Empire UK

(Chris Devlin) #1
and a root in Fleming.” That root can be
tracedback to Octopussy the original
Fleming short story in which a man
called Hannes Oberhauser is referenced
by Bond almost as afather figure. After
all once his parents died Bond had to
gosomewhere. Why not into thecare of
Hannes Oberhauser?And does that mean
Franz Oberhauser is the son of Hannes
and effectively Bond’s ‘step-brother’? If
Oberhauser really is the author of Bond’s
pain Chapter One may have started
early possibly with well-timed wedgies.
“In Skyfall we got to Bond age 12
when his parents died but what happened
after that?” asks Mendes. “What
happened during his adolescence? It’s
a kind of retrospective creation story
in a way. When you looked at the surface
of Skyfall it felt like an ending. But
it was a new beginning on so many
levels. It felt like there were all these
threads to pull so let’s pull them.”
Let’s assume then that Waltz is not

Blofeld. So much so in fact that he
perhaps should have been called Not
Blofeld. But rumours are pests and there
are still cynics convinced Eon is hiding
its glorious bastard in plain sight; that
despite all the denials Waltz is playing
Blofeld after all. This is known as
Pulling A John Harrison after the wildly
complex efforts to mask the fact that
Benedict Cumberbatch’s Star Trek Into
Darkness villain was actually Khan
a decision that contributed to some of
the fan fury heaped upon that movie.
“Why was there a backlash?” asks
Mendes whenEmpirebrings this up.
We venture that fans may have felt
tricked maybe even lied to. “But there’s
a narrative as well” he counters. “The
naming of a character is part of a story.
The audience cannot and should not
be given — and I’m not confirming or
denying anything — information that the
characters do not have. And preserving
tension in the narrative of a story that
is a riff or an acknowledgement of the
iconography of Bond over the years has
been crucial. Otherwise you are taking
an audience out of the narrative before
it’s even begun.”
Just talking about Blofeld is tricksy.
Mendes could be forgiven for banning

the mere mention of the B-word on set.
“The B-word!” he snorts. “No we
talk about it all the time. It’s the great
figure from the Bond vault as it were.
There was this big spectre hanging over
the movie and the franchise which is
Blofeld and what happened to the
supervillain.” He chuckles. “That’s
all I’m going to say.”
So Oberhauser is a supervillain
smart and sinister enough to lure
Bond to the MI6 building where they’ll
have a very intense confrontation. For
some filmmakers the presence of a
supervillain and the fun to be had from
pure unrestrained id can sometimes
lead to the hero being overshadowed
or ignored. Mendes insists that with
Spectre the focus will remain on the
most important B-word of them all.
“In Skyfall Bond is playing catch-
up the whole time” says Mendes. “Here
it’s a totally different story. Here he
has to drive the movie.” And Bond’s

investigation will throw up some
interesting revelations... “There’s
some big stuff the movie is moving
towards” teases Mendes. “There are
depth charges you hopefully don’t
see coming.”
While the director was keen to spare
Bond a “psychological”ordeal this time
around there’s no question that as 007
flits between London Mexico Morocco
Austria and Rome (sadly Chris Corbould’s
house will not feature in the movie) his
ordeal will be physical. Craig ’s Bond has
already sustained bullets to the body
and blows to the balls but Spectre will
really dole out the damage including
a train fight with Dave — sorry David
— Bautista’shulking henchman Mr.
Hinx that is deliberately redolent of
the Connery/Robert Shaw dust-up in
From Russia With Love. “It’s a different
kind of style of fight a different kind of
antagonist” says Mendes. “There are
challenges and lots of situations in the
movie where you think ‘How on earth is
he going to get out of this?’” The author
of Bond’s pain laughs. “It’s a pretty dark
place.” James Bond will return...?

SPECTRE IS OUT ON OCTOBER 26 AND WILL
r$)"3-*&(3": BE REVIEWED IN A FUTURE ISSUE.


00-LEGEND
MEET DEBBIE McWILLIAMS
BOND’S SECRET WEAPON

“WE HAVE BOXES OF THEM” SAYS 007 CASTING


guru Debbie McWilliams about the snapshots of
blokes in ill-fi tting tuxes she receives on an almost
daily basis. “Every man on Earth seems to think he
is James Bond. It’s fascinating but a bit trying when
you want to get on with the job.”
McWilliams has been OHMSS since For Your Eyes
Only and is the series’ unsung hero. Due to Bond’s
unique demands she is brought in far earlier than
the norm partly to fi nd one of the most important
ingredients of the Bond mix — the female foil. This
is partly because Casino Royale started shooting
without a Vesper Lynd in place — “It was absolutely
terrifying; sleepless nights” — and partly due to the
demands of Sam Mendes. “Having Sam as a director
is a bit of a game changer. Obviously from a Bond
point of view they have to be gorgeous. But for Sam
that’s not enough. He’s more concerned with the
acting than anything else.”
From Mads Mikkelsen to Bérénice Marlohe
(above) McWilliams is renowned for fi nding fantastic
international actors mainstream audiences haven’t
seen before often by scouring fi lm festivals or
a network of foreign fi eld agents who tip her off
to fresh talent. For Spectre Stephanie Sigman
(Estrella) came through her Mexican contacts and
she found Alessandro Cremona (Marco Sciarra) on
a recce to Rome. Léa Seydoux represents another
strand of McWilliams’ genius — her ability to see
through the jitters.
“Léa was beside herself with nerves when she
came in for her audition” says McWilliams. “She
went pink. She couldn’t remember her words. But
she came back the next day and absolutely nailed
it.” McWilliams’ work is a prime example of the Bond
Effect the unerring ability the franchise has to transform
the lives of those who touch it. “It’s shone a light on
some people” she says modestly. “I’m thinking of
Gemma Arterton and Rosamund Pike — they’d done
virtually nothing when we cast them. I think everyone
loves to say they’ve been in a James Bond fi lm.
Everyone wants to be in another one. Usually they’ve
been bumped off so they can’t.” IAN FREER

“There are depth


charges you don’t


see coming.” Sam Mendes

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