Time Out open letter to Bond 23 writer Peter Morgan
News broke last week that âFrost/Nixonâ and âThe Queenâ writer Peter Morgan is to join regulars Robert Wade and Neal Purvis in scripting the next James Bond movie. With the damp squib of âQuantum of Solaceâ still fresh in his mind, Tom Huddleston of
Time Out decided to pen an open letter to Morgan laying out a few friendly dos and donâts...
Dear Peter,
While we at Time Out are thrilled that you, one of our countryâs most talented and inquiring screenwriters, have accepted the challenge of penning the next James Bond movie, there are a few salient points we feel you might like to keep in mind while writing what will inevitably become one of 2011âs most important and, we hope, enjoyable movies. We trust you accept our advice in the friendly spirit with which itâs intendedâ¦
Please give the characters room to breathe
Perhaps the greatest stride writers Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and erstwhile colleague Paul Haggis made with âCasino Royaleâ was giving Bond and his companions a real sense of life, depth and emotional conflict. Weâre used to Bond the wisecracking automaton, but with an actor like Daniel Craig in the role this approach is a terrible waste. âQuantum of Solaceâ reduced Bond to little more than grunts and sneers â a smart thug who faces off against a loquacious but rather pathetic villain. Youâve already proved your worth as a master of verbal sparring in your previous scripts, so weâre sure youâll have the murderous banter down pat. The challenge will be to make us care about Bond again.
Please respect your audience
Thereâs no doubt that the best of Bond is revealed when thereâs a strong storyline packed with twists, switchbacks and double crosses: just think of Sean Beanâs deception in âGoldeneyeâ, or Vesperâs betrayal in âCasinoâ. As long as your action sequences are gripping and your characters convincingly motivated, thereâs no crime in keeping the viewer guessing.
Please donât waste your Bond girls
Another of the great pleasures offered by âCasino Royaleâ was the chance to see Bond confronted by female characters who could hold their own: not just Eva Greenâs scheming Vesper, but Judi Denchâs fractious, commanding M. Dench was the best thing in âQuantumâ, but she was let down by Olga Kurylenkoâs fiery but underused Camille. Itâs a lesson the makers of Bond have been long in learning: these women can be more than just eye-candy. A strong female lead doesnât just centre the film, she allows writers and audiences a chance to get to the core of Bond himself.
Please donât remake the Bourne series
Both âCasinoâ and âQuantumâ were clearly inspired by the downbeat realism of the Bourne trilogy, but while the former balanced gritty action sequences with a wry streak of self-deprecating humour, the writers and director of âQuantumâ seemed content with an endless parade of repetitive shakycam punch-ups in grimy locales. So, while action is clearly the lifeblood of the series, remember that Bond always benefits from a moment of levity amid the mayhem.
Please show us something we havenât seen before
Itâs hard to think of anywhere Bond hasnât been (Antarctica? Everest? Leamington Spa?), but one of âQuantumâ director Marc Forsterâs better accomplishments was picking some stunning international locations, from the seedy streets of Panama and the barren Atacama Desert in Chile to the grandiose opera house at Lake Constance in Austria. While the old Bonds were increasingly confined to traipsing between MI6 and Moscow battling the same faceless, jabbering Russkies, the global nature of the new filmsâ mysterious conspiracy means that Bond can now head just about anywhere, and beat up just about anyone.
Finally, we await the Bond producersâ choice of director with bated breath. Some interesting names have been rumoured, though we understand Danny Boyle has officially denied all knowledge and Christopher Nolan is busy with all that Batman business. But the Bond films have never been about the big-name directors; in fact, with names like Ian Fleming, Roald Dahl and Paul Haggis, you could say itâs one of the few major film series where the choice of writer actually matters more than the choice of director. Which is where you come in, Mr Morgan.
Good luck!
Yours in anticipation,
Tom
Thanks to `bondaholic_007` for the alert. Discuss this news here...