Why did Kevin McClory want to remake Thunderball?

Why did Kevin McClory want to remake Thunderball?

It strikes me as odd that seeing as Thunderball is so superior to Never Say Never Again, that McClory thought he could have improved on it. What was going through his mind I wonder?

It’s understandable that he felt betrayed by Fleming “stealing” and novelising the screenplay that he, Fleming, Jack Whittingham, Ivar Bryce and Ernest Cuneo had been collaborating on—the novel later becoming an Eon Bond film (Thunderball). The previous sentience is a very potted version of what I have understood to be the case, and so could be wrong, if so I welcome corrections.

But I can’t see how he thought he could better that film without the expertise, resources and talent of Eon behind him. Maybe he didn’t want to better it, but simply “get back” at the estate of Fleming and Eon. Or maybe he just wanted to make a film that was more faithful to the original screenplay he had worked on. Not having read that screenplay, I don’t know if Never Say Never Again is faithful to it or not.

In any event, Never Say Never Again is not a very good legacy for him after all his efforts to see it come to pass.

Comments

  • Matt SMatt S Oh Cult Voodoo ShopPosts: 6,596MI6 Agent
    It wasn't that he wanted to remake Thunderball, he just wanted to make a James Bond film. And remaking Thunderball was the only way he could legally do it.
    Visit my blog, Bond Suits
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 36,276Chief of Staff
    It’s understandable that he felt betrayed by Fleming “stealing” and novelising the screenplay that he, Fleming, Jack Whittingham, Ivar Bryce and Ernest Cuneo had been collaborating on—the novel later becoming an Eon Bond film (Thunderball). The previous sentience is a very potted version of what I have understood to be the case, and so could be wrong, if so I welcome corrections.

    The following threads may be of interest:

    http://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/29701/kevin-mcclory/
    http://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/28885/kevin-mcclory/
    https://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/45208/the-whole-fleming-mcclory-thing/

    There are a few others, too.
  • Monsieur SixteMonsieur Sixte Posts: 39MI6 Agent
    Thanks for the links.
  • Monsieur SixteMonsieur Sixte Posts: 39MI6 Agent
    Barbel wrote:
    It’s understandable that he felt betrayed by Fleming “stealing” and novelising the screenplay that he, Fleming, Jack Whittingham, Ivar Bryce and Ernest Cuneo had been collaborating on—the novel later becoming an Eon Bond film (Thunderball). The previous sentience is a very potted version of what I have understood to be the case, and so could be wrong, if so I welcome corrections.

    The following threads may be of interest:

    http://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/29701/kevin-mcclory/
    http://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/28885/kevin-mcclory/
    https://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/45208/the-whole-fleming-mcclory-thing/

    There are a few others, too.

    I went to two of the threads you gave to make a comment but it says at the top of their pages:

    “You are not logged in. Please login or register.”

    Which is strange, as at the top of other pages it says:

    “Logged in as Monsieur Sixte. Last visit 9th Oct 2018 17:45”

    The threads that say I am not logged in are:

    http://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/29701/kevin-mcclory/
    http://www.ajb007.co.uk/topic/28885/kevin-mcclory/
  • Charmed & DangerousCharmed & Dangerous Posts: 7,358MI6 Agent
    Hi M. Sixte - it’s just a site glitch which SiCo (our imperious leader and benevolent benefactor) is fixing - you should be able to just login in again and continue. -{
    "How was your lamb?" "Skewered. One sympathises."
  • Monsieur SixteMonsieur Sixte Posts: 39MI6 Agent
    Thanks, but the problem is still there.

    I’m logged in when I go to those threads, yet I’m not recognised on those pages as being logged in.
  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,272MI6 Agent
    Well McClory wanted a second bite at the cherry. I mean, it's more cash.

    And he got that.

    Doubtless he'd have been irked to see the franchise doing so well when in theory all that could have been his. Anyway plenty of EON films borrow from previous movies, I mean TSWLM is similar to YOLT and anyhow much of TSWLM seems to have been 'inspired' by the remake of Thunderball that McClory had in mind in the mid 70s and was a preemptive strike, what with its submarines, Spectre-like villain and HQ (Atlantis). It seemed to want to shoot McClory's fox, just as the FYEO pts which killed Blofeld was said to have done.

    I don't know if TB is a work of genius that can't be improved upon, it depends on what mood you're in when you see it. Unfortunately, NSNA was interfered with a lot by EON who objected almost on a daily basis over its plot, prompting revisions. They tried to get a good team on it but went ahead when the money was right, not the script. Plus, they had to bag Connery when he had a window and was up for it. In a way Connery was of the same attitude - get some cash because you didn't make enough the previous time round.
    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • Monsieur SixteMonsieur Sixte Posts: 39MI6 Agent
    True, TB is not a work of genius, and could probably be improved upon to some extent. It would be interesting to hear suggestions on how to improve it—my biggest complaint with it is that the second half drags on a bit, especially the under water fight scene. But I like its look, style and soundtrack and Connery’s performance in it. He seems to me to have reached his Bond performance peak in this film.

    NSA, though he was in it, failed (for me) mainly because it had none of the film Bond elements that we had become used to by 1983—such as the cinematography, Barry’s musical score, and all the other elements of Eon Bond films. Having said that, though, LALD and OP don't seem like Eon Bond film either—to me anyway, but I still like them.

    NSNA’s failure was no doubt due to what you say about Eon hampering its pre-production. It’s a pity that this happened, but Eon being a business had its interests to consider I suppose.

    By the time NSNA came out, the Indiana Jones films probably were the “Bond films” for most youngsters of that generation. It would have been interesting to see what an Eon Bond would look like if they had let Spielberg direct one. I think he wanted to at one point but they wouldn’t let him as they always chose directors who were not famous, as having a famous one would detract from Eon’s ensemble-style approach to production. That’s what I heard in 1989. I can’t find any mention of it online.
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 36,276Chief of Staff

    By the time NSNA came out, the Indiana Jones films probably were the “Bond films” for most youngsters of that generation. It would have been interesting to see what an Eon Bond would look like if they had let Spielberg direct one. I think he wanted to at one point but they wouldn’t let him as they always chose directors who were not famous, as having a famous one would detract from Eon’s ensemble-style approach to production. That’s what I heard in 1989. I can’t find any mention of it online.

    Here's a few:

    https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/steven-spielberg-james-bond-the-bfg-moonraker-broccoli-007-jaws-close-encounters-a7142731.html

    http://www.mtv.com/news/1993590/steven-spielberg-james-bond-roger-moore/

    https://filmschoolrejects.com/why-we-havent-gotten-a-james-bond-film-from-steven-spielberg-6520485ba37a/
  • Monsieur SixteMonsieur Sixte Posts: 39MI6 Agent
    edited October 2018
    Thanks for the links.

    From them it seems Spielberg approached Cubby Broccoli four times: after making Duel, after making Jaws, after making Close Encounters and after making Schindler’s List.

    The reason he was rejected after Duel was that he wanted a percentage of the profits of any Bond film he directed, according to what Roger Moore says about his meeting with Spielberg (in the second link). If Moore is correct, then Spielberg shot himself in the foot for asking for a percentage seeing as Duel, though good, hardly put him in a position to demand such a thing.

    After making Jaws he approached Broccoli but at the time Broccoli thought he wasn’t right for the job (in the first link), so he approached Broccoli again (in the first link) after Close Encounters and was again rejected for presumably the same reason.

    Then (in the third link) Broccoli after being impressed with Schindler’s List and being asked by Spielberg if he could now direct a Bond film replied that he (Broccoli) couldn’t afford him.

    So it all seems to boil down now to Spielberg being too expensive to hire these days.

    I wasn’t aware of the money reason and only of the other reason that the third link mentions:

    “Not only that, with a director of that caliber, they wouldn’t exactly be hiring a filmmaker who would bow to certain creative requests.”

    I had no idea about the money angle.

    Spielberg is so rich, though, I don’t see why he couldn’t direct a Bond film for free—if he loves Bond so much.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy Behind you !Posts: 63,792MI6 Agent
    I did notice in the J Gardner 007 novel Role of Honour (1984 ).
    He has Bond commenting on how Monte Carlo had lost some
    Of its glamour. With " One armed bandits " in the Casino, and
    How he'd expect to see "Space Invaders" in next. I thought as
    This was a year after NSNA, was it a little dig, at the film ?
    "I've been informed that there ARE a couple of QAnon supporters who are fairly regular posters in AJB."
  • GrindelwaldGrindelwald Posts: 1,294MI6 Agent
    "that he (Broccoli) couldn’t afford him"

    Just like Bruce Lee : after Enter had wrapped and offers were coming in from world wide , he wanted at least 2 mill to consider doing a movie with Ponti or Hwood in general......he was aware of his market value indeed
  • superadosuperado Regent's Park West (CaliforniaPosts: 2,652MI6 Agent
    The book, "The Battle for Bond" by Robert Sellers is a great resource for this question, though it's been criticized for some questionable information and conclusions. It does document the sequence of events that could support the claim that McClory as the CEO of sorts of the TB enterprise was instrumental in creating the blueprint of the cinematic Bond, that would eventually be used by EON. Accounts in the book also reveal McClory's personality, one of that as a driven man fueled by a large ego and sense of self-entitlement, not to mention a utilitarian regard for people who could help him meet his desired ends.

    So, why do I think he wanted to remake TB, and after NSNA why did he make it his life's mission to do so again? I think it's a matter of extreme anger and frustration watching the juggernaut success of the EON series, which he surmised should have been his success to behold and enjoy, but felt he was robbed of. So I don't think it's far off that for the rest of his life he bode his time wringing his hands in this anger to take what he believed was his to take.
    "...the purposeful slant of his striding figure looked dangerous, as if he was making quickly for something bad that was happening further down the street." -SMERSH on 007 dossier photo, Ch. 6 FRWL.....
  • Monsieur SixteMonsieur Sixte Posts: 39MI6 Agent
    I just checked the Wikipeida entry for NSNA, and it said that it grossed $9.72 on its first weekend, and this made it the best opening record of any James Bond film up to that point, and that it surpassed Octopussy's first weekend takings, which were $8.9 million. Though NSNA didn’t make as much as OP did in the long run, which was $187.5 million.

    I think that the initial high takings for NSNA were due to people being curious to see Connery “updating” his Bond role, and that the majority of tickets bought were due largely to that. I certainly bought a ticket for that reason, and not because of the trailer, which was pretty naff, and if Connery hadn’t been in it I wouldn’t have bothered. To show how naff it was here it is:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UepZyoe7Nf4

    And here is a fan trailer made in 2009:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlIXXkBvUUE

    The fan trailer is far superior and does the film more justice than the official one. It makes what little there is in the film seem like a feast.
  • Matt SMatt S Oh Cult Voodoo ShopPosts: 6,596MI6 Agent
    I just checked the Wikipeida entry for NSNA, and it said that it grossed $9.72 on its first weekend, and this made it the best opening record of any James Bond film up to that point, and that it surpassed Octopussy's first weekend takings, which were $8.9 million. Though NSNA didn’t make as much as OP did in the long run, which was $187.5 million.

    I think that the initial high takings for NSNA were due to people being curious to see Connery “updating” his Bond role, and that the majority of tickets bought were due largely to that. I certainly bought a ticket for that reason, and not because of the trailer, which was pretty naff, and if Connery hadn’t been in it I wouldn’t have bothered. To show how naff it was here it is:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UepZyoe7Nf4

    And here is a fan trailer made in 2009:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlIXXkBvUUE

    The fan trailer is far superior and does the film more justice than the official one. It makes what little there is in the film seem like a feast.

    That original trailer is awful! I had never seen it before. I didn't think anything could make the film look worse than it is on its own!

    The fan trailer is much better, but it's cheating by using proper Bond music!
    Visit my blog, Bond Suits
  • DutchJamesBondFanDutchJamesBondFan the NetherlandsPosts: 414MI6 Agent
    That's the dullest trailer I've ever seen.
    Don't confuse me with the other DutchBondFan, but be sure to follow his YouTube account. You can read my articles on James Bond Nederland: www.jamesbond.nl/author/gosse/
  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,272MI6 Agent
    Americans were all over Connery's return because his movies I guess had been shown on telly of late so he was still 'current' whereas in the UK I think years went by when a Connery Bond wasn't on TV, I know cos I was a fan. I wonder if it was a ruse by Cubby to better promote Moore as Bond.

    Starburst magazine of 1983 kept banging on about the battle of the Bonds, so yes the opening of NSNA was big, esp as it was a bit more of an American Bond in flavour.

    It had a limp opening in the UK, second fiddle in most fleapit cinemas to Jaws 3.

    That Battle of the Bonds book is highly readable even if it needs editing. Dick Clements and Ian Le Frenais reveal they were hired for the Moonraker script, just some tarting up with one-liners, but in conversation they couldn't remember what they did for it, they said they were on for the big explosion scenes so not much going on there from their point of view. I suppose that joke with Jaws and the ladder might have been theirs. The script doctors are very good on the perils of making NSNA, and it seems the film only went ahead because a) They had a lawyer on board as producer, only he was no good at producing and b) They had Connery on board, and they got the green light - but the script wasn't any good, so they were forever playing catch up, rewriting as they went.

    Director Irvin Kershner said he couldn't make the film he wanted to and always had to compromise but you do wonder about the bloke. He wanted that bike to be able to sprout wings that would let if fly over buildings, but when he got it out the packet in Nice, they hadn't provided any really so that was that, he couldn't shoot it. It does make you think, eh? Like, is that stunt suited to a Connery Bond film, and hadn't anyone on the project talked to each other at all. :s
    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • Monsieur SixteMonsieur Sixte Posts: 39MI6 Agent
    The bike scene looked like it was meant to be the high point stunt scene in the movie, but looked more like the sort of run of the mill stunt that would have been in any TV action series of the day like the A-Team—maybe that’s a slight exaggeration.

    The whole film just looked cheap to me, and lacking in the cinematic scope of the Eon Bonds of the time. I don’t know why that was. Was it lack of money, lack of a good action director, lack of a good cinematographer who could make a film look large-scale?

    I don’t know why Connery agreed to be involved. It must just have been for the money perhaps.
  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,272MI6 Agent
    Well, money is the reason most of us do stuff and again, like McClory, he doubtless felt he could have done much better out of the Bond phenomonon (sp) I mean I understand that despite everything, on average, Connery got paid the least of all Bond stars :o because of course the first three he was under contract and just an actor, and not a famous star, so he wasn't going to hit paydirt.
    Even then he gave his fee for DAF to charity, though he got a percentage of grosses so was hardly out of pocket.
    Now he gets the chance to nab some of Moore's cash - Moore being on around £3m per film!

    NSNA did not quite suffer from lack of money but lack of nouse - they didn't know how to put that money up on the screen, they didn't have experience with action, nor did the director who went too slowly and they were getting nabbed daily by EON's lawyers over the script.
    The cinematographer Douglas Slocombe was a good one, fine track record and went on to do Indy and The Last Crusade so it's not really him that said the film didn't always look great and if you can't get the sun to come out in the South of France then the gods really aren't smiling on you.

    I suppose NSNA is what you get when you do something for money rather than love, it gets done on the cheap to cut costs and maximise profits - typical of today's outsourcing racket you'll find.

    Of course, 1983 was the year when all the cinema Bonds got to play Bond again, as Lazenby had a cameo driving a gadget-laden Aston Martin DB5 in The Return of the Man from UNCLE.
    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • superadosuperado Regent's Park West (CaliforniaPosts: 2,652MI6 Agent
    Very likely, as with McClory, Connery was motivated by money, plus he had an axe to grind against EON...or does that go without saying?
    "...the purposeful slant of his striding figure looked dangerous, as if he was making quickly for something bad that was happening further down the street." -SMERSH on 007 dossier photo, Ch. 6 FRWL.....
  • caractacus pottscaractacus potts Orbital communicator, level 10Posts: 3,932MI6 Agent
    skimming through Lycett's Fleming biography, I see there's quite a few very fundamental elements in Thunderball that were not the idea of Fleming but of others.
    It was McClory's idea to set the story in the Bahamas, because he was establishing a production company in the Bahamas at the time. He had lost money on the Boy and the Bridge, and could save taxes/receive subsidies if he set up in the Bahamas, Not certain the precise legal details.
    Also, all the underwater scuba-diving content was McClory's idea, as he himself was a diving buff. I would have assumed that was definitely Fleming's idea, but Lycett says Fleming was not the only underwater enthusiast in the gang.

    The original collaborators also included Ivar Bryce and the real life Ernie Cuneo, who I think was a New York lawyer Fleming knew through William Stephenson. I'm not sure why a lawyer had cinematic ambitions, but he wrote the original story outline which Fleming reviewed and expanded upon after doing a bit of travelling. Fleming was researching Thrilling Cities at the time his collaborators developed the idea for the film. It was Cuneo's idea to feature a boat with an underwater hatch. I think the murder of the pilot was Cuneo's idea too.
    Fleming noted Cuneo's plot had no heroine, so the character that evolved into Domino was his idea. According to Lycett Fleming also came up with the idea of SPECTRE too, but I've seen this argued back and forth. Certainly whoever came up with SPECTRE was the key legal question for decades to come, and we all know it was McClory who ended up with those rights. Cuneo's original story had the villains as Russia, then for a while it was going to be the Mafia, before someone decided on an allnew fictional terrorist organisation.

    My copy of the Lycett's book is on my bedside table in another city, so I'm going by memory. Please feel free to tell me all I got wrong, because I don't want to be the source of further misinformation. But since we're talking about why McClory would want to remake the one thing he held valuable legal right to, I think its important to review what precisely each of the players contributed. I bet Barbel has it all properly memorised.
    If Lycett has it correct, I am surprised how few of the big ideas were Fleming's. Also that Ernie Cuneo was conspicuously the one person who did not get a credit in later printings of Fleming's book.

    One element I do understand was all Fleming was the Shrublands sequence that basically makes up the first third of the book, because this was a fantasy version of his own recent real life experience. When you think about it, that sequence is almost tacked on to the main Bahamas story, the connection (Lippe and his tattoo) is very tenuous. So I wonder if he added that himself later when he decided to novelise the abandoned film project? elsewhere, Lycett claims the Blades sequence in Moonraker was added after the proposed Moonraker film project was abandoned, to fill out a book to 200pgs, and the Shrublands sequence fits into the larger plot of Thunderball in much the same way.


    there's a good Never Say Never Again thread here, where much of this stuff was previously discussed.
    also theres five pages of excerpts from the Battle of Bond book on this DoubleOhSeven Magazine blog.
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 36,276Chief of Staff
    :)) Thanks for the confidence in me, but that particular can of worms isn't one I'd like to open right now!
  • RevelatorRevelator Posts: 578MI6 Agent
    edited October 2018
    Matt S wrote:
    It wasn't that he wanted to remake Thunderball, he just wanted to make a James Bond film. And remaking Thunderball was the only way he could legally do it.

    Bingo. McClory actually wanted to make a Bond film called Warhead that had nothing to do with Thunderball. More can be read about it here: https://web.archive.org/web/20121024232001/http://www.totalfilm.com/features/the-lost-bond
    Safe to say there were no robotic sharks in Fleming's book!

    Broccoli called foul, and after the lawyers were sicced on McClory, the decision was made to play things safe and re-adapt Fleming's Thunderball instead, since McClory couldn't prove he had the rights to make up a new Bond story. Ironically, when Never Say Never Again was finally made, it wasn't really McClory's baby. The real producer was Jack Schwartzman, and McClory found himself almost pushed out of the film, though he still received credit and money.
    superado wrote:
    The book, The Battle for Bond by Robert Sellers is a great resource for this question, though it's been criticized for some questionable information and conclusions.

    Correct on both counts. I have criticized the book for being too biased in Jack Whittingham's favor, but the fact remains that Sellers is one of only two people who have gone through all the scripts of what became the novel and film of Thunderball. The other person is John Cork, whose article "Inside Thunderball" is required reading and useful corrective to Sellers. It can be read in three parts online:

    http://archive.li/cjf2m

    http://archive.fo/Ha6nu

    http://archive.li/QQ2QU
    According to Lycett Fleming also came up with the idea of SPECTRE too, but I've seen this argued back and forth. Certainly whoever came up with SPECTRE was the key legal question for decades to come, and we all know it was McClory who ended up with those rights.

    I believe both Cork and Sellers state that Fleming created Spectre, which settles the matter for me. It's possible that McClory first had the idea to make the villains a freelance terrorist organization, but there's no evidence to clinch this, whereas Fleming's proposal and description of Spectre exists on paper and marks the first ever mention of the organization.

    McClory ended up with a claim to the rights only because Broccoli did not want to delay production of The Spy Who Loved Me by engaging in a legal battle over ownership of Spectre. So he had the organization removed from the script and didn't bother with it again, though some early scripts of Octopussy featured Blofeld and Spectre.
    One element I do understand was all Fleming was the Shrublands sequence that basically makes up the first third of the book, because this was a fantasy version of his own recent real life experience...I wonder if he added that himself later when he decided to novelise the abandoned film project?

    Correct. Fleming claimed he was making "a book of the film," but the film follows his book far more than McClory and Whittingham's scripts! I suspect Fleming wanted to take back control of the project, which Whittingham was taking into somewhat unFlemingian directions, by making a novel out of it.
  • GrindelwaldGrindelwald Posts: 1,294MI6 Agent
    Its funny , in the 60s Mandrake fought an evil organization called "8" similar to SPECTRE :

    http://www.mandrakewiki.org/index.php?title=8
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