bond movie, Casino Royal. Watch for more details at www.pmkane.com.

    Press Release

    Read the CBn Paul Michael Kane interview here.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest news on the literary James Bond.

  7. 'Goldfinger' To Be Re-released Digitally In UK Cinemas

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-02

    The Sunday Herald reports that Sean Connery’s third James Bond film, Goldfinger is set for a major re-release in the UK across 150 multiplexes and other mainstream commercial venues this upcoming July.

    John Letham, managing director of Park Circus, the Glasgow-based film distribution company behind the re-release of Goldfinger, said it was ‘testing the water. The thing about James Bond films is that they work so well on the big screen. They’re designed to be watched on the big screen.’ Re-releases of other classic 007 films, such as From Russia With Love and Thunderball could follow.

    With traditional film prints costing £2000 to £7000 each, digital copies (which cost about £50) make short runs of films more economically viable. This re-release of Goldfinger will be the first Bond film ever released digitally in the UK and it could pave the way to a digital release of Daniel Craig’s second 007 film, Bond 22, due in theatres in November 2008.

    Anne Bennett at Eon (who is working with Park Circus on this re-release) said: ‘Goldfinger was rereleased with From Russia With Love. And a lot of the films got shown in cinemas over Bond-themed weekends–but, as for a full-scale re-release, I don’t think anything has happened since the introduction of video.’

    ‘It was the third one and it was probably the pivotal one,’ said Letham. ‘People always talk about what is their favourite James Bond, and Goldfinger is one of the ones that always come up. But there are others as well, so it could well be the first in a series of rereleases.’

    According to the Film Distributors’ Association website, the re-release of Goldfinger is set for 27 July.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest James Bond news.

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  8. 'Breakfast With Bond' Marathon On Spike TV In July/August

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-02

    Spike TV have announced that Monday, 30 July will kick off their ‘Breakfest With Bond’ marathon. Rise and shine with 007 as Spike TV telecasts one movie a day in the chronological order in which they were released in theaters. In the final week, it’s the best five James Bond movies, as voted online by Spike TV viewers.

    Telecasts are set to run at 9:00AM (ET/PT) Monday through Friday, beginning 30 July and ending 31 August. The marathon begins with Sean Connery’s first two Bond films:

    • Monday, 30 July:
    • Dr. No: James Bond’s investigation of a missing colleague in Jamaica leads him to the island of the mysterious Dr. No and a scheme to end the US space program. Starring Sean Connery, Ursula Andress and Joseph Wiseman.
    • Tuesday, 31 July:
    • From Russia With Love: James Bond willingly falls into an assassination ploy involving a naive Russian beauty in order to retrieve a Soviet encryption device that was stolen by SPECTRE. Starring Sean Connery, Tatiana Romanova and Pedro Armendariz.

    Stay tuned to CBn for full details on the schedule.

  9. Looking Back: Licence To Kill

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-06-01

    Completing the CBn John Gardner ‘Looking Back’ series will be his 1989 novelization, Licence To Kill (released after original novel Scorpius and before Win, Lose Or Die). This is the first of two James Bond novelisations written by Gardner, the first being GoldenEye in 1995. As is the case with the GoldenEye novelization, Licence To Kill has become one of the more difficult novels for Bond fans to collect, but it is worth the effort. Included are trivia notes about the book and CBn forum fan reactions…

    James Bond is back… And in this exciting novelization of the major motion picture, “Gardner maintains the Bond tradition!” (Indianapolis News), as the phenomenal Agent 007, created by Ian Fleming, continues his incredible forays into danger.

    This time, Bond’s in the Florida Keys, on leave from the British Secret Service, where he’s about to be best man at the wedding of his old friend, ex-CIA agent Felix Leiter, who now heads the DEA. On their way to church, they learn that billionaire druglord Franz Sanchez is within reach in the Bahamas. After a land and air chase that finds Bond reeling in Sanchez’ aircraft while dangling beneath a state-of-the-art Coast Guard Aerospatiale helicopter, the vicious criminal is captured.

    But soon Sanchez is freed in a cleverly engineered escape, and he exacts a horrible revenge on Leiter and his bride. What started out as a joyous wedding becomes a nightmare for Bond as he’s pitted against a master villain who gives the word “bad” a new dimension. 007 is prepared to do anything: ignore Secret Service orders… even lose his licence to kill.

    This new James Bond adventure has no lack of high-powered motor propulsion… or threatening modes of death (including sharks and electric eels). And, of course, the beautiful Bond girls and the Secret Service team of “Q”, “M” and Miss Moneypenny have their parts to play in Licence To Kill

    A United Artists release, the motion picture Licence To Kill stars Timothy Dalton as James Bond and features a star-studded supporting cast.

    US Book Club Hardback Edition

    Trivia

    Japanese edition of 'Licence To Kill'

    Japanese edition of Licence To Kill

    • The only John Gardner novel/novelization that was not released in a Large Print format.
    • There was no UK hardback release of Licence To Kill–only the Coronet paperback edition
    • In the US, the first true release of the novel was the 1989 Charter paperback edition (there is also a US Book Club hardback edition that uses the same cover art). What followed were four extremely rare hardback releases: A signed/slipcased hardback (limited to 26 lettered editions), a signed/slipcased hardback (limited to 100 numbered editions), an unsigned blue-colored hardback, and a trade hardback that uses cover art similar to the UK paperback. Any and all hardback editions of Licence To Kill fetch very high prices on eBay making it one of the more difficult Gardner novels to obtain for collectors; the others being GoldenEye and COLD.

    ‘The Bond series can still hold the reader!’

    Sacramento Bee

    Release Timeline

    • 1989: 1st British Coronet Paperback Edition
    • 1989: 1st American Charter Paperback Edition
    • 1989: 1st American Book Club Hardback Edition
    • 1990: 1st American Armchair Detective Library Lettered Limited Hardback Edition
    • 1990: 1st American Armchair Detective Library Numbered Limited Hardback Edition
    • 1990: 1st American Armchair Detective Library Hardback Edition
    • 1990: 1st American Armchair Detective Library Trade Hardback Edition

    Forum Reviews

    Just read Gardner’s Licence To Kill novelization, it was a pretty good read, more action packed than the usual Gardner outing of course. One thing about it was curious though – Gardner appears to try and make Licence To Kill part of the book canon. Bizarrely, it is revealed that Felix Leiter had ALREADY been mauled by the shark in Live And Let Die the book, and now he gets the mauling again, with his artificial arm and leg getting bitten off?! This didn’t really make a whole lot of sense to me. Why did he incorporate the events of Live And Let Die into the story?

    Stranger still, we don’t even get the shark mauling scene in the book, which is the pivotal event of the entire film. Nor do we get a lot of Sanchez’s early scenes, like talking to Krest at the warehouse or offering a bribe to Killifer (Killifer himself talks about this scene to Felix…its kind of odd that Killifer would say this in front of Felix and Bond when presumably he’d already accepted Sanchez’s offer.) I guess perhaps Gardner was trying to make it more book-like by keeping the villain mostly out of sight until the second half, I’ve noticed many of his and Fleming’s stories like to do this.
    Yeah anyway it wasn’t bad, I’ll give it a moderate thumbs up.

    CBn Forum member ‘dinovelvet’

    I like it that he tries to reconcile Leiter’s injuries with those he suffered in the novels. Since Gardner is writing in book format, it makes sense to make Felix’s injuries fall in line with the previously written works. I’ve always felt that the books were one medium or series and the films were another and Gardner’s Licence To Kill follows that line of thinking. It’s a really good read too–one of my favorites.

    CBn Forum member ‘Double Oh-Agent’

    Definitely not You Only Live Twice material, and not as good as Gardner’s own Icebreaker, but it isn’t all that bad.

    I’d classify it with James Bond and Moonraker, the second Wood novelisation which followed the screenplay so closely that I found it tedious to read through. Not that Licence To Kill was tedious, but it seems to be the most comparable novelisation–a step above Tomorrow Never Dies and The World Is Not Enough.

    CBn Forum member ‘General Koskov’

    I find the novelization even worse than the movie, and that isn’t good. It was poorely written with no lame descriptions of characters and locations. The locations were also very boring, not exotic at all (that is the scripts fault of course).

    The Licence To Kill novelization was a very poor effort from Mr. Gardner…

    CBn Forum member ‘Kronsteen’

    Personally, I found it quite amusing. Of course, it’s not so good as The Spy Who Loved Me novelization. (No one has yet come close to Wood’s work. The only tie-in I respect). Still Licence To Kill is on the level with Win, Lose Or Die, No Deals, Mr. Bond and other good Gardner’s works. If I hadn’t seen the movie, I would take the Licence To Kill novelization as another book in the series. Which I cannot say about the GoldenEye book. GoldenEye seem to be a flop.

    CBn Forum member ‘Grubozaboyschikov’

    That novelisation is probably my favorite Bond work by Gardner. I always felt that he was a so-so story-teller, but great with words (I guess this is the general concensus, though).

    CBn Forum member ‘Pussfeller’

    In my opinion, John Gardner’s Licence To Kill novelization is one of the better entries in the “rollercoaster” of highs and lows (in terms of fan appeal) that starts after No Deals, Mr. Bond.

    As is the case with his GoldenEye novelization, Gardner was able to create one of his better Bond adventures with the general storyline already plotted out by the screenplay. Recommended.

    CBn Forum member ‘Qwerty’

    The Looking Back at John Gardner Series:

    Related Articles:

  10. 'James Bond Gadgets' DVD Available To Order In US

    By Devin Zydel on 2007-05-31

    The James Bond Gadgets History Channel special is now available to order at amazon.com. Released last year in the UK by SilvaScreen, the special highlights the many different gadgets from several 007 films.

    According to SilvaScreen, the features of this James Bond special include:

    • The Bell Textron Jet Pack as seen in Thunderball
    • Little Nellie, the Wallis Autogyro as seen in You Only Live Twice
    • The Q Boat as seen in The World Is Not Enough
    • The Aston Martin DB5 and V-12 Vanquish
    • The Freedom Jet as seen in Octopussy
    • Aqua Tow Sleds as seen in Thunderball
    • The 360 degree Barrel Roll as seen in The Man With The Golden Gun
    • As well as ‘rare interviews about the Bond films and gadgets with Albert “Cubby” Broccoli and his wife Dana.’

    Order James Bond Gadgets from Amazon.co.uk.

    Order James Bond Gadgets from Amazon.com.