Showing posts with label james bond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label james bond. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Does Bond 22 End With A Bout Of Animal Cruelty?

There's a spoiler for the next James Bond ahead, so step cautiously.

According to the Itallian newspaper Il Giornale, there's filming happening this Thursday for the next James Bond film. The shoot is to take place at the famous Palio bareback horse race. Many people claim that this is for the film's climax - personally, however, I'm, not sure. There's no reason to believe this isn't for the opening scenes, or, for that matter, any other part of the film.

The Palio has always been very controversial with animal rights activists, and seemingly endorsing it rather than faking all of the footage in a humane fashion isn't going to win the Bond producers any new fans.

After this early shoot, which is all second unit stuff timed to coincide with the real Palio, it doesn't seem as if the Bond 22 shoot will continue in an unbroken fashion. Daniel Craig is to finish up his commitments elsewhere before spending too long in the famous tux, or even filming his inserts for the Palio sequence.

It's worth noting that the Bond crew are contractually obliged to not use any acts of violence or injury that they catch on film.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Warhead: The Great Lost Bond Film

In 1977, Sean Connery was preparing to return as James Bond in Warhead, a film that he was not only producing, but had also co-written with Len Deighton. Now, some preproduction art and photographs have surfaced, along with plenty of plot details, and The Scotsman have a nice little story on the whole business.

Warhead was to feature Bond parachuting onto the Stature of Liberty, water-skiing down the Hudson River and fighting a robot shark in the New York sewers. I assume he also left the city that never sleeps, as Connery reportedly scouted a number of 'international locations'.

For the record, this was a Kevin McClory Bond, as per Never Say Never Again, and would never managed to get anywhere near Eon or the Brocollis and therefore, never become canon. But it does sound delightfully daft.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Marc Forster Gets The Bond Gig

Nikki Finke has a very brief story revealing Marc Forster has indeed been given the controls for Bond 22.

I'm not happy about this.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

I Don't Really Know How To Review The New Fantastic Four Film

What can I say about Fantasic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer? It wasn't too hot, I can tell you that. You can probably guess the entire plotline from the trailers. And all of the jokes and major character beats. So, was anything unexpected?

Yes - here's the list of surprises I encountered while watching the film on Tuesday night.


I attended a 'regional premiere', starting just ahead of the big deal in London. We had live link up via satellite to the red carpet in London where Edith Bowman struggled to hold it all together. The cinema we were in - the Vue in Oxford - did an embarrassingly bad job with the digital projection of these segments, however. The images were in black and white, there was ghosting, all in all, it looked rather dreadful. Which is a crying shame because, while the Vue's projectionists clearly have no idea how to use the digital projector and were too proud to ask for help and get it right before hand, it is typically the one cinema in Oxford that offers the best presentation of the lot.

After over an hour of red carpet interviews that never quite happened the link up announced that we were now about to see the film. The manager of the cinema disagreed, however - there was to be an intermission of fifteen minutes for us to pop to the loo. This was a very good idea, but a better solution would have been to limit the outside broadcast to ten minutes or so in the first place. There wasn't ten minutes worth of actual content, but I think we could have just about stomached it stretching that far. Over an hour? I'm a little surprised that none of the thirty or so people in the audience snapped and killed the rest of us.

And then, the film and the next surprise: according to the BBFC title card, this film is simply called 4 - Rise of the Silver Surfer. No Fantastic. How prophetic.

The plot is pretty straightforward - Reed and Sue are to get married but Reed is distracted with a Surfer-monitoring project. The Surfer is coming to herald Galactus' destruction of us all. Doom starts knocking about again (his first few scenes were the most empty, boring scenes in an empty, boring film - simply there to remind us he existed and grasp at some kind of suspense). The Surfer is incarcerated by the military, Doom gets his board and powers, Sue bonds with the Surfer, they set him free and then there's a chase about for a bit, he gets his board back, tells Galactus to shove off, the end. Basically.

There's plenty of attempts at comedy but I didn't hear a single laugh from the little audience. Not even the kids. Maybe it 'works better' in a full auditorium. Which reminds me: the effects, particularly in an early 'funny' nightclub dance sequence with a CG Reed, were often sub-Ally McBeal. The rubber Surfer suit - seldom seen as it was, and stiff-faced too - looked fairly good, though.

I was surprised by the sequence in which the Surfer is incarcerated. It seemed like political subtext was bubbling up and that wasn't expected - even such ham-brained dumb-fisted attempts at subtextual relevance as this. It adds nothing and will convince no-one, which makes it seem rather sincere. I'm sorry, but this was probably a genuine attempt by Tim Story and writers to 'say something' - and that's the most damning thing I can say about this film, if you think about it.

There are a few action set-pieces and they're just mediocre, really. Like a late 70s Bond film or an 80s Arnold film that had nought to do with Cameron. The trailer that showed the Johnny/Surfer chase looked to be a bit choppy, and I was surprised to see that, actually, many of the cuts in the film were the same as in the trailer, that it hadn't been hacked down for the promo. Skillfully wrought stuff this was not.

Ultimately, this was an exercise in lowest common-denominator dreck, speckled with the odd attempt to convince the audience that they were watching something slightly
more worthwhile than they actually were (only slightly - they don't even set this fake bar very high).

One final surprise: after the screening, my girlfriend claimed to have enjoyed it more than Spider-Man 3 because Spider-Man 3 'took itself too seriously'. There were countless things wrong with that (surprising) statement, not least that actually, she spent the entire Fantastic Four 2 rolling her eyes, tutting and mocking it with the odd funny comment. During Spidey, she laughed and didn't offer any snarky put downs at all. She must have just been trying to make a point.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Carice Van Houten In Valkyrie

How's your Dutch? If its okay, then check out some news on Carice van Houten joining the cast of Bryan Singer's Valkyrie. A great move for the future Bond girl and the director alike.

I'm assuming she'll be playing Nina von Satuffenberg, the wife of Tom Cruise's character. Here's her introduction:

INT. HOSPITAL - DAY TITLES: MUNICH, GERMANY - FIRST GENERAL MILITARY HOSPITAL. 21 APRIL 1943.

A fast clicking. Heels on linoleum. A beautiful, dignified woman keeps herself from running. She is:

NINA VON STAUFFENBERG (30), Stauffenberg’s wife and mother of his four children. Beside her is BERTHOLD VON STAUFFENBERG (38), Stauffenberg’s older brother.

They reach the door of a private hospital room just as A DOCTOR comes out. Awkward pause.

DOCTOR
You are Mrs. Stauffenberg?

NINA (gesturing to Berthold)
And the Colonel’s brother, Berthold.

DOCTOR
Perhaps before you see the Colonel we should go to my office and -


NINA
I will see my husband now.


The Doctor wants to argue but Nina’s eyes shut him down. He opens the door and they enter to find...

You'll have to see the film to find out. But hopefully that gives you an idea of who Nina is, what she is like.

I like this script very much, and I think van Houten can make a great deal of this role. I'm also pleased that she appears to still be on the table for Bond 22 because, whoever they have directing, whichever draft of the script they employ, van Houten is likely to be a genuine asset to the production.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Movie Minesweeper - The Wedding Daze Is A Crime Against Cinema Edition

A really, realy short round up this time. Just four seperate pieces. Savour every one.

- The latest video for
Faithless is not only a commercial for the band and the song, but also for Coca Cola. The visuals are much better than the audio. Feed have the clip, as well as some behind-the-scenes business.

- Neil Gaiman himself has commented on the Death story I got re-rolling last weekend.

- Criss Angel is designing the magic tricks for the Mandrake movie.

- Goldfinger is to be rereleased across the UK this summer - entirely in digital screens. Hopefully they'll have done a good job with the mastering because this will pull in a lot of customers yet to see a digitally projected film.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

The Hildebrand Rarity

Neal Purvis and Robert Wade, erstwhile James Bond warhorses, appear to have let slip that, in fact, Fleming's short story The Hildebrand Rarity has been the key source for 'story elements' in the next film.

On the matter of Bond, the Carice van Houten story started here at film ick. Since it went wide, sneaking into just about every last corner of the international rumourweb, I had one more e-mail from my source. Simply, it said "Notice that there have been no denials from her people - or from Eon", or words to that effect (I've deleted it, unfortunately).

And indeed, I haven't seen a single denial from anyone.

Monday, April 23, 2007

The Next Bond Girl Is Dorothy Mills

Carice van Houten has signed on to play the lead role in Dorothy Mills. She's a doctor, and she suspects foul play in a strictly religious community that seems to mean people who live there are being denied necessary medical attention. Cracking starting point for a film.

According to whispers on the grapevine - a different vine in the the same vineyard that put Colin Salmon up-front for Bond a few years back - Carice van Houten is the current frontrunner for the lead female role in Risico. There's certainly been some back-office talk, but how advanced negotiations are, I have no idea.

You probably know van Houten from Black Book, but if you don't, here's a picture.


Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Supposed Bond Girl Is A Bright Star


Abbie Cornish is, if you believe gossip, a homebreaker and a future Bond girl. In fact, she may be neither, but she has entered final negotiations to star in Jane Campion's Bright Star. Wisest move of the three, if you ask me.

The film - written by Campion, and to be directed by her with a late summer and autumn shoot planned - tells of Fanny Brawne and John Keats' romance. It was doubtlessly tempestuous and passionate, torrid and wrenching, and ran from Keats being 22 until he was 25 - and then it was over. Principally, of course because that's when Keats died. How romantic.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Casino Change

Dame Judi Dench has rubbished the reports that Casino Royal has opened uncensored in China. She quite clearly remembers looping a line about missing the cold war with a far less China-baiting alternative about missing the good old days.

Not The Good Old Days, mind.

So, is that the only alteration made for the Chinese release? Hopefully somebody in China can find out definitively for us.

Friday, January 12, 2007

Bafta Nominations Announced

The full set of Bafta Film Award nominations is out, and there's one blank space yet to be filled in the listing. Where Little Miss Sunshine is undoubtedly nominated for best film, the actual producer nominees have yet to be named. Bafta arbitration as to who actually produced the film is clearly underway and might, just might, get mildly controversial. Yawn.

Many of the usual suspects are up for multiple gongs - The Queen, The Departed, Babel - but one notable stand out is Daniel Craig's nomination as Best Actor. This is the first time a Bafta nomination has been handed out for playing Bond, and I wouldn't be surprised to see it also become the first time a Bond has won.

The awards are to be dished out on Sunday 11th February from a new home at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden. Sadly, this time the ceremony will also be without Stephen Fry who handled matters so very well over the last few years.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Risico

According to The Sun newspaper, and reported at IGN, the next Bond film is to be based upon Fleming's story Risico. Other, quiter sources maintain that Tom Stoppard is working on the script and that a director has been selected, if not named. I guess we'll find out soon enough.