"Die Another Day" Interview
JamesBondJunior
Posts: 67MI6 Agent
Here's a great interview with Pierce and the director of "Die Another Day". The interviewer is a beautiful Bondian woman, as well. Putting "Die Another Day" in context as a 40th Anniversary tribute film and that it was competing with Mission Impossible films, XXX films and Austin Powers spoofs, I have a new respect for it. Its sad as Pierce mentions looking forward to a 5th appearance as Bond.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfBIlBhuYMU&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfBIlBhuYMU&feature=related
Comments
Great find. Made me feel angry at what a great Bond film DAD could have been, and indeed was for the first half. Also re affirmed what a charming man and 'Ambassador' PB was. Not my favourite Bond perhaps but he truly 'got it' in terms of the cultural significance of Bond and the custodial nature of the gig. DC could learn a lot re how to conduct yourself in interviews and with the Press, although he has improved greatly from the initial terse monosylabic performances in interview.
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Totally! DAD could have been amazing. High tech gadgets, retro style and a big name actress for a Bond girl. And some great set-pieces. I sort of respect it like "Moonraker" as a really ambitious film that just failed miserably. But at least it provides us Bond fans a shared laugh in hindsight.
DAD would have been a great film with a new script, plot, director, scriptwriters, leading lady, villain, removal of the special effects, the daft gadgets, the awful endless double entendres, the tired references to Bonds past.
With apologies to those who do find some merit in it, the less there is available on the web about DAD, the better.
Have you met him then?
The most interesting bits for me were Lee Tamahori's comments about loving the old 007 movies, which he interprets as thrillers first and Bond films second. Curious that he then counters this by suggesting TSWLM is an 'old Bond movie' and he loves the big sets and outrageous narratives of those 'old movies.'
He's much clearer when discussing the lack of a Cold War villian, and explaining why Korea was chosen as a likely source of devilment. His comment that audiences readily accept 'Russian agitators' (in XXX) is spot on and I think the Craig movies have now created thier own multinational agitators in Quantum.