A James Bond Bear Joins The Family

2022 sees the launch of the first James Bond bear by German toymakers Steiff. Just 1,962 handcrafted collector’s bears will be made in a numbered series of to mark the date of Dr. No’s cinematic release in 1962.

Dressed in a tailored black cotton dinner jacket, white buttoned shirt and black bow tie, the bear channels Bond’s effortless style, complete with black mohair legs and a 60th Anniversary embroidery on one foot. He features a gold-plated Steiff button in ear, bearing his individual number, and will come with a numbered certificate of authenticity within a special James Bond presentation box.

Founded in 1880, Steiff invented the Teddy bear in 1902. This was the world’s first bear with moveable arms and legs and is the basis of the bear today. Every single part of a Steiff bear continues to be sewn by hand and the company remain in their original buildings in Germany. Every Steiff Teddy bear proudly wears a button in ear (Knopf Im Orh) as a distinguishing mark, ensuring its authenticity.

Set for release in June 2022, the James Bond Bear can be pre-ordered now at 007Store.com and steiffuk.com 

Producers And Daniel Craig In NY Honours List

Producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli have been awarded CBEs (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the 2022 New Year Honours list for services to film, drama, philanthropy and skills. They said, “It is both an honour and a privilege to receive the CBE and we are grateful to all those who have worked with us within the British film industry.” Meanwhile Daniel Craig was made a CMG (Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George), an honour that’s traditionally reserved for spies, diplomats, ambassadors and Foreign Office workers.

The Cinematography In Focus

Find out how the BAFTA and Academy Award-winning director of photography, Linus Sandgren used colour and lighting to showcase the rich and contrasting environments in the 25th Bond adventure. 

 

Jack Hedley (Oct 1929 – Dec 2021)

We are sorry to learn that acclaimed actor Jack Hedley has died at the age of 92. He appeared as Sir Timothy Havelock in For Your Eyes Only (1981). Our thoughts are with his family and friends.

The Special Effects Of Chris Corbould

Chris Corbould has worked on 15 Bond films since 1977’s The Spy Who Loved Me. From the tank chase in GoldenEye to the DB5 pursuit through the streets of Matera in the latest adventure, Corbould has been the man in charge of creating some of the most memorable Bond moments. Here, Corbould explains how we went about making the thrilling sequences for No Time To Die.

Bond 25 To Be Honoured At Tribute To The Crafts

The American Cinematheque announced today the honourees for their inaugural Tribute to the Crafts, which will take place on Wednesday 26 January in Los Angeles. Among those being celebrated include Stunt Coordinators Lee Morrison and Olivier Schneider for their work on Bond 25’s incredible stunt sequences and Billie Eilish and Finneas for their No Time To Die theme song.

Tribute to the Crafts will honour those who are at the very heart of filmmaking, and have exhibited extraordinary work behind the camera, over the past year. The evening will celebrate individuals in fourteen categories covering all aspects of filmmaking and will showcase clips from each of their respective films.

Apple Announce The Sound Of 007 Doc

Apple today announced “The Sound of 007,” a new feature documentary about the remarkable history of six decades of James Bond music. The documentary will make its global debut on Apple TV+ to mark the 60th anniversary of the James Bond film series in October 2022.
“The Sound of 007” will go behind the lens into the greatest movie franchise in history from the genesis of Dr. No and the iconic 007 theme song all the way to No Time To Die, mixing heartfelt interviews with incredible James Bond archive material.

Signed, Sealed And XXL: The Art Editions

Following on from the launch of The James Bond Archives No Time To Die Edition, Taschen releases two very special signed and numbered Art Editions. Each edition of the XXL sized book is signed by Daniel Craig and producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli and is accompanied by a museum quality photographic print signed by photographer Greg Williams. Just 500 have been made of each.

As the most complete account of the making of the film series, the XXL tome has been put together following unrestricted access to the Bond Archives and features stories from 150 members of cast and crew. Among the 1,007+ images are many previously unseen stills, on-set photos, memos, documents, storyboards, posters, and designs, plus unused concepts, and alternative designs.

Each Art Edition is signed and comes in a clamshell box together with its companion print in a portfolio and a certificate of authenticity. The numbered and signed prints are iconic images of Daniel Craig as 007, shot by Greg Williams – the Casino Royale (2006) Edition features the film’s teaser poster, while the No Time To Die (2021) Edition features Daniel Craig and Léa Seydoux in the DB5. Both editions are now available to order at 007Store.

 

In Love With Gold – “Its Divine Heaviness”

“This is gold, Mr. Bond. All my life I’ve been in love with its colour… its brilliance, its divine heaviness.” Auric Goldfinger kick started an appreciation of all things gold which has run through the film series ever since. To celebrate, Zippo has released a precious James Bond 18k Gold Lighter, made in a limited series of just seven.

The launch sees the classic Zippo windproof lighter elevated to supreme luxury status. Crafted with a solid 18k gold and a gold-flashed lighter insert, the lighter pays homage to Goldfinger with the iconic quote, “This is gold, Mr. Bond” elegantly engraved onto its face.

Each 18k gold lighter is expertly handmade in Zippo’s Pennsylvania workshop, where craftsmen use their metalworking skill to sculpt gold – a notoriously soft precious metal. After the quote is engraved, the reverse side is engraved with the 007 logo and its unique 00 number, before being hand buffed to a reflective sheen. It’s then hallmarked in England and presented in a velvet-lined walnut wood case with a certificate of authenticity.

A maximum of just seven of these handsome collectible lighters will be produced, each with its unique 00 number. The James Bond 18k Gold Lighter is exclusively available to order at the 007Store here, priced £25,000.

Lasers, Norwegian Ice And Explosions 

When you want to add texture to a frozen lake, or cover the tracks of a fishtailing DB5, the man to speak to is No Time To Die Visual Effects Supervisor Charlie Noble. No stranger to the world of 007, Charlie worked on GoldenEye before returning to work on Bond 25 and has a CV littered with VXF standout movies including The Mummy, Batman Begins, Captain America: The First Avenger, Mission: Impossible – Fallout and Jason Bourne. We caught up with Charlie to find out more about the invisible effects he created for Bond’s 25th screen adventure …

(This interview contains No Time To Die plot spoilers)

What is the role of your team on a Bond film?

The work we do and the invisible effects we create are all about supporting the other departments. I see visual effects as an extension to all the other departments really. We had some amazing locations to work on from Ben Piltz. Lee Morrison’s team did some brilliant stunts and Chris Corbould produced some of his usual ingenious special effects. So we are standing on the shoulders of some pretty big giants there. We get called in when things can’t always be done for real – and then we make the impossible possible. We couldn’t really blow up an entire island or a building in London at dusk, so it’s better to do it within the computer. We enhance practical effects, smooth out some of the changeable lighting conditions when we’re shooting exterior work, and create set extensions to continue the fantastic work of Mark Tildesley.

What is the scope of VFX in No Time To Die?

It starts with choosing anything that’s not practical in camera, for whatever reason. They can be tiny, little things or they can be really big things. You’re dealing with the practicalities of everyday filmmaking – sometimes you might have some lights in shot or a camera track, so we have to paint them out: that’s the bread and butter for us. The easy stuff all the way up to how to sink a boat or blow up an island – things that you probably wouldn’t easily be able to do for real. So it varies but on this film, we had around 1,500 shots scattered throughout the movie. I would say that we touched – to varying degrees – and were involved with, close to one in every three shots across the film. Everything from laser beams on rifles through to bubbles in the water for the trawler scene. 

What are the challenges then working on location?

Knowing that you’re only there for a limited amount of time to capture as much of the environment as possible – just in case anything crops up later – for those moments that are unforeseen so that we can recreate things if we have to. That’s the main part of our work. You’re there to make sure that everything shot is how we like it, but if there are visual effects set-ups to do, we need to be comfortable that what we’re shooting is achievable later on. It’s great to go to these fantastic places because the richness does come through and you can’t really replicate that. Shooting outside does throw out the usual challenges of changeable light and changeable weather conditions. 

Can you share a scene where this happened?

I think a good example of that was the opening Norway sequence. We travelled to an amazing remote frozen lake just to the east of Oslo in Norway. Cary’s vision as director was for this house by the lake. The lake would be covered in this thick ice – the Norwegians call it steel ice. He wanted it to be an early morning, misty look. Cary and Linus, our cinematographer, selected one hero shot which had the perfect balance of this beautiful slightly pinky, early morning sky with a lovely layer of SFX mist. We built this CG version of the environment and we could then line up all the other angles that had been shot practically and use this as a guide as to how to grade the footage so that everything matched. We then also stripped in our CG ice. We tried to clear a large portion of the lake with the ice rink polishing machine but it never really cut through the top crusty layer of mushy frozen crystals and it didn’t really give us the deep, steel ice that we wanted to show so we had to strip ours in for all the shots running out onto the ice, which looks gorgeous actually. We are only adding in as much as is necessary. It was all shot with IMAX cameras and it looked pretty stunning on screen.

What were some of the other complex elements on No Time To Die?

There were a number of complicated setups. In terms of the number of locations that we knitted together, it would be the Norway safe house escape scene. That involved eight different locations being knitted together. Bond arriving in Norway was filmed in Norway and Pinewood; various locations for the car chase were between Norway, Scotland and Salisbury Plain. So each time we’re switching locations, we’re having to strip the backgrounds from one location into the incoming shot, just to keep continuity going. In the car chase, a lot of it was shot practically but every now and again we needed to push cars closer together so that certain action beats were more telegraphed. That sort of sequence is primarily driven by Lee and Chris but it’s a good example of how we’re all working in tandem. Every now and again we as VFX get involved to support the narrative.

You said earlier you couldn’t blow up a building for real, so what did your team do for the London lab scenes?

We see the tower block exploding from the exterior. It was toned down a bit from its original idea of the building fully exploding just to show that it’s a targeted attack on the lab. The villains weren’t necessarily wanting to blow the whole place up, just one area. We shot various plates in Canada Square in Canary Wharf for this sequence and we did aerial work as well. We gave it nice street lighting, tweaked the sky and made it look pretty to give us that lovely mirror effect that Cary was after as the whole city was reflected in the side of this building. It did look gorgeous. We did subtle work in that scene like adding and enhancing the laser beams of the sights on the rifles. 

Which are your favourite effects that viewers might miss on a first watch?

I think the Norway ice work was gorgeous. That and the river chase, that was pretty special as well. Matera was fun too. There’s a lot of subtle stuff in there – we come out of a CG tunnel to reveal the whole of Matera. Whenever we have material of Matera, we’re putting the bridge in from a neighbouring town. We cleaned up a lot of 21st century clutter that was in shot – aerials, satellite dishes, cranes and anything that made it not look as quite as pretty as it really was. Then there’s the chase scene in the DB5 and we had to paint elements of those scenes out like tyre marks from previous takes. Once you get into what we call ‘The Donut Square’, Chris Corbould had rigged it with pyro that he clad onto this 1,000 year old square. We obviously couldn’t damage it but when the DB5 performed the donut move, the pyro went off, the bullet hits went off on the masonry as the car went around in a circle. Bond deploys the smoke as he exits and we needed to add a bit more just to give it that continuous donut look that the team was after. A nice cylinder of smoke as the DB5 exits the square.

Did the party scene in Cuba require VFX work?

Yes, we added to the look of the prosthetic make-up for the boils appearing on the faces when the iridescent mist containing Heracles comes down on the SPECTRE agents. We had to enhance a few of those to make the boils grow, certainly on a close up on one of the first guys to go down. The other thing we did was give a lovely sort of rainbow iridescent quality to the mist as it falls.

Were your team heavily involved with the trawler scene in Jamaica?

Absolutely. We filmed the real trawler in Jamaica and we had our scanning and texturing crew with us throughout so we could build a CG version of it for later use. Chris Corbould set an explosion off on the real thing so the shot of the plane flying away was created for real. We added a few extra bits and pieces that skid across the top of the water and we cleaned it up and got rid of the island in the shot but, pretty much, it was all in camera. It was a real explosion but we added a bunch of detritus and extra splashes. We added some more CG bubbles in there as well just to give it a bit more frenetic activity. 

No Time To Die Breaks New Records

No Time To Die has now become the third biggest film of all time at the UK box office. This week it reached £95.5 million which overtakes Spectre and now only Skyfall and Star Wars: The Force Awakens are ahead of it in the all-time list. No Time To Die continues to thrill audiences around the globe and has now made more than $758 million.