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James Bond writers Neal Purvis and Robert Wade have
revealed some of their thinking behind the "Casino
Royale" script...
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Purvis & Wade Talk Casino Royale
14th March 2005
James Bond scribes Neal Purvis and Robert Wade have revealed
some of their thinking behind the next movie, "Casino
Royale" due out sometime in 2006, in an interview with Screen
International this month.
The writing duo who penned "The World Is Not Enough" and "Die
Another Day" started
work on the "Bond 21" script back in March 2004, but then
the title was unknown. Last
month MGM confirmed the 21st James Bond film would be "Casino
Royale" directed by "GoldenEye" helmer Martin Campbell.
A Faithful Adaptation
In the interview, Purvis & Wade reveal that a lot of the elements
from the Ian Fleming novel will be retained, including the torture
sequence and the famous final line "the bitch is dead". On the
subject of the torture scene, Robert Wade said, “if it is done
the right way, there are going to be a lot of crossed legs in
the cinema”.
The script currently deals with 007's early years of his
career in the double-O section, and will explore how the
character the world is so familiar with came to be. Wade
explained, "At the moment it is a very faithful adaptation,
updated. The book is the story of the incident that actually
forges James Bond as a secret agent. There is a James Bond
that everyone knows, but it would be nice just once to show
how he got there".
As Martin
Campbell discussed in an interview last month, "Casino
Royale" will not, however, be set in the 1950's. Purvis &
Wade have been tasked to update and expand Ian Fleming's novel
to modern time. Wade said, "That is our attempt at a sleight
of hand. We can’t make it as a period piece". |
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Above: Robert Wade & Neal Purvis
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The 1953 novel, which is almost entirely set around Royale-les-eaux
(France), poses another problem for the writers - lack of variation
in location. Wade said, "it doesn’t have the global vista and
it doesn’t have the level of action with which the cinematic Bonds
have become synonymous with. We’ve opened it up but tried to keep
the action fairly contained, and of realistic proportions. And
everything that we’ve done that expands on the book is providing
a modern context for what happens”.
So does this mean a return to the style of the early Connery
films? No, Neal Purvis explained, "We don’t want to hark back
to the old Bond films, because everyone goes on about that. We
want to do something new, faithful to the original sense".
Conceptual Integrity
But does the vision of director Martin Campbell gel with that
of the writers? "Die Another Day" director Lee Tamahori brought
in a lot of his own ideas (including the slated CGI ice parasurfing
sequence) on the original script, so will the vision for "Casino
Royale" change? Another factor that is likely to cause alterations
to the script is the casting of a new James Bond. Purvis & Wade
said back in early 2004 that they had written their first draft
with Pierce Brosnan in mind. On the subject of a change of 007,
Purvis said, "Pierce Brosnan is a very, very hard act to follow,
so you need something very different. You don’t want to have Pierce-lite".
Die Another Day Post-Mortem
Their last film "Die Another Day",
despite box-office success, came into criticism that 007 had become
a tired format and had slipped into self-parody. On the subject
of the way the film turned out, Purvis sad "The film started off
down-and-dirty and got into the realms of You Only Live Twice
and Moonraker, which was fun to do once". Wade explained the other
motivation on moving back-to-basics, "You can’t go bigger than
[Die Another Day], you have to re-conceive the thing. It has coincided
with Casino Royale now being owned by Danjaq, so the timing was
perfect".
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Interview - Neal Purvis
and Robert Wade (Part 1)
Interview - Neal Purvis
and Robert Wade (Part 2)
Interview - Neal Purvis
and Robert Wade (Part 3)
Interview - Neal Purvis
and Robert Wade (Part 4)
Interview - Neal Purvis
and Robert Wade (Part 5)