
The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
- stockslivevan
- SPECTRE 02
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Sounds like Skywalker is under Moore's hypnobrow. Poor guy. 

- Captain Nash
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....
Ah heck all of them - Favorite Movies: Lawrence Of Arabia, Forrest Gump, Jaws, The Shawshank Redemption, Vertigo, The Odd Couple, Zoolander, Cool Hand Luke, The Great Escape...many more.
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Well he was up against Sir Rog's OP hypnobrow. It's hard to resisit Stocks.
(Don't bag OP!)
It does sound like you kind of enjoyed CR though Skywalker, and does Mrs.Skywalker have a secret desire to see Craig as Bond? Maybe she's a closet fan.Haha.
Why would she pick CR if she knows you hate it?
(Don't bag OP!)
It does sound like you kind of enjoyed CR though Skywalker, and does Mrs.Skywalker have a secret desire to see Craig as Bond? Maybe she's a closet fan.Haha.
Why would she pick CR if she knows you hate it?
- Skywalker
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Platoon
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Like I said, I'd not seen a Bond film for quite some time and it wasn't as bad as I had remembered. That said, compared to all the other Bond films (including Niven's CR) it is poor.Captain Nash wrote:Well he was up against Sir Rog's OP hypnobrow. It's hard to resisit Stocks.
(Don't bag OP!)
It does sound like you kind of enjoyed CR though Skywalker, and does Mrs.Skywalker have a secret desire to see Craig as Bond? Maybe she's a closet fan.Haha.
Why would she pick CR if she knows you hate it?
Mrs Skywalker loves Brosnan so there's no chance the pasty gurner is going to take that mantle.
“I'd like to thank the Royal Marines for bringing me in like that and scaring the s--- out of me,” Bond Hardman Daniel Craig.
- stockslivevan
- SPECTRE 02
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Almost there Skywalker, you'll soon join our club.



- carl stromberg
- Ministry of Defence
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
It's a growing club. Here is one of the newer members:stockslivevan wrote:Almost there Skywalker, you'll soon join our club.![]()

Bring back Bond!
- stockslivevan
- SPECTRE 02
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Apparently Junkie loser,I mean Amy Winehouse is releasing her Bond theme."Not able to deal with rejection?" anyone? 

- James
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
"I can't do that superhero stuff" Daniel Craig
- James
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
The pro-Craigers regroup with an eerie mantra that insists Daniel Craig is 5'10 (despite all evidence to the contrary) and somehow looks like (ahem) Sean Connery...

As CNB resistance fighters get ready to go back into action...


As CNB resistance fighters get ready to go back into action...

"I can't do that superhero stuff" Daniel Craig
- English Agent
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
JAMES.........don't know about the rest of the pro-Craigers........but i'am handsome!!!
Regards 'Amy Winehouse'...............it sounds like sour grapes from her..............if she wasn't it such a mess
then i'am sure the producers would of picked her song..........what a shame eh!
AB

Regards 'Amy Winehouse'...............it sounds like sour grapes from her..............if she wasn't it such a mess
then i'am sure the producers would of picked her song..........what a shame eh!
AB
- FormerBondFan
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
James wrote:The pro-Craigers regroup with an eerie mantra that insists Daniel Craig is 5'10 (despite all evidence to the contrary) and somehow looks like (ahem) Sean Connery...
As CNB resistance fighters get ready to go back into action...


- English Agent
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- Favorite Bond Movie: OHMSS, CR, TB, LALD
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
I'am sure the pictures have been posted the wrong way around!
AB



AB
- English Agent
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- Favorite Bond Movie: OHMSS, CR, TB, LALD
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Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Hi
I reaD today that Marc Forster is coming to the end of editing the first cut of QOS before it is presented to the producers.
Apparently he says he's only been given 6 weeks to edit the film, when he normally gets 14 weeks if it was one of his smaller
films.
Sounds a bit scary to me, when you've got thousands of feet of film to put together in such a short time...............and that the film he's editing cost $230,000,000 to produce...............hope he doesn't mess it up!!!!
AB
I reaD today that Marc Forster is coming to the end of editing the first cut of QOS before it is presented to the producers.
Apparently he says he's only been given 6 weeks to edit the film, when he normally gets 14 weeks if it was one of his smaller
films.
Sounds a bit scary to me, when you've got thousands of feet of film to put together in such a short time...............and that the film he's editing cost $230,000,000 to produce...............hope he doesn't mess it up!!!!

AB
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Arthur Brain wrote:JAMES.........don't know about the rest of the pro-Craigers........but i'am handsome!!!![]()
Regards 'Amy Winehouse'...............it sounds like sour grapes from her..............if she wasn't it such a mess
then i'am sure the producers would of picked her song..........what a shame eh!
AB
Methinks that her being on a constant high probably doesn't help things. Darn right it's sour grapes.She knows that EON wouldn't touch her with a ten foot pole(probably not a good idea to touch her in general unless you've had your shots

- Skywalker
- 002
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Goldfinger
The Spy Who Loved Me
Quantum of Solace.......Hmmm - Favorite Movies: Batman Begins
The Dark Knoght
Shawshank Redemption
Platoon
Top Gun
Aliens - Location: On the side of truth and honesty. No room for sheep - just shepherds.
- Contact:
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
For those of you who have not had the honour of seeing the 'handsome' Mr Brain, below is a photo of Arthur doing his favourite Daniel Craig impression.Arthur Brain wrote:JAMES.........don't know about the rest of the pro-Craigers........but i'am handsome!!!![]()
AB


“I'd like to thank the Royal Marines for bringing me in like that and scaring the s--- out of me,” Bond Hardman Daniel Craig.
- stockslivevan
- SPECTRE 02
- Posts: 3249
- Joined: Thu Mar 15, 2007 12:13 am
- Favorite Bond Movie: From Russia with Love
- Location: Crab Key
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Somebody needs to throw Amy Winehouse in some dungeon.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
Well, she's not the first artist to release a rejected Bond theme, though I think she may be the first to release it as a single. I know Pulp's rejected theme for TND was used as a B-side, and I think Alice Cooper's TMWTGG and Blondie's FYEO were album tracks.stockslivevan wrote:Somebody needs to throw Amy Winehouse in some dungeon.
"He's the one that doesn't smile" - Queen Elizabeth II on Daniel Craig
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
The big difference being that those people were not attention seeking drug addicts who are in the tabloids all the time to say nothing of making of making a public fuss about not being chosen to do a Bond themeWell, she's not the first artist to release a rejected Bond theme, though I think she may be the first to release it as a single. I know Pulp's rejected theme for TND was used as a B-side, and I think Alice Cooper's TMWTGG and Blondie's FYEO were album tracks.

- bjmdds
- 001
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- Favorite Bond Movie: Any without CR-egg in it.
Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
The next role for Winehouse should be Morticia Adams in another remake of The Addams Family.

Re: The BJMDDS General Discussion Thread......
An interesting interview with Marc Forster has surfaced.
http://www.timeout.com/film/features/sh ... olace.html
Dave Calhoun catches up with Marc Forster, the director of ‘Quantum of Solace’, as, in a race against time worthy of his fictional subject, he strives to finish editing the latest in the 007 spy franchise...
Marc Forster, the slim, suave, German director of the new James Bond movie, is holed up in his bunker-style headquarters in London's Soho. There are some trappings of a permanent office – an assistant, a couple of sofas, a dog even – but, even though Forster has managed to bag himself a really rather grandiose desk in this anonymous building on Dean Street, the general feeling is of a makeshift base that can be dismantled as quickly as it has been put together. And, indeed, Forster’s project is temporary: in two weeks’ time he must deliver a first edit of ‘Quantum of Solace’, the twenty-second official Bond film, to his paymasters and keepers of the Bond flame, Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson, daughter and stepson of the original Bond producer, Cubby Broccoli. No wonder Forster is a man with his eye on the clock.
‘I have way too little time to edit,’ he says calmly and frankly. ‘We wrapped the movie just a few weeks ago and I’m basically editing right now for another week or so. Then I show it to Michael and Barbara at a little preview screening and then I have another week to cut. So I have, like, five or six weeks to edit the whole movie. Normally, I’ve had 14 weeks for any of my films so far. Six weeks for this film is crazy.’
Forster, a welcoming and gentle presence, takes me downstairs and introduces me first to one editor and then another. The two of them are working round the clock to finish the film. One, a rough-haired, bearded chap called Matt Chesse, has worked with 39-year-old Forster on six previous films, from ‘Everything Put Together’ in 2000, via ‘Monster’s Ball’ in 2001 and ‘Finding Neverland’ in 2004, to last year’s ‘The Kite Runner’. The familiarity is deliberate: one way in which Forster has staked his ground after he accepted the mammoth gig of directing the new Bond – taking over from Martin Campbell, who helmed ‘GoldenEye’ and ‘Casino Royale’ – has been to bring in several new heads of department, which means that the production designer, costume designer, editors and several other key figures on the film are of his own choosing. But he’s no fool: he knows very well that making a Bond movie is as much about tradition (‘there are always the girls, the car and so on’) as it is about progress. He admits he initially had doubts about taking the job at all but says that he was won over by the personal touch offered to him by producers Broccoli and Wilson who act as buffers between him and the studio.
‘I’m used to making movies for between $20 million and $40m with total creative control,’ he explains. ‘Everyone leaves me alone. So I thought: What’s the upside for me to make a Bond film? It seemed there was none. “Casino Royale” was a huge success. Everybody loved it, it was critically acclaimed. So, I thought, if my movie’s not as good or better, it’ll be a failure. There was no upside. Then I met with Daniel Craig and I met with Barbara and Michael, and I thought: If I’m going to do a commercial film, it may as well be Bond because I’m not dealing with a studio, I’m dealing with them. They promised me, and they have kept to their word so far, to fight for my creative vision. I’m thankful for that. But let’s see what happens when I show them the first cut…’
Forster plays me a scene on which his editors have been working: we watch as Bond arrives at a lakeside opera house in Bregenz, Austria, dressed, of course, in the requisite dinner suit. Central to the existing set for the opera is an enormous human eye the size of the entire stage. ‘It’s very Bond,’ says Forster.
We see a flash, too, of the new Bond villain, French actor Mathieu Amalric, who plays a character with the decidedly unvillainous name of Dominic Greene. ‘In the old Bond films, it was clear who were the good guys and who were the bad guys. Today, it’s not so clear. I feel like Mathieu looks so sympathetic and normal, the type you can’t see right away is the villain.’
Again, talk turns to time – and the lack of it. ‘I wish we would have more time to craft the film properly,’ he regrets. ‘For instance, with “The Dark Knight” Christopher Nolan had a year to cut his movie, to work on the visual effects, to reflect. I don’t have that time and so compromises have to be made.’
If it sounds like he’s making excuses for what’s to come when the film opens at the end of October, it doesn’t feel like that in the moment. Overall, he sounds confident, both of the film and his vision of it, which he says will tip a hat to the groundbreaking designs of Ken Adam in the first Bond films. Several times he mentions what he believes will be at the heart of the new film: character. ‘The great thing is that Daniel and I had an intense relationship, so between us we could always go back to the character.’
Forster and his cast and crew travelled the world, from Italy to Austria to Chile and back to Pinewood Studios to shoot the film. The plot, as ever, remains under wraps and Forster gives little away. What we do know is that the story begins just 20 minutes after the end of ‘Casino Royale’ and that key to it is Bond’s grief over the death of Vesper, the love interest played by Eva Green in the last one. ‘There’s this conflict going on: he’s an assassin, but he’s also lost someone he loves. We’re asking: where’s the psychological conflict in that?’
Forster says that he didn’t find directing the action sequences too difficult and reminds me that he had the luxury of a second-unit director to fall back on. Still, why does he think the producers picked him – a director with no experience of action whose successes have almost exclusively been character-driven dramas?
‘I think they wanted to bring more of an emotional component to the movie,’ he says. ‘And they wanted to have the franchise go in a different direction. Last time, they took a risk with having Daniel Craig in the film. That was a success, so this time they felt they could take it another step and see how it goes with another filmmaker.’ Time’s up, and Forster returns to his particular vision of what a Bond movie should be about: girls, cars and a healthy dose of angst.
‘Quantum of Solace’ opens on Oct 31.
http://www.timeout.com/film/features/sh ... olace.html
Dave Calhoun catches up with Marc Forster, the director of ‘Quantum of Solace’, as, in a race against time worthy of his fictional subject, he strives to finish editing the latest in the 007 spy franchise...
Marc Forster, the slim, suave, German director of the new James Bond movie, is holed up in his bunker-style headquarters in London's Soho. There are some trappings of a permanent office – an assistant, a couple of sofas, a dog even – but, even though Forster has managed to bag himself a really rather grandiose desk in this anonymous building on Dean Street, the general feeling is of a makeshift base that can be dismantled as quickly as it has been put together. And, indeed, Forster’s project is temporary: in two weeks’ time he must deliver a first edit of ‘Quantum of Solace’, the twenty-second official Bond film, to his paymasters and keepers of the Bond flame, Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson, daughter and stepson of the original Bond producer, Cubby Broccoli. No wonder Forster is a man with his eye on the clock.
‘I have way too little time to edit,’ he says calmly and frankly. ‘We wrapped the movie just a few weeks ago and I’m basically editing right now for another week or so. Then I show it to Michael and Barbara at a little preview screening and then I have another week to cut. So I have, like, five or six weeks to edit the whole movie. Normally, I’ve had 14 weeks for any of my films so far. Six weeks for this film is crazy.’
Forster, a welcoming and gentle presence, takes me downstairs and introduces me first to one editor and then another. The two of them are working round the clock to finish the film. One, a rough-haired, bearded chap called Matt Chesse, has worked with 39-year-old Forster on six previous films, from ‘Everything Put Together’ in 2000, via ‘Monster’s Ball’ in 2001 and ‘Finding Neverland’ in 2004, to last year’s ‘The Kite Runner’. The familiarity is deliberate: one way in which Forster has staked his ground after he accepted the mammoth gig of directing the new Bond – taking over from Martin Campbell, who helmed ‘GoldenEye’ and ‘Casino Royale’ – has been to bring in several new heads of department, which means that the production designer, costume designer, editors and several other key figures on the film are of his own choosing. But he’s no fool: he knows very well that making a Bond movie is as much about tradition (‘there are always the girls, the car and so on’) as it is about progress. He admits he initially had doubts about taking the job at all but says that he was won over by the personal touch offered to him by producers Broccoli and Wilson who act as buffers between him and the studio.
‘I’m used to making movies for between $20 million and $40m with total creative control,’ he explains. ‘Everyone leaves me alone. So I thought: What’s the upside for me to make a Bond film? It seemed there was none. “Casino Royale” was a huge success. Everybody loved it, it was critically acclaimed. So, I thought, if my movie’s not as good or better, it’ll be a failure. There was no upside. Then I met with Daniel Craig and I met with Barbara and Michael, and I thought: If I’m going to do a commercial film, it may as well be Bond because I’m not dealing with a studio, I’m dealing with them. They promised me, and they have kept to their word so far, to fight for my creative vision. I’m thankful for that. But let’s see what happens when I show them the first cut…’
Forster plays me a scene on which his editors have been working: we watch as Bond arrives at a lakeside opera house in Bregenz, Austria, dressed, of course, in the requisite dinner suit. Central to the existing set for the opera is an enormous human eye the size of the entire stage. ‘It’s very Bond,’ says Forster.
We see a flash, too, of the new Bond villain, French actor Mathieu Amalric, who plays a character with the decidedly unvillainous name of Dominic Greene. ‘In the old Bond films, it was clear who were the good guys and who were the bad guys. Today, it’s not so clear. I feel like Mathieu looks so sympathetic and normal, the type you can’t see right away is the villain.’
Again, talk turns to time – and the lack of it. ‘I wish we would have more time to craft the film properly,’ he regrets. ‘For instance, with “The Dark Knight” Christopher Nolan had a year to cut his movie, to work on the visual effects, to reflect. I don’t have that time and so compromises have to be made.’
If it sounds like he’s making excuses for what’s to come when the film opens at the end of October, it doesn’t feel like that in the moment. Overall, he sounds confident, both of the film and his vision of it, which he says will tip a hat to the groundbreaking designs of Ken Adam in the first Bond films. Several times he mentions what he believes will be at the heart of the new film: character. ‘The great thing is that Daniel and I had an intense relationship, so between us we could always go back to the character.’
Forster and his cast and crew travelled the world, from Italy to Austria to Chile and back to Pinewood Studios to shoot the film. The plot, as ever, remains under wraps and Forster gives little away. What we do know is that the story begins just 20 minutes after the end of ‘Casino Royale’ and that key to it is Bond’s grief over the death of Vesper, the love interest played by Eva Green in the last one. ‘There’s this conflict going on: he’s an assassin, but he’s also lost someone he loves. We’re asking: where’s the psychological conflict in that?’
Forster says that he didn’t find directing the action sequences too difficult and reminds me that he had the luxury of a second-unit director to fall back on. Still, why does he think the producers picked him – a director with no experience of action whose successes have almost exclusively been character-driven dramas?
‘I think they wanted to bring more of an emotional component to the movie,’ he says. ‘And they wanted to have the franchise go in a different direction. Last time, they took a risk with having Daniel Craig in the film. That was a success, so this time they felt they could take it another step and see how it goes with another filmmaker.’ Time’s up, and Forster returns to his particular vision of what a Bond movie should be about: girls, cars and a healthy dose of angst.
‘Quantum of Solace’ opens on Oct 31.