Empire UK

(Chris Devlin) #1

086


“Judi gave a sort of new definition to M” Ralph
Fiennes enthuses well aware of the tough act
he’s in the process of following. “You felt the
power of her. It is an intimidating challenge.”
So what do we make of Lt. Col. Gareth
Mallory ex-British army ex-SAS? He made a
dramatic entrance in Skyfall right enough. From
shifty civil servant to taking a bullet for Dench’s
M to being enthroned in the classic Whitehall
offi ce as the new M wearily squaring off to 007
— an image that sent us back to Connery raising
the hackles of the headmasterly Bernard Lee.
“I guess people might use the term old-
school” Fiennes offers carefully summarising
the fourth offi cial M (after Lee was Robert Brown
then Dench). “Sam was keen to bring back the
offi ce. It is oak-panelled with paintings of naval
battles that sort of thing. He has a certain sort
of style about him. What has not changed is that
Bond is a bit of a rogue and M is frustrated but
appreciates the value of Bond.”
That said despite some familiar banter
(“There is a humour”) akin to the introduction
of Dench in GoldenEye Spectre will depict 007
getting to grips with a new boss. Bond isn’t yet
sure he can even trust Fiennes’ M. The same
Meet MI6’s newly established inner circle goes for Moneypenny Tanner and Q. M has to

win them all over. “There is a good arc for M in
this fi lm” Fiennes refl ects. “For a moment he’s
out of a job and he fi nds his way back. He has
to bond with Bond so to speak.”
All the Craig-era fi lms have attempted to
root the fantastical elements of 007 in current
questions. It’s something that Mendes has honed
in on — setting the derring-do against Realpolitik.
And Spectre fi nds an MI6 chiefl y M’s 00 division
embattled in a post-Snowden era of digital
espionage and data hacking.
“MI6 represents the man on the ground who
has to make contact with his opposition” says
Fiennes the passion rising in his voice. “He has
to put himself in harm’s way in order to do his
job. As opposed to drones and surveillance
and satellites: everything done at arm’s length.”
M will tangle with MI5 in Andrew Scott’s C
a man advocating the supremacy of digital
surveillance. A man who considers not just Bond
but M and the whole of MI6 to be dinosaurs.
“But there is still a place for the 00 division to
go in and do the dirty work” insists Fiennes.
To prove the point without stealing thunder
from 007 M will get out from behind the desk
and into the action. “I am not allowed to do too
much” he laughs “but there is only one scene
in the offi ce.” This included crossing London’s
Westminster Bridge entirely on his own after it
was closed for the production. And then seeing it
rebuilt in perfect replica for as-of-yet unspecifi ed
reasons... A fellow director Fiennes is staggered
how Mendes relishes such vastness. “He loves
detail he is hungry to get in there” he marvels.
“It would scare the fuck out of me.” IN
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