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Comments
I found the first half of the book immensely informative but a bit tedious to read. The part about the development and production of NSNA was much more entertaining. Nevertheless, a wellspring of information and a brilliant book.
That's James Bond: The Legacy (although it only goes up to DAD).
Totally! That book is a great addition to the ' inside ' documentaries.
Wow, that's a bloody good bargain. I paid almost full price I think, and it is one of the best books about film-making I've read. Totally engrossing. Enjoy.
It's a fascinating book for people genuinely interested in the transition of Bond to the big screen. What I found most interesting was the negative reaction from the Fleming estate. My impression was that it doesn't particular paint anyone in a distinctly good or bad light, it's pretty ambiguous in its portrayal of the main players. This seems true to life. One minute you feel quite sorry for McClory, the next you can't help but feel he was his own worst enemy. Then there's Fleming who through no real fault of his own probably felt overwhelmed by the tenacity of McClory.
Anyway I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. Would be good to get your thoughts.
Ah, thanks for clearing that up. I'll hopefully get round to reading soon. Sounds like its a really good read.
The best section is the early part dealing with the Bryce-McClory partnership to make a Bond movie, Fleming helping develop a script, Wittingham being hired, Bryce wanting rid of McClory, Fleming going off and writing the Thunderball novel. The events are described almost day by day thanks to the legal papers the author gets to uses as a source.
Then there is a section on the making of Thunderball where Luciana Paluzzi among others describes it from her point of view.
There's a short section dealing with the attempts to make a new movie in the 1970s written by Len Deighton but I would have liked a little more detail on it.
Then the last section deals with NSNA and the more up to date events including the Sony-MGM legal situation around 1999.
Overall it's a good read and the author should be congratulated on his work on the early section in particular. He's also very even handed and doesn't paint anyone as a villan.
Well worth £3!
There are photos of Connery location scouting the Statue of Liberty for the film's climax - where Bond parachutes onto it. After fighting remote-controlled sharks in the New York sewers.
If it was made, it could have been quite something. Perhaps not a great movie, but a great spectacle. It was more The Spy Who Loved Me than the low-key Thunderball NSNA turned out to be. And it may well have been a huge success, and established a rival Bond franchise....
I think the only bloke who came out of it well was Whittingham. Fleming and Bryce seemed guilty of naivety of what they were getting into and arrogance in equal measure. That said they brought everything to the table in terms of money and the character rights but from what I can tell Mcclory brought nothing except an ability to spend Bryces money.
It was Bryce who paid for everything and Whittingham who wrote the screenplay, Mcclory seemed just to spend most of his time location scouting and buying dinner on expenses so for him to end up a millionaire and Jack to get nothing was particularly disgusting.
There was a handwritten note in the copy I had in early pages saying something about period piece and 1958, suggesting they were considering doing it in that way -- but that hardly jived with the hang glider and the totally over the top futuristic sub-thing Blofeld has, which would make the seaQuest and Seaview seem like the Merrimac or the Monitor.
Probably the biggest disappointment I've ever had reading a script for an unmade movie.
Do you mean the Warhead script?
I'm pretty sure I got my copy from a place that advertised in STARLOG and CFQ called STILL THINGS; they sold audio tapes of TV shows too (I used to have the audio tape of a really interesting Shatner movie called THE TENTH LEVEL that I got from them.)
The book is highly readable but needs some serious proofing and editing. Revelations by script doctors of NSNA Dick Clement and Ian Le Frenais are entertaining, about what a shambles the films was.
I only knew about these writers from the NSNA dvd included on THE CONNERY COLLECTION from KMART, they are on the extras and help make up for the terrible Kersh commentary.
Ok, the first edition was banned by IF Will Trust: http://tomahawkpress.com/battle-for-bond-banned-edition/
Can someone tell me what the differences are between the first and the second edition?
Which one should I buy?
Thanks.
As for the book, it's worth owning but is neither well-written nor well-structured. Sellers also does a poor job of citing his sources. Just as aggravating, the book is heavily slanted toward Whittingham (a hack screenwriter no one would otherwise have heard of today), and argues he was the real architect behind the success of the screen Bond (so much for Maibaum, Young and Connery!), though that's easily disproven by the summary of Whittingham's screenplay helpfully included in the appendix. Sellers's bias is at times hilarious--he even throws in totally irrelevant photos of Whittingham's daughter, taken during her brief singing career. Fleming meanwhile is written off as a plagiarist, bad writer, and snob.
Several years ago John Cork--probably the greatest all-around Bond expert we have--wrote a three part article tracking the genesis of Thunderball, from treatment to script to novel to film. His article demonstrated far more critical sense than Seller's entire book, and I wish it was still online.
I understand then that the second edition is better? Can't be worse for sure!