On November 3, 2011, the cast and crew of Bond 23 put on a press conference to announce the next James Bond movie: Skyfall.
In attendance were the film’s director Sam Mendes, Daniel Craig, Javier Bardem, Dame Judi Dench, Naomie Harris, Berenice Marlohe, and the franchise long-standing producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli.
And, without further adieu, here is the complete press conference.
Some random thoughts I had during the press conference:
“The worst kept secret in the history of London…the title of the film” MGW
Barbara Broccoli had such a pouty face in the beginning.
I like that I’ve never heard of either Bond girl before…but boy are they beautiful!
I hope Javier Bardem puts on a thick “meeester Bond” accent.
Bummer that DC confirmed that there will be no Quantum. Here’s to hoping he’s lying.
I love that it ended with Barbara so emphatically stating that Daniel Craig will be back! Keep ‘em coming.
November 3, 2011 was a huge day in the world of 007. On the 50th anniversary of the announcement of Sean Connery as the first James Bond, the producers held a big press conference to let the world know more about the 23rd Bond movie: Skyfall.
Naturally, the Internet is abuzz with stories about the film. Here are a few of the best ones I’ve come across:
As previously announced, Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes directs his first Bond adventure, which celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2012 when Skyfall is released.
One of the few details Mendes revealed to more than 100 reporters from around the world at the film’s London press launch were his cast and the locations of the blockbuster, which starts production on Monday.
Bond regulars Craig and Judi Dench, as his stern spymaster M, return to their roles, Spanish actor Javier Bardem plays the villain and French actress Berenice Marlohe and Britain’s Naomie Harris are Bond girls.
All five were at the press briefing, where they were joined by Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson.
In addition, Mendes said the latest installment in one of cinema’s longest and most successful film franchises will feature Ben Whishaw “who will be playing a part I can’t tell you about in scenes I can tell you nothing about.
“And Albert Finney, who will also be playing a part I can tell you nothing about in scenes that I can’t really tell you about and Ralph Fiennes, who, similarly, I can give you very little information about.”
Asked whether he had not named all of the characters the leading actors would be playing because Bond fans might recognize them, the “American Beauty” director replied: “They might do. On the other hand they might not.”
What producers have confirmed is that Skyfall will take Bond on another action-packed mission to London, Shanghai, Istanbul and Scotland.
A press release gave a brief plot outline, saying Bond’s loyalty to M is tested “as her past comes back to haunt her.
“As MI6 (British intelligence) comes under attack, 007 must track down and destroy the threat, no matter how personal the cost.”
NO “AUSTERITY” BOND
Mendes and his producers sought to reassure fans that tough economic conditions in the real world would not make the fictional exploits of the suave superspy any less spectacular.
“It, I think, has all the elements of a classic Bond movie, including, to quell any rumors, a lot of action,” Mendes said.
Wilson added: “I think it’s in the same (cost) range as the last film and we really haven’t had to change anything in the script. We haven’t had to sacrifice anything.”
And of course the BBC covered the Skyfall James Bond 23 press conference
The latest 007 adventure will star Daniel Craig for the third time. Leading ladies have been confirmed as French actress Berenice Marlohe and Naomie Harris.
Skyfall is being directed by Sam Mendes, who won an Oscar for 1999′s American Beauty.
Mendes said the storyline will take the secret agent to London, China, Turkey and Scotland.
It will see Bond’s loyalty tested to M, his superior, while espionage headquarters MI6 faces an attack.
The movie, which sees the return of Dame Judi Dench as spy boss M, will also star Ralph Fiennes, Albert Finney and Javier Bardem as the villain of the piece.
It will be released in the UK on 26 October 2012.
Craig told reporters in London that the cast would start filming sequences for the new movie later on Thursday.
Daniel Craig and French actress Berenice Marlohe on their roles in Skyfall
Much speculation about the new film has focused on what Mendes will bring to the franchise, with some suggesting he will tone down – or even abandon altogether – the action sequences.
But the director denied that this was the case. He told reporters in London that the “fantastic script” had “all the elements of a classic Bond movie, including – to quell any rumours – lots of action”.
When asked what fans could expect from the latest film, he added: “The movie will reveal everything, and there’s lots of surprises.”
Producer Barbara Broccoli said no-one had yet been chosen to write and perform the Bond theme tune.
After months of hype and a period of previews during which Hugh Jackman scolded an audience member for leaving their cell phone on, A Steady Rain has finally opened on Broadway on Tuesday, September 29, 2009. The drama will only run for a limited 12-week engagement, so don’t wait to see 007 on stage with Wolverine.
According to the official Web site, “Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman star in the most anticipated theatrical event of the season: A Steady Rain. This new American play by Keith Huff tells the story of two Chicago cops who are lifelong friends and whose differing accounts of a few harrowing days change their lives forever. Directing is John Crowley.
A Steady Rain is produced on Broadway by Frederick Zollo, Michael G. Wilson, Barbara Broccoli, Raymond L. Gaspard, Frank Gero, Cheryl Wiesenfeld, Jeffrey Sine, Michael Rose Ltd, The Shubert Organization, Inc. and Robert Cole. Set and costume design are by two-time Tony Award winner Scott Pask, with lighting design by two-time Tony Award nominee Hugh Vanstone and original music and sound design by Mark Bennett.”
Since I was a young boy, James Bond has had an important role in my life. I still remember watching the TBS marathons with my father in the Poconos: especially The Man With The Golden Gun. The image of solar panels rising out of a rock in the middle of the water has been ingrained in my head for two decades and, when I learned that I could visit the actual island where the movie was filmed it became my number one priority in southern Thailand.
Tours to James Bond Island are more than plentiful in Krabi and Phuket, with fliers and signs posted on every tour office billboard and window. Every day thousands of tourists board boats for different types of tours, but around lunch time they all make way for the island. This was exactly what I did not want, as I wanted the place to myself to explore and find the actual filming locations. After looking for a while I resolved to joining the masses: until we found Sim’s Tours.
A view of the limestone crags of Phang Nga Bay
Offering a twilight cruise around Phang Nga Bay (pronounced fang-nah), Sim’s was the only company that actually arrived on the island just before sunset. The bay itself is home to dozens of large limestone crags that jut out of the water in beautiful chaotic ways. Some have small beaches, but many are just rock formations that pepper the landscape. It’s very outer-worldly and unlike anything I’ve ever seen. In reality, Sim’s tour was like a 2 for 1 special, as the crags were must-sees for us as well.
The adventure began when we arrived at the pickup point five minutes late and learned that the bus had already left. The tour agent suggested that we just go a different day, but we had run out of time in Phuket. Repeated calls to the bus resulted in more frustrations, as they did not want to wait for us. However, after some pleading they agreed, so we flagged down a motorcycle taxi and told him to step on it so we could catch up with the bus.
In true Bondian fashion we sped down the streets of Phuket, weaving in and out of traffic. Man was that bus far away! When we got to the large hill dividing Phuket island our bike began to huff and puff its way up. “Hurry up,” I thought, as the minutes ticked by. When the bike finally made it over the hump and to the meeting point, the bus was nowhere in sight. However, while dealing with being charged double what we thought we agreed to the Sim’s bus showed up and we hopped on.
Our boat for visiting Phang Nga Bay and James Bond Island
Finally comfortable on the air conditioned coach bus, we listened in as our guide explained the tour to us, joking that his Thai name was too complicated and we should just call him James. As in James Bond, 007. He spoke for a while longer then put The Man With the Golden Gun on the bus’ TV to get the group ready.
Our first stop was Wat Suwannakuha, a beautiful cave temple with a reclining Buddha statue and lots of stalactites and stalagmites. From there it was onto the docks, where our covered long tail boat waited to take us into Phang Nga Bay. We sped along, staring in awe at the crags that towered above our boat and snapping away with our cameras: no photos could have prepared us.
After touring the bay, our next stop was the Muslim Gypsy village: a collection of houses on stilts that used to be a traditional town but has since become a tourist trap. It was sad to see that the entire village is now a floating market filled with stall after stall selling the same tee shirts, magnets, post cards and souvenirs…many with James Bond Island plastered across them. Still, although I did not like what I saw, I couldn’t resist the chance to get some keepsakes for myself.
Paying admission at the backside of the beach on James Bond Island in Phang Nga Bay
Back on the boat again, we sped around more crags before I saw it creeping up in the distance. Finally, James Bond Island was before me. We did a loop around it before coming to dock on the back side of the beach. I was the second one off and, after paying the national park entrance fee I was off running around the place like a kid at Christmas.
The actual beach and island was extremely small…you could walk from one end to the other in less than a minute. Still, all the set locations were there: the triangular shaped entrance to Scaraamanga’s fortress, the steps Nick Nack walked down with a bottle of champaign in the teaser sequence, the area of the beach where Bond’s plane landed…and most importantly, Nail Island: the crag that the solar panel came out of in the film.
Snap. Snap snap snap. It’s all I did for most of the time on the island, though my serenity was quickly broken as two more boats arrived just after us and the place soon filled with dozens of other snapping tourists and Bond aficionados.
Me in front of the cave used for Scaramanga
Also quite different from when the movie was filmed was the row of souvenir stands that stands in the middle of the beach and blocks a direct walk from one end of the island to the other. Sadly, or happily…I can’t decided to this day…the stands were all closed. I guess a few dozen visitors are not enough to stay open when compared to the thousands they get at lunch. I would have liked to have seen all the goodies they had to offer, but am glad I was not hounded to buy things my whole time on James Bond Island.
Finally, about 30 minutes after we arrived it was time to leave. I was in no way ready: I could have stayed there soaking it all in for hours, but most other people on the boat do not share my special love for 007. So it was back to sea, passing yet more crags with the sun setting in the distance. We watched as the sky changed from blue to a mix of purple, pink, orange, navy and finally black. All with the crags framing the scene and providing a stunning backdrop.
Nail Island, off of James Bond Island in Phang Nga Bay
All in all things could not have worked out better. We saw the crags and I got to go onto James Bond Island all by myself…for a few seconds at least. For anyone else who ever wanted to see the place and finds themselves in Phuket, I highly recommend Sim’s Twilight Tours. You can find information about it at any tourist office in town, the price is right and the experience unforgettable.
Some other new fun facts about The Man With the Golden Gun and Thailand that I learned from Sim…
The Man With the Golden Gun was the first movie to be used as a promotional tool for Thailand. It was the first Western movie to show Thai boxing, floating markets, traditional Thai dance, longtail boats and the streets of Bangkok.
A mere couple of years after the movie’s release, tourism had become the #3 industry in Thailand.
Ever year, more than 600,000 people visit James Bond Island
In a recent interview, Daniel Craig was asked if Bond 23 was going to be the final part in a trilogy involving the group Quantum. To this he replied, “No *#$&!@% way. I’m done with that story. I want to lie on a beach for the first half an hour of the next movie drinking a cocktail.” Now the final sentence was obviously a joke, but the interview has led to all news media definitively stating that Bond 23 will be completely different.
While the staff at Universal Exports is torn between this being good or bad news, the fact of the matter is that this was just a random interview with a man tired of James Bond at the moment. There is no script, nor any idea of what the plot will be. All that has been confirmed is what Daniel Craig HOPES for the next film. Granted, he does have more than a little pull, but still, the interview should be taken at face value.
After five weeks atop the international boxoffice, Quantum of Solace has finally been bumped from the number one slot by the animated sequel Madagascar 2.
Meanwhile, according to The Hollywood Reporter:
“A solid $10.8 million from 6,350 screens in 72 markets greeted “Quantum of Solace” as it slid to second place during its seventh week of international release. The film’s sole new opening saw Venezuela bring in $415,000 from 75 screens, hailed by Sony as 98% bigger than the comparable bow for 2006′s “Casino Royale.” “Quantum’s” international cume stands at $357.8 million. Market grosses include $77.4 million in the U.K., $30.8 million in France and $37.1 million in Germany.”
The 73 year old Dame Judi Dench has said in an interview recently that she is not too keen to play M in the next James Bond movie, stating that she doubts her return.
According to ContactMusic, Dench has often threatened to walk away from the role but is usually convinced to do another one by Bond producer Barbara Broccoli.
According to Broccoli, “She had such a great relationship with Pierce on the screen and she has such a great relationship with Daniel. She is our anchor. She is the real Bond girl – the one that keeps it all going, and I don’t want her to leave. She keeps threatening to leave but I will not let her!”
The Swedish auction house Bonhams is set to auction off James Bond’s Lotus Esprit from the 1977 film The Spy Who Loved Me. The Lotus will be sold by the international auctioneers on December 1 at its annual motoring sale at Olympia, in West London, and is expected to go for around £100,000-120,000.
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The Lotus Esprit in 1977's The Spy Who Loved Me
According to a press release issued by Bonhams, With the global release of the new movie Quantum of Solace putting Ian Fleming’s legendary British secret agent James Bond firmly back in the public eye, Bonhams is delighted to announce that it has one of 007’s classic sports cars for sale.
The white 1976 Lotus Esprit from the 1977 film The Spy Who Loved Me, starring Roger Moore and Barbara Bach, will be sold by the international auctioneers on 1 December at its annual motoring Sale at Olympia, in West London. The car is expected to fetch £100,000-120,000.
The vehicle is one of two Lotus cars driven in the film by Roger Moore’s James Bond character. It turns into an amphibious car for the movie, driven both on land and underwater.
Also for sale, is the registration number ‘AU1’, used in another James Bond film Goldfinger. The first registration issued in Nottingham in 1903, this number was fitted to the Rolls-Royce Phantom III used by arch villain Goldfinger in the legendary film of the same name, since AU is the chemical symbol for gold in the Periodic Table. It is expected to fetch in excess of £80,000.
Roger Moore shows off his star on the Hollywood walk of fame
Whew, there sure has been a ton of Roger Moore related stories floating around these days; mostly because of the release of his new memoirs, My Word is My Bond. The latest from “jocular” Bond is that he does not like the new, more violent Bond.
According to an interview with Reuters, “I am happy to have done it, but I’m sad that it has turned so violent. That’s keeping up with the times, it’s what cinema-goers seem to want and it’s proved by the box-office figures,” Moore told Reuters.
Moore, recalled being appalled at the violence in A View to a Kill, “That wasn’t Bond,” he said. In his book, Moore writes of his distaste for guns, ever since he was shot in the leg by a friend with a BB gun as a teenager.
While making The Man With the Golden Gun, director Guy Hamilton wanted Bond to be tougher and had him threaten to break Maud Adams’ character’s arm to get information, he writes. “That sort of characterization didn’t sit well with me, but Guy was keen to make my Bond a little more ruthless.
“I suggested my Bond would have charmed the information out of her by bedding her first. My Bond was a lover and a giggler, but I went along with Guy,” the British actor wrote.