Post

James Bond buzz: who will continue the 007 legacy?

James Bond buzz: who will continue the 007 legacy?

Source: Radio New Zealand (world)

The auditions for the next James Bond have started, firing up the speculation as to who will fill Daniel Craig’s tux and togs.

Auditions for the new 007 have opened, and the reckons have too, though let’s be fair, they haven’t stopped since Daniel Craig hung up his blue swimming togs.

The odds are shortening and at least one audition has already taken place, which displaced the favourite of the last six months, Dua Lipa’s boyfriend Callum Turner, in favour of Tom Francis.

British actor Tom Francis.
British actor Tom Francis.ANGELA WEISS

British actor Tom Francis.

Continuing 007’s substantial legacy

“I’d never heard of him,” says New Zealand entertainment journalist, Kate Rodger.

But he’s a theatre actor with piercing blue eyes and chops on the boards, and at 26 he hasn’t been imprinted with any other fictional characters.

“The casting of this is headline news for months and months – we’re obsessed about it,” Rodger tells The Detail.

“And each time it’s been a recalibration on where is Bond going next?”

Rodger says she’s genuinely excited to see who will get the nod for one of the most iconic screen roles.

“If we think about the franchise, that’s over five decades we’ve been entertained by 007,” she says.

“And the fascination, I don’t think, has waned in that time.”

Craig held the title for 15 years which has added to the obsession over who will take his place.

Rodger says a huge number of people grew up with James Bond, whether it was the movies or the books. Now the franchise has been sold to Amazon which will want some creative control.

“We have an idea or a notion of what Bond is and [Ian] Fleming wrote him as a male character. In my mind I do want Bond to be true to the character – I want him to be male. I think the bigger conversation is, is he reflective of the world we live in now, and does he have to be white?”

Polls show viewers tend to agree: they are not keen on a Jane Bond, but they’re more relaxed on (his) race – and Rodger says she’s ready for a black Bond, her pick being Damson Idris, who stared alongside Brad Pitt in F1: The Movie and is in the Bond conversation.

British actor Damson Idris -
British actor Damson Idris – “phenomenal screen presence”.ANGELA WEISS

British actor Damson Idris – “phenomenal screen presence”.

“He’s got a phenomenal screen presence,” she says.

One absolute requirement for the job, she says, is that you do have to be a good actor.

“Even if we look back through the ages at the hamminess of Roger Moore – and also Pierce [Brosnan] was pretty hammy as well – but of course they could act, and I think the reason this conversation is coming up is purely because I believe that compared to the 70s our audiences … demand more, we’re a little bit more sophisticated … about what we want.”

Roger Moore as James Bond in a scene of Moonraker in 1979.
Roger Moore in Moonraker, 1979.AFP

Roger Moore in Moonraker, 1979.

One of those on the shortlist for the job is Australian Jacob Elordi who played Elvis in Priscilla and who has just won his first Oscar for Frankenstein. (Only one Bond has not been British – another Australian, George Lazenby – and only for one film.)

“The whole notion of Bond is that he’s British-ish,” Rodger says.

Elordi is 28 which puts him in the right age range for producers wanting an actor who can age with the franchise.

Bond buzz: Australian actor Jacob Elordi is in the running.
Bond buzz: Australian actor Jacob Elordi is in the running.Axelle/Bauer-Griffin

Bond buzz: Australian actor Jacob Elordi is in the running.

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin

“The Elordi thing feeds into a whole lot of other conversations around an actor being well known for being an actor, but also because he’s dating a Kardashian, or he’s in Margot Robbie’s Wuthering Heights, or Euphoria for that matter.

“He comes with such a branded kind of CV already that how do we leave the ‘Elordi-ness’ of it all at the door?”

Bond’s casting agents are believed to want a relatively fresh face, which is another reason why the odds on Tom Francis have gone up – he could burst onto the movie scene without any baggage – baggage, for instance, that the people’s overwhelming favourite, Henry Cavill, carries in spades. After all, he’s really Superman.

Check out how to listen to and follow The Detail here. You can also stay up-to-date by liking us on Facebook or following us on Twitter.

Get weekly Life highlights

Our editors pick the best of food, arts, culture and lifestyle. Delivered straight to your inbox every Saturday.

Sign up for the Life newsletter now

The Backrooms: how a teenager’s creepy YouTube series became the year’s most anticipated horror

The horror genre has become one of the most significant areas of overlap between internet creator culture and Hollywood.

Docuseries featuring Kaitaia choir wins two awards at US festival

Filmmaker Leanne Pooley’s Choir Games was praised for its “moving depiction of the uplifting and healing power of music”.

What Kylie Minogue learned from Michael Hutchence and Nick Cave

The Aussie popstar has a new doco landing on Netflix this month, in which she looks back over her long career.

Dame Gaylene Preston’s new film GRACE is the opposite of a Netflix documentary

Gaylene Preston describes GRACE: A Prayer for Peace as a “visual poem” about the career of artist Dame Robin White.

Other Life sections:

Āhua noho/Lifestyle

Whanaungatanga/Relationships