EoN sells up - Amazon MGM to produce 007 going forwards (Steven Knight to Write)

1127128129130132

Comments

  • DaltonforyouDaltonforyou The Daltonator
    edited September 24 Posts: 908
    Some interesting tidbits from the article:

    "Online speculators and betting companies throw out names without thinking who Bond is. Knight will be going back to Fleming’s earliest novels – Casino Royale (1953), Live and Let Die (1954), Moonraker (1955), Diamonds Are Forever (1956), From Russia, with Love (1957), Doctor No (1958), and Goldfinger (1959), to help remind us who Fleming’s protagonist is. Might the new Bond be more in the mould of a younger Sean Connery who originated 007 in 1962’s Dr. No?"


    This is music to my ears. I can't think of anything better for Steven Knight to do than go back and read Fleming, particulary his early work. This gives me more confidence this will be a faithful adaption.


    "Those familiar with the matter tell us that the director and his collaborators are seeking a “fresh face” to take on the 007 mantle in Bond 26.

    Also, Bond … James Bond, will be male, as written by creator Ian Fleming, and importantly, will be an actor who hails from the British isles.

    Yes, they want a Brit to play Bond."


    Also Music to my ears, This rules out trendy suggestions like Jacob Elordi and I think an unknown is probably the best way to go. That way your not just sticking your finger to the wind and seeing which way it blows.

    And its also nice to get confirmation Bond will be played by a British Male, we shouldn't need confirmation, but it's nice to have nonetheless.


    "There’s a sense from the many conversations I’ve had that Knight’s going back to Bond’s beginnings as a Royal Navy Commander before being recruited by MI6, the UK’s foreign intelligence agency, to perhaps chart how Bond attained 007 status. I want to stress that this is what I’m hearing but to caution that none of this is confirmed or fully formed because the script is still being written and the direction of travel is still up for grabs."



    If true, this is very exciting. Seeing Bond at his very beginning, even before Casino Royale, gives us something fresh to watch. I can see the first 30-40 minutes or so of the film charting his time with the Royal Navy and seeing what work he was doing there and his eventual recruitment. Then going to the Mi6 training grounds, and getting all sorts of physical and mental tests and then to getting his first two kills.



    That said, I suspect a few old Bond hands might well be consulted on the quiet in the snug of a private club in Pall Mall, London.



    Could this be a Barbara Broccoli reference? We shall see.


    An unprecedented number of applicants have already sent in their pitch to play James Bond to the production. “Every name you’ve heard of, and many you’ve never heard of,” a well placed mole revealed. “We’ve been flooded. But understand that the casting process has not begun and it won’t until Denis finishes the Dune movie,” they continued.



    British actors in their mid twenties to early thirties, with stellar acting chops, who fit the Bond mould, are going to be under an intense spotlight for the next twelve months. Bond…James Bond is somewhere out there.


    And its nice to know that agencies are already pitching their clients on Bond, its a hot gig in town. Although I'm glad they've found their sweet spot, we haven't had a really young Bond since Connery and Lazenby so it will be fun to see how this shakes out.
  • edited September 24 Posts: 5,985
    Some interesting tidbits from the article:

    "Online speculators and betting companies throw out names without thinking who Bond is. Knight will be going back to Fleming’s earliest novels – Casino Royale (1953), Live and Let Die (1954), Moonraker (1955), Diamonds Are Forever (1956), From Russia, with Love (1957), Doctor No (1958), and Goldfinger (1959), to help remind us who Fleming’s protagonist is. Might the new Bond be more in the mould of a younger Sean Connery who originated 007 in 1962’s Dr. No?"


    This is music to my ears. I can't think of anything better for Steven Knight to do than go back and read Fleming, particulary his early work. This gives me more confidence this will be a faithful adaption.

    That sounds good to me. Although it's worth saying Fleming's character is noticeably different to Connery's Bond in many respects (especially DN), and the last part is pure speculation. There's so much there in those books though they can adapt/play with.
    S


    "There’s a sense from the many conversations I’ve had that Knight’s going back to Bond’s beginnings as a Royal Navy Commander before being recruited by MI6, the UK’s foreign intelligence agency, to perhaps chart how Bond attained 007 status. I want to stress that this is what I’m hearing but to caution that none of this is confirmed or fully formed because the script is still being written and the direction of travel is still up for grabs."



    If true, this is very exciting. Seeing Bond at his very beginning, even before Casino Royale, gives us something fresh to watch. I can see the first 30-40 minutes or so of the film charting his time with the Royal Navy and seeing what work he was doing there and his eventual recruitment. Then going to the Mi6 training grounds, and getting all sorts of physical and mental tests and then to getting his first two kills.

    It depends on how it's done, but for me that'd be a pointless film. I don't think we need a 'Bond begins' thing (even CR didn't do that). Unless his navy days are important to a vital plot point in the PTS/opening.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited September 24 Posts: 19,157
    mtm wrote: »
    Yeah I think the stuff about an unknown, or even a Brit really, is a bit meaningless: if they find the right guy and he doesn't 100% match up to those criteria, I don't think they're going to boot him. Brosnan wasn't a Brit after all. Otherwise there's a lot in there which sounds like guesswork: younger Bond, Royal Navy yadda yadda. Might well turn out that's what the film is, but we could all guess it might be that, it doesn't take much of a detective to write those thoughts down.

    The thing that interests me a bit more, if the article isn't out of whack, is that the process doesn't begin until Villeneuve is available. So the producers aren't presenting him with an actor, this is his movie and we won't know until then. I'm sure they're gathering a huge database in the meantime, but it does feel the right way to do it. I guess it's pretty much stand down until then.
    (IF the article is right of course!)

    It's Deadline, they are quite reliable.

    It's Baz though, I have a long memory when it comes to him (although he's got plenty right over the years).
    I don't know why we need to see Bond earning his 00 status, or why it should be considered a necessary step to introducing a new actor. Dalton and Brosnan worked just fine as already competent and experienced agents.

    I think it can be interesting. There's no official origin story we have to see played out again either, he doesn't get bitten by a radioactive civil servant, so plenty of ways to deal with it. If they want to do it I'm up for it.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,767
    So I guess that the “audition” that Scott Rose Marsh did was more than likely his agent packaged/taped a read, sent it to the producers of Bond, and then went to The Hollywood Reporter and dropped an anonymous tip that their man auditioned for the role, 😂. Which wouldn’t surprise me.
  • MSL49MSL49 Finland
    Posts: 617
    Some interesting tidbits from the article:

    "Online speculators and betting companies throw out names without thinking who Bond is. Knight will be going back to Fleming’s earliest novels – Casino Royale (1953), Live and Let Die (1954), Moonraker (1955), Diamonds Are Forever (1956), From Russia, with Love (1957), Doctor No (1958), and Goldfinger (1959), to help remind us who Fleming’s protagonist is. Might the new Bond be more in the mould of a younger Sean Connery who originated 007 in 1962’s Dr. No?"


    This is music to my ears. I can't think of anything better for Steven Knight to do than go back and read Fleming, particulary his early work. This gives me more confidence this will be a faithful adaption.


    "Those familiar with the matter tell us that the director and his collaborators are seeking a “fresh face” to take on the 007 mantle in Bond 26.

    Also, Bond … James Bond, will be male, as written by creator Ian Fleming, and importantly, will be an actor who hails from the British isles.

    Yes, they want a Brit to play Bond."


    Also Music to my ears, This rules out trendy suggestions like Jacob Elordi and I think an unknown is probably the best way to go. That way your not just sticking your finger to the wind and seeing which way it blows.

    And its also nice to get confirmation Bond will be played by a British Male, we shouldn't need confirmation, but it's nice to have nonetheless.


    "There’s a sense from the many conversations I’ve had that Knight’s going back to Bond’s beginnings as a Royal Navy Commander before being recruited by MI6, the UK’s foreign intelligence agency, to perhaps chart how Bond attained 007 status. I want to stress that this is what I’m hearing but to caution that none of this is confirmed or fully formed because the script is still being written and the direction of travel is still up for grabs."



    If true, this is very exciting. Seeing Bond at his very beginning, even before Casino Royale, gives us something fresh to watch. I can see the first 30-40 minutes or so of the film charting his time with the Royal Navy and seeing what work he was doing there and his eventual recruitment. Then going to the Mi6 training grounds, and getting all sorts of physical and mental tests and then to getting his first two kills.



    That said, I suspect a few old Bond hands might well be consulted on the quiet in the snug of a private club in Pall Mall, London.



    Could this be a Barbara Broccoli reference? We shall see.


    An unprecedented number of applicants have already sent in their pitch to play James Bond to the production. “Every name you’ve heard of, and many you’ve never heard of,” a well placed mole revealed. “We’ve been flooded. But understand that the casting process has not begun and it won’t until Denis finishes the Dune movie,” they continued.



    British actors in their mid twenties to early thirties, with stellar acting chops, who fit the Bond mould, are going to be under an intense spotlight for the next twelve months. Bond…James Bond is somewhere out there.


    And its nice to know that agencies are already pitching their clients on Bond, its a hot gig in town. Although I'm glad they've found their sweet spot, we haven't had a really young Bond since Connery and Lazenby so it will be fun to see how this shakes out.

    Its sound fresh to me which is important.
  • Posts: 2,399
    I've always thought something like Spymaker could work as a Bond origin film. Obviously, with more action.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 9,199
    peter wrote: »
    So I guess that the “audition” that Scott Rose Marsh did was more than likely his agent packaged/taped a read, sent it to the producers of Bond, and then went to The Hollywood Reporter and dropped an anonymous tip that their man auditioned for the role, 😂. Which wouldn’t surprise me.

    Looks like Denis will be able to make the Dune 3 premiere after all.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 19,157
    I've always thought something like Spymaker could work as a Bond origin film. Obviously, with more action.

    It's quite fun when they blur the lines a little between Bond and Fleming, like Bond basically having Fleming's Jamaica retirement plan in NTTD, or Bond being part of 30 AU in the CR biography dossier.
  • Last_Rat_StandingLast_Rat_Standing Long Neck Ice Cold Beer Never Broke My Heart
    Posts: 4,807
    Back to basics. So scrambled eggs, Bentleys, House Maid May, Winchester Cigarettes, Meals with Felix. Ill take a whole movie with just that.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited September 24 Posts: 7,687
    Time to hit the 1960 Sean Connery cloning factory.

    In all seriousness, a PTS showing Bond in a royal navy uniform would be cool. Fast forward to a Section Chief Bond having to earn his 00 status.

    Thomas Doherty

    td-f.jpg

    I don't know, maybe it's just me but he gives me crazy young Connery vibes.
  • Last_Rat_StandingLast_Rat_Standing Long Neck Ice Cold Beer Never Broke My Heart
    Posts: 4,807
    Time to hit the 1960 Sean Connery cloning factory.

    In all seriousness, a PTS showing Bond in a royal navy uniform would be cool. Fast forward to a Section Chief Bond having to earn his 00 status.

    Thomas Doherty

    td-f.jpg

    I don't know, maybe it's just me but he gives me crazy young Connery vibes.

    He'd be perfect. 32 when filming would start and doesn't look it at all.
  • Posts: 2,119
    I think what they mean by going with an unknown fresh face is an actor who is known, but not a mega star. Kind of like how Sean Connery and Daniel Craig started when they were James Bond. They were known actors, but they weren’t mega stars

    I hope they go this route
  • edited September 24 Posts: 5,985
    Time to hit the 1960 Sean Connery cloning factory.

    In all seriousness, a PTS showing Bond in a royal navy uniform would be cool. Fast forward to a Section Chief Bond having to earn his 00 status.

    Thomas Doherty

    td-f.jpg

    I don't know, maybe it's just me but he gives me crazy young Connery vibes.

    He'd be perfect. 32 when filming would start and doesn't look it at all.

    One of my favourite quotes on these forums (I'm sorry as I have no idea who wrote it) is someone who replied to a post that said Thomas Doherty reminded them of Sean Connery. The reply went something like 'yes, but without the masculinity'.

    A bit rude, but kind of true. There's something about him as an actor (and incidentally I think he's a good one) which doesn't overlap with Bond.
    fjdinardo wrote: »
    I think what they mean by going with an unknown fresh face is an actor who is known, but not a mega star. Kind of like how Sean Connery and Daniel Craig started when they were James Bond. They were known actors, but they weren’t mega stars

    I hope they go this route

    I think that'd be ideal personally. It's so difficult finding a great, truly unknown actor (I mean to the point they've never done a film before). It's like anything - experience is key.
  • edited September 24 Posts: 2,119
    There’s a sense from the many conversations I’ve had that Knight’s going back to Bond’s beginnings as a Royal Navy Commander before being recruited by MI6, the UK’s foreign intelligence agency, to perhaps chart how Bond attained 007 status

    This is something that I would be 100% for. And it’s something the films never really explored before. Which was Bonds Royal Navy past.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,687
    I don't know, if you put some muscle on him as many actors do for roles, Craig as well, and assuming he can "act", I tend to think that sort of thing is a baseless criticism for an actor.
  • Last_Rat_StandingLast_Rat_Standing Long Neck Ice Cold Beer Never Broke My Heart
    Posts: 4,807
    Fleming didn't like the Connery casting at start but eventually warmed up to him by the time of FRWL. #darbymacgillandthelittlepeople
  • Posts: 5,985
    Fleming didn't like the Connery casting at start but eventually warmed up to him by the time of FRWL. #darbymacgillandthelittlepeople

    To be fair, it was probably genuinely a bit strange that Fleming's 'English gentleman spy' was played by an actor with a noticeable Scottish accent. There's something about Connery as well which is quite unpolished (in a great way).

    Maybe that's the logic in this 'unknown' thing.
  • DaltonforyouDaltonforyou The Daltonator
    Posts: 908
    Time to hit the 1960 Sean Connery cloning factory.

    In all seriousness, a PTS showing Bond in a royal navy uniform would be cool. Fast forward to a Section Chief Bond having to earn his 00 status.

    Thomas Doherty

    td-f.jpg

    I don't know, maybe it's just me but he gives me crazy young Connery vibes.

    A potential Bond actor shouldn't look like they're not attracted to the opposite sex.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 19,157
    Just because someone looks like Connery doesn't mean they can act like him (see Operation Kid Brother for more on that news); and also, I don't want someone who looks like Connery anyway. We've had one of those and he was great, let's have a new one please.
  • MSL49MSL49 Finland
    Posts: 617
    My only question is Doherty good enough actor to play Bond?
  • Posts: 5,985
    MSL49 wrote: »
    My only question is Doherty good enough actor to play Bond?

    I guess he's good enough an actor, but that's not the point. It just depends on if he's right for the part.
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 2,897
    Those are some good Bond novels for Knight to look at. Maybe apart from Diamonds Are Forever & Goldfinger, which aren't bad Bond novels...but clearly aren't among Fleming's best, but still got good moments. They're really taking Bond 26 seriously. It seems Amazon are trying to make Bond 26 their GoldenEye. As in, Bond 26 is a very important Bond film.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,687
    Damn. Okay, never mind.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,941
    Time to hit the 1960 Sean Connery cloning factory.

    In all seriousness, a PTS showing Bond in a royal navy uniform would be cool. Fast forward to a Section Chief Bond having to earn his 00 status.

    Thomas Doherty

    td-f.jpg

    I don't know, maybe it's just me but he gives me crazy young Connery vibes.

    A potential Bond actor shouldn't look like they're not attracted to the opposite sex.

    @Daltonforyou
    Keep such thoughts to yourself, please. No need to drop provocative statements when they are built on quicksand.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 19,157
    It seems Amazon are trying to make Bond 26 their GoldenEye. As in, Bond 26 is a very important Bond film.

    Yes, it has to do a similar thing to GoldenEye- reinvigorate the series once again. It's not a small thing, but I'm pretty optimistic given the team they have already.
    Folks can be down on Broccoli and Wilson all they like, but they pulled off that essential reinvention twice, and that's no mean feat.
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 2,897
    mtm wrote: »
    It seems Amazon are trying to make Bond 26 their GoldenEye. As in, Bond 26 is a very important Bond film.

    Yes, it has to do a similar thing to GoldenEye- reinvigorate the series once again. It's not a small thing, but I'm pretty optimistic given the team they have already.
    Folks can be down on Broccoli and Wilson all they like, but they pulled off that essential reinvention twice, and that's no mean feat.

    Yes. Precisely.
  • redherringredherring Netherlands
    Posts: 22
    If we're allowed to campaign in this thread I'd once again like to drop James Norton's resume on top of the pile but he's 40.
  • Last_Rat_StandingLast_Rat_Standing Long Neck Ice Cold Beer Never Broke My Heart
    Posts: 4,807
    Damn I'll be 37 on Sunday and B26 won't come out until I'm 40.

    This sucks
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 9,199
    Damn I'll be 37 on Sunday and B26 won't come out until I'm 40.

    This sucks

    The longer we have to wait, the bigger the event it will be when it finally arrives. Think how big The Force Awakens or Jurassic World were because the fans had to wait a decade the next entry.
  • Not really a fan with the stuff about Bond's naval history; in fact I think the whole Bond in the Navy thing is probably one of the biggest misconceptions people have about the character.

    Bond wasn't actually a part of the Royal Navy; he was RNVR Special Branch (in other words, Naval Intelligence). In Thunderball, he is described as chocolate sailor; that is, a sailor who didn't do much sailing and just looked good in uniform. M says in YOLT that Bond's work pre and post war was in the same department, and his naval title was due to the secrecy of his work. In addition, he worked with M before the war in a gambling job where he first met Mathis. Any serious adaptation with Bond swabbing decks or manning submarines isn't as faithful as it claims.

    If any modern equivalent exists it'd probably be in the Intelligence division of the SBS or something like that where he would have a heavy connection to the spy side of things.
Sign In or Register to comment.