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Thank you for that trip down the memory lane, @grunther!
Well, some of them are on BaB. Some on CommanderBond.
I had contact with some of them on MSN but since that service were shutdown i haven't heard from any of them.. That was a shame. :-S
One member I can't seem to get hold of again is vmsns. Did anyone MSN with him?
I don't know if this site was forced to shutdown by someone like MGM but if that's the case its fairly pointless nowadays. Sites are even easier to create, especially the blog style ones. It would be a loosing battle, and lets face it- most people are just trying to share and promote their interest. Not rip-off a copyright. Ultimately its good for them.
I came across some nice sites over the weekend I've not seen before like illustrated 007 and The James Bond 007 Dossier
I was in double-o-heaven!
http://www.007forever.com/films/
There's some rare script comparisons from Maibaum's archive and details of things like Per Fine Ounce long before they appeared on MI6.
Some nice director/actor/producer interviews as well...
Director John Glen & Producer Michael Wilson:
Despite the reliance on stunts, Glen finds it strangely amusing that these films can actually shoot key sequences without an actor having been signed for the lead role. He cites a climactic scene in OCTOPUSSY as an example. In this sequence, James Bond is on horseback pursuing a plane taxiing for takeoff. He leaps from the horse to the plane and hangs on for dear life as it soars skyward. It is undoubtedly one of the most stunning sequences ever filmed. We shot that before we commenced main shooting," Glen admitted with a wry smile. "We hadn`t cast James Bond yet, but the favorite was a fellow with black hair, so the double had black hair."
Pierce Brosnan:
"I think we`ve kind of got the foundation to do a fourth and maybe a fifth," he continues, referring to events in WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH that point in the direction he would like to go: "Because of his guilt, he lends himself to a particular woman, and then how foolish could he be to let it get out of hand so far?" He adds that he would like to extend the character by "taking all of those sequences one step further. You have a rating on this film, which is PG, which should always be there. But there`s a part of me that would love to do an R-rated Bond, or just take the PG rating off it and do it--not for real, because you want the fantasy--but just to see some surprises and explores facets of the character more."
Michael Wilson on TWINE:
THAT LAST LINE OF DIALOGUE WAS A BIT MUCH. WHOSE IDEA WAS IT?
That was Rob and Neal, the original writers on it. We`ve always pushed a bit. At the very end of the film, we kind of pushed a bit, for the teenagers. We`re family films, and you`ve got to have something for everybody in the family.
HOW DO YOU GO ABOUT SELECTING COMPOSERS AND PERFORMERS FOR THE THEME SONG?
We`ve had a lot of different forces acting on us in the music area over the years. We have a view, Barbara [Broccoli, Wilson`s sister] and I, that we should have the composer do the theme song, the title song, because the theme will be integrated throughout the score of the film. The lyric may be done by the performer or some other guy. We feel ballads by female singers probably work the best in the Bond films, so we aim for that.
ANY CHANCE OF BRINGING BACK SPECTRE OR BLOFELD?
Well, with Spectre and Blofeld, the last film we did was DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER in 1971. When I talk about not looking backwards, that is looking backwards. We`ve kind of moved beyond that.
WELL, HE WAS IN FOR YOUR EYES ONLY.
The guy down the chimney? [laughs and quickly takes a question from another journalist]
Brosnan-era Screenwriters - Feirstein, France, Wilson...
One person not entirely pleased with the final results was Bruce Feirstein. "I personally did not want all of the running and shooting in the film," he says. "I had a different kind of conception for the character of Eliot Carver. I wanted him to be much more like Goldfinger. I have a background in journalism, where I have at one time or another worked for all the moguls. I didn`t see this as being a character who was surrounded by eighteen guys in black camo-gear, carrying uzis or whatever. I saw him as a guy being surrounded by eighteen guys with briefcases. That was lost. At the box office, obviously I was wrong. Michael Wilson and I had long conversations about this. Michael has very firm beliefs that this is why people go to see these movies. We have tremendously funny arguments where I would say to Michael, `You basically believe that in the basement of every building in the world there are eighteen guys in camo-gear waiting to spring.` In the end, TOMORROW NEVER DIES did $350 million worldwide. When I went to work on THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH, Michael and I had this very conversation where he said, `You see, I was right.` And the truth is, the numbers are on his side."
Gosh, thank you so much for reuniting me with that site, @grunther! I used to spend many an hour looking through that site in 2001/2002. Great to see it and indeed read the articles again.
Great site and quotes, thanks.
And I wonder if Newman was told this part directly or not:
HOW DO YOU GO ABOUT SELECTING COMPOSERS AND PERFORMERS FOR THE THEME SONG?
We've had a lot of different forces acting on us in the music area over the years. We have a view, Barbara [Broccoli, Wilson`s sister] and I, that we should have the composer do the theme song, the title song, because the theme will be integrated throughout the score of the film. The lyric may be done by the performer or some other guy. We feel ballads by female singers probably work the best in the Bond films, so we aim for that.
Perhaps because Newman did not write any part of the theme song, he did not want to incorporate it into the score. But it does need to be there; that is a "Bond" film.
Yes, I remember reading over it, and I do remember Rhino too! There was another guy called Dragonpol on it, but it wasn't me!
http://hmssweblog.wordpress.com/
Sometimes they even break stuff before MI6 gets to it, surprisingly.
@4EverBonded I don't know why at the very least they can't arrange for the composer to work on the song with artist and co-write with them or their producers as John Barry did in the mid-80's. A lot of the time when studio execs have got involved the artist has been signed too late and the composer has already written a large amount of the score. I think George Martin might be the only one that took the theme song and integrated it into the score.
As the theme songs become more important for marketing and as studios have their own music supervisors, there seems to be a view that if past songs did not perform in the charts, they would take control for the next one.
Too many people are involved in the process now for it to go smoothly, it seems.
-here, found it through my Never Say McClory Again bookmark!
http://www.ohmss-007.com/
Is that he formerly of CBn Forums (Blofeld's Cat)?
YEEEEES! Thanks!!!
As far as I recall he was actually active on forums... It's just that I'm not sure about his nick...
He was called Blofeld s Cat on CBn as well. Look for him there, have not been there for a long time myself.
Haha, is Mr Fleming the guy in the yellow outfit?!
I printed it in the past when I found it, but I'd never save it and it was very difficult to find online!
Thanks for this treasure from the past!
That's cool!