Tag: Bond

  • Amazon Greenlights Bond Reality Competition

    Daniel Craig as James Bond in 2012's 'Skyfall.'
    Daniel Craig as James Bond in 2012’s ‘Skyfall.’

    Mere weeks after Amazon officially closed its $8.5 billion acquisition of MGM, the company has announced its first Bond-related project: a reality TV competition series.

    Prime Video has flashed the greenlight for ‘007’s Road to a Million’, a series that will see competitors shaken and stirred as they’re dispatched on a challenging race and series of trivia questions in a quest for a cash prize. Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, the shepherds of the Bond franchise, are involved, and it’ll kick off shooting later this year.

    Yet while the announcement has led to a ripple of panic online that this is the future of the Bond movie series and a clear indication that Amazon’s purchase of MGM means a wave of junk Bond spin-off opportunities, this show has been in the works for years, long before the MGM deal closed, and something that has the backing of Broccoli and Wilson.

    “I first had this idea over three years ago. Dan Grabiner and the U.K. Originals team took it to a whole other level, says 72 Film boss David Glover, whose company will be producing the show for Amazon, MGM, and EON, tells Variety. “To be working with Michael Wilson and Barbara Broccoli and the Bond franchise is a privilege and a dream come true.”

    Sean Connery as James Bond
    Sean Connery as James Bond in 1964’s ‘Goldfinger’

    Sounding a lot like a Bond-branded version of CBS series ‘The Amazing Race’, the show will see contestants competing in a global adventure to win a £1 million ($1.3 million) cash prize. Filmed in many of the historic locations featured throughout the seminal Bond films, this will be a test of intelligence and endurance. In addition to passing physical obstacles, the contestants — who will compete in two-person teams — must correctly answer questions hidden in different locations around the world to advance to the next challenge.

    It seems unlikely to dip too far into Bond’s history – the famously sexist spy has been modernized in recent years, so while it’ll see competitors heading to locations, we doubt challenges will include unzipping a dress with a magnetic watch or shooting as many nameless henchmen as possible. And though they could end up mixing martinis, they probably won’t have to match the spy’s alcohol consumption levels.

    The show comes at a point of transition for big-screen Bond: Daniel Craig’s tenure as 007 is over following ‘No Time to Die’, which has earned more than $774 million at the worldwide box office. Broccoli and Wilson are now tasked with finding a fresh face to take on the role and keep the film series evolving to meet the demands of a changing cultural and cinematic world.

    This competition won’t end up with the winner claiming the role of Bond, but if you want to apply for the show – UK residents and those who can prove a direct connection to the country only, we’re afraid – you can head to this link.

    And if you get in? Do pay attention, 007.

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  • Bond Producer Talks Future of Franchise and Idris Elba

    Daniel Craig as James Bond
    Daniel Craig as James Bond

    The 25th Bond movie, ‘No Time to Die’ has been a huge hit, making more than $774 million worldwide in ticket sales at a time even as the pandemic continued to stifle the box office.

    Now, producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, who have shepherded the film series since 1995’s ‘GoldenEye’, have been talking about the decision to kill off the character (yet keeping the “James Bond will return” caption at the end), their insistence that ‘No Time to Die’ remain a purely theatrical release, and the future of the character.

    ‘No Time to Die’s biggest shocker, of course, was Daniel Craig’s Bond sacrificing his life to save Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux) and their young daughter. He literally goes down in a blaze of, well, not quite glory, but missile explosions. According to Broccoli, the decision to kill Bond came early in Craig’s tenure.

    “The conversation began when we opened ‘Casino Royale.’ Daniel and I were in Berlin,” Broccoli tells ‘Deadline’s Crew Call Podcast. “It was a big success, and everybody embraced him and there was a lot of excitement. He and I were in the back of a car in Berlin going from the screening to the hotel. And he brought the idea up then. He said, ‘what about if I die?’ Well, first of all, he said, ‘how many of these pictures have I got to do?’ Which made me laugh after all the negotiating we’d been doing with agents and everybody.

    “Stupidly, I said, ‘four…’ I should’ve said ‘nine or 10’! I should’ve lied, but I said four because that was the deal at the time. And he said, ‘what if we kill him off?’ I said, ‘sure, let’s do that. We’ll talk about it.’ That’s when the seed was planted, and I discussed it with Michael a lot. We had discussed it over the years because Fleming had tried to kill Bond off in books and things, but Daniel planted that idea.”

    Daniel Craig as James Bond
    Daniel Craig as James Bond

    The idea grew through the rest of Craig’s time as Bond, via ‘Quantum of Solace’, ‘Skyfall’, ‘Spectre’ and now ‘No Time to Die’, all more serialized than the movies had been in the past. Everything almost ended with ‘Spectre’ on a more upbeat note with Bond driving off into retirement with Madeleine at his side.

    “Daniel decided that that was the end of his tenure. But after several months, Michael and I approached him, once he’d had some rest, and time to think, and we said, ‘it’s not really the end of your story, we still have another chapter. So that’s when the discussions came up that if he were to do another one, what is left in his portrayal of Bond and where to go with it? This became the obvious conclusion.”

    So what’s next for Bond? Broccoli isn’t ready to really name names yet. “People always ask, ‘Oh, who’s the next James Bond?’” she tells The Hollywood Reporter. “It’s like asking a bride as she’s going up to the altar who’s her next husband going to be. I don’t really want to think about who is going to be the next person until I absolutely have to.”

    One name that has cropped up in conversation at lot for the role is Idris Elba, though Broccoli and Wilson are coy on the idea. “Well, we know Idris – I’m friends with him and he’s a magnificent actor,” Broccoli says. “It’s been part of the conversation, but it’s always difficult to have the conversation when you have someone in the seat,” she continued. “I think we have decided that until ‘No Time to Die’ has kind of had its run and Daniel has been able to – well, we’ve all been able to – reap the benefits of Daniel’s wonderful tenure, we’re not gonna think about or talk about anybody else, actors to play the role or storylines or anything. We just wanna live in the moment, the present.”

    Idris Elba
    Idris Elba

    One part of the decision has led to some controversy, with Broccoli adamant that there won’t be a female Bond as long as she’s running the show. “I think it will be a man because I don’t think a woman should play James Bond,” she explains. “I believe in making characters for women and not just having women play men’s roles. I don’t think there are enough great roles for women, and it’s very important to me that we make movies for women about women. He should be British, so British can be any ethnicity or race.”

    Regardless of who plays Bond going forward, it’s hard to argue with the success so far. The 25 official movies have earned more than $7 billion. And even as the pandemic forced delays and shifts by other movies to streaming, Broccoli and Wilson stayed firm in the belief that 007 should stay theatrical only.

    “I never thought of it as power and control. I mean, these films are made by a group of people that had started in 1962, and it’s always been a group of people working together to make these films,” she says. “We make theatrical films and go to great pains to make them as cinematic as possible. We have always worked with great directors and cinematographers and production designers who do their utmost to create a visual feast for people to enjoy. I think that’s what we intend to do, but things change, so who knows? Down the road, it may be different.”

    The future also holds the prospect of Amazon completing its purchase of studio MGM, which owns some of the rights to Bond. But don’t go expecting a Marvel or Lucasfilm -style exploitation of side characters on big screens or TV.

    “Sure, there are other main characters like M and Q and all that,” says Broccoli. “But we haven’t really wanted to make a Bond film without Bond. It would be like making ‘Hamlet’ without Hamlet.”

    As part of the celebration for Bond’s 60th anniversary, ‘No Time to Die’ will return to IMAX screens on Friday January 27.

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