New Bond film to be called Spectre

Blackleaf

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'I think you need to move on': Daniel Craig shuts down reporter during excruciating Spectre interview after she repeatedly asks him to 'pout'



The interview with Daniel Craig (right) on ITV's This Morning left viewers less than impressed, with some dubbing it 'embarrassing' and 'excruciating'. The James Bond star was promoting his latest film Spectre, and appeared opposite the programme's showbiz reporter Sarah Powell (left). She demanded to know why he hadn't 'got his kit off' in the new film and how many polo necks he had worn on set. The 47-year-old actor shut her down after she repeatedly asked him to 'pout' for her, eventually telling her: 'I think you need to move on.' Viewers were not impressed and expressed their displeasure on Twitter (inset left).

Daniel Craig shuts down reporter in excruciating Spectre interview after she repeatedly asks him to 'pout' | Daily Mail Online

Now just imagine the cries of sexism had a male TV reporter asked an actress why she didn't "get her kit off" in her latest film.
 

AnnaG

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Jason Statham? hahaha He's like 175 cm. He must have been the runt of the litter like Th(spits a lot)ylveth(more spit)ter Th(and yet more spit)tallone. Thufferin thuccotath! My tongue hath thtuck to my lip now.
Anyway, for the most part, Statham's movies are even funnier than Bond movies.
 

AnnaG

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Why not cast Michael Myers he did a pretty good job playing Austin Powers.

Excellent choice!
No. He has good teeth. I think perhaps Jackie Chan would be the best Bond ever.

Or maybe Afshan Azad. Brits better get used to seeing a lot of Muslims on their tellies. hehe

And she is waaaaaay cuter than any dude that played Bond, too.
 

spaminator

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Why not cast Michael Myers he did a pretty good job playing Austin Powers.


www.youtube.com/watch?v=iP-jYiuDD9g
 

Blackleaf

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The James Bond character is based off a Canadian spy.


Which one?
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Piers Morgan: Enough of this PC nonsense! James Bond can’t be gay or female any more than I can play Wonder Woman or Lassie

'James Bond can’t be gay or female any more than I can play Lassie' writes Piers Morgan | Daily Mail Online


The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry have joined the stars of new James Bond film Spectre for its world premiere in London.

The royal guests were met by director Sam Mendes and producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson ahead of the screening at the Royal Albert Hall.

Daniel Craig, who has played 007 for a decade, was the first to arrive on the red carpet on Monday night.

He told the BBC: "It's changed my life and I've loved every second of it."

The star also admitted that he "hated" watching himself on screen, but said "I love playing James Bond".

Spectre also opened in cinemas around the world yesterday,
becoming the first Bond film to open in cinemas on the same day as its premiere.

Spectre stars join royals for James Bond world premiere


BBC News
26 October 2015


The stars brought plenty of glamour to the red carpet event

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry have joined the stars of new James Bond film Spectre for its world premiere in London.

The royal guests were met by director Sam Mendes and producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson ahead of the screening at the Royal Albert Hall.

Daniel Craig, who has played 007 for a decade, was the first to arrive on the red carpet on Monday night.

He told the BBC: "It's changed my life and I've loved every second of it."

The star also admitted that he "hated" watching himself on screen, but said "I love playing James Bond".

Craig said Mendes was "one of the best directors there is" and that he had enjoyed being "creatively involved from the very beginning".


The Duchess of Cambridge spoke to Sam Mendes as they walked towards the Royal Albert Hall


Naomie Harris is reprising her role as Moneypenny in the new 007 film


Other cast members on the red carpet included Naomie Harris, Christoph Waltz, Ben Whishaw, Ralph Fiennes, Andrew Scott, Dave Bautista and "Bond girls" Lea Seydoux and Monica Bellucci.

Bellucci said it was a "great pleasure" to be part of the "amazing tradition" of Bond films.

"It's magic," she said. "It's incredible how James Bond represents so much, not just in England actually, but all over the world."

Scott, who plays a new character called Denbigh, said that the franchise had lasted so well because it kept "reinventing" itself.

The Sherlock star added: "The storyline in this movie is about surveillance and how we're watched constantly. There's a lot of prescient subject matter in the recent Bond films."

Spectre is the first Bond film to open in cinemas on the same day as its premiere.

Mendes said he was delighted that the public were also getting to see the film. " I love the idea that cinemas around the country will be full tonight at the same time as we are doing the royal premiere."

The 24th official entry in the franchise sees Bond battling a criminal syndicate led by Franz Oberhauser, played by Waltz.

Spectre is the third Bond film chosen for the Royal Film Performance since its inception in 1946. It follows previous premieres for Die Another Day (2002) and Skyfall (2012).

Early reviews have been positive, with some critics awarding the film five stars.

Speaking to the BBC last week, Craig said he had not made any decisions about whether he would carry on playing 007.

The actor, on his fourth outing as the superspy, had told Time Out magazine that he would "rather slash [his] wrists" than make a fifth Bond film.

But he told the BBC's Lizo Mzimba: "I'm quite straightforward and I say things when I feel it and then I change my mind. I'm just like everybody else."

Speaking to the BBC on the red carpet, producer Barbara Broccoli said: "I'm pretty determined to keep him!"


Prince Harry and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge met the cast ahead of the screening



Singer Sam Smith hit number one with Spectre theme tune Writing's on the Wall



Bellucci on the red carpet outside the Royal Albert Hall

Spectre was shot at Pinewood Studios and filmed on location in London, Mexico City, Rome and Tangier and Erfoud, in Morocco.

The shadowy organisation Spectre - which was previously an acronym for the Special Executive for Counter-Intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion - last made an appearance in 1971's Diamonds Are Forever, with Sean Connery as Bond.

Tim Masters, entertainment correspondent on the red carpet


Craig stopped on the red carpet to take photographs with fans

"It's just fantastic to see everybody out tonight," said Daniel Craig as he arrived on the Spectre red carpet that snaked further than the eye could see around the Royal Albert Hall.

Hundreds of fans - some of whom had queued since Saturday - lined the route in the hope of a photo with Craig. He didn't disappoint them.

As several thousand guests surged into the famous domed venue, huge speakers pumped out Bond themes past and present, as clips from Spectre played out on giant screens.

Famous faces on the carpet included Dames Shirley Bassey and Joan Collins, Hobbit star Martin Freeman, musician Will.i.am and former Bond girl Maryam D'Abo from The Living Daylights.

For two hours the whole event was telecast around the world - just as cinema audiences prepared to watch the film for the first time.

When it comes to world premieres, nobody does it better than 007.



Spectre stars join royals for James Bond world premiere - BBC News
 

Blackleaf

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The ultimate in cool, more like.

Cool British secret agent.

Cool British car.

And an Austrian baddie.

 

Blackleaf

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boring reshashed tripe.


You've not even watched it. I would have watched it by now if I actually like going to the pictures. I haven't been to the pictures this century. I'm waiting till it comes out on DVD.
 

spaminator

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'Spectre' review: Daniel Craig's 007 hits the bull's eye
By Bruce Kirkland, Postmedia Network
First posted: Tuesday, November 03, 2015 08:48 AM EST | Updated: Tuesday, November 03, 2015 09:19 AM EST
Spectre is spectacular. If this new James Bond thriller really is the exclamation mark on the Daniel Craig era as 007, he goes out with an adrenaline rush of action, insight, drama, pathos, brutality, humility, humanity and even the occasional whisper of mischievous comedy.
The movie does labour through a few minor failings. Some are structural, thanks to the Bond template; some are embedded in the plot-heavy storyline, because Spectre tries to tidy up a lot of loose ends. A few of those, including one startling revelation, date back to the 1960s. A lot more emerge specifically from the three previous Bonds that starred Craig: Casino Royale, Quantum of Solace and Skyfall. But this problem of familiarity and even repetition of subplot is no surprise because genre movies in a franchise as long-lived and overwrought as the 53-year-old Bond series are always trapped in their own traditions to some extent.
The beauty of this Bond movie — which instantly leaps into my Top 10 of all time, and will probably make it into the top three when I digest its true impact — is that it does all the Bondian things we expect so extremely well. For example, the opening pre-title sequence is absolutely classic and is guaranteed to leave viewers with hearts racing, blood pounding and voices ready to shout out approval.
The sequence is staged on location in Mexico City during the Day of the Dead (Dia de Muertos) holiday and parade. Bond, going rogue from what his bosses at MI6 expect back in London, is snooping around looking for bad guys he suspects are up to no good. By the time 007 exits from Mexico City, a big chunk of the city has blown up, some bad guys are dead, a low-altitude helicopter chase has freaked out thousands of revellers and Bond has abandoned a hot babe waiting for him on a bed. And, of course, he gets grounded by M (Ralph Fiennes) when he reports back.
The core part of the movie picks up where the Mexico City antics left off and 007 is soon doing his spy thing in Morocco, Italy, Austria and England. Rarely in ways that his spy bosses approve of, of course, although he does have friends in next-to-high places. Among them are the always impressive Eve Moneypenny (Naomie Harris) and the ever-fretting Q (Ben Whishaw). Even M will come around as he faces a bureaucratic squeeze from above as a mandarin whom Bond nicknames C (Andrew Scott) brings new-age surveillance techniques into operation while he deems the double-0 agents as brutish dinosaurs of the past spy wars.
That tension makes Spectre one of the most subtle daring Bonds ever. The past is heavily referenced, especially in the case of Sean Connery’s Goldfinger (1964), and the methodology of the spy assassin is questioned. Craig’s Bond even questions himself, in yet another touch of the fragility that he has brought to the iconic role since taking over in 2006. Craig’s Bond has always been tough, grim-faced and capable of ruthless violence. Yet he is simultaneously vulnerable, flawed and utterly human as he wrestles with his demons and his memories of his own youth.
Another critical part of this Bond movie is the legacy of death that has touched Craig’s Bond since Casino Royale. From Eva Green’s sensuous Vesper Lynd to Judi Dench’s monumental turn as the M before Fiennes got the job, people closely associated with Bond have died in the pursuit of truth or love or honour.
Spectre also has some great stuff from new characters. Wrestler-turned-actor Dave Bautista (who played Drax in Guardians of the Galaxy) takes another intriguing detour. As Mr. Hinx, Bautista is a near-silent henchman to Christoph Waltz’s tyrannical villain. Baustista has one word of dialogue but makes his silent work count almost as much as Waltz does with his talk-heavy performance. Also making a brief yet memorable appearance is Monica Bellucci as a mature Bond Girl with a bad attitude and a hot body. Lea Seydoux gets a lot more screen time as the young Bond Girl who insinuates herself into 007’s brain and heart, with a surprising series of twists.
Throughout, Sam Mendes directs Spectre as a drama, not just a movie with a skein of special effects driven stunts. Multiple writers worked on the story and script but the “spectre” of original novelist Ian Fleming hovers above this movie.
I suspect he would approve of what his franchise has become so many decades later.
Twitter: @Bruce_Kirkland
bruce.kirkland@sunmedia.ca
'Spectre' review: Daniel Craig's 007 hits the bull's eye | REVIEW | Movies | Ent
 

Blackleaf

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It's funny how subjective such things are. Some reviews of Spectre on some websites are saying that it's the worst Bond film ever, whilst others are saying that it ranks in the Top 10 greatest films ever made. Each person will just have their own opinions on whether it's good or not, like every film. I just can't wait till it comes out on DVD so I can watch it in the comfort of my own home rather than having to mingle with the common people in the cinema.

Spectre opening credits

This video previously contained a copyrighted audio track. Due to a claim by a copyright holder, the audio track has been muted.


 

spaminator

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James Norton emerges as frontrunner for Bond role
WENN.COM
First posted: Thursday, July 07, 2016 08:28 AM EDT | Updated: Thursday, July 07, 2016 08:38 AM EDT
James Norton is now the hot favourite to land the role of James Bond.

The 30-year-old British actor is most famous for his parts as Russian prince Andrei Bolkonsky in the BBC adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's novel War and Peace and as the star in U.K. period drama Grantchester, but landing the prestigious 007 job would undoubtedly see his career reach new heights.

James has been linked to the role for several months, but he has only emerged as the frontrunner after both Tom Hiddleston and Poldark star Aidan Turner were rumoured to be out of the race.

Tom has been hitting headlines in recent weeks thanks to his accelerated romance with Taylor Swift. But the public nature of the relationship, including pictures of Tom sporting an "I heart T.S." tank top, is said to have led to the end of his talks with Bond bosses.

"Tom's cool performance in The Night Manager saw him as a late contender for 007, but initial talks have come to an end," a source told Britain's The Sun newspaper. "Bond needs an air of mystery â€" his public romance with Taylor has made him totally uncastable."

Meanwhile, Aidan, who had been a popular choice to play the suave spy if Daniel Craig does choose to step down from the role, ruled himself out of the race when he signed up for a third series of hit U.K. television series Poldark.

James now has odds of 1/3 to land the Bond part, ahead of Aidan at 7/4 and Tom at 9/2, according to bookmakers Paddy Power.

The actor has previously spoke about whether he'd consider playing the iconic spy during an interview with Britain's The Times newspaper in March, explaining: "We would, we would, but I don't know quite how the conversation would go. I think Daniel Craig said himself, think long and hard about it."

Although the actor would mull any decision over, James is enjoying being linked to the part, saying, "It's lovely and very bizarre and flattering to be included in that conversation."
Actor James Norton participates in the "Grantchester" panel at the PBS Winter TCA on Monday, Jan. 18, 2016, in Pasadena, Calif. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)

James Norton emerges as frontrunner for Bond role | Movies | Entertainment | Tor
 

Blackleaf

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There are rumours that Tom Hiddleston has been dating Taylor Swift to get publicity to try and be the new Bond.

Now it seems that dating her has put him down to third favourite behind James Norton and Aidan Turner of BBC's Poldark (a second and third series of which have been announced).

 

spaminator

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Daniel Craig warming up to Bond again?
Postmedia Network
First posted: Tuesday, October 11, 2016 01:36 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, October 11, 2016 01:53 PM EDT
It turns out Daniel Craig may not be ready to retire his licence to kill just yet.
After telling Time Out magazine last year that he’d rather “slash my wrists” than play James Bond again, the 48-year-old actor appears to be having a change of heart.
Speaking at the New Yorker Festival recently, Birth.Movies.Death. reporter Phil Nobile Jr. captured Craig answering a question about whether he’s done with the character.
“When asked 20-feet from the end of a marathon, ‘Will you do another marathon?’ The answer is simple, ‘No, I won’t.’ But the things I get to do on a Bond film, there’s no other job like it. If I were to stop doing it, I would miss it terribly,” he said.
Ahead of the release of 2015’s Spectre, Craig was downright cantankerous telling Time Out he’d had enough of playing 007.
“I’m over it at the moment. We’re done. All I want to do is move on.”
When he was asked who he thought could take over as the suave spy, he was dismissive.
“Look, I don’t give a f---,” he told Time Out. “Good luck to them! All I care about is that if I stop doing these things we’ve left it in a good place and people pick it up and make it better.”
"Were I to stop doing it, I'd miss it terribly." Daniel Craig indicates he has not quit the James Bond role. #007 pic.twitter.com/YgiVLVqEzA
— Phil Nobile Jr. (@PhilNobileJr) October 8, 2016
In the months following Spectre’s release, speculation mounted that the Bond franchise would be rebooted with Tom Hiddleston and Idris Elba among the leading candidates to assume the title role.
In a recent interview with the BBC, Callum McDougall, executive producer on the last four 007 films, said that Craig is still the “first choice” of Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, who run Eon Productions, the company behind the Bond films.
“We love Daniel,” he said. “We would love Daniel to return as Bond. Without any question he is absolutely Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli’s first choice. I know they’re hoping for him to come back.”
Craig has played Bond four times in the 54-year-old franchise — Casino Royale in 2006, Quantum of Solace in 2008, Skyfall in 2012 and Spectre in 2015.
Daniel Craig warming up to Bond again? | Movies | Entertainment | Toronto Sun