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#1 |
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Knighted 00 Agent
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"James Bond Unmasked" New Bond Book
Veteran film journalist Bill Desowitz chronicles the 50 years of James Bond on the big screen in JAMES BOND UNMASKED. Featuring interviews from all 6 Bond actors to have had the 007 status.
Avaliable June 1st OFFICIAL BOOK SITE AND ORDERING INFO >>>>> http://www.jamesbondunmasked.com/index.htm About the author Bill Desowitz covers all aspects of film, particularly animation/VFX/below-the-line. His “Immersed in Movies” column appears weekly at Indiewire’s TOH blog. He is a contributor to Animation World Network, where he recently served as senior editor as well as editor of VFXWorld. Desowitz is a long-time contributor to Editors Guild Magazine (retitled Cinemontage) and is a book reviewer for USA Today. He is also the author of the forthcoming James Bond Unmasked (Spies), which chronicles the 50-year evolution of 007 from Sean Connery to Daniel Craig, featuring interviews with all six actors. He was previously assignment editor at Below the Line, where he launched the BTL director series of interviews with such luminaries as Steven Spielberg, Clint Eastwood, James Cameron, Peter Jackson, Michael Mann, Peter Weir, Mike Nichols, and the late Anthony Minghella. He began his animation/VFX coverage as managing editor and then editor of Animation Magazine. The Los Angeles native launched his career as a staffer for The Hollywood Reporter, where he also was a film reviewer. As a distinguished freelancer, he’s written in-depth analysis of home entertainment, film restoration, outside the box trends, production stories, and profiles. His pieces have appeared in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Premiere, Film Comment, Wired, Variety, Fandango.com, and Amazon.com, among others ISBN-13: 9780984412617 Publisher: Spies LLC Publication date: 6/1/2012 Pages: 180 Product dimensions: 7.50 (w) x 9.25 (h) x 0.38 (d)
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#2 |
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Barman
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Thanks for this. I can't remember if it's been mentioned on this forum already but Roger Moore is also publishing a book for the anniversary this year
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I think Bond himself is the key ingredient of the films: the combination of the larger-than-life and his stereotypically British response. When faced with larger-than-life gadgets, villains and situations, he must take all of this in his stride, keep calm and carry on, and, no matter how difficult the situation is, he must not only pull through but ultimately come out on top |
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#3 |
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Knighted 00 Agent
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Ah yes thanks for the reminder heard he doing some book for the 50th anniv last year just put up some info and details on it on it. I think I will try and get both of these.
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#4 |
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Knighted 00 Agent
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More from Bill Desowitz's new book J.B. Unmasked
James Bond is reputed to be a producer's franchise, but there's no denying there's a strong directorial imprint on the series as well.
The Bond helmers have each left their own lingering mark on the character, and on the pictures that followed. In fact, Sean Connery admits that director Terence Young is responsible for inventing the onscreen persona of Ian Fleming's iconic superspy when the franchise was launched with "Dr. No" (1962). Young imbued Bond with his suave sensibilities and droll sense of humor and molded Connery in his own image. "Terence's contributions were enormous because he was always a great bon vivant," Connery recalls. "He was very much up on the latest shirts and blazers and was very elegant himself -- whether he had money or not -- and all the clubs and that kind of establishment. [He] got me a rack of clothes and, as they say, could get me to look convincingly dangerous in the act of playing it. … And the humor was one element that was missing from the books of Fleming himself." When Guy Hamilton succeeded Young on "Goldfinger," he helped engineer a new level of outlandish style and excitement. Bond hit the streets in his tricked-out Aston Martin DB5 and was armed with even more quips. The result was the first modern blockbuster and the template for future Bond films. "Bond was only as good as his villains and there was a great danger in him becoming Superman," says Hamilton (who previously served as Carol Reed's assistant on "The Third Man"). "Consequently, tension goes if you know he's going to win every time." After Connery's initial departure, editor-turned-director Peter Hunt stripped Bond of his excesses and explored his humanity in "On Her Majesty's Secret Service," the most personal and tragic 007 adventure. He also crucially played Svengali to George Lazenby, an Australian model with no previous acting experience. "Peter liked the idea of having someone outside of the acting world so he could not only get him to do what he wanted but to also have a lot of praise for being able to pull it off with an unknown," Lazenby says. Although Lewis Gilbert got his first taste of Bond with Connery on "You Only Live Twice," he didn't leave his mark on the franchise until returning to direct Roger Moore's third outing, "The Spy Who Loved Me." Gilbert's more absurd approach liberated Moore and the star and helmer often improvised one-liners on set. "He and I had more or less the same sense of humor, which is slightly off the wall," Moore says. "We had a marvelous rapport." Martin Campbell had the honor of breaking in the two most recent Bonds, Pierce Brosnan ("GoldenEye") and Daniel Craig ("Casino Royale"). The first experience was like being on a high wire ("Pierce played it straighter, so it made it that much better," Campbell says), and the second was a more introspective origin story. ("Bond's past is important because he has difficulty dealing with the violence," Campbell adds.) However, Craig's 007 is now fully formed in the upcoming "Skyfall," which finds him reteamed with the Oscar-winning Sam Mendes, the most prestigious Bond director yet. But unlike "Road to Perdition," this is like being on a high wire in honor of the franchise's 50th anniversary. "I think it is still possible to make a big, entertaining, fabulous, glamorous movie and yet at the same time to say something about the world that we're living in," Mendes observed in his recent videoblog. Bill Desowitz is the author of the forthcoming "James Bond Unmasked" (Spies), featuring interviews with all six Bond actors.
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