Who will be the next James Bond? Over on X, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos posed the question to his 6 million followers: “Who’d you pick as the next Bond?” Popular answers included a few names that have been bandied about for years,
Amazon has acquired the creative license to the long-running James Bond franchise. But how do they plan to deliver?
For over six decades, the Broccoli family has been as much a part of the James Bond film franchise as vodka martinis (shaken, not stirred, of course), beautiful women and henchmen with terrible aim.
With Amazon MGM Studios gaining creative control of the James Bond franchise, who will emerge as the next 007?
Seeing the James Bond franchise owned by any major corporation is a downer. It felt special to see something as big as 007 still having this small, independent feel because it was family-owned. However,
Uncertainty over the famed franchise has started to take on a new form thanks to Amazon-MGM’s James Bond deal seeing long-time stewards Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson handing over the keys to their family’s kingdom.
The James Bond franchise’s longtime casting director is quitting after a storied career working on 13 of the iconic films. Debbie McWilliams told ScreenDaily she was throwing in the towel just after the franchise rights were sold to Amazon—adding that the company’s filmmaking history “does not fill me with any great enthusiasm.
The former Congressman says Ritchson was "just looking for Hollywood attention" by trashing him in a recent GQ interview The post Matt Gaetz Insists He and ‘Reacher’ Star Alan Ritchson ‘Were Not Adversaries’ After Actor Called Him a ‘Motherf–ker’ appeared first on TheWrap.
In a huge shakeup for the James Bond series, Amazon will take creative control as longtime producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli step back.
A movie star from classic James Bond films warned that the series' acquisition by Amazon MGM may bring changes to the long-running franchise.
In a new interview, Timothy Dalton, who played the infamous agent in “The Living Daylights” (1987) and “License to Kill” (1989), reacted to the news that Amazon MGM Studios gained creative control over the film franchise after producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson announced they would be taking a step back.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results