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Casino Royale -- Spy Anxiety
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Daniel Craig is a different kind of James Bond for a different kind of "007." The new film, Casino Royale, tells the backstory of the young secret agent who ends up with a broken heart. But don't worry, martinis are still shaken, not stirred.

 

 

While many Bond fans remember the debonair grin of Pierce Brosnan and expect gadgets and pyrotechnics, Daniel Craig portrays a side of the secret agent they've never seen before. Craig's tough masculinity, unique poise, and sincerity introduce the early James Bond, telling the previously unknown painful making of the legendary British secret agent.

 

Craig has worked hard for recognition as the sixth James Bond. The unforgiving global media complained he was too blond and too plain, drawing comparisons to Sean Connery and Roger Moore.

 

"It's pressure, but it's good pressure," says the 39-year-old blue-eyed British actor. "The experience of being cast in such an iconic role in film history is exciting and inspiring."

 

This action-packed movie, which has already taken in US$500 million globally, was released in China on Monday. It is the first James Bond film officially allowed to screen at Chinese theaters.

 

The film crew, including director Martin Campbell, Craig, and new Bond temptress Eva Green attended a press conference and chatted with the local audience on Tuesday.

 

Based on the first James Bond novel published by Ian Fleming in 1953, the 21st Bond adventure centers on the hero's first assignment as a "00" agent (00 means "license to kill").

 

He attempts to dismantle an international terrorist network, a mission that leads to a poker showdown with terrorist banker Le Chiffre. The locations include Prague, Venice, London, South Africa, and the Bahamas.

 

Director Campbell, who also introduced Pierce Brosnan in his Bond debut GoldenEye, avoids excessive weaponry. This Bond doesn't showcase the type of high-tech gadgets given to him later in his career by Q. Instead, he uses guns, knives, and more physical forms of combat.

 

"It is actually the first of the 007 movies to reveal the superspy's true origins," he says. "The movie recounts the start of Bond's career. Here Bond is a darker character, which is how Fleming originally wrote him."

 

GoldenEye, in Campbell's eye, is a traditional Bond film in which the spy is a perfect superhero. But in Casino Royale, the script's emotional complexity and the way Bond's character evolves are fresh to Bond fans.

 

"The agent looks tougher, more realistic and very near to the author's vision of Bond," says the director.

 

Unlike the happy endings of most Bond films, this Bond undergoes the painful loss of his lover, a woman for whom he even considered quitting the secret agent business to embark on a new life.

 

"Bond really falls in love this time," Craig says with a grin. "Apart from his courage and strength, we read his sweetness inside. I'm very keen to show people this unknown side. Maybe next time he will appear stronger but with a broken and closed heart."

 

French actress Green appreciates her good fortune in portraying the woman (Bond's lover) who forges the rough-around-the-edges spy into the hardened and seductive type that everyone knows and loves. "Craig presents a sensational, charming and sexy Bond," she says.

 

Bond fans will be pleased to find Craig's performance largely surpasses their expectations. Some say Casino Royale ranks among the best Bond offerings.

 

"Craig makes an impressive debut as the new James Bond, with his macho charisma and cool look," says Minnie Jiang. "He has magnetism and portrays a much more real 007 - sometimes arrogant and incautious, which reminds us that the hero is never a superman."

 

Born in Chester, the son of a steel worker and art teacher, Craig began his film career with The Power of One, a coming-of-age drama by John Avildsen in 1992.

 

He gained recognition in the United States in Sam Mendes' movie Road to Perdition with Tom Hanks as a cunning murderer, in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider with Angelina Jolie, in Sylvia with Gwyneth Paltrow, and in Enduring Love with Rhys Ifans.

 

But none of these pictures required of Craig more time and energy than his Bond debut. To get in shape for the part, he started a rigorous fitness regime. In the movie, the physically imposing actor did much of the action work himself.

 

"After taking every job, you just have to give your life to it," he says. "I committed myself to it during the six-month shooting. If you don't get bruised playing Bond, you're not doing the job properly."

 

Sean Connery is Craig's favorite Bond. Both the "007" film debut of Dr No in 1962 and 1963's From Russia With Love made a great impact on him.

 

"Connery defined the role, for which he was perfect," Craig explains. "He was bad, sexy, animalistic, and cool."

 

Craig is contracted to do two more Bond movies and shooting on the second will begin by the end of next year. He gave no details.

 

Craig is aware that being typecast as Bond could limit his work.

 

"My ambition is to make the movie I like," Craig says. "I'm certainly going to try and get as much out of Bond's aura as I can. This year I will make one or two films out of my personal interest. I just won't stop working."

 

(Shanghai Daily February 2, 2007)

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