It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
^ Back to Top
The MI6 Community is unofficial and in no way associated or linked with EON Productions, MGM, Sony Pictures, Activision or Ian Fleming Publications. Any views expressed on this website are of the individual members and do not necessarily reflect those of the Community owners. Any video or images displayed in topics on MI6 Community are embedded by users from third party sites and as such MI6 Community and its owners take no responsibility for this material.
James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
Comments
so to answer your question... no, EA couldn't on their own, create a rival Bond series or else face serious legal repercussions... their best bet, would be to purchase back rights from EON once Activision's time is up.... and believe me, I just played NFS The Run and Battlefield 3 tonight, both use EA's Frostbite 2 technology - and I would love to see a Bond game created with the same engine.
As for EA, I don't think they'd want to make any more Bond games. Even if they were able to.
they at the very least own the rights to DEVIL MAY CARE and CARTE BLANCHE... that is indeed fact - since it's so recent, that I remember being reported here - because that started up rumors for the title of Bond 23 (at the time)... I thought they gobbled up the rights to the others back when they came out as well.... not confirmed though... will have to do some digging around to find that out.
curious - what have they used?
Licence Renewed: James Bond gets his first glimpse of villain industrialist Anton Murik at England’s famous Ascot racetrack.
A View to a Kill (1985): James Bond gets his fist glimpse of villain industrialist Max Zorin at England’s famous Ascot racetrack.
Licence Renewed: Bond poses as a weekend party guest at Murik’s large country estate in Scotland.
A View to a Kill (1985): Bond poses as a weekend party guest at Zorin’s large country estate in France.
Licence Renewed: Bond’s SAAB ejects tear gas from its vents when surrounded by henchmen.
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997): Bond’s BMW ejects tear gas from its vents when surrounded by henchmen.
Licence Renewed: Bond fights henchman Caber in the cargo hold of C-130 over Spain in the book’s climax.
The Living Daylights (1987): Bond fights henchman Necros in the cargo hold of C-130 over Afghanistan in the film’s climax.
There are examples of this kind of stuff throughout the Gardner section.
Isn't there a connection between the Benson novel "Zero Minus Ten" and Tomorrow Never Dies as well?.. I believe it's plot is a bit to do with someone trying to start up a war between China and Britain.. it was published in April of '97 though - meaning that for probably well over a year before, it was being written, right around that same time as probably the script for TND was being written... coincidence you think?
I'm not sure about the connection between TND and Zero Minus Ten, though. Maybe, maybe not. If so, if I were Benson, I'd have been mad that IFP made me write the same book twice.
I think the torture sequence from TWINE is from one of the continuation books
EON can licence out the character of Bond for video games and they can either do a tie-in with an existing film or do an original story, but not a literary continuation story.
The two are considered quite separate entities for legal purposes, hence why Carte Blanche has Deaver's own interpretation of the character but GoldenEye 007 has Craig's likeness.
It is quite unlikely that a continuation novel will be made into a film or a video game.