The 24th James Bond Film
24th, 25th James Bond films already in the making With Daniel Craig starrer Skyfall set to hit the theatres soon, the makers have already started work on the 24th and 25th James Bond films. James Bond is a fictional character created by novelist Ian Fleming in 1953. Bond is a British secret agent working for MI6 who also answers to his codename, 007. He has been portrayed on film by actors Sean Connery, David Niven, George Lazenby, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan and Daniel Craig, in twenty-six productions. Attempts are made throughout the new film to tie Franz Oberhauser to James Bond’s past life, which is an interesting aspect, but in a way it robs the Oberhauser character of his enigmatic origin, which is something that made the original SPECTRE organization and its number one man in the old films so effective.
26. Casino Royale (1967)
Wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Even a cameo from Orson Welles couldn’t lend lustre to this pointless and unfunny spoof, a dire tongue-in-cheeker that slipped past the franchise control of the producers, Eon. David Niven saunters unsexily as the retired “Sir James Bond” in this chaotic film.
25. Die Another Day (2002)
Oh lawdy. The Bond franchise was looking lost in the grim and joyless new “war on terror”-era, and this movie featured the worst gadget in the history of 007: an invisible car. What on earth is the point of that? You can almost see the P45 being pressed into Brosnan’s hand.
24. The Living Daylights (1987)
This was the turn of straight actor and RSC stalwart Timothy Dalton. He was supposedly there to give Bond a hard and gritty new seriousness, but always just looked a bit humourless. This was during the Aids era of sexual restraint, too, so Bond only cops off a couple of times.
23. Licence to Kill (1989)
Bond goes rogue, and Dalton stays dull. This one is notable for the young Benicio del Toro as a humble henchman. After this, legal copyright rows caused a six-year production hiatus during which Dalton quit.
22. For Your Eyes Only (1981)
You can hear a whistling and a crackling in the air as Roger Moore begins to tune out. The stunts hold up, but Moore is on the exit ramp and his flaccid relationship with 24-year-old Carole Bouquet is a deathly embarrassment.
21. Never Say Never Again (1983)
The title is what Connery’s agent should have shouted at him when he was offered the comeback: (“Never”! Say “Never”! Again!) Connery lumbers back for the remake of Thunderball that no one wanted or needed. He was never a six-pack guy at the best of times, but he’s out of condition here. One to forget.
20. Quantum of Solace (2008)
Much mocked at the time, this film wasn’t as bad as that – despite the silliest title in the series’ history. Craig is always watchable and Mathieu Amalric is a very eccentric oddball villain.
Name Of The 24th James Bond Film
19. The World Is Not Enough (1999)
Not bad, but some of the fizz has gone. In this film, the distinction between villain and henchman seems to collapse with three bad guys: Robert Carlyle, Robbie Coltrane and, erm, Goldie, who was very big in those days.
18. GoldenEye (1995)
Was it a Bondaissance? A Brosnanaissance? Whatever. Stylish yet assertive smoothie Pierce Brosnan had already made an impression in the TV caper Remington Steele. He took to Bond like a duck to water: virile, cool, nice suits. Judi Dench made her debut as M. Bond was back!
17. A View to a Kill (1985)
Quite unexpectedly, Moore pulled it back a bit for his last hurrah. (It was also, sadly, the last hurrah for Lois Maxwell’s Miss Moneypenny.) Christopher Walken was always destined to play a Bond villain and it came to pass in this film, as the evil electronics mogul Max Zorin. A good note for Moore to bow out on.
16. Moonraker (1979)
A whopping, megabudget Bond in its day, clearly influenced by the Star Wars-led sci-fi revival. It is all about the theft of a space shuttle, but this excursion into space can’t conceal the fact that Moore is looking a bit jaded.
15. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969)
George Lazenby’s sole appearance wasn’t a bad Bond. Had he done more, Lazenby might have become a favourite. Diana Rigg played the woman who shows 007 is no commitmentphobe. They marry, before gunfire poignantly restores Bond’s eternal singledom.
14. Diamonds Are Forever (1971)
Uh-oh. Connery was tempted back to the role with a big pay packet, now looking craggier and toupeed. Ernst Blofeld, boringly played by Charles Gray, wants to use diamonds to focus his space laser. Bond girl Tiffany Case was played by Jill St John, whose real-life boyfriend, Henry Kissinger, would have been better as the villain.
13. Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
It took a spanking from Titanic at the box office, but this is a good, underrated Bond: one of the very few films (or plays or books) to satirise Rupert Murdoch and his Chinese expansionist plans – a rather taboo subject in 90s media. Jonathan Pryce has great fun with the role of the villainous mogul.
12. Octopussy (1983)
Outrageously daft, but silly and fun. Roger Moore wears a gorilla costume.
11. The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)
This has a well-loved Bond song, Carly Simon’s Nobody Does It Better. It also introduced us to the exotic henchman Jaws. The action opens with that staggering skiing-off-a-cliff stunt, just after Moore is seen supposedly skiing in front of an obvious back projection.
10. The Man With the Golden Gun (1974)
Despite iffy reviews at the time, this has one of the very best villains, wonderfully played by Christopher Lee: Scaramanga, he of the creepy third nipple. It is a preposterous 70s fuel-crisis drama about a solar energy device. There’s some funky martial arts, too.
9. Skyfall (2012)
An excellent, intelligent Bond which shrewdly expanded the role of Judi Dench’s M, developed her relationship with 007 and created a plausible, sympathetic backstory for him. Javier Bardem got his teeth into the villain role.
8. Live and Let Die (1973)
And so began the reign of Roger Moore, tacitly conceding the campness that many saw as unavoidable for Bond. Moore was witty, sprightly and a mature 46 when he took over (Connery had started at 32.) This movie has a great song from Paul McCartney and Wings.
7. Thunderball (1965)
The evil organisation Spectre had its first appearance in Fleming’s Thunderball novel, but we were used to it by now, this being the fourth outing for 007 on the big screen. Good stuff here, but the franchise faltered a bit, with long underwater sequences.
6. Spectre (2015)
Boom! Craig and director Sam Mendes bring off an absolutely storming 007 extravaganza, kicking off with a head-banging action sequence in Mexico City. Léa Seydoux has a Veronica Lake-type sultriness and Ben Whishaw almost steals the show as the geeky Q.
5. Casino Royale (2006)
Daniel Craig had to face a lot of internet bickering when he was cast, but he blew everyone away with a performance that was just right: cool, cruel, ruthless, yet sardonic. It was great at the time and looks even better now. One of the best Bonds.
4. Dr No (1962)
Sean Connery’s first outing in the Bond role. It gave us the gun-barrel titles and the Monty Norman theme. There was Ursula Andress in the bikini and the exotic Johnny Foreigner villain with an outrageous island lair.
3. From Russia With Love (1963)
Weirdly ungadgety and downbeat. Connery searches his hotel room for bugs for what seems like 10 minutes, with the theme music playing deafeningly. There’s a great train fight with Robert Shaw’s Red Grant.
2. Goldfinger (1964)
“You eckshpect me to talk?” “No, Mr Bond, I expect you to DIE!” This introduced us to Bond’s Aston Martin DB5 and the weird spectacle of Shirley Eaton suffocating in gold. It established the convention whereby the villain leaves 007 time to escape some elaborate automated death.
1. You Only Live Twice (1967)
This great action movie put Connery’s Bond right back on top and introduced us to the Nehru-suit-wearing, cat-stroking master criminal Spectre chief, Blofeld, played by Donald Pleasence. Connery announced his intention to quit after this. Perhaps he knew it could never be this good again?
Spectre | |
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Directed by | Sam Mendes |
Produced by | |
Screenplay by | |
Story by |
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Based on | James Bond by Ian Fleming |
Starring | |
Music by | Thomas Newman |
Cinematography | Hoyte van Hoytema |
Edited by | Lee Smith |
Distributed by |
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148 minutes[3] | |
Country |
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Language | English, Spanish, Italian, German, French |
Budget | $245 million[5] |
Box office | $880.7 million[5] |
Spectre is a 2015 British spy film, the twenty-fourth in the James Bond film series produced by Eon Productions for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Columbia Pictures. It is the fourth film to feature Daniel Craig as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond, and the second film in the series directed by Sam Mendes following Skyfall. It was written by John Logan, Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and Jez Butterworth. It is the final James Bond film to be co-distributed by Columbia Pictures, as Universal Pictures will become the international distributor of its future films.
The story sees Bond pitted against the global criminal organisation Spectre and their leader Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Christoph Waltz). Bond attempts to thwart Blofeld's plan to launch a global surveillance network, and discovers Spectre and Blofeld were behind the events of the previous three films. The film marks Spectre and Blofeld's first appearance in an Eon Productions film since 1971's Diamonds Are Forever;[N 1] a character resembling Blofeld had previously appeared in the 1981 film, For Your Eyes Only, but, because of the Thunderball controversy, he is not named, nor is his face shown. Several James Bond characters, including M, Q and Eve Moneypenny return, with new additions Léa Seydoux as Dr. Ek rishta full movie download. Madeleine Swann, Dave Bautista as Mr. Hinx, Andrew Scott as Max Denbigh and Monica Bellucci as Lucia Sciarra.
Spectre was filmed from December 2014 to July 2015 in Austria, the United Kingdom, Italy, Morocco and Mexico. The action scenes prioritised practical effects and stunts, while employing computer-generated imagery made by five different companies. Spectre was estimated to have cost around $245 million—with some sources listing it as high as $300 million—making it the most expensive Bond film and one of the most expensive films ever made.
Spectre was released on 26 October 2015 in the United Kingdom—fifty years after the release of Thunderball, thirty after A View to a Kill, and twenty after GoldenEye—on the night of the world premiere at the London Royal Albert Hall.[6] It was followed by a worldwide release, including IMAX screenings. It was released in the United States on 6 November. Spectre received mixed to positive reviews from critics who praised the film's action sequences, cinematography, acting and musical score, but criticised the runtime, screenplay and pacing. The theme song 'Writing's on the Wall', performed and co-written by Sam Smith, won an Academy Award and Golden Globe for Best Original Song. Spectre grossed over $880 million worldwide, making it the sixth-highest-grossing film of 2015 and the second-largest unadjusted total for the series after Skyfall.
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Plot[edit]
A posthumous message from the previous M leads MI6 agent James Bond to carry out an unauthorised mission in Mexico City on the Day of the Dead, where he stops a terrorist bombing plot. Bond kills Marco Sciarra, the terrorist leader, and takes his ring, which is emblazoned with a stylised octopus.
Upon his return to London, Bond is suspended from field duty by Gareth Mallory, the current M, who is engaged in a power struggle with Max Denbigh (whom Bond dubs 'C'), the Director-General of the new, privately-backed Joint Intelligence Service formed by a recent merger of MI5 and MI6. C campaigns for Britain to join the global surveillance and intelligence initiative 'Nine Eyes', and uses his influence to close down the '00' field agent section, which he believes is outdated.
Bond disobeys M's orders and travels to Rome to attend Sciarra's funeral. He seduces Sciarra's widow, Lucia, who tells him Sciarra belonged to an organisation of businessmen with criminal and terrorist connections. Bond uses Sciarra's ring to infiltrate a meeting to select Sciarra's replacement, where he identifies the leader, Franz Oberhauser. After hearing Oberhauser give the order for the 'Pale King' to be assassinated, Bond is pursued across the city by the organisation's assassin, Mr. Hinx. Eve Moneypenny informs Bond that the Pale King is Mr. White, a former member of the organisation's subsidiary Quantum who had fallen afoul of Oberhauser. Bond asks her to investigate Oberhauser, who was presumed dead years earlier.
Bond locates White in Altaussee, Austria, where he is dying of thallium poisoning. He tells Bond to find and protect his daughter, psychiatrist Dr. Madeline Swann, who will take him to L'Américain in order to locate Oberhauser; White then commits suicide. Bond confronts Swann and rescues her from Hinx and his forces. The pair meet Q, who links Oberhauser to Bond's previous missions, identifying Le Chiffre, Dominic Greene and Raoul Silva as agents of the same organisation, which Swann identifies as Spectre.
Swann takes Bond to L'Américain, a hotel in Tangier, and they discover that White left evidence directing them to Oberhauser's base at a crater in the Sahara. Taking a train to a remote station, Bond and Swann encounter Hinx, who gets ejected from the train in the ensuing struggle, and are escorted to Oberhauser's base. Oberhauser reveals that Spectre has funded the Joint Intelligence Service while staging terrorist attacks around the world, creating a need for the Nine Eyes programme. In return, C will give Spectre unlimited access to intelligence gathered by Nine Eyes, allowing them to anticipate and counter-act investigations into their operations. Bond is tortured as Oberhauser discusses their shared history: after the younger Bond was orphaned, Oberhauser's father, Hannes, became his temporary guardian. Believing that Bond supplanted his role as son, Oberhauser killed his father, staged his own death, adopted the name Ernst Stavro Blofeld and went on to form Spectre and target Bond. Bond and Swann stun Blofeld by setting off an explosive wristwatch at his face, and the two escape to London to prevent Nine Eyes from going online.
In London, Bond and Swann meet M, Bill Tanner, Q, and Moneypenny with the intention of arresting C. Swann and Bond are abducted separately by Spectre operatives, while the rest of the group proceed with the plan. After Q succeeds in preventing the Nine Eyes from going online, a struggle between M and C ends with C falling to his death. Bond is taken to the ruins of the old MI6 building, scheduled for demolition after Silva's bombing. Blofeld, still alive, tells Bond that he must escape before explosives are detonated or die trying to save Swann. Bond finds Swann and they escape by boat as the building collapses. Bond shoots down Blofeld's helicopter, which crashes onto Westminster Bridge. As Blofeld crawls from the wreckage, Bond confronts him but leaves him to be arrested by M, before leaving the bridge with Swann.
The next morning, Bond claims his repaired Aston Martin DB5 from Q, and drives off with Swann to parts unknown.
Cast[edit]
- Daniel Craig as James Bond, agent 007. The director Sam Mendes has described Bond as being extremely focused in Spectre, likening his new-found dedication to hunting.[7]
- Christoph Waltz as Ernst Stavro Blofeld (born Franz Oberhauser), the mysterious mastermind behind Spectre, as well as the puppeteer responsible for events in Bond's recent life, stemming from his and Bond's shared childhood.
- Léa Seydoux as Dr. Madeleine Swann, a psychiatrist working at a private medical clinic in the Austrian Alps,[8] and the daughter of Mr. White.[9]
- Ben Whishaw as Q, the MI6 quartermaster who outfits Bond with equipment for use in the field.
- Naomie Harris as Eve Moneypenny, a former agent who left the field to become M's assistant.
- Dave Bautista as Mr. Hinx, Spectre's huge, muscle-bound assassin.
- Andrew Scott as C (Max Denbigh), Head of the new Joint Intelligence Service, and an agent for Spectre, heavily involved with their plan to merge nine national intelligence agencies into the Nine Eyes Committee, thus allowing Spectre the power to take over the world.
- Monica Bellucci as Lucia Sciarra, the wife of assassin Marco Sciarra.
- Ralph Fiennes as M (Gareth Mallory), head of MI6.
- Rory Kinnear as Bill Tanner, the MI6 Chief of Staff.[10]
- Jesper Christensen as Mr. White, a fugitive from MI6 and a former senior figure in Spectre's Quantum subsidiary, as portrayed in Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace,[11][12] now dying from thalium poisoning after falling from Spectre's favour over his reservations relating to human trafficking.
- Stephanie Sigman as Estrella, a Mexican agent who accompanies Bond on his mission to assassinate Marco Sciarra. In the video game James Bond: World of Espionage, her full name is given as Estrella Luna.
- Alessandro Cremona as Marco Sciarra,[13] a Spectre agent whom Bond kills in the pre-title sequence of the movie.
- Judi Dench as Mallory's predecessor M.[14]
Production[edit]
Pre-production[edit]
In March 2013 Mendes said he would not return to direct the next film in the series, then known as Bond 24;[15][16] he later recanted and announced that he would return, as he found the script and the plans for the long-term future of the franchise appealing.[17]Nicolas Winding Refn would later reveal that he turned down an offer to direct the movie.[18] In directing Skyfall and Spectre, Mendes became the first director to oversee two successive Bond films since John Glen directed five consecutive films, ending with The Living Daylights and Licence to Kill in 1987 and 1989.[19]Dennis Gassner returned as the film's production designer,[20] while cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema took over from Roger Deakins.[20][21] In July 2015 Mendes noted that the combined crew of Spectre numbered over one thousand, making it a larger production than Skyfall.[22] Craig is listed as co-producer. He considered the credit a high point of his career, saying, 'I'm just so proud of the fact that my name comes up somewhere else on the titles.'[23]
The film's usage of the Spectre organisation[N 2] and its characters marked the end of long-standing litigation between Eon Productions and producer Kevin McClory, who sued James Bond creator Ian Fleming in 1961 claiming ownership over elements of the novel Thunderball,[24] and in an out of court settlement two years later, was awarded the novel's film rights, including Spectre and its characters.[N 3] McClory died in 2006, and in November 2013 MGM and the McClory estate formally settled the issue with Danjaq, LLC—sister company of Eon Productions—with MGM acquiring the full copyright film rights to the concept of Spectre and all of the characters associated with it.[26] It has been suggested that with the acquisition of the film rights and the organisation's re-introduction to the series' continuity, the SPECTRE acronym was discarded and the organisation reimagined as 'Spectre'.[27][28][29]
When Sony Pictures Entertainment renegotiated with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer the deal to co-finance the Bond franchise in 2011, they were tasked to provide 25 percent of the negative cost of both Skyfall and Spectre, in exchange for receiving 25 percent of the profits plus distribution fees for overseeing its worldwide rollout. When the film was announced in June 2013, the budget was not yet fixed, but was certain to be higher than the $210 million of Skyfall due to foreign locations and bigger payments for Mendes and Craig.[30] In November 2014, Sony was targeted by hackers who released details of confidential e-mails between Sony executives regarding several high-profile film projects. Included within these were several memos relating to the production of Spectre, claiming that the film was over budget, detailing early drafts of the script written by John Logan, and expressing Sony's frustration with the project.[31] Eon Productions later issued a statement confirming the leak of what they called 'an early version of the screenplay'.[32] Eon resisted Sony and MGM's arguments to cut down on stunts and location work to reduce the budget, but managed to secure tax incentives and rebates, such as $14 million from Mexico. Spectre has a final budget estimated between $250 million and $275 million.[30]
Writing[edit]
Spectre marked the return of many scriptwriters from the previous Bond films, such as Skyfall writer John Logan;[19]Neal Purvis and Robert Wade, who had done work in five previous Bond films;[N 4] and British playwright Jez Butterworth, who had previously made uncredited contributions to Skyfall. Butterworth was brought in to polish the script, being helped by Mendes and Craig. Butterworth considered that his changes involved adding what he would like to see as a teenager, and limited the scenes with Bond talking to men, as 'Bond shoots other men—he doesn't sit around chatting to them. So you put a line through that.'[34] With the acquisition of the rights to Spectre and its associated characters, Purvis and Wade revealed that the film would provide a minor retcon to the continuity of the previous films, with the Quantum organisation alluded to in Casino Royale and introduced in Quantum of Solace reimagined as a division within Spectre rather than an independent organisation which is implied to be no longer active by the film's events. The plot of Spectre also linked the events of Skyfall to Craig's first two Bond movies by revealing antagonist Raoul Silva to be associated with Spectre reverting Skyfall's initial solo story status.[35]
Despite being an original story, Spectre draws on Ian Fleming's source material, most notably in the character of Franz Oberhauser, played by Christoph Waltz, and his father Hannes. Hannes Oberhauser is a background character in the short story 'Octopussy' from the Octopussy and The Living Daylights collection, and is named in the film as having been a temporary legal guardian of a young Bond in 1983.[36] As Sam Mendes searched for events in young Bond's life to follow the childhood discussed in Skyfall, he came across Hannes Oberhauser, who becomes a father figure to Bond. From there, Mendes conceived the idea of 'a natural child who had been pushed out, cuckoo in the nest' by Bond, which became Franz.[37] Similarly, Charmian Bond is shown to have been his full-time guardian, observing the back story established by Fleming.[36]
Casting[edit]
The main cast was revealed in December 2014 at the 007 Stage at Pinewood Studios. Daniel Craig returned for his fourth appearance as James Bond, while Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris and Ben Whishaw reprised their roles as M, Eve Moneypenny and Q respectively, having been established in Skyfall. Rory Kinnear also reprised his role as Bill Tanner in his third appearance in the series.[38]
Christoph Waltz was cast in the role of Franz Oberhauser, though he refused to comment on the nature of the part.[39] It was later revealed with the film's release that he is Ernst Stavro Blofeld. Waltz got interested in the film for dealing with technology-assisted mass surveillance, 'speaking about relevant social issues in a way that few Bonds have done before', and denied rumours that the role was written specially for him, but added that 'when I came on board, the role grew, evolved, and mutated.'[40]
Dave Bautista was cast as Mr. Hinx after producers sought an actor with a background in contact sports.[41] The character only has one line in the entire film, 'Shit'. Sam Mendes thought the silent nature would drive Bautista away, but the lifelong Bond fan expressed interest in reviving the quiet henchman archetype of characters such as Jaws. Bautista's performance was inspired mostly by Oddjob from Goldfinger,[42] and said not talking created an acting challenge, 'trying to find this way where I am actually going to have speak without speaking.'[43] After casting Bérénice Lim Marlohe, a relative newcomer, as Sévérine in Skyfall, Mendes sought out a more experienced actor for the role of Madeleine Swann, ultimately casting Léa Seydoux in the role.[44]Monica Bellucci joined the cast as Lucia Sciarra, becoming, at the age of fifty, the oldest actress to be cast as a Bond girl. In a separate interview with Danish website Euroman, Jesper Christensen revealed he would be reprising his role as Mr. White from Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace.[11][12] Christensen's character was reportedly killed off in a scene intended to be used as an epilogue to Quantum of Solace, before it was removed from the final cut of the film, enabling his return in Spectre.[45]
In addition to the principal cast, Alessandro Cremona was cast as Marco Sciarra, Stephanie Sigman was cast as Estrella, and Detlef Bothe was cast as a villain for scenes shot in Austria.[13][46][47] In February 2015 over fifteen hundred extras were hired for the pre-title sequence set in Mexico, though they were duplicated in the film, giving the effect of around ten thousand extras.[48][49][8][50]
Filming[edit]
Mendes revealed that production would begin on 8 December 2014 at Pinewood Studios, with filming taking seven months.[51] Mendes also confirmed several filming locations, including London, Mexico City and Rome. Van Hoytema shot the film on Kodak35 mm film stock, in contrast to Skyfall being filmed on digital cameras.[52] Early filming took place at Pinewood Studios, and around London, with scenes variously featuring Craig and Harris at Bond's flat, and Craig and Kinnear travelling down the River Thames.[53]
Filming started in Austria in December 2014, with production taking in the area around Sölden—including the Ötztal Glacier Road, Rettenbach glacier and the adjacent ski resort and cable car station—and Obertilliach and Lake Altaussee, before concluding in February 2015.[54][55][56] Scenes filmed in Austria centred on the Ice Q Restaurant, standing in for the fictional Hoffler Klinik, a private medical clinic in the Austrian Alps. Filming included an action scene featuring a Land Rover Defender Bigfoot and a Range Rover Sport.[57] Various airplane models were used in filming, from a life-sized plane with detachable wings to film the crash in the woods, to plane fuselages either built atop snowmobiles or shot from nitrogen cannons.[58] Production was temporarily halted first by an injury to Craig, who sprained his knee whilst shooting a fight scene,[59] and later by an accident involving a filming vehicle that saw three crew members injured, at least one of them seriously.[60][61]
Filming temporarily returned to England to shoot scenes at Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire, which stood in for a location in Rome,[62] before moving on to the city itself for a five-week shoot across the city, with locations including the Ponte Sisto bridge and the Roman Forum.[63] The production faced opposition from a variety of special interest groups and city authorities, who were concerned about the potential for damage to historical sites around the city, and problems with graffiti and rubbish appearing in the film.[64][65]Special effects supervisor Chris Corbould stated the scenes had to be extensively planned prior to filming specially to avoid any mishaps, going to the point of building protection above steps where cars would drive.[58] A car chase scene set along the banks of the Tiber River and through the streets of Rome[66] featured an Aston Martin DB10 and a Jaguar C-X75.[57] The C-X75 was originally developed as a hybrid electric vehicle with four independent electric engines powered by two jet turbines, before the project was cancelled.[67] The version used for filming was converted to use a conventional internal combustion engine, to minimise the potential for disruption from mechanical problems with the complex hybrid system. The C-X75s used for filming were developed by the engineering division of Formula One racing team Williams, who built the original C-X75 prototype for Jaguar.[68] Remote driving pods were built above the cars so the vehicles could be driven while the cameras focused on Craig and Bautista in the steering wheel.[58] According to chief stunt co-ordinator Gary Powell, filming the chase had the 'risk of skidding into the Vatican', and led to 'a record for smashing up cars in Spectre—seven Aston Martins in all,' with the film's car expenses estimated at £24 million ($48 million).[69]
With filming completed in Rome, production moved to Mexico City in late March to shoot the film's opening sequence, with scenes to include the Day of the Dead festival filmed in and around the Zócalo and the Centro Histórico district.[70] At the time, no such Day of the Dead parade like the one from the film took place in Mexico City; in 2016, due to the interest raised by Spectre and the government's desire to promote the pre-Hispanic Mexican culture, the federal and local authorities decided to organize an actual 'Día de Muertos' parade through Paseo de la Reforma and Centro Histórico on 29 October 2016, which was attended by 250,000 people.[71][72] The film opens with a long take that joins six shots seamlessly, and was one of the few scenes that required previsualization. Through extensive planning, filming did not require motion control cameras. The scene joints were done in post-production through re-timing and re-projections, which even matched Mexico locations with interiors filmed at Pinewood.[58]
The planned scenes required the city square to be closed for filming a sequence involving a fight aboard a Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm Bo 105 helicopter flown by stunt pilot Chuck Aaron,[73] which called for modifications to be made to several buildings to prevent damage.[74] This particular scene in Mexico required 1,500 extras, 10 giant skeletons and 250,000 paper flowers.[75] Reports in the Mexican media added that the film's second unit would move to Palenque in the state of Chiapas, to film aerial manoeuvres considered too dangerous to shoot in an urban area.[76] These were pasted over a computer-generated square and crowd below the helicopter, with motion capture doubles fighting inside. Mendes and the effects team felt that this approach 'would get believable composition and movement' compared to adding a digital helicopter above the Mexico City location.[77] Following filming in Mexico, and during a scheduled break, Craig was flown to New York to undergo minor surgery to fix his knee injury. It was reported that filming was not affected and he had returned to filming at Pinewood Studios as planned on 22 April.[78] Nonetheless, some parts of the Mexico scene were done with stunt doubles, whose faces were digitally replaced with Craig's.[58]
A brief shoot at London's City Hall was filmed on 18 April 2015, while Mendes was on location.[79] On 17 May 2015 filming took place on the Thames in London. Stunt scenes involving Craig and Seydoux on a speedboat as well as a low flying helicopter near Westminster Bridge were shot at night, with filming temporarily closing both Westminster and Lambeth Bridges. Scenes were also shot on the river near MI6's headquarters at Vauxhall Cross.[80] The crew returned to the river less than a week later to film scenes solely set on Westminster Bridge. The London Fire Brigade was on set to simulate rain as well as monitor smoke used for filming. Craig, Seydoux, and Waltz, as well as Harris and Fiennes, were seen being filmed.[81] Prior to this, scenes involving Fiennes were shot at a restaurant in Covent Garden.[82] Filming then took place in Trafalgar Square.[83] In early June, the crew, as well as Craig, Seydoux, and Waltz, returned to the Thames for a final time to continue filming scenes previously shot on the river.[84] Blofeld's helicopter crash was done with two full sized helicopter shells, which were rigged with steelwork and an overhead track. Computer-generated rotor blades and scenery damage were added in post-production. The MI6 building, which in the film is vacated and scheduled for demolition following the terrorist attack from Skyfall, was replaced in the production plates for a digital reconstruction. When the building is detonated, it is a combination of both a miniature and a breakaway version of the digital building.[58]
After wrapping up in England, production travelled to Morocco in June, with filming taking place in Oujda, Tangier and Erfoud, after preliminary work was completed by the production's second unit.[85] The headquarters of Spectre in Morocco was located in Gara Medouar [nl] which is a 'crater' caused by erosion and of neither volcanic nor impact origin.[86] An explosion filmed in Morocco holds a Guinness World Record for the 'Largest film stunt explosion' in cinematic history, involving 8,140 litres of kerosene and 24 charges each with a kilogram of high explosives.[87]Principal photography concluded on 5 July 2015. A wrap-up party for Spectre was held in commemoration before entering post-production.[88] Filming took 128 days.[89]
Whilst filming in Mexico City, speculation in the media claimed that the script had been altered to accommodate the demands of Mexican authorities—reportedly influencing details of the scene and characters, casting choices, and modifying the script to portray the country in a 'positive light'—to secure tax concessions and financial support worth up to $20 million for the film.[90] This was denied by producer Michael G. Wilson,[90] who stated that the scene had always been intended to be shot in Mexico as production had been attracted to the imagery of the Day of the Dead, and that the script had been developed from there.[91] Production of Skyfall had previously faced similar problems while attempting to secure permits to shoot the film's pre-title sequence in India before moving to Istanbul.[92][93]
Five companies did the visual effects—Industrial Light & Magic, Double Negative, Moving Picture Company, Cinesite and Peerless—under the supervision of Steve Begg. The computer-generated effects included set extensions, digital touches on the vehicles, and crumbling buildings.[58][77] A sixth one, Framestore, handled the title sequence, the seventh in the series designed by Daniel Kleinman. It took four months to complete, and centred on an octopus motif reminiscent of the Spectre logo, along with images of love and relationships.[94]
Music and soundtrack[edit]
Thomas Newman returned as Spectre's composer.[20] Rather than composing the score once the film had moved into post-production, Newman worked during filming.[50] The theatrical trailer released in July 2015 contained a rendition of John Barry's On Her Majesty's Secret Service theme.[95][96] Mendes stated that the final film would have more than one hundred minutes of music.[22] The soundtrack album was released on 23 October 2015 in the UK and 6 November 2015 in the US on the Decca Records label.[97][98]
The English band Radiohead were commissioned to write the title song, and submitted 'Man of War', an unreleased song written in the 1990s.[99] The song was rejected as it had not been written for the film and therefore was ineligible for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.[100] Radiohead recorded another song for the film, 'Spectre', but this was also rejected as too melancholy.[101][100]
In September 2015 it was announced that Sam Smith and regular collaborator Jimmy Napes had written the title theme, 'Writing's on the Wall', with Smith performing it for the film.[102] Smith said the song came together in one session and that he and Napes wrote it in under half an hour before recording a demo. Satisfied with the quality, the filmmakers used the demo in the final release.[103] 'Writing's on the Wall' was released as a download on 25 September 2015.[104] It received mixed reviews from critics and fans, particularly in comparison to Adele's 'Skyfall',[105][106][107][108] leading to Shirley Bassey trending on Twitter on the day it was released.[92][109] It became the first Bond theme to reach number one in the UK Singles Chart,[110] the second to win the Academy Award for Best Original Song,[111] and the fifth to be nominated.[112][113][N 5] It also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 73rd Golden Globe Awards.[114]
Marketing[edit]
During the December 2014 press conference announcing the start of filming, Aston Martin and Eon unveiled the new DB10 as the official car for the film. The DB10 was designed in collaboration between Aston Martin and the filmmakers, with only 10 being produced especially for Spectre as a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the company's association with the franchise.[115] Only eight of those 10 were used for the film, however; the remaining two were used for promotional work.[116] After modifying the Jaguar C-X75 for the film, Williams F1 carried the 007 logo on their cars at the 2015 Mexican Grand Prix, with the team playing host to the cast and crew ahead of the Mexican premiere of the film.[117][118]
To promote the film, the film's marketers continued the trend established during Skyfall's production of releasing still images of clapperboards and video blogs on Eon's official social media accounts.[119][120] 17 brands appear in the film through product placement, and many of those, such as Heineken, Bollinger, Omega and Sony—owner of the film's co-distributor Columbia Pictures—did Spectre tie-in advertisements.[121]
On 13 March 2015, several members of the cast and crew, including Craig, Whishaw, Wilson and Mendes, as well as previous James Bond actor, Sir Roger Moore, appeared in a sketch written by David Walliams and the Dawson Brothers for Comic Relief's Red Nose Day on BBC One. In the sketch, they film a behind-the-scenesmockumentary on the filming of Spectre.[122][123] The first teaser trailer for Spectre was released worldwide in March 2015,[124] followed by the theatrical trailer in July[125] and the final trailer in October.[126]
Release[edit]
Spectre had its world premiere in London on 26 October 2015 at the Royal Albert Hall, the same day as its general release in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland.[127] Following the announcement of the start of filming, Paramount Pictures brought forward the release of Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation to avoid competing with Spectre.[128] In March 2015 IMAX corporation announced that Spectre would be screened in its cinemas, following Skyfall's success with the company.[129] In the UK it received a wider release than Skyfall, with a minimum of 647 cinemas including 40 IMAX screens, compared to Skyfall's 587 locations and 21 IMAX screens.[130]
Home media[edit]
Spectre was released for Digital HD on 22 January 2016 and on DVD and Blu-ray on 9 and 22 February 2016 in the US and UK respectively.[131] It debuted atop the home video charts in both countries,[132][133] and finished 2016 with 1.5 million units in the UK, the second best-selling title of the year, behind only Star Wars: The Force Awakens,[134] and 2 million copies in the US, 12th in the year-end charts.[135]
Reception[edit]
Box office[edit]
Spectre grossed $880.7 million worldwide; $135.5 million of the takings were generated from the UK market and $200.1 million from North America.[5] Worldwide, this made it the second-highest-grossing James Bond film after Skyfall,[136] and the sixth-highest-grossing film of 2015.[137]Deadline Hollywood calculated the net profit of the film to be $98.4 million when factoring together all expenses and revenues for the film.[138] Sony had expected the net profit of the film to be around $38 million had it performed to the same level of its predecessor, but since it earned 20 percent less than Skyfall, the profit in actual was $24.6 million.[139] Sony paid 50 percent of the production costs for the film—which totalled some $250 million after accounting for government incentives—but received only 25 percent of certain profits, once costs were recouped. The studio also spent tens of millions of dollars in marketing and had to give MGM some of the profit from the studio's non-Bond films, including 22 Jump Street.[139]
In the United Kingdom, the film grossed £4.1 million ($6.4 million) from its Monday preview screenings.[140] It grossed £6.3 million ($9.2 million) on its opening day[141] and then £5.7 million ($8.8 million) on Wednesday, setting UK records for both days.[142] In the film's first seven days it grossed £41.7 million ($63.8 million), breaking the UK record for highest first-week opening, set by Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban's £23.9 million ($36.9 million) in 2004.[143] Its Friday–Saturday gross was £20.4 million ($31.2 million) compared to Skyfall's £20.1 million ($31 million). The film also broke the record for the best per-screen opening average with $110,000, a record previously held by The Dark Knight with $100,200.[144] It has grossed a total of $136.3 million there.[145] In the UK, it surpassed Avatar to become the country's highest-grossing IMAX release ever with $10.09 million.[146]
Spectre opened in Germany with $22.5 million (including previews), which included a new record for the biggest Saturday of all time,[147] Australia with $8.7 million (including previews) and South Korea opened to $8.2 million (including previews).[148] Despite the 13 November Paris attacks, which led to numerous theatres being closed down, the film opened with $14.6 million (including $2 million in previews) in France.[149] In Mexico, where part of the film was shot, it debuted with more than double that of Skyfall with $4.5 million.[147] It also bested its predecessor's opening in various Nordic regions where MGM is distributing, such as in Finland ($2.7 million) and Norway ($2.9 million),[150] and in other markets like Denmark ($4.2 million), the Netherlands ($3.4 million), and Sweden ($3.1 million).[150] In India, it opened at No. 1 with $4.8 million which is 4% above the opening of Skyfall.[151] It topped the German-speaking Switzerland box office for four weeks and in the Netherlands, it held the No. 1 spot for seven weeks straight where it topped Minions to become the top movie of the year.[145][152] The top earning markets are Germany ($70.3 million) and France ($38.8 million).[153] In Paris, it has the second-highest ticket sales of all time with 4.1 million tickets sold only behind Spider-Man 3 which sold over 6.3 million tickets in 2007.[154]
In the United States and Canada the film opened on 6 November 2015, and in its opening weekend, was originally projected to gross $70–75 million from 3,927 screens, the widest release for a Bond film.[155] However, after it grossed $5.3 million from its early Thursday night showings and $28 million on its opening day, weekend projections were increased to $75–80 million. The film ended up grossing $70.4 million in its opening weekend (about $20 million less than Skyfall's $90.6 million debut, including IMAX previews), but nevertheless finished first at the box office.[156] IMAX generated $9.1 million for Spectre at 374 screens, premium large format made $8 million from 429 cinemas, reaping 11% of the film's opening, which means that Spectre earned $17.1 million (23%) of its opening weekend total in large-format venues. Cinemark XD generated $1.9 million in 112 XD locations.[156][157]
In China, it opened on 12 November and earned $15 million on its opening day, which is the second biggest 2D single day gross for a Hollywood film behind the $18.5 million opening day of Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation and occupying 43% of all available screens which included $790,000 in advance night screenings.[158] Through its opening weekend, it earned $48.1 million from 14,700 screens which is 198% ahead of Skyfall,[148] a new record for a Hollywood 2D opening.[159] IMAX contributed $4.6 million on 246 screens, also a new record for a three-day opening for a November release (breaking Interstellar's record).[148] In its second weekend, it added $12.1 million falling precipitously by 75% which is the second worst second weekend drop for any major Hollywood release in China of 2015.[160] It grossed a total of $84.7 million there after four weekends (foreign films in the Middle Kingdom play for 30 days only, unless granted special extensions).[161] Albeit a strong opening, it failed to attain the $100 million mark there as projected due to mixed response from critics and audiences as well as facing competition from local films.[145][162][163]
Critical response[edit]
On review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 64% based on 326 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The website's critical consensus reads, 'Spectre nudges Daniel Craig's rebooted Bond closer to the glorious, action-driven spectacle of earlier entries, although it's admittedly reliant on established 007 formula.'[164] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 60 out of 100, based on 48 critics, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[165] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of 'A−' on an A+ to F scale.[156]
Prior to its UK release, Spectre mostly received positive reviews.[166]Mark Kermode, writing in The Guardian, gave the film four out of five stars, observing that the film did not live up to the standard set by Skyfall, but was able to tap into audience expectations.[167] Writing in the same publication, Peter Bradshaw gave the film a full five stars, calling it 'inventive, intelligent and complex', and singling out Craig's performance as the film's highlight.[168] In another five star review, The Daily Telegraph's Robbie Collin described Spectre as 'a swaggering show of confidence', lauding it as 'a feat of pure cinematic necromancy.'[169] Positive yet critical assessments included Kim Newman of Sight and Sound, who wrote that 'for all its wayward plotting (including an unhelpful tie-in with Bond's childhood that makes very little sense) and off-the-peg elements, Spectre works' as he felt 'the audience's patience gets tested by two and a half hours of set-pieces strung on one of the series' thinner plots';[170] and IGN's Chris Tilly, who rated the film 7.2 out of 10, considering Spectre 'solid if unspectacular', and concluding that 'the film falls frustratingly short of greatness.'[171]
Critical appraisal of the film was mixed in the United States. In a lukewarm review for RogerEbert.com, Matt Zoller Seitz gave the film 2.5 stars out of 4, describing Spectre as inconsistent and unable to capitalise on its potential.[172]Kenneth Turan, reviewing the film for Los Angeles Times, concluded that Spectre 'comes off as exhausted and uninspired'.[173]Manohla Dargis of The New York Times criticised the film as having 'nothing surprising' and sacrificing its originality for the sake of box office returns.[174]Forbes' Scott Mendelson also heavily criticised the film, denouncing Spectre as 'the worst 007 movie in 30 years'.[175] Darren Franich of Entertainment Weekly viewed Spectre as 'an overreaction to our current blockbuster moment', aspiring 'to be a serialized sequel' and proving 'itself as a Saga'. While noting that '[n]othing that happens in Spectre holds up to even minor logical scrutiny', he had 'come not to bury Spectre, but to weirdly praise it. Because the final act of the movie is so strange, so willfully obtuse, that it deserves extra attention.'[176]Christopher Orr, writing in The Atlantic, also criticised the film, saying that Spectre 'backslides on virtually every [aspect]'.[177] Lawrence Toppman of The Charlotte Observer called Craig's performance 'Bored, James Bored.'[178] Alyssa Rosenberg, writing for The Washington Post, stated that the film turned into 'a disappointingly conventional Bond film.'[179]
In a positive review published in Rolling Stone, Peter Travers gave the film 3.5 stars out of 4, describing Spectre as 'party time for Bond fans, a fierce, funny, gorgeously produced valentine to the longest-running franchise in movies'.[180]Mick LaSalle from the San Francisco Chronicle, raved that 'One of the great satisfactions of Spectre is that, in addition to all the stirring action, and all the timely references to a secret organization out to steal everyone's personal information, we get to believe in Bond as a person.'[181] Stephen Whitty from The New York Daily News, who awarded the film four of five stars, stated that 'Craig is cruelly efficient. Dave Bautista makes a good, Oddjob-like assassin. And while Lea Seydoux doesn't leave a huge impression as this film's 'Bond girl', perhaps it's because we've already met—far too briefly—the hypnotic Monica Bellucci, as the first real 'Bond woman' since Diana Rigg.'[182]Chicago Sun-Times film reviewer Richard Roeper, who gave the film three stars out of four, considered the film 'solidly in the middle of the all-time rankings, which means it's still a slick, beautifully photographed, action-packed, international thriller with a number of wonderfully, ludicrously entertaining set pieces, a sprinkling of dry wit, myriad gorgeous women and a classic psycho-villain who is clearly out of his mind but seems to like it that way.'[183]Michael Phillips, reviewing for the Chicago Tribune, stated, 'For all its workmanlike devotion to out-of-control helicopters, Spectre works best when everyone's on the ground, doing his or her job, driving expensive fast cars heedlessly, detonating the occasional wisecrack, enjoying themselves and their beautiful clothes.'[184]Variety film critic Guy Lodge complained in his review that 'What's missing is the unexpected emotional urgency of Skyfall, as the film sustains its predecessor's nostalgia kick with a less sentimental bent.'[185]
Accolades[edit]
Award | Category | Recipient | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Academy Awards | Best Original Song | 'Writing's on the Wall' (Sam Smith & Jimmy Napes) | Won |
Golden Globe Awards | Best Original Song | Won | |
Critics' Choice Awards | Best Song | Nominated | |
Best Actor in an Action Movie | Daniel Craig | Nominated | |
St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association Awards | Best Song | 'Writing's on the Wall' (Sam Smith & Jimmy Napes) | Won |
Houston Film Critics Society Awards | Best Original Song | Nominated | |
Art Directors Guild Awards | Production Design for a Contemporary Film | Dennis Gassner | Nominated |
Satellite Awards[186] | Best Cinematography | Hoyte van Hoytema | Nominated |
Best Original Score | Thomas Newman | Nominated | |
Best Original Song | 'Writing's on the Wall' (Sam Smith & Jimmy Napes) | Nominated | |
Best Visual Effects | Steve Begg & Chris Corbould | Nominated | |
Best Art Direction and Production Design | Dennis Gassner | Nominated | |
Best Film Editing | Lee Smith | Nominated | |
Best Sound (Editing and Mixing) | Per Hallberg, Karen Baker Landers, Scott Millan, Gregg Rudloff & Stuart Wilson | Nominated | |
Saturn Awards[187] | Best Action or Adventure Film | Nominated | |
Empire Awards[188] | Best British Film | Won | |
Best Thriller | Won | ||
Teen Choice Awards[189] | Choice Movie: Action | Nominated | |
Choice Movie Actress: Action | Léa Seydoux | Nominated |
Sequel[edit]
A sequel was initially scheduled to be released in November 2019, but after Cary Joji Fukunaga replaced Danny Boyle as director it was rescheduled to 8 April 2020.[190][191]
Notes[edit]
- ^Within the series' continuity, the version of Spectre that appeared in Diamonds Are Forever was written out of the timeline with the 2006 reboot of the franchise in Casino Royale, making its appearance in Spectre its first in the new timeline.
- ^Originally stylised 'SPECTRE' as an acronym of SPecial Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion.
- ^Following the settlement, McClory collaborated with Eon to produce the adaptation Thunderball (1965), and licensed Spectre and its characters to Eon for ten years,[25] allowing their subsequent appearances in You Only Live Twice, On Her Majesty's Secret Service and Diamonds Are Forever.
- ^Purvis and Wade were credited for the screenplay of Quantum of Solace, as they wrote the original draft of the film. However, the final script was written by Paul Haggis, with several uncredited co-writers.[33]
- ^The other four were 'Skyfall' (2012), 'For Your Eyes Only' (1981), 'Nobody Does It Better' (1977), and 'Live and Let Die' (1973).[112][111]
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External links[edit]
- Spectre – official site
- Spectre on IMDb
- Spectre at AllMovie
- Spectre at Box Office Mojo
- Spectre at Rotten Tomatoes
- Spectre at Metacritic