CommanderBond.net
  1. O'Lachlan Confirms Screen Test, Details

    By johncox on 2005-08-07

    Alex O’Lachlan has confirmed for The Daily Telegraph that he was one of four actors who auditioned last month for the role of James Bond in Casino Royale.

    Alex O'Lachlan

    Alex O’Lachlan

    “I’m spinning out of my brain about it,” said the 28-year-old. “I flew to London, stayed on Piccadilly and was looked after beautifully. [I was] fitted out at Hugo Boss for a tuxedo, had my hair cut and filmed two scenes.”

    The Telegraph reaffirms previous reports that O’Lachlan was up against ER’s Goran Visnjic, Henry Cavill and Scotsman Ewan Stewart. Fans and media have dubbed these “the Final Four.” The candidates filmed a series of screen tests at Pinewood Studios for director Martin Campbell.

    The article confirms that the producers are looking for a relatively unknown actor who can take over the role from Pierce Brosnan.

    O’Lachlan says he expects to hear the final decision within the next 20 days.

    “The reality is I may not get the role, which is the conundrum for all actors, but at the end of the day, I’m incredibly grateful just to be considered.”

    “It’s James Bond, need I say any more?”

    Keep watching CBn for all the latest news on Casino Royale .

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  2. Win 'Remington Steele' DVDs

    By Athena Stamos on 2005-08-06

    UPDATE August 13: We have a winner! Congrads to CBn Member thuffner!

    Courtesy of Fox Home Entertainment, we now have a region 1 Remington Steele Season 1 DVD box set to give away to one lucky CBn member. To learn more about the Remington Steele Season 1 DVDs see: “Before He was Bond, He was…“.

    You must be a registered member of the CBn Forum with a mailing address located in the United States or Canada and answer the following questions correctly to be eligible to win.

    To enter, fill out the following questionnaire and e-mail it to [email protected] (Subject: Remington Steele) by midnight PST on Thursday August 11th.

    Questions

    1. What’s your CBn Forum Screen Name?
    2. Cassandra Harris, who appeared in Remington Steele Season 1 episode “Thou Shalt Not Steele“, played a Bond Girl in which James Bond film?

    All those who answer correctly will be put into a drawing and the winner will be sent a PM on Friday morning, Aug 13th via the CBn Forums to the Screen Name they provided to inform them of their win. The winner must respond to this PM by noon (PST) on Sunday, Aug 14 with the requested information (name, address, etc) or another drawing will be held. The winner will be announced once shipping information has been received. Item will be shipped directly from Fox Home Entertainment.

  3. Looking Back: Death Is Forever

    By Devin Zydel on 2005-08-06

    In July 1992, following the very fan-controversial The Man From Barbarossa, came Death Is Forever, the eleventh John Gardner James Bond novel. CBn takes a look back with release dates, publication blurbs, trivia, and forum reactions regarding Death Is Forever.

    UK First Edition Hardback

    UK First Edition Hardback

    John Gardner’s eleventh original novel featuring Ian Fleming’s indestructible hero sees James Bond plunged into the dangerous, shadowy world of post-Cold-War Europe.

    Before the Berlin Wall fell, Cabal has been the most extensive and successful Western Intelligence network in the Eastern bloc. With the coming of Europe’s unexpected peace, its local agents were expected to go to ground — but to the consternation of their MI6 and CIA controllers death stalks them still.

    When case officers sent to track down the surviving Cabal agents are killed in mysterious circumstances, James Bond — together with the CIA’s Elizabeth Zara (henceforward known in the American vernacular as ‘Easy’) — are sent to pick up the pieces of the investigation, and before long they are on the trail of a fanatical Communist spymaster and a terrifying conspiracy to turn back the tide of European democracy.

    With a tension-packed train journey across Europe and a denouement at the new Channel Tunnel, John Gardner shows why, as the Daily Telegraph said of an earlier novel, “Ian Fleming would not be displeased.”

    UK First Edition Hodder & Stoughton Hardback

    Trivia

    • Despite the UK publisher being “dead set against it,” John Gardner insisted that the AIDS epidemic be addressed in this Bond novel. Hence, James Bond practices “safe sex” for the first (and last) time.
    • Gardner used the villain’s moniker, “the poison dwarf” for another character in Nobody Lives Forever, and also in one of his Boysie Oakes novels.
    • John Gardner includes the word ‘death’ in every chapter title except for the last which is simply titled ‘R.I.P.’.
    • James Bond is offered a knighthood at the end of this book (which he refuses).
    • As a marketing afterthought, a blue sticker was affixed to all US Putnam hardcover editions announcing the book as a ” SUPER VALUE! Bond Is Back.”

    Release Timeline

    • 1992: 1st British Hodder & Stoughton Hardback Edition
    • 1992: 1st American Putnam Hardback Edition
    • 1992: 1st American Bookclub Hardback Edition
    • 1993: 1st British Coronet Paperback Edition
    • 1993: 1st British Chivers Large Print Hardback Edition
    • 1993: 1st American Berkley Paperback Edition
    • 1994: 1st British Chivers Large Print Paperback Edition

    Relationship to the film series

    …no similarities between this book and the films, but isn’t it interesting that this book was published when EON was embroiled in legal issues over 007 and no film was being developed?

    Forum Reviews

    I just started Death Is Forever, which I find a very nice read. It’s more of a spy story then a Bond movie.

    CBn Forum member chimera01

    I like it, it’s not too bad considering there are more twists in the book than a pretzel factory. It has a good villain and enough action to keep the mind occupied, unlike Scorpius which seems to meander from time to time.

    CBn Forum member Genrewriter

    Large Print Edition

    Large Print Edition

    Oh look, there are some real people. Again. The Death Is Forever spider sandwich scene is satisfyingly nasty. Even if it is part of yet another long sequence in a hotel room. Interesting twist in Death Is Forever to have Bond completely fail in his mission. Only he comes back alive. OK, so he saves the world but that’s incidental. Quite a bit of whizzing about Europe in this, so it comes across as fast moving but it’s hard to remember any particular incident and in essence it’s a tired re-run of No Deals, Mr Bond. Ooh, there’s a traitor. Erm…hasn’t that happened before?

    CBn Forum member Jim

    US First Edition Hardback

    US First Edition Hardback

    I just re-read it, and I liked it. I liked the similarities to No Deals, Mr. Bond, and Bond was really clever in this one. Some of Gardner’s other ones, he’s getting bailed out all the time by other people, but not here. I love the way he killed Weisen, who is my favorite Gardner villain. He would have been a really fun ally of Bond’s, if written that way. He should have been introduced earlier in the book, he needed more “screen time”.

    A couple of things, though. Is this where Gardner starts showing his age? I was really annoyed by yet another Sean Connery reference, and that whole business where Bond says he was once compared to Hoagy Carmichael.
    The two times Bond’s love interests make him wear a condom, didn’t really bother me, it’s P.C. and all that, but it just seemed juvenile the way it was brought up.

    I’m just fearful that Gardner is starting to show his age and I’ll be reading the ramblings of an old man.

    CBn Forum member Jriv71

    The second half of the John Gardner series of Bond novels is instead much more fun. Great stories like Win, Lose Or Die, Death Is Forever, The Man From Barbarossa and Never Send Flowers.

    One of Gardners better ones actually…

    CBn Forum member Kronsteen

    US Paperback Edition

    US Paperback Edition

    Ahhh…here we have one of the higher points in the rollercoaster of highs and lows of the later books in the John Gardner era. Many fans seem to often compare this novel here to No Deals, Mr. Bond, which is somewhat less enjoyable to read compared to Death Is Forever in my opinion. I definitely recommend Gardner Bond fans to pick this one up.

    CBn Forum member Qwerty

    I have to say I prefer No Deals, Mr. Bond. I found this book to be nothing more than a rehash of No Deals, Mr. Bond, which is one of my favourite Gardner novels, it had the same basic plot, same type of characters, etc. And did anyone care when Easy dies?

    CBn Forum member scaramanga

    UK Paperback Edition

    UK Paperback Edition

    I found this novel to be an interesting read to say the least.

    The plot was constantly changing and the characters were cofusing, each having about three names each, and each used after the other, so that was quite confusing.

    It began slowely and only picked up slightly near the end, this was mainly due to the un-needed detail on every aspect of everything.

    CBn Forum member Tehuti 004

    I like it better than No Deals, Mr. Bond, but it’s not really one of my favorite Gardner novels.

    CBn Forum member zencat

    The Looking Back at John Gardner Series:

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  4. Tomorrow's Troubles Today

    By johncox on 2005-08-05

    John CoxA typist’s error changed the title from Tomorrow Never Lies to Tomorrow Never Dies; the producers and director didn’t speak; writers were hired and fired; Pierce Brosnan was unhappy; Teri Hatcher had morning sickness; George Lucas co-opted Eon’s new studio; government officials in Beijing tried to scuttle the production at the last minute. One thing was clear, there was no way “Bond 18” would make its December 1997 release date.

    But just how true were the “troubles” reported from the set of Tomorrow Never Dies? While no one denies it wasn’t a tight production schedule with some unforeseen events (like a facial injury to Pierce Brosnan, a scar of which still shows today), it turns out much of what was reported in the press was greatly exaggerated and/or ill-informed (imagine that).

    Variety announces the start of principal photography on Tomorrow Never Dies

    Variety announces the start of principal photography on Tomorrow Never Dies

    Tomorrow Never Dies did meet its December release, opening on the same day as Titanic in the U.S. and came within a few million of besting that film’s opening weekend. (Ironically, Titanic was also savaged in the press all year long as being a troubled production). Eon and Spottiswoode now admit to overdoing it with the action, but most fans agree the first hour of the film is excellent, with Vic Armstrong’s “backseat driver” parking garage sequence perhaps the best action sequence of the entire Brosnan era. There are even some fans who consider it Brosnan’s best film.

    So with the film now in retrospect, and with the prospect of another production year ahead of us, CBn offers some choice TND press stories from November 1996 to summer 1997. Perhaps this will prepare us for what the media has in store for us when cameras start rolling on Casino Royale. Because, remember, no matter what you read about casting troubles or location conflicts or unsatisfactory scripts, in the end, James Bond will return.

    “Sleaze” for 11/4/96 (online gossip website)

    Paranoid producers on the eighteenth JAMES BOND movie have become stuck in their own web of intrigue. The handful of film executives have been so wrapped up in keeping the latest spy story top secret from the world’s media, they have apparently forgotten to work on the film. And with just two months to go until the start of shooting – the latest 007 installment is untitled, without a leading lady or villain, and the script is still in the laboratory. So, panicking producers jetted in to British-based LEAVESDEN STUDIOS this week for crisis talks. Bond makers EON PRODUCTIONS admit they have left it rather late to scout for co-stars to appear alongside the film’s only confirmed actor PIERCE BROSNAN. Eon spokeswoman AMANDA SCHOFIELD reveals, “It is all a bit hectic at the moment. Producers are dashing in from America and trying to get things organized.” Brosnan, who starred as the suave agent in the last box office bond blockbuster, is waiting with bated breath for the script from GOLDENEYE writer BRUCE FIRSTEIN. But sources say Brosnan is fuming he is still in the dark on who he will be working with. An aide says, “Producers seem more concerned about shrouding the movie in complete secrecy rather than working on it – it must seem all very amateur for someone like Pierce.” Meanwhile, newspaper reports that 1960s icon TERENCE STAMP was to take on the role of the bad guy in the film and that the movie was to be titled AVATAR were described as “news to us” by sources at Eon. Hmmm?

    The following article from Weekly Variety offered the best and most accurate information on the early troubles of Tomorrow Never Dies, especially in regards to securing studio space (the article has been edited for space).

    Latest Bond Production Shaken, Stirred

    From Weekly Variety (Dec. 8-15, ’96)
    By Rex Weiner and Adam Dawtrey

    James Bond is being shaken, if not stirred, as preparations for the 18th installment of the film franchise inch forward without a start date, without firm locations, without completed sets and without a final script.

    The suave British secret agent regularly saves the world from catastrophe, but his mission has taken on an added importance since it could determine the fate of Metro Goldwyn Mayer Inc., the struggling studio that makes the Bond films.

    Resuscitating Bond has been a top priority at MGM the past 6 years. Getting “Bond 18” off the ground is especially fraught with urgency now, as studio management strives to prove itself under the new ownership of Kirk Kerkorian’s Tracinda Corp. and Australia’s Seven Network.

    The first image from TND had Bond fans complaining about Pierce's

    The first image from TND had Bond fans complaining about Pierce’s “Eddie Munster” hair-style

    But after the death of Bond producer Albert (Cubby) Broccoli in June, the urgent question is whether the franchise’s revival was a fluke or a repeatable phenomenon.

    Brosnan is aboard to reprise his starring role, but GoldenEye director Martin Campbell opted not to return and is now making Zorro. Anthony Hopkins was tentatively set to play a villain, but dropped out. Meanwhile, several locations have fallen through and the script process has been tortuous.

    Neither United Artists production executive Jeff Kleeman nor Eon Productions, now headed by Broccoli’s daughter Barbara and his stepson Michael Wilson, would comment. Sources close to the project insist that Bond 18 is on track to begin in the first quarter of 1997, as previously announced.

    Cliffhanger scribe Michael France was penning GoldenEye in May 1993, while two other writers were assigned to work separately on scripts for future sequels. It was routine, said Bond production veterans, for two or three scripts to be in the works in order to crank out a Bond every 2 years.

    “When you get up to 17 in one series,” longtime Danjaq spokesman Charles Juroe said at the time, “you do things differently. You don’t wait until 17 is a success to say, ‘Oh, we’d better do another one.’ This 2-year cycle does not give Danjaq the luxury to wait another 10 or 11 months down the line to get started on the next one. They’ve learned to be ahead of the game. When United Artists says they’re ready to do another one, they’re expected to have one ready.”

    That principle, along with those scripts, appears to have fallen by the wayside. And Bond has encountered several setbacks, such as losing a studio in which to shoot.

    Eon was set to film Bond 18 at Leavesden, the abandoned Rolls-Royce factory north of London where Eon crews hammered together sound stages for GoldenEye. Leavesden was for sale and the production company had an option to buy. But before it could move, the 1 million-square-foot-property was sold to Third Millennium, a Malaysian company.

    Still, Eon and UA were in talks with Leavesden about Bond 18, but were again beaten to the punch, this time by George Lucas, who plunked down a deposit and secured the facility for the next Star Wars installment.

    Leavesden Development Corp. executive Mark Pinkstone said discussions continued with Eon about using 400,000 square feet still available. When it became clear the Bond shoot would overlap with Leavesden’s plans to redevelop that part of the site as an entertainment complex, Leavesden offered to delay that project if Eon would compensate it. Talks broke down.

    Eon now is improvising soundstages at another derelict industrial site not far from Leavesden, dubbed Frogmore Studios. Time also has been secured at the Albert R. Broccoli 007 Stage, the large space at Pinewood Studios that was booked but never used for GoldenEye, due to scheduling problems.

    Although no deal had ever been struck for Hopkins to star, the actor expressed an interest in playing a Bond arch-nemesis when the revival got under way in 1993. His enthusiasm was still strong, sources said, on the basis of the original script handed in this summer by GoldenEye co-scribe Bruce Feirstein and approved by Calley. But in the past few weeks, Hopkins opted instead for a role in Zorro.

    That film is shooting in January in Mexico under Campbell, whose deft execution of the patented Bond formula of action plus humor plus girls was well-received. The fact that he has not returned for a second go has had some industryites questioning why Bond’s producers failed to nail him down.

    It appears the decision was Campbell’s. “Martin just didn’t want to do 2 Bond films in a row,” says his agent, Martha Luttrell, at International Creative Management.

    TND crew shirts promised plenty of location work

    TND crew shirts promised plenty of location work

    Eon and UA agreed to bring Roger Spottiswoode aboard in mid-September. The director has a few unsuccessful action pictures under his belt, including Under Fire and Air America, and one successful comedy, Turner and Hooch. He was widely praised for directing And the Band Played On , the AIDS drama for HBO.

    After a month on the job, Spottiswoode convinced Eon and UA to fly seven Hollywood screenwriters to London for a weekend brainstorming session. “I would describe it as fun,” said Robert Collector, one of the invited scribes put up at London’s pricey Athenaeum Hotel.

    “No one was paid,” Collector said, “and it was made clear to everyone that no writing was to be done. It was a free weekend in London.”

    The weekend paid off for one of the writers. A close friend of Spottiswoode’s, Nicholas Meyer (who penned The Seven Percent Solution and directed the second and sixth Star Trek pictures), was hired to perform rewrite chores. With original scribe Feirstein still slated to do a final polish, Spottiswoode’s brainstorming session did not bring the production any closer to a start date.

    Meanwhile, Spottiswoode has been spotted in Vietnam and other exotic locales in search of sites for Bond’s exploits. Designers at Frogmore are sketching sets. And Hollywood talent agents report that Bond’s casting directors are making offers to actors with availability in February or March.

    Assuming 007 is possessed of his usual luck, Bond 18 stands a decent chance of keeping the franchise on its year on-year off schedule by making it to the screen for Christmas. But with lean days ahead at the box office, MGM may be wishing that James Bond arrives sooner than Santa.

    This New York Daily News story is a bit sensational in its implication of a Chinese “conspiracy”, but the essence of the story is true; Eon lost its Vietnam location at the last minute. Note the leaking of the title Tomorrow Never Dies.

    China Resists Western Efforts to Bond

    From New York Daily News (March 10, ’97)
    Rush and Molloy column

    Did Chinese operatives sabotage James Bond’s latest Far East mission? In a plot twist worthy of Ian Fleming, Vietnamese officials have blocked the next 007 movie from shooting in their country – supposedly because the script offends friends in Beijing.

    Pierce's facial injury is very visible on this photo taken by Bjoern Feddersen in Hamburg

    Pierce’s facial injury is very visible on this photo taken by Bjoern Feddersen in Hamburg

    For 2 months now, producers of the 18th Bond thriller have been laying the groundwork for what was to be Hollywood’s first major invasion of Vietnam since American troops pulled out in 1973. But last week, word came from Hanoi that the visa for the MGM picture had been rescinded.

    “The Chinese put pressure on the Vietnamese to kick them out,” claims one source who believes Beijing got wind of the new Bond storyline. It deals with corrupt Chinese generals who do the bidding of a Rupert Murdoch-like media tycoon.

    In real life, it happens that Murdoch and the Chinese government have a major satellite deal. This wouldn’t be the first time China has frowned upon Tinseltown entertainment. Disney execs are already concerned that the company’s long-term interests there could be jeopardized by Martin Scorsese’s movie about the Dalai Lama.

    Bond spokesman Gordon Arnell insisted the Vietnamese had no problem with the 007 script, but hadn’t bargained on the crew and equipment needed for the movie’s pyrotechnics. “They just found us a bit too ambitious for what’s still a rather sketchy infrastructure,” said Arnell.

    An official with the Vietnamese culture ministry said permission was denied for “many complicated reasons.”

    Bond location scouts have since found sets in Thailand. Due to get rolling in April, the film stars Pierce Brosnan as Bond and Jonathon Pryce as the Murdochian mogul who threatens to blow up Hong Kong. Roger Spottiswoode is directing the closely guarded script, first drafted by Bruce Feirstein. The new Bond girl will be Michelle Yeoh, Hong Kong’s top “chop socky” star.

    The title of the movie is due to be announced today. Among the rumored names: “Shamelady,” “Avatar,” “Shatterhand,” “Aquator,” and “Zero Windchill.” We hear the most likely is “Tomorrow Never Dies.” We’ll see.

    The following article in the Daily Mail is probably 100% nonsense. Nevertheless, the tabloid press was filled with stories like this during the entire production of Tomorrow Never Dies.

    New Bond Shaken And Badly Stirred

    From Daily Mail [London] (April 25, 1997)

    by Baz Bamigboye

    Tensions are mounting on the set of the new Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies. Several of the leading cast members are unhappy with their roles.

    Brosnan and Michelle Yeoh on location in Thailand

    Brosnan and Michelle Yeoh on location in Thailand

    Film villain Jonathan Pryce has clashed with the film’s director Roger Spottiswoode, claiming that his character lacks depth and bears no resemblance to the role as it was first described to him.

    His screen wife Teri Hatcher, star of TV’s Superman, is just as livid. Having flown in this week from the U.S., she has discovered that her part has been reduced to 3 small scenes.

    As a result, she has complained vigourously that it was not the role she had signed on the perform. For once, these are not just the whinings of temperamental movie stars. They are valid criticisms of a picture that at the moment, is said not to be up to scratch.

    New script writers have been hired urgently to beef up and re-write several scenes featuring Pryce, Hatcher and Pierce Brosnan, who is making his second outing as 007.

    Mr. Brosnan has observed to friends that, so far, filming has been a total shambles and certainly not as enjoyable as GoldenEye, his first outing as 007, which grossed more than any of the previous Bond movies.

    Until a few days ago, the production was shooting in Germany and there were several bitter and vocal run-ins between the actors and the production team.

    Another example of a highly questionable “report” of on-set tensions, this time from America.

    No Bonding On This 007 Flick

    New York Daily News
    Rush and Molloy column (May 23, 1997)

    The evil forces at S.P.E.C.T.R.E. couldn’t concoct any more trouble than what is reportedly consuming the production of the new James Bond movie. Well-placed 007 operatives say that Tomorrow Never Dies is over its projected $85 million budget and that its director, stars, producers and writer are all at odds with each other.

    One L.A. source who’s getting intelligence from the flick’s Thailand set claims that actors Pierce Brosnan and Jonathan Pryce find director Roger Spottiswoode “indecisive.”

    “The cast shows up at 6:30 a.m. and Spottiswoode doesn’t put them to work till 2:30 p.m.,” charges the source.

    A Spottiswoode defender argues, “It doesn’t make a difference when he starts, the fact is the film is ahead of schedule.”

    But even a friend of the director admits United Artists is not happy that the film is over budget, possibly pushing $100 million. The blame for that, according to the friend, goes to producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson, “who haven’t been able to contain the cost” of the pyrotechnic extravaganza, which is shooting in five countries.

    The producers have also reportedly clashed with Spottiswoode over the casting of TV star Teri Hatcher, who was favored by UA, and the rehiring of original screenwriter Bruce Fierstein. Even though the producers have asked Fierstein to do last-minute script changes, Spottiswoode reportedly is refusing to talk with him.

    “Roger feels he has a script already,” says a source, who corroborates that the producers “aren’t on the same wavelength as the director.”

    United Artists, which is releasing the picture, had no comment on any of this. One UA exec did say, “From what we’ve seen of the footage so far, it looks great.”

    At the end of he day, UA had the final word and delivered the film to theaters on time as promised.

    BOND WILL BE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS

    By Michael Williams
    Reuters/Variety, 07-01-97

    AMSTERDAM (Variety) – MGM is denying rumors that the latest installment of its James Bond franchise, Tomorrow Never Dies, won’t be ready for its December release.

    Word on the street had suggested that the mega-buck (around $100 million) picture might not be ready for its holiday slot, particularly if weather considerations during shooting in Asia forced delays.

    However studio executives say the Pierce Brosnan starrer will be in the hands of British cinema owners in time for its Dec. 12 world premiere, before launching in most of the rest of Europe and the U.S. one week later.

    “This film will be ready, and anyone who says it won’t is either wrong or showing considerable bad faith,” said Guy Laurence, MGM’s executive vice-president of international distribution and marketing. He said getting prints to theaters will be “tight but manageable.”

    tomorrow never dies poster

  5. Bedingfield Confirmed for 'Russia' Cameo

    By Matt Weston on 2005-08-05

    As previously leaked, Electronic Arts has now confirmed British singer Natasha Bedingfield will have a role in the upcoming James Bond game, From Russia With Love.

    Natasha Bedingfield

    Natasha Bedingfield

    Joining the original Bond, Sean Connery and newcomer Maria Menounos, Bedingfield will lend her voice and likeness to an original character named Elizabeth Stark, who is the daughter of the British Prime Minister. 007 is called into action when Miss Stark goes missing.

    I am thrilled to be featured alongside Sean Connery in the game version of one of my favorite Bond films,” said Bedingfield. “It’s not every day you get to become a Bond Girl so this is a great honour.”

    Natasha Bedingfield is an exceptional British talent and was a natural choice for this part,” said Jon Rissik, Senior Marketing Director EA Europe.

    Bedingfield has a previous Bond game connection: she performed the end title track for EA’s last 007 game, GoldenEye: Rogue Agent.

    Meanwhile, EA has unleashed its latest batch of impressive screenshots from the new game.

    From Russia With Love is in development simultaneously across Microsoft Xbox, Sony PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube, and will be released worldwide later this year.

    Pre-order ‘From Russia With Love’

  6. CBn's 5th Anniversary: Introducing S-Branch

    By Devin Zydel on 2005-08-04

    CommanderBond.net’s S-Branch is now back online.

    Devin Zydel

    The most popular James Bond site on the web just got better. CommanderBond.net opens up its S-Branch Section. Adding to the already extensive and in-depth articles that have been featured on the James Bond 007 films over the years on CBn, S-Branch gives in-depth coverage on the characters in the James Bond 007 films from Dr. No to Die Another Day.

    The main section that we’re opening today is the James Bond Films section, which covers the Villains, Bond Girls, Allies, Gadgets, Trivia, Box-Office, Film Facts, Foreign Translations, Release History and more. Each film has a page dedicated to it including a full synopsis, release information, poster taglines, as well as primary cast and crew links, with in-depth coverage on the cast members included as well.

    Links to the IMDb biographies are also included on each page for each character. Continuing on in the films sections are links to the gadgets used in each specific film, with information given on each gadget as well. Trivia related to each 007 film is also included. Foreign film title translations have been added in for the films, which lists the name of the film and its English translation, not to mention the film?s release dates around the world. A links section at the bottom includes pages to buy the specific film as well as featured CBn articles related to it.

    Well-known characters such as Pussy Galore, Hugo Drax, and Felix Leiter are included, but also some lesser-known characters such as Ladislav Kutze, Nicole, and Linda also.

    Not only do we have extensive content on the films, but we also have some detailed information about the DVD releases of the films. The DVD section in S-Branch compiles together the summaries for the 007 films from Dr. No to Die Another Day, as well as audio and general film information, the scene chapters, special features, and links to buy the film from both Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk.

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net for many more sections to be opened in CBn’s S-Branch in the future, providing the James Bond fan community with extensive, in-depth, and complete coverage on all things Bond, James Bond. Where all other Bond sites end… this one begins!

    Not sure where to start? Check out the Index page.

  7. The Blades Library Book Club: The Spy Who Loved Me

    By David Winter on 2005-08-04

    Welcome back to The Blades Library Book Club – the place for quality discussions of the books of James Bond!

    Every two months a book is chosen for the club members to read. A thread is posted in the club forums listing locations on where you can find the novel. Discussions about the book will go on as the book is read and when it is finished. Another thread will be created so that club members can post their review and give a rating on the current book.

    All fans of the Literary Bond are eligible for membership. All you need to do to sign up is register for the CBn Forums and then post your name in the sign up thread.

    The Book Club’s tenth Book

    The Spy Who Loved Me

    The Spy Who Loved Me

    Currently we are progressing though the novels in chronological order, since quite a number of members are using the club as an opportunity to read the books for the very first time. Therefore, The Spy Who Loved Me will be the book in the hands of readers for August 2005. The Spy Who Loved Me, written in 1962, is Fleming’s tenth Bond novel.

    Obtaining The Book

    Ordering online should be quite easy. The Spy Who Loved Me can be ordered online from the following sources:

    Online sources for other older versions of The Spy Who Loved Me:

    Discuss other places to buy The Spy Who Loved Me or where you got your copy in this thread.

    Discuss The Book While Reading

    Want to talk about the book while reading it. Post a new thread in The Blades Library. Be sure to title the thread with The Spy Who Loved Me and the chapter number you have read through.

    Review And Rate The Book

    After you have finished reading The Spy Who Loved Me, you can dicuss it with other club members in The Blades Library, and give the book your personal rating out of five in this thread.

    If you have any questions or suggestions just post them in a new thread. Happy reading.

    Previous Books Read

  8. Maria Menounos Joins 'From Russia With Love'

    By Matt Weston on 2005-08-03

    Electronic Arts today announced Maria Menounos will star alongside Sean Connery in the company’s upcoming James Bond video game, From Russia With Love.

    Maria Menounos

    Maria Menounos

    Menounos will lend her voice and likeness to an original character named Eva, who is Red Grant’s driver and henchwoman. A spokesperson for Pantene hair products, Menounos recently made her big-screen debut in Fantastic Four, and has also had a recurring role in One Tree Hill.

    I am honored to be a Bond girl and be a part of the Bond legacy,” said Menounos. “To star in a video game with Connery, the original Bond, is incredible.”

    Menounos joins a growing cast for From Russia With Love (recent reports indicate Natasha Bedingfield may also have a role in the game). After the commercial misfire of GoldenEye: Rogue Agent late last year, it appears EA is attempting to create a game more in the mould of Everything or Nothing, its most critically-acclaimed effort so far (Everything or Nothing featured an all-star cast including Pierce Brosnan, Willem Dafoe, Shannon Elizabeth and Bond regulars Judi Dench and John Cleese).

    From Russia With Love is in development simultaneously across Microsoft Xbox, Sony PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube, and will be released worldwide later this year.

    Pre-order ‘From Russia With Love’

  9. Two New Podcasts Now Available

    By David Winter on 2005-08-02

    Yesterday we released our second episode of our monthly podcast. Featuring all the latest news and updates from the month of July.

    Early this morning, we also released a Special Edition episode of the podcast featuring an interview with the Irish Radio Station, Spin 103.8 and our very own, Paul Dunphy which took place on Sunday evening.

    Both are available by subscribing to our Podcast, which is available in an enhanced or standard version. Details can be found here as well as direct links for downloading the episodes.

  10. Fiat Claims Panda Will Be Bond's Car in 'Casino Royale'

    By johncox on 2005-08-02

    Last week an article in the International Herald-Tribune leaked the news that Fiat’s new 4×4 “Panda” will make an appearance in Casino Royale, the 21 James Bond adventure due out next year. Bond fans (and CBn) figured the car would get a “cameo” in the film, or perhaps be driven by Bond Girl Vesper Lynd. As recently as two months ago CBn reconfirmed that Bond’s main car in Casino Royale would be the Aston Martin V8 Vantage.

    However, according to the Italian website ANSA.it, Fiat has today made the surprising announcement that the Panda will be driven by James Bond himself, replacing the Aston Martin!

    Fiat Panda

    Fiat Panda 4×4

    “The Turin automaker has confirmed the startling news that in his next film, Casino Royale, the legendary seducer and undercover agent will be driving one of its budget utility vehicles. By taking the wheel of one of Fiat’s bottom-of-the-range models, the original 007 will be breaking a tradition of flashy, high-performance autos that goes back to the Aston Martin DB5 in 1964’s Goldfinger. The Fiat Panda to be driven by the new James Bond – the actor to replace Brosnan has not yet been named – takes 20 seconds to get from 0 to 60 mph and its top speed is not even half that of the Aston Martin.

    Interestingly, the article goes on to quote “sources close to the production company” as saying Bond’s Panda “will be a fully armed miniature fortress, as indestructable as the other Bond cars. Details of the special gadgets have not yet been decided.”

    Can this be true? What happened to Eon’s deal with Ford/Aston Martin? Or will both cars somehow be featured in the film?

    As always, stay tuned.For more photos and information on the Panda, CLICK HERE.

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