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  1. Casino Royale Official Marketing Partners

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-28

    The official Casino Royale website has recently opened up a new section with details on the marketing partners of the newest James Bond film.

    While many Bond fans are already aware of some of the companies, such as Smirnoff and Heineken and their involvement in the film, other details may be new. The full list includes:

    #1 – Atlantis:

    Kerzner International, owners and operators of Atlantis, Paradise Island, The Bahamas, and the One & Only Ocean Club were proud to be included as locations in Casino Royale. Atlantis, will be included as a sweepstakes destination in Sony’s International campaign, and with other Sony and Casino Royale partners.

    #2 – Bollinger:

    The history of Bollinger spans five dedicated generations of the same family rooted in the Champagne region.

    Bollinger is one of the very few family owned Champagne businesses that can claim to be a household name worldwide…

    #3 – Brioni:

    Further details coming soon.

    #4 – Ford:

    Further details coming soon.

    #5 – Heineken:

    With the launch of its “World of Bond” global campaign, Heineken will offer its consumers unique and exciting access to Casino Royale. Beginning in November, Heineken will bring fresh, unexpected experiences and entertainment to the James Bond audience on a global scale…

    #6 – Omega:

    Bond is back and as the intrepid secret agent enters the Casino Royale on his first mission as 007 the stakes are perilously high. Will his impenetrable demeanour and tactical moves be enough to break the concentration of his notorious opponent “Le Chiffre” and beat him at the poker table? As the intrigue unfolds James Bond knows that apart from his instinct, his only ally on this arduous assignment he can trust implicitly is the precision and accuracy of his Seamaster Professional…

    #7 – Persol:

    Persol, the historic eyewear brand that has represented the ultimate expression of Italy’s finest craftsmanship, taste and style since 1917, is once again the exclusive sunglass choice for James Bond. The legendary British secret agent has chosen two frames that are featured prominently in the new 007 movie Casino Royale. Already wearing Persol in the previous movie Die Another Day, James Bond, played here for the first time by British actor Daniel Craig, perfectly embodies the Persol values of coolness, stylishness and effortless sophistication…

    #8 – Smirnoff:

    The return of Bond will also mark the return of another icon – SMIRNOFF Vodka.

    The close partnership between Smirnoff Vodka and Bond began in 1962’s Dr. No, when the villain hands Sean Connery a “Martini, shaken not stirred” made with SMIRNOFF Vodka…number one-selling premium distilled spirit in the world, as James Bond’s vodka of choice…

    #9 – Sony Ericsson:

    If anyone loves gadgets, it’s Bond. So you won’t be surprised he shows off a special edition mobile phone by Sony Ericsson in his latest movie.

    MI6 were understandably proud of the K800i, and so are we. Now Bond has no excuse to go missing in action, and neither do you. Instead, you can reccy your whereabouts and share them with friends or family. Bond’s not alone in appreciating the new K800i’s imaging specs:…

    #10 – Sony Style

    Bond is back. In anticipation of the new Bond thriller, Casino Royale, you’ll find Casino Royale gear available only at Sony Style…

    #11 – Turnbull & Asser

    Turnbull & Asser, the world renowned Jermyn Street shirt maker, is proud to be launching its first “Limited Collection” Shirt and Bow Tie combination to be featured in the new blockbuster film Casino Royale

    #12 – Virgin Atlantic

    Further details coming soon.

    Official Casino Royale website

    Visit the official Casino Royale website for the full details on each partner and their involvement in the film.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  2. Casino Royale's Cold War Symbols, Featuring Body Worlds

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-28

    It was revealed by the official Casino Royale website back in early June that the James Bond crew was working with others from Dr. Gunther von Hagens Body Worlds, an anatomical exhibition of real human bodies.

    A press release regarding the exhibit and its relation to Casino Royale has appeared online…

    Two Cold War Symbols in New Bond Film, Featuring BODY WORLDS

    This November, anatomist, Gunther von Hagens–one of the most well known defectors from former East Germany–marks the 17th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall with the most celebrated of all Cold War era icons, James Bond.

    Dr. von Hagens and the mesmerizing BODY WORLDS anatomical exhibition appear in cameo roles in Casino Royale, the 21st James Bond film, based on Ian Fleming’s 1953 novel of the same name.

    BODY WORLDS is the setting for an archetypal battle of good and evil, between Agent 007 and one of the villains of the film. For Dr. von Hagens, who was imprisoned in 1969 for two years after a failed attempt to escape, James Bond films are more than innocuous spy thrillers.

    While Bond spent the Cold War fighting Communists, the younger generation behind the Iron Curtain at that time, including Dr. von Hagens, were inspired by him. “He stood for the power of the individual against communism and was anti-authoritarian and unconventional, which I don’t think the film censors realized at the time,” said von Hagens. “The leadership did not understand the thirst of our generation to break boundaries, to be free to travel like James Bond to Jamaica and Cape Canaveral and Fort Knox and Monte Carlo. He was for us the embodiment of freedom and possibilities.”

    The technology and wizardry in the early films also made an impression on the future anatomist and polymer chemist. “Bond worked with high technology, very unusual work at that time for a film character. In Goldfinger he was trying to prevent the radioactive contamination of gold reserves. As someone who was deeply interested in chemistry and physics, I knew that unlike the world of James Bond which celebrated such innovations, the authoritarian regime I lived under killed invention,” he said.

    Impossible as it seems, a cinematic hero with a complex psychological dossier strengthened the ego and shaped the thinking of a generation of East German scientists. “He was very hardworking. He was always on duty, lived only for his mission, and used all his abilities to realize his mission. Those of us who escaped East Germany at that time defined ourselves by our work in science and technology and our drive to succeed at any cost,” said Dr. von Hagens.

    BODY WORLDS exhibitions are currently showing at the Science Museum of Minnesota in St. Paul, the Museum of Science in Boston, Massachusetts and Telus World of Science in Vancouver, Canada.

    PR Newswire

    Visit the official Body Worlds website here.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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  3. David Arnold On Scoring Casino Royale

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-27

    Casino Royale composer David Arnold was interviewed by Kirsty Lang on BBC Radio’s Front Row on Monday, 23 October 2006.

    To listen to the entire interview, click here and select Monday under the ‘Listen Again’ menu on the right panel. Note that this interview will be kept for one week past the original air date of 23 October. The David Arnold segment starts at roughly six minutes in and lasts for about ten minutes total.

    The in depth interview covers how Arnold matched his music to the masculinity of Daniel Craig’s James Bond, what is different with this score, and much more…

    Kirsty Lang mentioned that Daniel Craig’s performance will be compared to Sean Connery’s as a hard and gritty James Bond. This contrasts to the suave and smooth 007 Roger Moore and Pierce Brosnan are known for. She asked Arnold whether he would be reflecting the new Bond’s alpha male tendances in his score for the film.

    David Arnold: That formed the entire approach to it. I mean, certainly Pierce Brosnan’s Bond and the Brosnan Bond films he was in were much more frivolous, you know, sometimes silly, a lot of fun and exciting, romantic, and dangerous all at the same time.

    But this one is an entirely different proposition. It’s like, for the first time since Sean Connery, I think that I believe this James Bond can do the things he is doing.

    And I think Daniel’s great strength is to bring that sense of truth and believability to a character that some might think is not worthy of that kind of attention.

    He had that kind of panther-like grace. For Daniel, alpha male is absolutely the key phrase. That aspect of masculinity that Dan has and is bringing to it… I figured I had to match that masculinity.

    As a physical thing, you know, if you tried to physically describe what the music was doing, it would be two clenched fists, whereas before it might have been sort of gently stroking something, I don’t know, but masculinity and alpha-maleness were the key words I think.

    Lang continued by mentioning some of the ‘tantalising hints in some of the title tracks like Bond Wins It All and The End of an Aston Martin. As Arnold has seen the film in its entirety, she asked if he could reveal any of the secrets.

    Arnold: We haven’t really got any CGI. There’s this huge section in the middle where the drama is contained around a table, where they are playing poker with huge amounts at stake. And, cinematically, of course, that doesn’t lend itself to great excitement, but there’s such an incredible sense of tension. That kind of drama over that amount of time, I haven’t really had chance to do before in a Bond film, because it really hasn’t gone for more than two minutes without something blowing up!

    I thought that I should get back to what was great about some of the early ones, you know, the low harps and the fruity bass flutes, with everything sounding quite delicious and intriguing.

    Lang continued with the process of composing the score, asking: ‘do you sit down in a room with the movie and play scenes and compose as you go along?’

    Arnold: Well, that’s basically it. You know, which is about as unglamorous as you could possibly imagine. It’s a small room, usually quite dark and you’re in there by yourself. And you have the picture in front of you and it’s begging you to do something for it.

    The exciting parts of it are being asked to do it, then you get the terror of sort of realising you actually have to do it, and then with the script I’ll visit the set, talk to the director and talk to the actors. All those kinds of ideas about what it could be and then have some kind of concrete form; something which you can play to someone and say: “if I played you this, then this is what this film is about” and “does that make sense to you?”

    Lang also asks that with Arnold being the ‘huge Bond fan’ he is, how important are the scores to the films?

    Arnold: I think they’re absolutely inseparable and essential. For me, 50% of what one experiences in any film is down to the music. And I think John Barry’s work with the series initially set the benchmark.

    ‘How contemporary do you have to make it? I mean, are you influenced by what is happening in the charts at the time?’

    Arnold: I think it’s interesting with what John was doing them, he was sort of gloriously ignoring anything that was going on… I mean, he produced a series of absolutely timeless, gorgeous, beautiful songs.

    And I think it was only in the 70s, probably Live And Let Die, and then Marvin Hamlisch’s score, which was kind of like a disco score, started becoming… paying homage to what was popular in contemporary music at the same time. I think it got to a point where, after 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 Bond songs, there was probably nothing wrong with saying “here we are at this point in time.”

    The films I think reflect a certain contemporary nature in sort of political issues, no matter how slight they are, you know, it does inform what you do. I think there are the classic approaches obviously, there’s the Goldfinger model… But, I have no problem with it being contemporary and I’m not really worried if it’s going to feel OK in ten years time.

    I think if it feels right for now, this is when people are going to be experiencing the music, this is when people are going to be experiencing the movie, so I write for what is I think it right for the time.

    Click here to listen to the entire interview online at BBC Radio.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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  4. Casino Royale Given A 12A Certificate By BBFC

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-27

    While the US rating of PG-13 for Casino Royale was announced in mid-October, an official UK rating by the BBFC of 12A has finally been added to the official site today.

    Casino Royale will be rated 12A for ‘one scene of torture and strong action violence.’ Pierce Brosnan’s final Bond film, Die Another Day, was also rated 12A. The previous three Bond films before that–The World Is Not Enough, Tomorrow Never Dies, and GoldenEye–were all rated 12 as the current 12A rating was not introduced until 2002.

    Some Bond fans debated whether or not Casino Royale would receive the higher 15 rating (which is still only held by one Bond film, Licence To Kill.)

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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  5. Casino Royale TV Specials Galore In November

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-27

    With the world premiere of Casino Royale just around the corner, the TV networks will be cashing in with a flood of new specials highlighting the making of the 21st James Bond film and Daniel Craig as the new 007.

    Several of the Casino Royale specials have been posted on the CBn forums, which we now collect for the main page…

    Making the Movie: Becoming Bond
    Tuesday, 31 October 2006
    12PM – 12:30PM
    MTV

    Becoming Bond
    Tuesday, 7 November 2006
    11:30PM – 12AM
    ITV2

    David Walliams: My Life With James Bond
    Thursday, 9 November 2006
    9PM – 10PM
    ITV1

    James Bond For Real
    Friday, 10 November 2006
    11:30PM – 12AM
    ITV2

    Casino Royale Special
    Friday, 17 November 2006
    9PM – 9:30PM
    Sky3

    Casino Royale Behind The Scenes
    Saturday, 25 November 2006
    8AM – 8:30AM
    E!

    Bond fans will also want to keep in mind that Daniel Craig will be appearing on the Late Show with David Letterman on 7 November.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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  6. Sony Reveals Additional 'James Bond Collection' Gear

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-27

    It was previously announced on CBn that Sony had begun promotion of Casino Royale with its new limited edition 007 gear.

    ‘To celebrate the release of Casino Royale, Sony is proud to present The Bond Collection. These Limited Collector’s Editions of Sony products feature the classic “007” engraving and impressive Sony engineering. Sleek and sophisticated, Bond Collection VAIO laptops, Cyber-shot cameras, and 1GB MicroVault add adventure and style to the everyday.’

    Laptop Logic reports today that even more Bond gear has been added to the collection, including the 007 VAIO UX and the 007 Micro Vault. Pictures of this new Bond gear can be viewed online here.

    The 007 VAIO UX consists of: VAIO UX Micro PC (4.5″ Widescreen display, Intel Core Solo ULV, WiFi, Digital Camera builtin, QWERTY keyboard), Cyber-Shot DSC-T50 Digital Camera, Aluminum Attache Carrying Case, VAIO UX Bluetooth GPS Receiver, and James Bond 007 Welcome Kit (photo certificate from the movie.) It costs $3,199 and ships in November.

    Also shipping in November is the 007 Micro Vault 1GB USB Flash Drive, which features the 007 Gun Logo and is sold seperately from the bundles. Cost: $54.99.

    And finally, the 007 Cyber-Shot DSC-T50 Slim Digital Camera (which is included with the UX and TX Spy Gear bundles but can be purchased seperately.) It features a 3″ touch screen LCD, 7.2-megapixel sensor, the 007 logo and carrying case. Cost: $599.

    Buy all ‘Bond Collection’ gear from the Sony Style website.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest Casino Royale coverage.

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  7. Video Interview With Casino Royale's Martin Campbell

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-27

    A new video interview has appeared online with Martin Campbell, director of GoldenEye and Casino Royale. Focusing on the new film and his involvement, the interview (which runs for about 15 minutes) can be listened to online here.

    ‘We have a new Bond, Daniel Craig, in this case,’ says Campbell. ‘We’ve gone back to a book… how the public will take it is going to be very interesting.’

    When asked about what he thought of Daniel Craig as the newest 007, Campbell said: ‘Daniel absolutely fits the template of Bond in Casino Royale… he has a dark quality about him, Connery had that.’

    On comparing him to Pierce Brosnan: ‘You can’t compare them, in the sense that they’re so different. I think Pierce was absolutely fantastic in the movies that he did, which was very much the old template of Bond. You know, they were very broad, they were kind of fantastic, there was always some nutcase taking over the world… Casino Royale very much has its feet on the ground.’

    ‘Gone is the fantastical element. The story itself is based much more in a reality, much more so than the previous Bonds.’

    ‘At the beginning of the movie he thinks much more with his heart instead of his head, so at the end of the movie he becomes the Bond we all know and love.’

    When asked with the absense of such characters of Q and the fantastical elements, will Casino Royale miss out on the iconic action sequences of the latest Bond films, Campbell said: ‘Oh, I don’t think you’ll be missing it. There is humour in the film, no doubt about it, there’s wit. Believe it or not, there’s one or two of the old Bond lines that we all know and love.’

    ‘There’s no difference,’ Campbell said when asked how directing Casino Royale compared to GoldenEye. ‘These films are meticulously planned… and all over the place.

    ‘The most important thing [in directing the action sequences] is to make sure the action is character-based… the character should keep in character. What you can’t do is just have a huge action scene for the sake of an action scene.’

    What is the secret of the success of 007 series? ‘Two things. One is the character. He’s who every man wants to be and who every woman wants to be with. The other [is that] Bond films have always delivered something new, something people hadn’t seen before, and its very exciting.

    And finally, will Campbell be returning for Bond 22 and beyond? ‘After GoldenEye I said I’d never direct another Bond and its rather like Sean Connery saying he’ll never do another Bond… well, you know, never say never again.’

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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  8. Daniel Craig And Mads Mikkelsen On Casino Royale

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-27

    Last week, CBn reported on Premiere magazine’s indepth article on Casino Royale, but the official website for the magazine features a few questions with Daniel Craig and Mads Mikkelsen that were not included in the publication.

    According to Craig, Steven Spielberg was one of his influences on whether or not to take the job as the newest James Bond. ‘If the script’s right and if the deal’s right, do the job,’ said Spielberg. ‘He sent me an e-mail when I finished, saying, “Don’t worry, the family will be there. We’ll be there watching on the first day,”‘ says Craig.

    If questioned about the earlier 007 films, Craig says: ‘I think I’m a fairly straight guy, a normal guy, who has grown up as you have watching them all their lives. There are certain things that Bond means to you that just don’t mean anything to me. But I think if you were to tell me about them, I’d go, “Oh yeah, I know exactly what you’re talking about.”‘

    Mads Mikkelsen, who plays Le Chiffre in the film was asked just how gritty the new film will be. ‘We’re talking grittiness compared to the other Bond films. The task is to bring this magical universe–it’s still a fairy tale, he’s still Superman, I’m still the baddie–into 2006. That’s the kind of grittiness we’re talking about.’

    Click here to read the entire article online at Premiere.com.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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  9. Casino Royale Extends Lengthy Bond-Bollinger Partnership

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-26

    As earlier reported on CBn, Bollinger will be bonding with 007 once again in Casino Royale. Featured previously in films such as Moonraker, GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies, and The World Is Not Enough, Bollinger is marketed as ‘The Champagne of James Bond.’ The full press release follows:

    Champagne Bollinger Shares the Big Screen With Bond

    Casino Royale Extends Lengthy Bond-Bollinger Partnership

    Adding another installment to one of the most enduring marketing partnerships in motion picture history, Champagne Bollinger will again be featured in a James Bond movie — the upcoming Casino Royale, in theaters November 17, 2006 from ColumbiaPictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios.

    The partnership marks the 10th Bond film in which Champagne Bollinger has been featured as 007’s Champagne of choice, beginning with Moonraker in 1979.

    William Terlato, President and Chief Executive Officer of Paterno Wines
    International, the exclusive importer of Champagne Bollinger for the United States says, “We believe that this collaboration is the longest-running brand marketing partnership in film industry history.”

    The relationship began when the Broccoli-Wilson family, producers of the Bond films, sought a wine to match Bond’s impeccable taste and refined personality. Not surprisingly, they chose Champagne Bollinger, long
    acknowledged as one of the world’s finest Champagnes. A mutual friendship developed between the Broccoli-Wilson family and the Bollinger family, and Champagne Bollinger has remained a Bond favorite even as the torch has been passed from Roger Moore to Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan and now Daniel
    Craig.

    Daniel Craig stars as “007” James Bond, the smoothest, sexiest, most lethal agent on Her Majesty’s Secret Service in Casino Royale. Based on the first Bond book written by Ian Fleming, the story recounts the making of
    the world’s greatest secret agent. Martin Campbell is directing the 21st adventure in the 44-year-old franchise, from a screenplay by Neal Purvis & Robert Wade and Paul Haggis.

    James Bond’s first “007” mission leads him to Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen), banker to the world’s terrorists. In order to stop him, and
    bring down the terrorist network, Bond must beat Le Chiffre in a high-stakes poker game at Casino Royale. Bond is initially annoyed when a
    beautiful British Treasury official, Vesper Lynd (Eva Green) is assigned to deliver his stake for the game and watch over the government’s money. As Bond and Vesper survive a series of lethal attacks by Le Chiffre and his henchmen, a mutual attraction develops leading them both into further danger and events that will shape Bond’s life forever.

    “Movie audiences make the connection between a character they admire and the drink he enjoys, Champagne Bollinger,” says Etienne Bizot, managing director of Societe Jacques Bollinger, the family holding company for Champagne Bollinger. “This kind of high-impact exposure will help us to continue to expand awareness, sales and distribution worldwide.”

    The James Bond film series is the longest running of all time, grossing more than $2.1 billion in theatrical earnings globally.

    Founded in 1829, Champagne Bollinger introduced the world to an instantly recognizable, dry, toasty style that connoisseurs around the globe covet. Six generations of the Bollinger family have maintained the trademark style of their namesake Champagne and it is one of a few
    remaining Grande Marque houses owned, controlled and managed by the same family since its founding.

    Bollinger relies on its own estate for more than 60 percent of its grape requirements, including the Pinot Noir that gives its Champagne much of its distinctive strength and structure. Bollinger is one of a select few
    houses that can control the quality of its grape supply so carefully. Bollinger is renowned for its use of traditional methods that include extensive use of Pinot Noir, individual vinification of each marc and cru,
    barrel fermentation and extra-aging of all of its Champagnes on the lees prior to disgorgement.

    About Paterno Wines International:
    Paterno Wines International, Leaders in Luxury, has a global portfolio of more than 40 brands from a host of world-class wine producers and presently markets more than one out of eight bottles of wine over $14 sold
    in America. Paterno, with more 90+ ratings than any wine company in the world, is the flagship company of the Terlato Wine Group, the parent company of several independent businesses specializing in the marketing and
    production of exceptional wines. Owned and operated by the Terlato family, the Group also includes the family’s winery investments and partnerships in some of the world’s most esteemed wine regions, including: Napa Valley;
    Sonoma County; Santa Barbara County; Victoria, Australia and the Rhone Valley.

    The Paterno Wines International portfolio of brands includes: Napa Valley: Chimney Rock, Cuvaison Estate Wines, Markham Vineyards, Rutherford Hill and Terlato Vineyards; Sonoma County: Alderbrook, Hanna, Rochioli and Terlato Vineyards; Santa Barbara County: Sanford; California Appellation: Glass Mountain; Oregon: Argyle and Sokol Blosser; Italy: Baglio di Pianetto, Barone Ricasoli, Ca’ del Bosco, Ca’ Marcanda (Gaja Toscana); Florio Martinez Marsala, Gagliole, Gaja, Il Poggione, Kettmeir, Lungarotti, Santa Margherita, Torresella; and Distilleria Nonino (Grappa); France:
    Champagne Bollinger, Chapoutier, Domaine Chanson, Domaine Louis Moreau, Josmeyer, Langlois-Chateau and Tour des Laurets; Australia: Domaine Terlato & Chapoutier, Domaine Tournon, Heathcote Estate, Two Hands and Yabby Lake Vineyard; Argentina: Tamari; Canada: Peller Estates Icewine; Chile: Vina Tarapaca; Greece: Boutari; New Zealand: Wairau River; Belgium: Chimay. For
    more information, visit http://www.paternowines.com.

    About Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.:
    Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. is an independent, privately-held motion picture, television, home video, and theatrical production and distribution company. The company owns the world’s largest library of modern films,
    comprising approximately 4,000 titles, and over 10,400 episodes of television programming. Its film library has received 208 Academy Awards(R), one of the largest award-winning collections in the world, and
    includes numerous successful film franchises, including James Bond, Pink Panther and Rocky. MGM is owned by an investor consortium comprised of Sony Corporation of America, Providence Equity Partners, Texas Pacific Group, Comcast Corporation and DLJ Merchant Banking Partners. For more
    information, visit http://www.mgm.com.

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

    About Columbia Pictures:
    Columbia Pictures, part of the Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group, is a Sony Pictures Entertainment company. Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) is a subsidiary of Sony Corporation of America (SCA), a subsidiary of Tokyo-based Sony Corporation. SPE’s global operations encompass motion
    picture production and distribution; television production and distribution; digital content creation and distribution; worldwide channel
    investments; home entertainment acquisition and distribution; operation of studio facilities; development of new entertainment products, services and technologies; and distribution of filmed entertainment in 67 countries. Sony Pictures Entertainment can be found on the World Wide Web at http://www.sonypictures.com.

    Press Release

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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  10. Casino Royale Carta Mundi Exclusive Poker Sets

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-10-26

    It was revealed on the CBn Forums back in May 2006 that Carta Mundi would be involved in the newest James Bond film, Casino Royale by supplying the cards for the poker sequences.

    Now, jamesbond-fr.com have revealed details on the two different poker sets the company will be releasing to tie in with Casino Royale.

    The exclusive James Bond compact poker set contains 150 chips and the luxury set contains 200. Pictures of both sets can be viewed online here.

    ‘As a Belgian company, we are proud that Cartamundi can contribute to the success of the series so famous James Bond in the world. We hope that the publicity generated by the Royal exit of Casino will still improve the image of Cartamundi and the poker in general,’ says Bert Van Pelt, Business Links Manager Playing Cards.

    Carta Mundi was previously involved with the most recent Bond film, Die Another Day. Visit the official website here.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale.

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