Tag: James Bond

  • New James Bond ‘Skyfall’ teaser trailer debuts

    New James Bond ‘Skyfall’ teaser trailer debuts

    TV promo for 23rd Bond film shown on US TV during Olympic opening ceremony

    Buy DVD and Blu-ray from Amazon UK

    New James Bond ‘Skyfall’ teaser trailer debuts – video

    A new teaser trailer for James Bond film Skyfall was broadcast on US television network NBC during their coverage of the Olympic opening ceremony.

    While the UK and the rest of the world witnessed Bond hard at work escorting the Queen to her seat in the Olympic Stadium, US television audiences also got a sneak peak from the forthcoming movie. You can watch it below.

    In the short, 30-second clip, Bond can be seen riding a motorcycle in Istanbul, having a steamy romp in a shower and jumping into a collapsing train. During the action-packed trailer, we also get a glimpse of Javier Bardem’s villainous character.

    Skyfall sees a face from M’s past return and haunt her and the agents of MI6. As the trailer reaches its tense climax, with an underground train hurtling towards the spy, Bond utters just one line of dialogue: “007, reporting for duty”.

    Javier Bardem, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Whishaw, Bérénice Marlohe and Naomie Harris co-star in Skyfall, which opens in the UK on October 26. The new movie’s release marks the 50th anniversary of the Bond series. Sean Connery kicked off the franchise in 1962, playing Ian Fleming’s British secret agent in Dr No.

    2012DanielCraigSkyfallJamesBondPR010212

    via New James Bond ‘Skyfall’ teaser trailer debuts – video | Film & TV News | NME.COM.

  • The Ten Biggest Things We Learned On The Skyfall Set

    The Ten Biggest Things We Learned On The Skyfall Set

    It’s James Bond’s first day in Istanbul, and things aren’t going that well. In hot pursuit of one of his many foes, Bond has forced the villain Patrice (Ola Rapace) to flip his Audi A5 and skid across a crowded marketplace, but his fellow agent Eve (Naomie Harris) has also crashed their Land Rover into a market stall, leaving Bond on foot and relying only on his gun. Crouched behind a pile of bright oranges, Bond answers the gunfire from Patrice just a dozen yards away, all while the vendors and shoppers of the market look on in horror, and a frankly unbelievable number of pigeons scatter overhead to add to the chaos.

    Bond and Patrice eventually continue the chase on motorbikes that zip atop the roof of Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar, then to the city suburbs and eventually to a train in the countryside. If this all sounds like some kind of grand finale, it’s actually just the beginning of Skyfall, the 23rd Bond film and one director Sam Mendes is calling a “regeneration” of the character. Even the decision to shoot in Istanbul, where From Russia With Love filmed 49 years ago, says a lot about the movie’s ambition– not only are they confident enough to stand right next to the classics of the franchise, but they’re bold– maybe crazy?– enough to shoot in one of the most crowded, ancient, complicated cities on Earth.

    Eminonu Square, like most everywhere else in Istanbul’s Old Town peninsula, is crowded enough that a James Bond film shoot can actually blend in. The square is usually wide open to vendors selling toys and snacks and the massive flocks of pigeons, but the Skyfall team has set up their own market of stalls selling everything you see in the nearby Spice Bazaar– fruit and vegetables, brooms, slippers, teapots, doner kebabs, roasted nuts, massive piles of spices and much more. Situated in the looming shadow of one of the city’s many enormous mosques, the Skyfall bazaar bleeds into the real market next to it, in which one of the stands selling plants and garden supplies remains open but part of the blocked set. The market feels like the real bazaar but just a little roomier, like a sitcom set with a realistic but spacious apartment– they may be shooting in the real streets of Istanbul, but you’ve gotta make room for two crashed cars, a camera crane, and dozens of crew somehow.

    Skyfall had actually been shooting in Istanbul for three weeks before Daniel Craig arrived, the second unit filming the motorbike chase atop the Grand Bazaar with stuntmen, and setting up the complicated car flips that preceded Bond’s moment crouched behind the oranges. But Monday was Craig’s first day of filming in Istanbul, and given that they were already 105 days into the Skyfall shoot, he looked as calm as if he’d been there all along. While director of photography Roger Deakins checked the monitors in a tent, Mendes conferred with the crew, and even Craig’s wife Rachel Weisz stood by chatting with producer Michael G. Wilson, Craig stood off to the side on his own, chewing gum and intently watching his stand-in run through the scene. With a sharp gray suit and closely cropped hair, he looked every inch James Bond, but also an actor who knows that even a simple shot of shooting a gun is crucial when you’re Bond..

    The day before I watched Bond face his enemy in the public square, I participated in a series of interviews with Sam Mendes, producer Barbara Broccoli, and the principal cast who were on location in Istanbul– Craig, Naomie Harris, Berenice Marlohe and Ola Rapace. You’ll be hearing more from all of them in follow-up pieces, but there were also some common themes that emerged in all the conversations, as well as a few key story tidbits gleaned despite their strict avoidance of anything resembling spoilers. So to kick of my series of reports from the Skyfall set, here are the ten biggest things I learned about Skyfall in Istanbul— and the ten biggest things you probably want to know as well.

    Naomie Harris isn’t Moneypenny, but she’s not a throwaway character either. When we first meet Harris as MI:6 agent Eve, she’s fighting right alongside Bond in that Istanbul sequence– but it was clear from how much training Harris underwent, and how thrilled she was to take the part, that she doesn’t drop out of the film immediately after. “Eve is out in the field, totally different from Moneypenny,” Harris was quick to explain. “I’m a field agent definitely, not a secretary.” And a field agent who offers Harris one of the biggest, maybe best roles of her career– “I was really excited [when I read the script]. largely because of my part, selfishly. I was very excited. I didn’t realize that I would have that size part.”

    Javier Bardem played a big role in crafting his own part. When MGM’s financing troubles left Skyfall on hold for more than a year, Mendes says he took advantage of the pause to not just improve the script, but attract even bigger talent to it. “It’s been a while since there was what I would call a classic Bond villain. I wanted somebody perhaps a bit more flamboyant, a bit more frightening, and we needed a great actor to achieve that […] When Javier said “I’m interested, let’s talk about the role,” we talked about the role and it began to develop from there. His ideas, I had time to factor in before he said yes. After a while he trusted it was something he could make his own.”

    Bond may be funnier than you remember him. Nearly everyone talked about the focus on humor in this film, from Harris revealing that the original script she read was changed significantly to “add a lot more humor and wit” to Craig saying, enigmatically, that “humor comes more out of a situation than it does out of gag lines.” During the press conference, he was a little more bold about his character’s wit this time around: “Yeah, he’s funny as hell in this movie.”

    There’s a lot of respect for the James Bond origins… Producer Barbara Broccoli shared an aphorism from her father, Albert Broccoli, who produced every Bond film before his death in 1996 : “Whenever you get stuck, go back to the Fleming.” Though Skyfall is an original story, not based on a specific Fleming novel, Broccoli spoke frequently of how Fleming’s “acerbic wit” influenced the film, and Mendes constantly cited older Bond films as examples of both the character’s evolution and his steady, consistent traits. When asked by a journalist about a “geek question,” Mendes practically giggled, thrilled to share what’s obviously at this point a Bond encyclopedia in his brain.

    …But Skyfall is also something new. Mendes was careful to use the word “regeneration” rather than “reinvention” to describe the Bond of Skyfall, using, of all things, a Dr. Who metaphor to explain it: “I was brought up on the idea that Dr. Who, at the end of his final episode, he dissolves and a new actor pops up and he regenerates, it’s a whole other character. I’ve always loved that idea.” Craig was much blunter about the different landscape of his third go-round as Bond: “[It’s different] in every way.”

    Don’t worry too much about continuity with the other two Bond films. Practically everyone brought up Casino Royale in interviews, whether praising Mads Mikkelsen as an excellent villain or Craig’s first turn as Bond or the emotional stakes of his relationship with Eva Green’s Vesper Lynde. Not a single person brought up Quantum of Solace. Clearly no one is ashamed of the most recent Bond movie, but all seem eager to move on as well, and turn the page over to something new.

    Sam Mendes is taking some cues from Christopher Nolan. Mendes mentioned The Dark Knight and Nolan twice in a very short span, first praising the current Batman run (along with the Bourne films) as one of the best franchises, “because there are characters at the center who are to some degree in conflict about what they do, and are pushed right to the edge.” Then talking about his learning to direct action, he praised Nolan’s sense of non-linear action sequences: “The challenge is to create parallel action so you’re not locked into a linear chase, which is something that Chris Nolan for example does very, very well. It’s never just A following B, there’s something else going on simultaneously, and they overlap.” As two British directors who broke out in smaller dramas before moving on to giant, blockbuster action films, Mendes and Nolan have clear similarities– so if you’re curious about what Mendes-directed action will look like, you may need look no further than The Dark Knight.

    M’s maternal relationship with Bond is key to the story.” The terse plot synopsis for Skyfall says that “M’s past comes back to haunt her” and helps destroy MI:6 early in the film; while Mendes wouldn’t admit that there’s a focus on M’s backstory, exactly, he did acknowledge that her relationship with Bond gets even deeper and more important this time around. “We’ve gone further into that relationship, and without giving too much away, I think it was a masterstroke when they cast Judi 7 movies ago. The character who was this fairly distant male character became this female, and there was a maternal aspect to it, and much more complexity in the relationship. I think we’ve taken that a little further.”

    Bond may be more realistic these days, but Bond girls can still get a little fantastical. Playing the “glamorous and enigmatic” femme fatale Severine, Berenice Marlohe couldn’t say much about how her character, but she did hint toward one outfit that might make all of our jaws drop when we see it. “There is one extremely theatrical, spectacular, extremely glamorous femme fatale outfit. [It’s] completely surreal. You never see that in movies.”

    The Istanbul sequence might be the best in the film. Of course, that doesn’t exactly come from an unbiased source– Ola Rapace, who’s at the heart of the whole scene, made the bold claim that it’s “the most spectacular scene in the whole film.” But given that they shot four weeks in the center of Istanbul, and another four further south in Adana, where the train fight takes place, it’s clear that this is no throwaway moment for Bond, even though it comes early enough in the film that Bardem’s villain Silva isn’t involved. By returning to Istanbul and staging such an enormous scene, Skyfall is making a huge statement– both that it remembers the films that came before it and that it’s confident enough to move way, way beyond them.

    Skyfall Set Visit 30713

    Come back for much, much more from the Skyfall set and my interviews with the people behind the film. The newest James Bond adventure opens in theaters November 9.

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  • Bond Back In Turkey

    29 April 2012

    Announcement, Event, SKYFALL

    Bond Back In Turkey

    SKYFALL CREW ARRIVE ON LOCATION IN ISTANBUL

    With the SKYFALL crew now in Istanbul, Turkey, this marks the third time in the 50 year history of the James Bond franchise that the city has served as a backdrop to 007’s adventures, with previous outings including FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE and THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH.

    And whilst Daniel Craig has arrived in the city with the cast and crew of SKYFALL, Istanbul isn’t the only Turkish location the team has been visiting; further filming locations include Adana and the coastal city of Fethiye.

    To mark the occasion, a photocall and press conference was held today with producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, director Sam Mendes, and cast members Daniel Craig, Naomie Harris, Bérénice Marlohe, and Ola Rapace.

    via The Official James Bond 007 Website | Bond Back In Turkey.

  • ‘James Bond’ returns to Istanbul on 50th anniversary

    InterAksyon.com

    The online news portal of TV5

    ISTANBUL — James Bond has once again returned to Istanbul for “Skyfall”, the latest film in the longest running series that this year celebrates half a century of the legendary spy in action, its director said Sunday.

    “We wanted to be here because it is the most magnificent place, it is an incredible city… I can’t get enough of it,” said director Sam Mendes, who spoke to the press in Istanbul after more than 100 days of shooting “Skyfall” in Turkey.

    The 23rd film in the Bond series was shot on several locations in Turkey, between the southern province of Adana and the southwestern coastal town of Fethiye, as well as in the historical Grand Bazaar of Istanbul.

    “Bond has had a close relationship with Istanbul… It has been 49 years to the day since they were last here.. Bond was last here,” said Daniel Craig, who took over the Bond character in 2006 with “Casino Royal”.

    Barbara Broccoli, one of the producers, noted that Istanbul was chosen as the venue for “Skyfall” to mark the 50th anniversary of the legend in “the favorite city of Ian Flemming”, the British author who invented “James Bond” in 1953.

    Bond may even have a car chase scene on the very epitome of Istanbul, the Bosphorus bridge, Mendes said in response to a question, hinting that the city may continue to appear in forthcoming Bond movies.

    The Bond series briefly featured Istanbul in 1999 for “The World is Not Enough”, after Bond’s first appearance in the city in 1963 for the second film of the series, “From Russia With Love”.

    “Skyfall” is expected to be released in late 2012.

    via ‘James Bond’ returns to Istanbul on 50th anniversary – InterAksyon.com.

  • Liam Neeson & Famke Janssen reunited

    Liam Neeson & Famke Janssen reunited

    Liam Neeson & Famke Janssen reunited

    It is about time we write up a few lines about the latest movie shot in Istanbul: Taken II. It looks like Turkey is growing popularity for classic spy movies!

    Taken IIIn this specific case, French producer Luc Besson teamed up with director Olivier Megaton to shoot in Istanbul for 7 1/2 weeks beside an extra few days on location in Koycegiz. This high profile action movie stars Liam Neeson (Schindler’s List, Star Wars, The Mission, Batman Begins, …) and Famke Janssen (X-men, Golden Eye, …) where a retired CIA operative and his wife are taken hostage in Istanbul.

    The movie is to be released later this year by October 2012.

    via Liam Neeson & Famke Janssen reunited | Turcopedia.

  • James Bond 23 Eyes Istanbul, May Have Found Next Bond Girl

    James Bond 23 Eyes Istanbul, May Have Found Next Bond Girl

    James Bond sequels regulary end up being international affairs. The secret agent’s license to kill usually works as a passport to global hotspots. I’d be hard pressed to come up with any major international location that didn’t serve as the backdrop for at least one 007 adventure.

    Berenice Marlohe 27045

    As director Sam Mendes puts the finishing touches on pre-production for his as-yet-untitled Bond 23, we continue to hear about new locations that plan to host 007’s crew. India was on the list, until railway officials gave Mendes a hard time about an elaborate railway stunt that would “promote” train hopping by locals (a no-no in India). South Africa was selected as an alternate shooting location. Now MI6-HQ.com, a Web site dedicated to the latest James Bond news, says longtime producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli met with officials in Istanbul, Turkey, to finalize plans to shoot multiple scenes in the city in November. At the very least, the film’s opening sequence – usually involving an eye-popping stunt – will be shot in Istanbul, though officials say the production could bank footage around town for use in different spots in the film.

    As Turkey tourism officials point out, Bond fans often travel to filming locations to see where 007 left his mark. MI6 reports that Mendes will film in the historical neighborhood Sultanahmet Square, as well as along the shores of the Bosporus. Previously, Istanbul played host to two Bond sequels over the years: Sean Connery’s excellent From Russian With Love and Pierce Brosnan’s less-impressive The World Is Not Enough.

    “It really just feels like we are coming home,” Wilson told area reporters.

    In other Bond-related news, Twitch is reporting that French television actress Berenice Marlohe has been cast as the next Bond Girl, a coveted role occupied over the years by everyone from Ursula Andress to Halle Berry. But nothing has been confirmed, so take this with a grain of salt until we hear something official from producers.

    What do we know about Bond 23 for sure? Well, Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and John Logan penned the script, which stars Daniel Craig in his third go-round as 007. MGM will get it into theaters on Nov. 9, 2012.

    via James Bond 23 Eyes Istanbul, May Have Found Next Bond Girl – CinemaBlend.com.