James Bond

Shaken, not Stirred

After Sean Connery’s one film return, Diamonds are Forever, to keep the franchise alive, producers Cubby Broccoli and Harry Saltzman needed to find a new leading man to keep the Bond saga alive.  Jeremy Brett, Julian Glover and Michael Billington were considered (Glover and Billington eventually showed up as Bond villains).

In the end the role went to The Saint star Roger Moore who had briefly been originally considered for the role before it was given to Connery.  Moore would go on to star in seven of the now 22 Bond films, the most of any actor to play the role in the series (discounting Connery’s late remake Never Say Never Again).  Fleming hardliners and die-hard Connery fans were upset with Moore’s lighter touch and more humorous and suave version of 007.  However the fans, and money, still rolled into the box office, and Moore found his own niche as a different, but still enjoyable, Bond.

Shaken, not Stirred Read More »

Bond: “The Other Fellow”

When Sean Connery retired, the first time, from the role of James Bond after You Only Live Twice, a new face for the franchise was needed.  The role, like Connery before him, went to an unknown.

George Lazenby was offered a seven picture deal with the Bond franchise, and if he had accepted who knows where Bond would have ended up today.  Instead he took his agent’s advice to refuse the deal and his time as Bond was short-lived spanning only one film, On His Majesty’s Secret Service.

Fans reaction to Lazenby’s Bond were mixed, finding him physically able to perform the role but emotionally distant and lacking the charm of Connery.  The choice was purposeful to paint Lazenby’s Bond as different from Connery and to cast him more in the image of Fleming’s novels.  Although he only performed in a single film, he was, if only for a short time, Bond.  James Bond.

Bond: “The Other Fellow” Read More »

The Music of 007

Our Bond Week continues.  The opening sequences to a Bond film are legendary.  We take a look back at some of our favorites starting with Sheena Easton singing the title song of For Your Eyes Only.  After the jump you’ll find other openings featuring Tom Jones belting out Thunderball, Matt Munro’s From Russia With Love, Shirley Bassey letting us know that Diamonds are Forever, Lulu‘s The Man With the Golden Gun, A View to a Kill by Duran Duran, Carly Simon sharing the fact that “Nobody Does it Better,” and Paul McCartney urging us to Live and Let Die.

For Your Eyes Only


The Music of 007 Read More »

Bond, James Bond

In 1961 producers Cubby Broccoli and Harry Saltzman set out to turn one of Ian Fleming‘s James Bond novels into a feature film.  Many were considered; one was chosen.  The list was long and extensive: Patrick McGoohan (The Prisoner), David Niven, James Mason, Roger Moore, and Cary Grant.

The role went instead to an unknown stage and television actor – Sean Connery, and the rest, as they say, is history.  Connery would go on to make five Bond films before leaving the role only to be called back after the Lanzenby film On Her Majesty’s Secret Service met with mixed reviews and the actor pulled out of a long term deal, paving the way for Connery to make one more Bond flick before saying goodbye to the character, for the second time, vowing never to play Bond Again.  He would return once more to reprise the role in a remake of a fan favorite Bond film in his final farewell to the Bond franchise Never Say Never Again.

Bond, James Bond Read More »

This Week in Film

  • Title: Quantum of Solace
  • IMDB: link

Picking up hours after the end of Casino Royale, Daniel Craig returns as James Bond on the search of the secret organization behind Vesper’s (Eva Green) death and taking on a businessman (Mathieu Amalric) trying to grab control of the world’s water supply.  Judi Dench and Jeffrey Wright return, and Olga Kurylenko and Gemma Arterton become the latest Bond Girls.  Check out the official site.  We’ve seen it and we’ll have the review when James Bond returns to theaters everywhere on Friday.

This Week in Film Read More »