If the British tabloids are to be believed ---- and they are usually good at this sort of thing ---- then Daniel Craig will never play James Bond again.
This is not a huge surprise. When Craig was promoting Spectre --- perhaps his last outing as Bond ---- he told an interviewer that he had no desire to ever play Bond again.
In fact, he said, he would rather rip his hands to shreds on broken glass than don that shoulder holster again.
More tellingly, he also broke the first rule of Bond promotion. He put down the character and the series. Asked about the decision to cast Monica Bellucci who is, well, a woman of a certain age, as one of Bond’s conquests in Spectre, he said that when someone like Bellucci says she is willing to part of something like a Bond film, you don’t think twice; you just say “thank you”.
James Bond actors are not allowed to do that. You have to pretend that the series is so great that it is an honour for any actor or actress to be featured in a Bond picture.
He also began rubbishing the Bond character. In promotional interviews, the Bond cast is supposed to say what a wonderful, fun-loving but dangerous playboy Bond is. But Craig broke ranks to suggest that Bond was a flawed, lonely man who was a misogynist.
You don’t do any of that unless you intend to get out. Rubbishing James Bond brings back uncomfortable memories of the last years of Sean Connery, who hated the Bond producers and took to telling the press that Bond was just a boring policeman. Or George Lazenby, who, after his one outing as Bond in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, came out as a make-love-not-war hippie and ridiculed Bond as a tool of the establishment.
So yes, it does rather look like Craig has had it with the role.
Or, on the other hand, maybe not.
After Connery rubbished Bond, stopped talking to Cubby Broccoli, the producer of the Bond movies, and carved out a career for himself, he was lured back to play Bond (once Lazenby walked out) in Diamonds Are Forever. What made him change his mind?
Money. Lots and lots of it.
And then, a decade later, a much older Connery played Bond once again in a rebel Bond movie produced by Kevin McClory, who had the movie rights to Thunderball and remade it as Never Say Never Again.
Why did Connery return to the role he hated?
"My favourite, at the moment, is Damian Lewis who you may remember as Brody from Homeland and Henry VIII in Wolf Hall. I reckon he’s perfect for the role."
|
Yes. You guessed it: money, once again!
Say this for Roger Moore: though he thought the films were a joke, he never broke ranks in public. But, after each movie, (once the initial contract was over and he was established as Bond in the public imagination), he would declare that he would not play Bond again.
This would set off an elaborate poker game during which the producers would publicly test other actors for the role. (Oliver Tobias --- yes I know you don’t remember him --- was the top contender.) Eventually Broccoli would match Moore’s demands and he would be back as James Bond.
In retrospect, people who bitch about Bond fare better with the producers than those who toe the party line. Timothy Dalton, an excellent Bond in his first outing, said nothing even when they put him in a really bad second film (Licence to Kill, the worst Bond movie of all time). But he got nothing for his loyalty. The US studios asked for him to be replaced by Pierce Brosnan (who had wanted the role when Dalton got it but had been committed to TV’s Remington Steele).
Brosnan was a perfectly good Bond in a male-modely-sort-of-way but, one fine day, they chucked him overboard. The success of the Bourne franchise had convinced them that James Bond needed a reboot and so they signed Daniel Craig even though Brosnan was still keen to continue in the role.
So, if Craig does drop out, then who will play Bond?
Well, you can forget all that nonsense about Idris Elba. A black Bond will work in the UK (and just possibly in the US) but the series makes over half its profits from international audiences. And the rest of the world is not ready for a black Bond.
At present, the smart money is on ex-Etonian Tom Hiddleston (Loki in Thor and the Avengers movies), especially after his star turn in The Night Manager (based loosely on the John Le Carre novel) probably one of the best TV shows ever made. Hiddleston has Bond’s ability to go suddenly from being all charming and intelligent (Hiddleston got a Double First at Cambridge) to turning into a man of violence.
But he still looks too much like Loki, in my mind, to fill James Bond’s shows.
My favourite, at the moment, is Damian Lewis (another Old Etonian) who you may remember as Brody from Homeland and Henry VIII in Wolf Hall. I reckon he’s perfect for the role.
But the producers have pulled surprises before. Daniel Craig was on nobody’s shortlist.
So who is to say who will get the role and be the next man to say “Bond, James Bond”?
Name:
E-mail:
Your email id will not be published.
Friend's Name:
Friend's E-mail:
Your email id will not be published.
Additional Text:
Security code:
Other Articles
-
Only five years ago I would have been stuck with Akasaka in Def Col. or Moti Mahal Deluxe in South Ex. Now I have amazing options to choose from.
-
In the pursuit of vegetarianism and vegetarian guests lies the future. And great profit.
-
I think that Indians have less desire to ‘belong’ than Brits do. We don’t need social approval. And this is a good thing.
-
And ask yourself: have I really been enjoying the taste of vodka all these years or just enjoyed the alcoholic kick it gives my cocktails?
-
There is a growing curiosity about modern Asian food, more young people are baking and the principles of European cuisine are finally being understood
See All