Quantum of Solace (
2008) is the 22nd
James Bond film by
EON Productions and is the direct
sequel to the 2006 film
Casino Royale. Directed by
Marc Forster, it features
Daniel Craig's second performance as
James Bond.
In the film, Bond
battles Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric), a member of the Quantum organisation posing as an
environmentalist who intends to
stage a coup d'état in Bolivia
to take
control of the nation's water supply. Bond seeks revenge for
the death of his lover,
Vesper Lynd
(
Eva Green), and is assisted by
Camille Montes (
Olga Kurylenko), who is also seeking
revenge.
Producer
Michael G. Wilson developed the film's plot while
Casino Royale was being shot.
Neal
Purvis,
Robert Wade,
Paul Haggis, and
Joshua Zetumer contributed to the script. The
title was chosen from a 1960 short story in
Ian Fleming's
For Your Eyes
Only, though the film does not contain any elements of the
original story.
Location filming took place in Panama
, Chile
, Italy
, and
Austria
while interior sets were built and watched at
Pinewood
Studios
. Forster aimed to make a modern film that
also featured classic cinema motifs: a vintage aeroplane was used
for a dogfight sequence, and
Dennis
Gassner's set designs are reminiscent of
Ken Adam's work on several early Bond films. Taking
a course away from the usual
Bond
villains, Forster rejected any grotesque appearance for the
character Dominic Greene to emphasise the hidden and secret nature
of the film's contemporary villains.
The film
premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square
on 29 October 2008, gathering mixed reviews which
mainly praised Craig's gritty performance and the film's action
sequences while feeling that Quantum of Solace was not as
impressive as the predecessor Casino Royale. It is
also the second highest grossing James Bond film, without adjusting
for inflation, making $586,090,727 worldwide, while becoming the
higher grossing Bond film domestically.
Plot
The film
continues immediately after the events of Casino Royale with Bond
driving from Lake
Como
to Siena
, Italy
. With
the captured
Mr. White in the
luggage compartment of his car, Bond is attacked by chasing
henchmen. After evading his pursuers, Bond and
M interrogate White regarding his
organisation,
Quantum. M's
bodyguard, Mitchell, is revealed as a
double agent and a
traitor, attacking M and allowing White to escape;
Bond chases Mitchell across Siena and kills him.
Following a forensic
investigation into Mitchell's apartment back in London
, Bond heads
to Haiti
to track
down and kill Mitchell's contact, Edmund Slate. In carrying
out his objective, Bond learns that Slate was sent to kill
Camille Montes at the behest of her lover,
Dominic Greene, the chairman of an
ecological organization called Greene Planet.
While observing her
meeting with Greene, Bond learns that Greene is helping the
Bolivian
general Medrano – who murdered Camille's family –
overthrow his government in exchange for a seemingly barren piece
of desert.
Greene has Camille escorted away on Medrano's boat to "sweeten"
their deal, but Bond rescues her.
Bond then follows Greene to a private jet,
which flies him to a performance of Tosca at Lake Constance
in Bregenz
, Austria
. Bond
infiltrates Quantum's meeting at the opera, and a gunfight ensues
in a restaurant. A bodyguard of Guy Haines, an advisor to the
British
Prime
Minister, is killed, and M, assuming Bond is the killer, has
his passports and credit cards revoked.
Bond travels to
Talamone, a small Italian town in Maremma
, to reunite
with his old ally René
Mathis. Though less than happy to see Bond, Mathis is
convinced to accompany him to La Paz
. They
are greeted by
Strawberry
Fields, an MI6 field operative from the
British Consulate,
who demands that Bond return to the UK on the next available
flight. Bond disobeys and seduces her in their hotel suite.
Bond meets Camille again at a fund-raiser being held by Greene, and
they leave hastily together, but are pulled over by the Bolivian
police. Not knowing that their chief was working with Medrano, the
policemen had beaten Mathis and put him in the trunk of Bond's car.
The police order Bond to open the luggage compartment of his
vehicle, revealing a bloodied Mathis. As Bond lifts Mathis out of
the vehicle, the policemen open fire and fatally wound Mathis, who
dies in Bond's arms. After Bond subdues the police he deposits
Mathis's body in a waste container, and takes money from his wallet
stating that Mathis wouldn't care. Bond and Camille drive to
Greene's intended land acquisition and survey the area in a
Douglas DC-3 plane. They are
intercepted and shot down by an
Aermacchi SF.260 fighter and a
Bell UH-1
Iroquois helicopter. They escape from
the crippled plane by
parachuting,
landing in a
sinkhole. While escaping the
cave, Bond and Camille discover Quantum is blockading Bolivia's
supply of fresh water, normally flowing in
subterranean rivers, by damming it to
double the price of water. The duo return to La Paz, where Bond
meets M and learns Quantum murdered Fields by drowning her in
crude oil. Believing that Bond has become
a threat to both friend and foe, M orders him to disarm and end his
activities in Bolivia, but he defies her and escapes.
Bond meets
CIA agent
Felix Leiter at a local bar, who
discloses Greene and Medrano will meet at an eco-hotel in the
Bolivian desert. Tipped off by Leiter, Bond evades American special
forces attempting to kill him. Bond then sets out to the hotel
where Greene and Medrano make the change in the Bolivian
leadership. Bond executes the departing Colonel of Police for
betraying Mathis, and sets off a chain of explosions in the hotel
when a
hydrogen fuel tank is hit
by an out of control vehicle. Camille kills Medrano, and Bond
captures Greene. After interrogating him, he leaves Greene stranded
in the middle of the desert with only a can of
motor oil. Bond drives Camille to a train station,
where they kiss before she departs.
Bond goes
to Kazan
, Russia
, where he
confronts Vesper Lynd's former lover,
Yusef Kabira. Yusef is a member of Quantum who seduces
high-ranking women with valuable connections, getting them to give
up government assets as ransom for himself in fake kidnappings
where he is supposedly held hostage.
He is attempting to
do the same with Canadian
agent Corinne Veneau, even giving her the same kind
of necklace he gave Vesper. Surprising them at Yusef's apartment,
Bond tells Corinne about Vesper and advises her to alert the
Canadian Security Intelligence
Service
. As Bond is leaving Yusef's apartment he is
confronted by M, who is surprised that Bond did not kill Yusef, but
rather left him alive for questioning. M reveals that Leiter has
been promoted by the CIA, replacing Beam, and that Greene was found
in the desert, dead with two bullets in the back of his skull and
with motor oil in his stomach. Bond doesn't volunteer any
information on Greene, but tells M that she was right about Vesper.
M then tells Bond that MI6 needs him back and fully reinstates him
as an agent. Bond walks off into the night telling M that he never
left. As he leaves, he drops Vesper's necklace in the snow.
Cast
Daniel Craig as
James Bond, Craig's physical training
for his reprise of the role placed extra effort into running and
boxing, to spare him the injuries he
sustained on his stunts in the first film. Craig felt he was
fitter, being less bulky than in the first film. He also practiced
speedboating and stunt driving. Craig felt
Casino Royale was [physically] "a walk in the park"
compared to
Quantum of Solace, and required a different
performance from him because
Quantum of Solace is a
revenge film, not a love story like
Casino Royale. While
filming in Pinewood, he suffered a gash when kicked in his face,
which required eight stitches, and a fingertip was sliced off. He
laughed these off, noting they did not delay filming, and joked his
finger wound would enable him to have a criminal career (though it
had grown back when he made this comment). He also had minor
plastic surgery on his face. The actor advised
Paul Haggis on the script and helped choose
Marc Forster as the director.
Olga Kurylenko as
Camille Montes, a Russian-Bolivian agent with
her own
vendetta regarding Greene and Medrano.
Forster chose her because out of the 400 women who auditioned, she
seemed the least nervous. When she read the script, she was glad
she had no love scene with Craig because it would have distracted
viewers from her performance. Kurylenko spent three weeks training
to fight with weapons, and she learned a form of indoor skydiving
known as body flying. Kurylenko dislikes stunts, but overcame her
fears because she found Craig helpful.
She was given a DVD
box set of the films since the Bond franchise was not easily
available to watch where she grew up in Ukraine
. Kurylenko found
Michelle Yeoh in
Tomorrow Never Dies inspiring
"because she did the fight scenes by herself." The producers had
intended to cast a South American actress in the role. Kurylenko
trained with a
dialect coach to
perform with a Spanish accent, which was easy as "I have a good
ear, so I can imitate people," and because her accent was not made
heavy. When reflecting on her experience as a Bond girl, she stated
she was most proud of overcoming her fears in performing
stunts.
Mathieu Amalric as
Dominic Greene, a leading member of Quantum
posing as a businessman working in
reforestation and charity funding for
environmental science. Amalric
acknowledged taking the role was an easy decision because, "It's
impossible to say to your kids that 'I could have been in a Bond
film but I refused.'" Amalric wanted to wear make-up for the role,
but Forster explained that he wanted Greene not to look grotesque,
but to symbolise the hidden evils in society. Amalric modelled his
performance on "the smile of
Tony Blair
[and] the craziness of
Sarkozy," the
latter of whom he called "the worst villain we [the French] have
ever had [...] he walks around thinking he's in a Bond film." He
later claimed this was not criticism of either politician, but
rather an example of how a politician relies on performance instead
of a genuine policy to win power. "Sarkozy, is just a better actor
than [his presidential opponent]
Ségolène Royal – that's all," he
explained. Amalric and Forster reconceived the character, who was
supposed to have a "special skill" in the script, to someone who
uses pure animal instinct when fighting Bond in the climax.
Bruno Ganz was also considered for the
part, but Forster decided Amalric gave a pitiful quality.
Judi Dench as
M. Forster felt Dench was underused in the
previous films and wanted to make her part bigger, having her
interact with Bond more because she is "the only woman Bond doesn’t
see in a sexual context," which Forster finds interesting.
Giancarlo Giannini as René
Mathis, Bond's ally who was mistakenly believed to be a traitor in
Casino Royale. Having been acquitted, he chooses to aid
Bond again.
Gemma Arterton as MI6 Agent Strawberry
Fields, who works at the British consulate
in Bolivia
.
Forster found Arterton a witty actress and selected her from 7000
candidates.
One of the casting directors asked her to
audition for the role, having seen her portray Rosaline in
Love's Labour's Lost
at the Globe
Theatre
. Arterton said Fields was "not so
frolicsome" as other Bond girls, but is instead "fresh and young,
not [...] a
femme fatale." Arterton
described Fields as a homage to the 1960s Bond girls, comparing her
red wig to
Diana Rigg, who played
Tracy Bond in
On Her Majesty's Secret
Service. Rigg, alongside
Honor
Blackman, is one of her favourite Bond girls. Arterton had to
film her character's death scene first day on the set. Although she
found the experience unpleasant, she believes the scene will be an
iconic part of the film. The character's first name is never
actually uttered on screen; when Bond asks her for her name, she
replies, "Just Fields."
Jeffrey Wright as
Felix Leiter, Bond's ally at the
CIA. This marked the first time
the same actor played Leiter twice in a row. Only
David Hedison had previously played the
character twice, in
Live and
Let Die (1973) and
Licence
to Kill (1989), but these performances were not
consecutive. Early script drafts gave Leiter a larger role, but his
screentime was restricted by on-set rewrites.
Anatole Taubman as Elvis, Greene's
second-in-command. His name was chosen by Paul Haggis, while
Taubman chose the
bowl cut. Amalric and
Taubman improvised a backstory for Elvis: he is Dominic's cousin
and once lived on the streets before being inducted into Quantum.
He called Elvis "a bit of a goofball. He thinks he's all that but
he's not really. [...] He's not a comic guy. He definitely takes
himself very serious, but maybe by his taking himself too serious
he may become friendly."
David Harbour as Gregg Beam, the CIA
Section Chief for South America and a contact of Felix
Leiter.
Joaquín Cosío as General
Medrano, the exiled general whom Greene is helping to get back into
power, in return for support of his organisation. He is responsible
for the murder of Camille's entire family when she was a young
girl.
Jesper Christensen as Mr. White, whom Bond captured after
he stole the money won at Casino Royale in Montenegro
.
Rory Kinnear as
Bill Tanner, M's aide.
Tim Pigott-Smith as the British
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.
Neil Jackson as Edmund Slate, a
henchman who fights Bond in Haiti.
Simon Kassianides as Yusef, who has a
confrontation with Bond in Kazan
towards the
end ofthe film.
Stana Katic as Corrine Veneau, a Canadian
Intelligence Service
agent.
Glenn Foster as Craig Mitchell, M's
bodyguard and a double agent.
Directors
Guillermo del Toro and
Alfonso Cuarón are friends of
Marc Forster and while filming he asked them to cameo, providing
voices in the Spanish language. Cuarón appears as a Bolivian
helicopter pilot, while del Toro provides several other
voices.
Production
Development
In July 2006, as
Casino Royale entered post-production,
EON Productions announced that the
next film would be based on an original idea by producer
Michael G. Wilson. It was decided beforehand the film
would be a direct sequel, to exploit Bond's emotions following
Vesper's death in the previous film. Just as
Casino
Royale's theme was
terrorism, the
sequel focuses on
environmentalism.
The film was confirmed for a 2 May 2008 release date, with Craig
reprising the lead role.
Roger
Michell, who directed Craig in
Enduring Love and
The Mother, was in negotiations to
direct, but opted out because there was no script. Sony
Entertainment vice-chairman Jeff Blake admitted a production
schedule of eighteen months was a very short window, and the
release date was pushed back to late 2008.
Neal Purvis and
Robert Wade completed their draft
of the script by April 2007, and
Paul
Haggis – who polished the
Casino Royale script – began
his rewrite the next month.
In June 2007,
Marc Forster was
confirmed as director. He was surprised that he was approached for
the job, stating he was not a big Bond film fan through the years,
and that he would not have accepted the project had he not seen
Casino Royale prior to making his decision: he felt Bond
had been humanised in that film, arguing since traveling the world
had become less exotic since the series' advent, it made sense to
focus more on Bond as a character.
Born in Germany and raised in Switzerland
, Forster was the first Bond director not to come
from the British
Commonwealth of Nations, although he noted Bond's mother is
Swiss, making him somewhat appropriate to handle the British
icon. The director collaborated strongly with
Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson,
noting they only blocked two very expensive ideas he had. The
director found
Casino Royale s 144 minute running time too
long, and wanted his follow-up to be "tight and fast [...] like a
bullet."
Haggis, Forster and Wilson rewrote the story from scratch. Haggis
said he completed his script two hours before the
2007–2008
Writers Guild of America strike officially began. Forster noted
a running theme in his films were emotionally repressed
protagonists, and the theme of the picture would be Bond learning
to trust after feeling betrayed by Vesper. Forster said he created
the Camille character as a strong female counterpart to Bond rather
than a casual love interest: she openly shows emotions similar to
those which Bond experiences but is unable to express.
Haggis located his
draft's climax in the Swiss
Alps
, but Forster wanted the action sequences to be
based around the four classical
elements of earth, water, air and fire. The decision to
homage
Goldfinger in
Fields's death came about as Forster wanted to show oil had
replaced gold as the most precious material. The producers rejected
Haggis's idea that Vesper Lynd had a child, because "Bond was an
orphan [...] Once he finds the kid, Bond can't just leave the
kid."
Michael G. Wilson decided on the film's title
Quantum of Solace only "a few days" before its
announcement on 24 January 2008. It was the name of a short story
in
Ian Fleming's anthology
For Your Eyes
Only (1960), although the film is otherwise unrelated.
Daniel Craig admitted, "I was unsure at first. Bond is looking for
his quantum of solace and that's what he wants, he wants his
closure. Ian Fleming says that if you don't have a quantum of
solace in your relationship then the relationship is over. It's
that spark of niceness in a relationship that if you don't have you
might as well give up." He said that "Bond doesn't have that
because his girlfriend [Vesper Lynd] has been killed," and
therefore, "[Bond is] looking for revenge [...] to make himself
happy with the world again." Afterwards, Quantum was made the name
of the organisation introduced in
Casino Royale. Craig
noted the letter Q itself looks rather odd. Near the end of the
film, the Camille Montes character and Bond have a discussion about
their individual quests to avenge the deaths of their loved ones.
Montes asks Bond to "let me know what it feels like" when he
succeeds, the implication of the title being that it will be a
small amount of solace compared to his despair. Bond's lack of
emotion when he does exact revenge shows this to be the case.
During filming, after the strike ended, Forster read a
spec script by
Joshua
Zetumer, which he liked, and hired him to reshape scenes for
the later parts of the shoot, which the director was still
unsatisfied with. Forster had the actors rehearse their scenes, as
he liked to film scenes continually. Zetumer rewrote dialogue
depending on the actors' ideas each day.
Filming
Quantum of Solace was shot in six
countries, Second unit filming began in
Italy at the Palio di
Siena
horse race on 16 August 2007: though at this point
Forster was unsure how it would fit into the film.
Some
scenes were filmed also in Maratea
and Craco
, two little
and characteristics towns in Basilicata. Other places used for
location shooting were Madrid
in August
2007; Baja
California
, Mexico
in early
2008, for shots of the aerial battle; Malcesine
and Limone sul Garda
in Italy during March, and at Talamone during the end of April.
The main
unit began on 3 January 2008, at Pinewood Studios
. The 007 Stage
was used for the fight in the art gallery, and an
MI6 safehouse hidden within the city's cisterns, while other stages housed Bond's Bolivian
hotel suite, and the MI6 headquarters. Interior and exterior
airport scenes were filmed at Farnborough Airfield
and the snowy closing scenes were filmed at the
Bruneval Barracks in Aldershot
.
Shooting
in Panama
City
began on 7 February 2008 at Howard Air
Force Base
. The country doubled for Haiti and Bolivia,
with the
National Institute of
Culture of Panama standing in for a hotel in the latter
country.
A sequence requiring several hundred
extra was also shot at nearby Colón
. Shooting in Panama was also carried out at
Fort
Sherman
, a former US military base on the Colón
coast. Forster was disappointed he could only shoot the boat
chase in that harbour, as he had a more spectacular vision for the
scene. Officials in the country worked with the locals to "minimise
inconvenience" for the cast and crew, and in return hoped the
city's exposure in the film would increase tourism.
The crew was going to
move to Cusco
, Peru
for ten
days of filming on 2 March, but the location was cancelled for
budget reasons. Twelve days of filming in Chile
began on 24
March at Antofagasta
. There was shooting in Cobija
, the Paranal Observatory
, and other locations in the Atacama
Desert
. Forster chose the desert and the
observatory's ESO
Hotel
to represent Bond's rigid emotions, and being on
the verge of committing a vengeful act as he confronts Greene in
the film's climax.

Marc Forster chose the Atacama Desert
to represent Bond's vengefulness in the climax
While
filming in Sierra
Gorda
, Chile, the local mayor, Carlos Lopez, staged a
protest because he was angry at the filmmakers portraying the
Antofagasta region as part of Bolivia, when Chile conquered it in
1883. He was arrested, detained briefly, and put on trial
two days later. EON dismissed his claim that they needed his
permission to film in the area. Michael G. Wilson also explained
Bolivia was appropriate to the plot, because of the country's
history of water problems, and was surprised the two countries
disliked each other a century after the
War of the Pacific. In a poll by Chilean
daily newspaper
La Segunda, 75%
of its readers disagreed with Lopez's actions, due to the negative
image they felt it presented of Chile, and the controversy's
potential to put off productions looking to film in the country in
the future.
From 4–12 April, the main unit shot on Sienese rooftops. Shooting
on the real rooftops turned out to be less expensive than building
them at Pinewood.
The next four weeks were scheduled for
filming the car chase at Lake Garda
and Carrara
. On 19 April, an
Aston Martin employee driving a
DBS to the set crashed into the lake.
He survived, and was fined £400 for reckless driving. Another
accident occurred on 21 April, and two days later, two stuntmen
were seriously injured, with one, Greek stuntman Aris Comninos,
having to be put in intensive care. Filming of the scenes was
temporarily halted so that Italian police could investigate the
causes of the accidents. Stunt co-ordinator Gary Powell said the
accidents were a testament to the realism of the action. Rumours of
a "curse" spread among tabloid media, something which deeply
offended Craig, who disliked that they compared Comninos' accident
to something like his minor finger injury later on the shoot (also
part of the "curse"). Comninos recovered safely from his
injury.
Filming
took place at the floating opera stage
at Bregenz
, Austria
from 28
April–9 May 2008. The sequence, where Bond stalks the
villains during a performance of
Tosca, required 1500 extras. The production used
a large model of an eye, which Forster felt fitted in the Bond
style, and the opera itself has parallels to the film.
A short driving
sequence was filmed at the nearby Feldkirch, Vorarlberg
. The crew returned to Italy from 13–17 May to
shoot a (planned) car crash at the marble quarry in Carrara, and a
recreation of the Palio di Siena at the Piazza del Campo
in Siena. 1000 extras were hired for a scene
where Bond emerges from the
Fonte Gaia.
Originally, he would
have emerged from the city's cisterns at Siena Cathedral
, but this was thought disrespectful. By
June, the crew returned to Pinewood for four weeks, where new sets
(including the interior of the hotel in the climax) were built. The
wrap party was held on 21
June.
Design
Production designer
Peter Lamont, a
crew member on eighteen previous Bond films, retired after
Casino Royale. Forster hired
Dennis Gassner in his stead, having admired
his work on
The Truman Show
and the films of the
Coen brothers.
Craig said the film would have "a touch of
Ken
Adam," while Michael G. Wilson also called Gassner's designs "a
postmodern look at
modernism." Forster said he felt the early Bond
films' design "were ahead of their time," and enjoyed the clashing
of an older style with his own because it created a unique look
unto itself. Gassner wanted his sets to emphasise Craig's "great
angular, textured face and wonderful blue eyes," and totally
redesigned the MI6 headquarters because he felt Judi Dench "was a
bit tired in the last film, so I thought, let’s bring her into a
new world."
Louise Frogley replaced
Lindy Hemming as
costume designer, though Hemming remained as
supervisor. Hemming hired
Brioni for Bond's
suits since her tenure on the series began with 1995's
GoldenEye, but Lindsay Pugh, another
supervisor, explained their suits were "too relaxed."
Tom Ford was hired to tailor "sharper" suits for
Craig. Pugh said the costumes aimed towards the 1960s feel,
especially for Bond and Fields.
Prada provided
the dresses for both Bond girls.
Jasper
Conran designed Camille's casual clothes and gold necklace,
while
Chrome Hearts designed gothic
jewellery for Amalric's character, which the actor liked enough to
keep after filming.
Sophie Harley,
who created Vesper Lynd's earrings and
Algerian
loveknot necklace in Casino Royale, was
called upon to create another version of the necklace.
The film returns to the traditional
gun barrel opening shot,
which was altered into part of the story for
Casino Royale
where it was moved to the end of the title sequence. In this film
the gun barrel sequence was moved to the end of the movie, which
Wilson explained was done for a surprise, and to signify the
conclusion of the story begun in the previous film. The opening
credits sequence was created by
MK12; Having
worked on Forster's
Stranger than Fiction and
The Kite Runner,
MK12 spontaneously began developing the sequence early on in
production, and had a good idea of its appearance which meant it
did not have to be redone when the
title
singer was changed. MK12 selected various
twilight colours to represent Bond's mood and
focused on a dot motif based on the gunbarrel shot.
MK12 also worked on
scenes with graphical user
interface, including the electronic table MI6 use, and the
Port-au-Prince
, Haiti
title
cards.
Effects
Quantum of Solace was the last in
Ford Motor's three-film deal that began
with 2002's
Die Another
Day. Although Ford sold over 90% of the
Aston Martin company in 2007, the
Aston Martin DBS V12 returned for the
film's car chase around Lake Garda;
Dan
Bradley was hired as
second unit
director because of his work on the second and third
Bourne films, so the film
would continue the gritty action style begun in
Casino
Royale. He had intended to use
Ford GTs
for the opening chase, but it was replaced by the
Alfa Romeo 159. After location filming in
Italy, further close-ups of Craig, the cars and the truck were shot
at Pinewood against a bluescreen. Originally three Alfa Romeos were
in the sequence: but Forster felt the scene was running too long
and re-edited the scene so it only looked like two Romeos were
chasing Bond. Six Aston Martins were destroyed during filming, and
one of them was purchased by a fan.
Fourteen
cameras were used to film the Palio di Siena
, footage which was later edited into the main
sequence. Aerial shots using helicopters were banned, and
the crew were also forbidden from showing any violence "involving
either people or animals."
To shoot the foot chase in Siena
in April
2008 four camera cranes were built in the town, and a cable camera was also used. Framestore
worked on the Siena chase, duplicating the 1000
extras during principal photography to match shots of the 40,000
strong audience at the real Palio, removing wires that held Craig
and the stuntmen in the rooftop segment of the chase, and digital
expansion of the floor and skylight in the art gallery Bond and
Mitchell fall into. The art gallery fight was intended to be
simple, but during filming Craig's stunt double accidentally fell
from the construction scaffolding. Forster preferred the idea of
Bond hanging from ropes reaching for his gun to kill Mitchell,
rather than having both men run out of the building to continue
their chase as specified in the script, and the number of effects
shots increased.
To film the aerial dogfight, a "Snakehead" camera was built and
placed on the nose and tail of a
Piper
Aerostar 700.
SolidWorks, who
provided the software used to design the camera, stated "pilots for
the first time can fly as aggressively as they dare without
sacrificing the drama of the shot." The camera could turn 360
degrees and was shaped like a
periscope.
The crew also mounted
SpaceCams on
helicopters, and placed cameras with 1600 mm lenses
underground, to cover the action. Forster wanted to film the
planefight as a homage to
Alfred
Hitchcock's
North by
Northwest, and chose planes like the
Douglas DC-3 to suit that. To shoot a
free-fall scene, Craig disliked the idea of being
blown by a large fan, so stunt co-ordinator Gary Powell suggested
filming the scene in a
vertical
wind tunnel. Seventeen small digital cameras were used to shoot
the scene, while Craig and Kurylenko wore wind-resistant contact
lenses that enabled them to open their eyes as they fell. For
safety, they only shot for thirty seconds at a time.
The wind tunnel shots
served in a manner similar to motion
capture, acting as reference for wind blowing on clothes and
hair on Craig and Kurylenko's digital doubles, created by Double
Negative
. Forster wished he had more time to work on
the free-fall scene.
The
Moving Picture Company
created the climactic hotel sequence. The fire effects were
supervised by
Chris Corbould, and
post-production MPC had to enhance the sequence by making the smoke
look closer to the actors, so it would look more dangerous. A
full-scale replica of the building's exterior was used for the
exploding part Bond and Camille escape from. The boat chase was
another scene that required very little CGI. Double Negative worked
on replacing a few shots of visible stuntmen with a digital version
of Craig's head, and recreated the boats Bond jumps over on his
motorcycle to make it look more dangerous. Crowd duplication was
done for the
Tosca scene by
Machine FX, to make the performance look like it
had sold out. Forster edited the opera scene to resemble
The Man Who
Knew Too Much. In total, there are 900 visual effects
shots in
Quantum of Solace.
Music
David Arnold, who composed the scores
for the previous four Bond films, returned for
Quantum of
Solace. He said that Forster likes to work very closely with
his composers and that, in comparison to the accelerated schedule
he was tied to on
Casino Royale, the intention was to
spend a long time scoring the film to "really work it out." He also
said he would be "taking a different approach" with the score.
Arnold composed the music based on impressions from reading the
script, and Forster edited those into the film. As with
Casino
Royale, Arnold kept use of the
James Bond Theme to a minimum. Arnold
collaborated with
Kieran Hebden for
"Crawl, End Crawl," a remix of the score played during the end
credits.
Jack White of
The White Stripes and
Alicia Keys collaborated on "
Another Way to Die," the first Bond music
duet. They had wanted to work together for two years beforehand.
The song
was recorded in Nashville, Tennessee
; White played the drums while Keys performed on the
piano. The Memphis Horns
also contributed to the track. White's favourite Bond theme is
John Barry's instrumental
piece for
On Her Majesty's
Secret Service, and he watched various opening credit
sequences from the series for inspiration while mixing the track.
Mark Ronson and
Amy Winehouse had recorded a
demo track for the film, but Ronson explained
Winehouse's well-publicised legal issues in the preceding weeks
made her "not ready to record any music" at that time.
Release
The film
premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square
on 29 October 2008. Princes
William and
Harry of Wales attended, and proceeds
from the screening were donated to the charities
Help for Heroes and
the Royal British Legion. The film
was originally scheduled to be released in the UK and North America
on 7 November; however, EON pushed forward the British date to 31
October during filming, while the American date was pushed back in
August to 14 November, after
Harry Potter and
the Half-Blood Prince had been moved to 2009, thereby
allowing the distributors to market the film over the Fall
blockbuster
Thanksgiving holiday
weekend. In Australia, the film was moved a week to 19 November,
after
20th Century Fox chose to
release
Australia on
Quantum of Solace s original date of 26 November.
Editing
After the first screening, Forster cut out a minute-long coda to
the film's ending where Bond encounters
Mr. White again. The director left it
out to give the next film's director a chance to tell his own
story, as including the scene would have forced them to make
Bond 23 another direct sequel. The catchphrase "Bond,
James Bond" was also cut out, marking only the third time that Bond
does not introduce himself with the line. It was shot for several
different scenes but was completely cut out as Forster and the
producers found it unnecessary. Forster also convinced the
producers not to edit in flashbacks of the previous film as he felt
it would look odd in a direct sequel.
Marketing
Returning
product placement
partners from
Casino Royale included
Ford,
Heineken Pilsener,
Smirnoff,
Omega SA,
Virgin Atlantic Airways and
Sony Ericsson. A reported £50 million
was earned in product placement, which tops the Bond film's record
of £44 million for
Die Another Day. The 2009
Ford Ka is driven by Camille in the film.
Avon created a fragrance called Bond Girl 007
with
Gemma Arterton as the "face" of
the product.
Coca-Cola became a
promotional partner, rebranding
Coke Zero
as "Coke Zero Zero 7." A tie-in advert featured the orchestral
element of "Another Way to Die." In the film, Coca-Cola was briefly
seen being served at Dominic Greene's party. Sony held a
competition, "Mission for a Million," enabling registered players
to use their products to complete certain tasks. Each completed
"mission" gives consumers a chance to win $1 million and a trip to
a top secret location.
Corgi International
Limited made 5-inch action figures and gadgets (such as a
voice-activated briefcase), as well as their traditional
die-cast toy vehicles. They also created 7-inch
figures of characters from the previous films.
Scalextric released four racing sets to coincide
with the film.
Activision released their
first James Bond game, also titled
Quantum of Solace, which
is based on both
Casino Royale and
Quantum of
Solace. It is the first
Bond
game to feature Craig's likeness and the first
seventh
generation console game in the series.
Swatch designed a series of wrist watches, each of
them inspired by a Bond villain.
Though there was no
novelisation
despite its original storyline,
Penguin
Books published a compilation of Fleming's short stories
entitled
Quantum of Solace: The Complete James Bond Short
Stories, with a UK release date of 29 May 2008 and a North
American release date of 26 August 2008. The book combines the
contents of Fleming's two short story collections,
For Your Eyes
Only—including the original "Quantum of Solace" short
story—and
Octopussy and The Living
Daylights.
The November/December 2008 issue of
Cigar Aficionado was a special James Bond
edition written by
David Giammarco,
noted author of
For
Your Eyes Only: Behind the Scenes of the James Bond Films, and
featured an extensive 20-page feature on the making of "Quantum of
Solace" from his exclusive interviews on location with Daniel
Craig, Gemma Arterton, Olga Kurylenko, Mathieu Amalric, director
Marc Forster, and producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson.
This tribute issue of the upscale magazine also featured
Giammarco's in-depth profile of 007 author Ian Fleming and the
46-year history of the James Bond films. The
Cigar Aficionado James Bond special edition
became the magazine's biggest-selling issue around the world.
Reviews
Reviews for
Quantum of Solace have been mixed to positive.
Of the 238 reviews listed on
Rotten
Tomatoes, 65% are positive, with an average rating of 6.1/10.
However, only 32% of selected notable reviewers gave it a positive
write-up, with an average rating of 5.5/10.
Metacritic calculated a score of 58 out of 100
from 38 reviews, indicating a "mixed or average" response. Critics
generally preferred
Casino Royale, but continued to praise
Craig's depiction of Bond, and agree that the film is still an
enjoyable addition to the series. The action sequences and pacing
were praised, but criticism grew over the serious and gritty feel
that the film carried over.
Roger Moore, the third actor to play
Bond in the films, continued to feel Craig was a "damn good Bond
but the film as a whole, there was a bit too much flash cutting
[and] it was just like a commercial of the action. There didn't
seem to be any geography and you were wondering what the hell was
going on."
Kim Newman of
Empire gave it 4/5, remarking it was
not "bigger and better than
Casino Royale, [which is]
perhaps a smart move in that there's still a sense at the finish
that Bond’s mission has barely begun." However, he expressed
nostalgia for the more humorous Bond films.
The Sunday Times review noted that
"[f]ollowing
Casino Royale was never going to be easy, but
the director Marc Forster has brought the brand’s successful
relaunch crashing back to earth — with a yawn"; the screenplay "is
at times incomprehensible" and the casting "is a mess." The review
concludes that "Bond has been stripped of his iconic status. He no
longer represents anything particularly British, or even modern. In
place of glamour, we get a spurious grit; instead of style, we get
product placement; in place of
fantasy, we get a redundant and silly realism."
The Guardian gave a more
positive review, rating it as 3/5 stars, and was particularly fond
of Craig's performance, saying he"made the part his own, every inch
the coolly ruthless agent-killer, nursing a broken heart and coldly
suppressed rage" and calling the film "a crash-bang Bond, high on
action, low on quips, long on location glamour, short on product
placement"; it concludes "
Quantum of Solace isn't as good
as
Casino Royale: the smart elegance of Craig's Bond debut
has been toned down in favour of conventional action. But the man
himself powers this movie; he carries the film: it's an indefinably
difficult task for an actor. Craig measures up."
Screen Daily says
"Notices will focus - rightly - on Craig's magnetism as the steely,
sexy, murderous MI6 agent, but two other factors weigh in and
freshen up proceedings: Forster's new technical team, led by
cinematographer Roberto Schaefer and production designer Dennis
Gassner. And the ongoing shift of M, as played by Judi Dench, to
front and centre: the Bond girls fade into insignificance as she
becomes his moral counterpoint and theirs is the only real
relationship on screen." The review continues, "Bond is, as has
been previously noted, practically the
Martin Scorsese of the
BAFTAs: 22 films later, with grosses probably close to
the
GDP of one of the small nations it depicts,
it's still waiting for that
Alexander
Korda award. The best
Casino Royale could achieve was
a gong for sound. Will this be the year that changes its
fortunes?"
Roger Ebert of
The Chicago Sun-Times, who
praised the previous film, disliked
Quantum of Solace. He
wrote that the plot was mediocre, characters weak and that Bond
lacked his usual personality, despite his praise for Craig's
interpretation of the role. Throughout his review, he emphasised
that "James Bond is not an action hero," and also criticised the
lack of a fantastical villainous lair and the Bond girls' names not
being
double entendres.Some writers
criticised the choice of
Quantum of Solace as a title.
"Yes,
it's a bad title," wrote Marni Weisz, the editor of
Famous, a Canadian
film publication distributed in movie theatres in
that country, in an editorial entitled "At least it's not
Octopussy."
An article published by the
Independent Film Channel remarked
the contrast between
Quantum and
Casino Royale s
reception came about because the American mood had been lightened
following the election of US President
Barack Obama, and the emotional Bond who
recognises his moral ambiguity had become inappropriate to
audiences.
Box office
Upon its opening in the UK, the film grossed £4.9 million ($8
million), breaking the record for the largest Friday opening (31
October 2008) in the UK. The film then broke the UK opening weekend
record, taking £15.5 million ($25 million) in its first weekend,
surpassing the previous record of £14.9 million held by
Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire. It earned a further £14.2
million in France and Sweden – where it opened on the same day –.
The weekend gross of the equivalent of $US10.6 million in France
was a record for the series, surpassing what
Casino Royale
made in five days by 16%. The $US2.7 million gross in Sweden was
the fourth-highest opening for a film there.
The following week, the film was playing in sixty countries. It
grossed the equivalent of $US39.3 million in the UK, $US16.5
million in France and $US7.7 million in Germany on 7 November 2008.
The film broke records in Switzerland, Finland, United Arab
Emirates, Nigeria, Romania and Slovenia. Its Chinese and Indian
openings were the second largest ever for foreign-language
films.
The film
grossed $27 million on its opening day in 3,451
theatres in Canada
and the
United
States
, where it was the #1 film for the weekend, with
$US67.5 million and $US19,568 average per theatre. It was
the highest-grossing opening weekend Bond film in the US, and tied
with
The Incredibles for
the biggest November opening outside of the
Harry Potter series. The
film earned a B- from
CinemaScore's
audience surveys. From the 31 October British opening through to
the November 14 US opening weekend, the film had grossed a total
$US319,128,882 worldwide. As of 19 March 2009, it has grossed the
equivalent of $US417,722,300 in countries other than Canada and the
U.S.A., where it grossed $US168,368,427, to give a total of
$US586,090,627.
Awards
The film was nominated for Best Original Score, Best Original Song,
Visual Effects, Film and Sound Editing at the 2008
Satellite Awards, winning Best Song. It was
nominated for Best Action Movie at the 2009
Critics' Choice Awards, and at the
Empire Awards, which is voted for by
the public, it was shortlisted for Best Actor, Best Actress, Best
Newcomer, Best Thriller and Best Soundtrack. It was nominated for
the
Saturn Award for Best
Action/Adventure/Thriller Film, while Kurylenko and Dench were both
nominated for the Best Supporting Actress award. An editorial by
The Times also listed the film's
pre-titles sequence as the tenth greatest car chase in film
history.
Home media
Quantum of Solace was released by Sony Pictures
entertainment
DVD and
Blu-ray in Australia, the UK and North America from
18 to 24 March 2009. At the DVD sales chart the film opened at #3,
grossing $21,894,957 from 1.21m DVD units sold. As of November 1,
2009 2,643,250 DVD units have been sold, generating $44,110,750 in
sales revenue. These figures do not include Blu-ray sales or DVD
rentals. They released the DVD in a standard one disc set and a
deluxe two disc special edition. There are no audio commentaries or
deleted scenes on these editions.
Like
Casino
Royale, no book adaptation of the movie was released
despite having no relations with the short story except for its
title. Instead,
Penguin Books released
Quantum
of Solace: The Complete James Bond Short Stories which is
a compilation of both
Octopussy and The Living
Daylights and
For Your Eyes
Only, both written by
Ian
Fleming.
References
Notes
- " Bond girl Olga Kurylenko introduces Ford Ka at
Paris Motor Show (video)," MI6.co.uk (2008-03-10). Retrieved on
2008-11-08.
- Amazon.co.uk listing. Retrieved 28 June 2008.
- Amazon.com listing, accessed 24 May 2008
- Review by Roger Ebert, November 12, 2008
- Marni Weisz, "At least it's not Octopussy," Famous,
October 2008, p. 6
Bibliography
- Bond on Set: Filming Quantum of Solace, Greg Williams,
DK ADULT (October 20, 2008), ISBN 0756641209
External links