CommanderBond.net
  1. Sideshow Pierce Brosnan Legacy Edition Preview

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-07-08

    Fans of the many different James Bond film figures from Sideshow Collectibles have something new to look forward to.

    Set to be previewed at the Comic Con 2006 event in San Diego, California next month (19-23 July) is the Sideshow Pierce Brosnan Legacy Edition figure.

    This new 12″ James Bond figure follows the announcement of the Roger Moore Premium Format figure and the Sean Connery Legacy Edition figure, which will also be previewed in July. Click here for the first picture of this 007 figure on Sideshow.

    According to Sideshow, the Legacy Edition collection is meant to ‘highlight the iconic look of different actors who played the sophisticated spy through the ages, rather than focusing on 007 from specific films.’ This Pierce Brosnan James Bond figure is the second in the series, with Sean Connery being the first.

    A shipping date or price have not been announced, but the Sean Connery Legacy Edition figure is available to pre-order for $44.99, so it is expected that this Pierce Brosnan figure will cost the same.

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest James Bond 007 news.

    Related Stories

    The Sideshow CBn Interview

    Sideshow’s James Bond Collection

    Sideshow Sean Connery Legacy Edition Preview

    Sideshow Roger Moore Premium Format Figure Preview

    Sideshow Collectibles at Comic-Con 2005

  2. Casino Royale Set Report: The Dunsfold Park Aerodrome

    By Guest writer on 2006-07-08

    Written by Mark Murphy

    CommanderBond.net recently received this set report from CBn forum user ‘marktmurphy’:

    CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE.

    ** MAY CONTAIN MINOR SPOILERS **
     

    Blow me down if a quick trip out of my office 40 mins drive out of London a couple of weeks ago didn’t get me all the way to Miami International Airport and back!

    That week I had the pleasure of that rarest of things—a sneaky peek at a James Bond film set! And, rather pleasingly, it happened that the crew had decided to shoot this particular scene—apparently one of the largest in the movie—just a few miles away from where I work in deepest, darkest Surrey at a small airfield many viewers around the world will already be familiar with as home to the BBC’s Top Gear motoring show: Dunsfold Park.

    IMAGE: 'CR' Sign

    A ‘CR’ sign

    IMAGE: Aerial image of Dunsfold Park

    Aerial image of Dunsfold Park

    For a few weeks now I’ve been getting glimpses of those little flurorescent signs film crews pin to signposts to direct other members of their unit to shooting locations: you’ve probably seen them but missed their use as they often use cryptic letters and words rather than stating their intentions clearly (presumably to stop gaupers like me getting in the way!), for example ‘UNIT LOC’ or ‘BASE’. But these particular signs have ‘CR’ written on them, and for us lot that can only mean one thing: James Bond’s here!

    After following the trail of CR signs from Guildford you arrive at Dunsfold Park, a smallish airfield but one whose celebrity status means a bit of security on the gate. Luckily I did actually have a valid reason to be there, so once past security a quick look around makes it clear quiet early on that there’s a film crew here from the proliferation of lighting lorries and stunt vehicles (‘Action Vehicles’ based out of Shepperton were present judging by their lorry) and moving over to the easternmost of the airfield’s three runways it becomes apparent that they’re shooting right here. For one, the runways is covered in lorries, lighting trucks and a couple of camera cranes—hopefully present to catch some more epic high angles on some thrilling action! The runway has grown a lengthy line of impressive halogen lampposts, each over 40ft high, which makes the whole area seem like a much more professional outfit; although you can tell they’re not real from the fact they’re all powered by generators on the ground and that they only run in a couple of spots. Plus I’m not convinced a large runway would actually have lampposts that near, but… This area has also been dressed with the sort of paraphenalia you see at the very end of large international runways—a V-section of lights raised on a frame to indicate to planes where the runway begins, plus large red and white barricades. Presumably there’s some action right on the edge of the runway for our man James! Other additions the crew have made include dressing what must be a bit of a bonus for making a small airfield seem like an international airport—Dunsfold’s own 747 Jumbo jet. They’ve given this fuel tanks to make it appear more functional than it actually is and added rather strange double engines where normally there’d be only one, plus the background is bolstered even more with the addition of an Air Atlanticque Douglas DC6—a relatively small passenger propeller-driven plane which feels in keeping with the Miami location. With these in the background the illusion should be helped somewhat.

    IMAGE: Boeing 'Prototype' IMAGE: Boeing 'Prototype' IMAGE: Boeing 'Prototype' and DC6

    The ‘prototype’ Boeing 747 that will be featured prominently in Casino Royale

    The previous week I’ve been lead to understand the crew were filming on one of the other runways, and vehicles had been tearing up and down the runway as part of the sequence: apparently they were at the time entering their third week of a five week presence. The most obvious item which told of the locations use was the line of baggage carts, each bearing the red ‘MIA’ logo, whose contents had been spilled across the runway, perhaps in the previous night’s action (a big part of making the place look realistic is apparently the fact that the scene is being shot at night—I was told it looked amazing when all lit up).

    IMAGE:  IMAGE:  IMAGE:

    Baggage marked ‘MIA’ of the runway at Dunsfold Park

    Event-wise a Virgin Airbus had made a landing the previous weekend (which ties with a similar plane arriving at the Prague Ruzyne Airport, also doubling for Miami, which had road signs and palm trees laid on) and, in a rather spoilerlicious bit of info, I was told they were planning to drive a Mercedes through an articulated bus of the type often seen ferrying passengers around an airport the week after. This week just gone saw the local residents warned about a small number of explosions and Chris Corbould, the effects supervisor, has recently been talking about blowing up a 757! Who knows what’s going on there!

    IMAGE:  IMAGE:  IMAGE: Aerail image of Dunsfold Park

    The runway at Dunsfold Park

    All in all a fun hour or two out of the office; you can’t imagine how hard it is driving past a sign telling you to go to see James Bond filming on your way to work every morning! I’ve included some pics, which aren’t terribly sexy and packed full of Aston Martins and 007 himself, but should give you an idea of the place.

    And incidentally, for all you Top Gear fans; yes we did drive down the runway as fast as we could!

  3. Casino Royale Bond Girls And Crew Interviewed

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-07-07

    A brand new interview with the stars and crew members of Casino Royale has appeared online at Coming Soon / SuperHeroHype.

    Bond girls Eva Green, (Vesper Lynd) Caterina Murino, (Solange) and Ivana Milicevic (Valenka) were interviewed along with long-time James Bond film producer Michael G. Wilson and casting producer Debbie McWilliams. Excerpts from the interview follow:

    ComingSoon.net: Why did it take so long to find an actress to play Vesper, before you finally ended up casting Eva?

    Michael G. Wilson: We did look far and wide, and we tested many women. Eva was considered very early on, but she was committed to another project. It wasn’t until about four or five weeks ago that she got free from that project so we could actually give her the script, she could read it, come in and do a test for us and we could hire her.

    CS: So how do you know when you’ve found just the right actor for a role like that?

    Debbie McWilliams: You know immediately. It quite often takes that long to find someone that you really like for the part, which is why and initially, Eva wasn’t available although she was on the first list I ever made. It wasn’t until we searched all over the world and then spent a few weeks in America looking at people there, then we said, well let’s just go back and ask her again. For an actress, to be presented with a Bond script, it’s a very hard decision to make, because they’ll always forever be known as the girl who was in the Bond film, which perhaps may have slightly worried Eva to begin with. Once she read the script, she realized what a fabulous part it was. There’s never been a role as wonderful for a woman as this part, and she’ll be fantastic in it.

    CS: Is that true, Eva? Why did you decide finally to be a Bond Girl?

    Eva Green: I think this is one of the best scripts I’ve read for a long time, and it’s not like a cliché movie or anything like that. It’s a very deep, profound movie with a lot of twists and turns. The love story moved me, and it’s not like an action movie. That’s why I’m doing this movie, and this character is a gift for an actor, so you can’t say no. You’d be quite a moron.

    CS: How have each of you been preparing to play your respective roles?

    Eva: Actually, I got the part about two weeks ago, but I’m working on the script. I’m quite cerebral, so I’m imagining each scene and working on the character. I haven’t read the novel and I’m reading it at the moment. I’m a bad student, but I’m about to read it. In a way, I just imagined this movie as an old-fashioned movie in a very good way, because [Vesper] is quite sassy and sharp, and the relationship is kind of unusual and very funny, but you’ll just have to wait and see. I’m working at the moment.

    Caterina: Everybody told me that I was preparing [to play a] Bond Girl. No way. I’m preparing a role, and that role is Solange. She’s not at all the classical Bond Girl that you know before. She’s somebody that’s very modern, but she’s married to a very bad man. The man is very bad with James Bond, and he’s very bad with me. She doesn’t have a very quiet life. I had to prepare my English and physically, I prepared because Solange loves to ride horses, so I rode a horse every day for a month. I had one of the best stuntmen in England for the horse.

    CS: That brings us to the most American of the new Bond girls. Ivana, can you tell us a bit about who you play in the movie?

    Ivana Milicevic: Well, I’m bad. I’m Le Chiffre’s girlfriend and I guess henchman, you could say his bodyguard. Usually, bad girls aren’t blonde, but look at me, I look angelic, and yet I’m not. We kind of were into that. I’m just always with Le Chiffre, taking care of him. I figure he saved me from post-war Croatia or maybe I saved him, I don’t know.

    McWilliams: In the story, it says “Valenka, Croatian beauty”, so here we have her. I just happened to find her in L.A.

    CS: And how does it feel to be playing a Bond Girl?

    Ivana: Do I count as one, ’cause I’m bad? Then I guess I am. It’s really exciting to most girls. My dad is really excited about it, and I’m not saying I’m not, but it hasn’t completely sunk in yet because it’s been go, go, go…

    CS: For many months, there were rumors about different actresses that might be co-starring opposite Daniel Craig. Were any of those rumors true?

    McWiliams: The two who were very strongly considered were Angelina [Jolie] and Charlize Theron, but thereafter, anybody else who you’ve heard is not true.

    CS: So there was a desire to bring in another superstar actress after having Halle Berry in “Die Another Day”?

    McWilliams: The Halle Berry thing was quite odd in itself when it happened, because we hadn’t ever really gone that way before, but everybody thinks there was a precedent set by that. If you look back through the films, you’ll see that most of the girls we have chosen haven’t been well known at all, and they have subsequently become well known. So historically speaking, we normally have gone for someone who is not well known.

    Coming Soon / SuperHeroHype

    Click here to read the full interview at Coming Soon / SuperHeroHype.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

    Related ‘Casino Royale’ Articles

    Casino Royale Main Page

    Casino Royale Latest News

    Casino Royale International Release Dates

    Casino Royale Cast & Production Updates

  4. Authors Announced For Ian Fleming James Bond Reprints

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-07-07

    All 14 of the authors scheduled to introduce the 2006 reprints of the Ian Fleming James Bond novels by Penguin UK have now been announced on the official website.

    All 14 of the 007 novels will now feature the retro cover artwork created by Roseanne Serra and Richie Fahey which was used for the 2002/2003 Penguin US editions. They will also feature brand new introductions by a collection of different authors. The complete list is: Jeffery Deaver, Louise Welsh, Michael Dibdin, Jonathan Kellerman, Charlie Higson, Simon Winder, Ben Schott, Barry Eisler, David Wolstencroft, Nick Stone, Val McDermid, Mo Hayder, Charles Cumming, and Robert Ryan.

    Each Bond novel will be released on 26 October 2006 from Amazon UK and will retail for £6.99 each. No details yet on an Amazon US release.

    In addition, Penguin Modern Classics, which released 10 of the Ian Fleming novels back in mid-2004, will be completing their series on 5 October 2006 with the addition of For Your Eyes Only, The Spy Who Loved Me, The Man With The Golden Gun, and Octopussy And The Living Daylights. The cover art is available on Amazon UK and each novel can be pre-ordered for a price of £7.99.

    Pre-order the Ian Fleming James Bond Novels

    Penguin Reprints – 26 October 2006

    Casino Royale – Jeffery Deaver …… Amazon.co.uk
    Live And Let Die – Louise Welsh …… Amazon.co.uk
    Moonraker – Michael Dibdin …… (Coming Soon)
    Diamonds Are Forever – Jonathan Kellerman …… Amazon.co.uk
    From Russia With Love – Charlie Higson …… Amazon.co.uk
    Dr. No – Simon Winder …… Amazon.co.uk
    Goldfinger – Ben Schott …… Amazon.co.uk
    For Your Eyes Only – Barry Eisler …… Amazon.co.uk
    Thunderball – David Wolstencroft …… Amazon.co.uk
    The Spy Who Loved Me – Nick Stone …… Amazon.co.uk
    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service – Val McDermid …… (Coming Soon)
    You Only Live Twice – Mo Hayder …… Amazon.co.uk
    The Man With The Golden Gun – Charles Cumming …… Amazon.co.uk
    Octopussy And The Living Daylights – Robert Ryan …… (Coming Soon)

    Penguin Modern Classics – 5 October 2006

    For Your Eyes Only …… Amazon.co.uk
    The Spy Who Loved Me …… Amazon.co.uk
    The Man With The Golden Gun …… Amazon.co.uk
    Octopussy And The Living Daylights …… Amazon.co.uk

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest James Bond 007 news.

  5. Casino Royale Photographs Featuring Daniel Craig Online

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-07-07

    As production continues on the 21st James Bond film, Casino Royale, several behind-the-scenes photographs have been released online.

    The five photos (taken on the 6th of July), which can be viewed here on justjared.com are of 007 actor Daniel Craig meeting with fans. The location is the cricket grounds at Eton, which are featured in Casino Royale.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

    Related ‘Casino Royale’ Articles

    Casino Royale Main Page

    Casino Royale Latest News

    Casino Royale International Release Dates

    Casino Royale Cast & Production Updates

  6. Casino Royale Banner At Amsterdam Cine Expo

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-07-07

    Lucky James Bond fans in Amsterdam got a chance to see the brand new Casino Royale banner at the Amsterdam Cine Expo, which ran from 26 to 26 June 2006.

    The banner was previously seen at the Cannes Film Festival. Click here and here to view two seperate shots of the Casino Royale banner on GreekGeek.de. In related news, previously 20 minutes of Casino Royale was previewed at the same Amsterdam RAI convention center Expo.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

    Related ‘Casino Royale’ Articles

    Casino Royale Main Page

    Casino Royale Latest News

    Casino Royale International Release Dates

    Casino Royale Cast & Production Updates

  7. The Simon Winder CBn Interview

    By The CBn Team on 2006-07-06

    This month saw the release of a new entry into the long list of books analysing the phenomenon of James Bond. In The Man Who Saved Britain: A Personal Journey into the Disturbing World of James Bond, Blair Pettisauthor Simon Winder takes a unique approach, addressing the impact of James Bond on the collective conscience of a mid-century Britain reeling from involvement in two world wars. It is Mr. Winder’s contention that agent 007 played a hugely significant role in healing the wounds suffered in these hard times. Employing an enjoyably witty style, the author does not shy away from criticism of either the literary or cinematic incarnations of James Bond. And he pulls no punches when it comes to analysing the various political, military and social movements in postwar Britain. I will not be reviewing the book here, but I urge anyone who has any interest in James Bond or the developing history of Britain to pick up a copy and give it a read. One might not agree with all of Mr. Winder’s points of view, but one is very likely to be entertained, and perhaps even informed.

    The Simon Winder CBn Interview

    Q:First off, welcome to CommanderBond.net, Mr. Winder.

    SW:Thanks very much. It’s a pleasure to be taking part.

    Q:Whom did you have in mind as an audience for this material?

    SW:Scarcely sane obsessives such as myself. I have spent so many hours watching the movies and reading the books that I thought it about time to put this to some use; and I recognised that at least I was not alone in my interests.

    Q:The book seems fraught with cynicism and pessimism, and yet is filled to the brim with humour. QUOTE: I thought it would be fun to say various... terrible things in a breezy and cheerful style...At one point you posit: ‘As the 1960s progressed, Bond’s ability to maim and kill foreigners became a great consolation to millions of embittered and confused people whose traditional world picture had changed with alarming speed. Bond in fact became in the 1960s pretty much the only British national capable of damaging anybody at all.’ How is that line supposed to make us feel?

    SW:I thought it would be fun to say various more or less terrible things in a breezy and cheerful style to see how people reacted. I am glad you picked on this quote as it sums it up. This is just popularized (and probably misunderstood by me) film theory, but I think everyone, if they think about it, should feel very odd about the way they can watch hundreds of simulated killings on a film screen and view it as entertaining. I also think it odd and appropriate that Britain, which has always had a cult of glamorous violence (a quick trip around St Paul’s Cathedral shows this very clearly, packed with superb white marble statues of homicidal maniacs, some might say), should generate a figure such as Bond who does indeed keep up the
    ‘good work’.

    Q:What do you say to the criticism that the essential premise of the book—that James Bond helped ease Britain’s painful transition from the glory of Empire to the dark days of rationing and political blundering—is not novel?

    SW:It certainly is not new—several writers such as David Cannadine have pointed it out many years ago. I just thought it was a useful peg around which it might be fun to sound off about British history and about Bond—the excuse around which the book could be built. Most of the UK reviews have been extremely positive, but one (in the Evening Standard) was completely baffled by the suggestion that there was any link between Bond and imperial decline—so perhaps it is not an entirely cliched idea—at least to one reviewer.

    Q:Speaking of reviews, you must be pleased that The Man Who Saved Britain has received good notices overall. And whether a given reviewer liked the book or not, the commentary has been interesting, to say the least. A few examples:

    A book of eccentric brilliance that covers everything from Jamaica as lieu de memoire to the sexual magnetism of General Nasser.

    TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT

    Hugely amusing… a bizarre mix and yet a weirdly compelling one.

    THE OBSERVER

    Poor Bond is little more than a prop to Winder’s obsession with the evils of Empire… and his desire to denigrate Britain’s intelligence services.

    Stella Rimington, former head of MI5, TIMES

    Q:What do you make of the Rimington comments?

    SW:Isn’t that great? She was so furious—I think the bit I wrote about the security services just sitting around watching CNN or drunkenly photocopying their bottoms was the last straw. The book’s meant to be funny—but Dame Stella certainly didn’t think so.

    Q:At one point you detail what was perhaps the last gasp of British colonialism, a tragic-comic episode in which ‘the RAF proposed a base on Aldabra—an uninhabited island off East Africa, home only to some 15,000 giant tortoises. This idea was scrapped on both finance and common-sense grounds. I love the brief Aldabra debate as it now stands so beautifully as a summary of the last, flickering gleams of an imperial mindset that had seemed utterly solid only twenty years previously. It was a dream of an absolutely pointless airstrip on a tropical island with no human inhabitants and therefore—at last—no troublesome nationalists, but unfortunately only useable for bombing runs against some putative Madagascan or Antarctic enemy. UK Cover Image: The Man Who Saved BritainPresumably a substantial ground crew would have been needed just to keep the airstrip tortoise-free.’ Throughout the book, you cast a critical lens on British political manoeuvering. Were you ever worried that in being so critical of Britain, you might deny yourself a wider audience?

    SW:Well, it has certainly angered a few people quite vigorously so far. I think the serious point behind the book (or semi-serious) is that Britain has had much more ferocious an impact on the world than British people like to think. I wanted to use the book to emphasise, and indeed rub people’s faces in, the limits of Britain as a ‘good guy’ in the way that Bond personifies. In the end Britain has liberal instincts and has behaved more morally than many other countries, but that’s only part of the story and often a late part. I was reading today about the aftermath of the Indian Mutiny of 1857 where in Allahabad, for example, some 5,000 Indians were summarily executed just to show who was boss. Britain was the principal beneficiary of the slave trade for many years. British settlers around the world have destroyed whole societies. The more I read about the British Empire the more we appear normally horrible—and yet it is crucial to Britain’s self-esteem to be better and nobler. People will disagree with me but I don’t see their arguments—I’m never happier than wandering around North America, but I think it is just a bit odd not to admit that the whole society of Canada and the US is based on expropriation and violence—much of it British-sourced.

    Q:The Man Who Saved Britain is not just a rant on the fall of the British Empire. It’s, thankfully, also a lot about James Bond and his creator. You are at times critical of Ian Fleming, The Man, but you seem to have a genuine affection for a good deal of his literary output, citing From Russia With Love, Dr. No and Goldfinger as his best. In analysing Rosa Klebb, Dr. No and Goldfinger, you come to the conclusion that: ‘[T]here
    is something authentically nightmarish about these new inventions—partly pantomime, partly myth. They are expressionist in the sense that they can only make grand gestures.’ QUOTE: I think the bit I wrote about the security services just sitting around watching CNN or drunkenly photocopying their bottoms was the last strawOn the other hand, you maintain that The Spy Who Loved Me is a transparent and poor attempt to write from a feminine point of view (this despite the ‘gratification’ that particular book brought you in your adolescence). Can you articulate a general feeling about the merits of the books?

    SW:In the end I just feel such affection and respect for the books that it is impossible to be mean. I was so hard on The Spy Who Loved Me in the spirit of all fans who have to attack something just to prove somehow that actually they are not fans. The books simply do not stand up as completely realized novels—they have too many poor patches and are too hastily written. But I do seriously think that real art can come out of such surroundings—that, as with films, particular scenes are enough to float the rest. Comparing to Shakespeare is silly, but it is fair to point that there are chunks of any of the plays which are kind of hopeless or not funny or involving or anything. It is perhaps true too of Fleming—that when he’s really on fire (the shoot-out in the aquarium in Live and Let Die, Oddjob smashing up Goldfinger’s mansion—does anyone on-line have any specific favourite moments?) he’s fantastically memorable and good.

    Q:You don’t have much time for Kingsley Amis or John Gardner, and you don’t even mention John Pearson, Christopher Wood, Raymond Benson or Charlie Higson. Is it safe to say you are a fan of Fleming, but not the continuation authors?

    SW:I read the Kingsley Amis and thought it so bad that it didn’t seem worthwhile to read anything further—but that could well have been a mistake. If anyone thinks that there is one really worth reading I’d be happy to give it a try.

    Q:If you were that unimpressed by Amis, I wouldn’t think you’d find much joy in the later continuation novels. But you might take a peek at John Pearson’s James Bond: The Authorised Biography Of 007, and Christopher Wood’s novelisation of The Spy Who Loved Me is surprisingly good. You might also give the Young Bond books a go. Many adult fans were sceptical when IFP first announced this series, but most of us have been won over by the first two books in the series.

    SW:I think Young Bond is wonderful and Higson a genius—these books really fell outside my own book’s remit, but they certainly show there is an amazing amount of life left in Bond, even if the official arteries now seem a bit clogged.

    Q:Do you consider yourself a fan of the James Bond films? At one point in the book, you clearly indicate that you feel the first four are really the only good ones. Specifically addressing your interests in the films, you state: ‘I admire Ken Adam and John Barry and the early films’ writers, editors and directors. But even on the central, indeed sacral, issue of Sean Connery himself it is hard to develop specifically devotional feelings.’ But you later state you make every premiere, and that you’ll be there for the opening night showing of Casino Royale. Explain.

    SW:In the end of course I love all the films—once. I think most of the later films just do not stand up to repeat viewings and once you know that Bond is going to get into, say, an invisible car or that he is going to say ‘Christmas comes but once a year’ it is pretty hard not to think there might be better DVDs in the shop. I’m really struck by the ability (or my ability at any rate) to watch the early films over and over again and find so much to enjoy—they are very complete worlds. The later films do not really, to me anyway, seem to have much of a leg up over many other action films.

    Q:You seem very critical of yourself for loving the Roger Moore films so much in your adolescence. But does it not seem that in Roger’s Bond, moreso than any other, British colonialism is glamourously alive and well?

    SW:This is a very good point and one made by a reviewer last weekend who pointed out that surely the real logic of my position is warmly to embrace Sir Roger as he in far purer form defines the general daftness of Britain. Connery is oddly good and plausible (and Scottish) whereas Moore’s Englishness and tongue-in-cheek pseudo-suavity makes a far better case in a more direct way for Britain’s ongoing sense of itself. I’ve definitely missed a trick by not admitting this to be the case.

    QUOTE: Moore’s Englishness and tongue-in-cheek pseudo-suavity makes a far better case... for Britain’s ongoing sense of itself.Q:All Bond fans have ‘pet’ films or books—those which, although the quality of the art may be relatively low, one just cannot help loving. Which are yours?

    SW:A very fine question. I would have to say that chunks of Diamonds are Forever do seem very appealing to me, although as a film it is clearly a real mess. The entire structure came from a bad moment of flailing about by the producers after Lazenby’s departure. Fleming’s book simply supplied some key details—the diamond ‘pipeline’ and the gay killers and Las Vegas—but was too poorly plotted and unambitious to work as a script. There was even a desperate plan to make Bond into an American and bring back Gert Frobe to play Goldfinger’s twin brother hiding in the Las Vegas hotel. Not a good idea. Even as finally done it’s a depressing ruin—that Moon Buggy, Blofeld in drag, Miss Moneypenny appearing for only 5 seconds dressed as a customs official. And Connery looks just too old (aside from suffering from early ’70s clothing issues). And yet, and yet: Wint & Kidd are terrific, it is one of Barry’s best scores, it has some wonderful Ken Adam sets, the fight in the glass elevator is exceptional, the opening credits a treat on a big screen. It’s enough—I’m happy.

    Q:George Lazenby comes in for some rough treatment in The Man Who Saved Britain. Any words for those who feel he’s quite good in the role?

    SW:Well, I have a real sympathy for them. We would all agree I think that OHMSS is the Bond film most argued about. It is the most slavishly loyal to Fleming’s original (even more so than Dr No), it is the most serious, the most carefully acted. The music is superb and everyone would agree that Peter Hunt’s directing is often exceptional. I just think that in the end Lazenby is distressingly uninvolving—that he is asked to act all kinds of scenes (tenderness, comedy) which are just way beyond him. If one could cut out all those and just have him in the action scenes then I agree he would be pretty good, but by the time you have got to those he has spent far too long camping it up (or failing to camp it up) as ‘Hilly’ in glasses and a kilt. What music though. And if we are to see Blofeld at all (which I prefer not to) then let’s have him played by Telly Savalas.

    Q:Who’s your favourite Bond Girl?

    SW:Well, it really has to be Luciana Paluzzi, the villainess in Thunderball—she’s a hopeless actress, but whatever. Having castigated Lazenby for his acting skills, I’m more than happy hypocritically to let Luciana off the hook.

    Q:You express reverence for most of John Barry’s Bond scoring, but you have some harsh words for the Moonraker score. I rather like that one, especially that quintessentially ’70s waah-waah bit when Bond first arrives in Rio. It may be slightly trashy, but it’s John Barry trashy!

    SW:Very true—I just hate the film too much to engage with the music very much—I can hardly hear the music I’m so angry about James Bond in Outer Space or that terrible fight with a plastic anaconda. I need to watch it again—perhaps with the screen covered and just listening to the soundtrack. The bit in the music where the space station is unveiled I think is just magnificent—classic Barry.

    Q:You express bafflement at Bond’s worldwide popularity, in light of the resentment you imagine the rest of the world must feel toward Britain (for its excesses in the days of Empire). Is it possible the rest of the world looks at Bond as just an extremely cool secret agent, without focusing much on the fact that he’s British?

    SW:Yes: definitely. I just thought it was funny (in a childish way) to think how offensive in all kinds of ways he could be viewed as being if you were a sensitive patriot. I left this out of the book (I left a lot of stuff out luckily) but apparently in Udaipur they have videos showing Octopussy everywhere and everyone is really pleased and proud that the film was made there—and of course there is a James Bond Island in Thailand in honour of The Man with the Golden Gun, which was damaged I think in the tsunami. So here are two on the face of it, just possibly not very good and rather offensive movies which have in fact just caused pleasure locally. Surely some people must be wound up though: I’d be surprised to find black Americans thrilled with Live and Let Die or white southerners come to that.

    Q:With respect to the popularity of the Bond films, you wrote: ‘Their success in America seems straightforward enough: they are viewed as comedies of self-delusion’, indicating that you feel American audiences view Britain as some kind of laughing stock. Simon WinderBut, again, there is an argument to be made that Americans dig Bond because he is so damn cool, irrespective of his Britishness; and that Americans (at least that dwindling percentage who possess any significant knowledge of history) look upon Britain as having nobly survived the wars and loss of empire, whilst maintaining its collective dignity. Thoughts?

    SW:Well, I’m sorry you have raised that sentence. I lived in America for some years and my wife is American and I put that in as a private joke really. I saw Four Weddings and a Funeral in New York when it came out and found it unwatchable because all the laughter around me appeared to be at the expense of my country (‘ha! ha! what idiots’) and I eventually had to leave it was so embarrassing. But of course all those New Yorkers just thought it was funny. And it’s the same with the Bond films. Also, to be honest, I did put in several sentences like the above just because I thought that by making such a claim it would completely enrage some British readers. And judging from some comments I have had already, it’s worked.

    Q:Here’s an interesting passage from your book: ‘[W]hat is odd about the sixties in the shape of ‘the sixties’ was that virtually the entire population were in practice excluded—too old, too young, too poor, too busy. This is clearly the case with the James Bond films. These are the fantasies of older men—fantasies of the war, of British greatness, of military service, of class distinctions. What has ‘the sixties’ to do with exclusive golf clubs, knowing what wine to drink with fish, with Venetian hotel suites? The answer of course is a great deal for an older, wealthy generation who felt the whole country was going to the dogs.’ And yet so many of us became Bond fans in our adolescence. Care to play psychologist with that one?

    SW:This section is part of an attempt here by a number of historians (including, for example, Dominic Sandbrook) to convert ‘the sixties’ into a proper bit of history—not simply a place where everyone’s grooving around and taking soft drugs. I think it must be fine though for later generations to buy into what was in reality a pretty confused melange of different overlapping generations. Perhaps my favourite scene in any Bond film is the meal on the Orient Express where Grant gives himself away by asking for red wine with his fish.

    Q:In reference to that same ‘sixties’ passage, can you go into further depth in regards to your comment about virtually the entire population being ‘excluded’? I’d always understood the sixties to have been quite an inclusive time. What do you know that I don’t?

    SW:I just think that most people were not really involved. My dad was the same age as John Lennon but for him, like millions of others, the sixties had no specific meaning—he simply went to work and helped look after a young family. Dominic Sandbrook in his wonderful Never Had It So Good points outthat most of the kids who in the mid 1950s trashed cinemas during the ‘Rock Around The Clock’ riots were working in factories and having children by thetime the Beatles came along and were not part of Beatlemania, which was the next echelon’s business. By ‘excluded’ I mean really that they were looking in other directions and doing nothing very much with a ‘sixties’ flavour. Sandbrook’s theory, which I’m sure is right, is that the period is so dominated by a specific atmosphere because it has been constantly
    mythologised by a bright bunch of people working in the media who came to the fore in the 1960s: and so records and clothing styles and television programmes which were in practice ignored by most of the population (or actively hated) have been endlessly revisited. It’s not that this is illegitimate—it’s just that there are lots of other things going on too.

    Q:I’ll contemplate the mythologisation of ‘The Sixties’ and segue right into your take on main title designer Maurice Binder: ‘He was one of those richly enjoyable figures from a different world whose very specialized skills in manipulating buttocks against coloured backgrounds earned him a unique niche in film history.’ I don’t really have a question here. I just wanted to repeat that lovely line.

    Cover Image: The Man Who Saved BritainSW:I’m glad you like it!

    Q:Is that the final cover art for the American edition?

    SW:I’m not sure—as far as I know it is—swell painting don’t you think?

    Q:Indeed. Do you have any plans for any further Bond-related books in the future?

    SW:That’s probably it. I have lots of spare material and keep thinking of things I’m annoyed I missed out—and things I’m annoyed I left in come to think of it. I’m trying to work out what to write next—but I always plan to write about Bond issues. He’s my first love.

    Q:Just to be clear, although you are often critical of Fleming, the Bond books and films, you are a big fan, right?

    SW:Oh a massive fan. I was in the car yesterday and, as usual, stuck the
    Goldfinger theme onto the CD player. It immediately brought it all back—those marvellous opening credits, with the gold tinted sneak previews of various scenes—fantastically stylish like almost everything in that film—and all thanks to Fleming. I’m disappointed by the later films, but I don’t think those really infect the earlier achievements—a batch of superb books (I reread Dr No last week as I’ve written a new introduction to the UK edition—Just Great) and at least 3 or 4 of the best of all ’60s films. definitely a fan.

    Q:Mr. Winder, thanks so much for your time. Do you have any last words for us?

    SW:Just that your website is seriously interesting and a fascinating resource. It’s great to know there are so many rather terrifyingly well-informed people out there who will no doubt be scouring my book and coming up with an ever bigger running total of gross errors.

    The Man Who Saved Britain: A Personal Journey into the Disturbing World of James Bond is available at Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com

  8. 'Trouble Spot' James Bond Collection Now Discounted

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-07-06

    The recently announced James Bond comic strip collection from Titan Books, Trouble Spot, is now discounted on both amazon.co.uk and amazon.com.

    This new 007 collection, made up of the Isle of Condors, The League of Vampires, and Die With My Boots On strips in addition to the title story. It will feature an introduction by Bond girl Martine Beswick, who portrayed Paula Caplan in Thunderball and gyspy girl Zora in From Russia With Love, amongst other special features that accompany these releases. The official blurb:

    The legend continues! Stand by for more adventures with the world’s greatest secret agent, as some of his most thrilling missions are collected for the first time ever! When Bond is called in to investigate a mysterious ‘box’ which has gone missing after the murder of its owner, Mike Channing, he becomes involved with a beautiful, deadly young adventuress – and the nefarious Baron Sharck! Can 007 avoid betrayal and death while persuading Channing’s blind wife that he is her husband? This new, never-before-collected edition also includes Isle of Condors, The League of Vampires and Die With My Boots On! It also contains a new introduction by Bond girl, Martine Beswicke (From Russia With Love), and exclusive feature material about the Bond girls!

    Titan’s Trouble Spot

    The Trouble Spot James Bond collection is due for release on 22 September 2006 in the UK and can be pre-ordered for a discounted price of £8.57 from amazon.co.uk. It will be released on 30 January 2007 in the US can can be pre-ordered for $11.67 from amazon.com.

    Stay tuned for CBn for all the latest news on the Titan James Bond comic strip releases, including the recently announced The Phoenix Project collection.

    Purchase the Titan James Bond 007 graphic novels from Amazon:

    The Man With The Golden Gun …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    Octopussy …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    Goldfinger …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    Casino Royale …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    Dr. No …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    The Spy Who Loved Me …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    Colonel Sun …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    The Golden Ghost (US: 30 Oct 2006) …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com
    Trouble Spot (UK: 22 Sept 2006 / US: 30 Jan 2007) …… Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com

  9. IFP Website Updated

    By righty007 on 2006-07-06

    IanFlemingCentre.com, the official website of Ian Fleming Publications Limited has been updated to include information on the company, Ian Fleming’s life, his thirteen James Bond novels (there’s unfortunately no mention of Thunderball due to legalities), Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and his other non-Bond work, the continuation novels by Kingsley Amis, John Gardner, Raymond Benson, and John Pearson, the film novelizations, Charlie Higson’s Young Bond series, The Moneypenny Diaries by Samantha Weinberg, the 2008 centenary of Ian Fleming, and James Bond: The Man of His World by Henry Chancellor.

    Despite the absence of information on Thunderball, this updated website is now the definitive source for official news and information on Fleming’s life and work and the other projects featuring his characters currently licenced by IFP.

  10. Casino Royale Cameo For Sir Richard Branson

    By Devin Zydel on 2006-07-05

    As production continues on the newest James Bond film, Casino Royale, news has come in on a cameo appearance in the film.

    The BBC report that Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Atlantic airline owner, will be making a cameo appearance in Casino Royale. Following up his cameo in the recent major release, Superman Returns, he will apparently be playing himself at one of the scenes set at Miami Airport for the upcoming Bond film.

    Branson met up with Bond girl Caterina Murino (Solange) and Chris Blackwell (owner of Goldeneye, former home of Ian Fleming) upon arriving. The Jamaica Gleaner reports that Branson and his Virgin Atlantic company have been ‘tagged “James Bond Seeks Out Virgin Atlantic For Casino Royale Assignment”, with the airline as a global partner and its Airbus A340-600s in an airport chase sequence.’ View pictures here and here.

    Stay tuned to CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale and all things James Bond 007.

    Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond 007 film produced by franchise holders Eon Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production began shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on 17 November 2006. Starring Daniel Craig as James Bond, it is currently being filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

    The film co-stars Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen, Jeffrey Wright, Judi Dench, Giancarlo Giannini, Caterina Murino, Simon Abkarian, Tobias Menzies, Ivana Milicevic, Clemens Schick, Ludger Pistor, Claudio Santamaria, and Isaach De Bankole.

    Related ‘Casino Royale’ Articles

    Casino Royale Main Page

    Casino Royale Latest News

    Casino Royale International Release Dates

    Casino Royale Cast & Production Updates