Playing James Bond may seem like a glamorous job, what with all the
fancy cars, beautiful women, and exotic locales. But there are hazards
that come with portraying the world's most famous secret agent. Just
ask Quantum of Solace star Daniel Craig, whose array of injuries
incurred during the film's arduous six-month shoot included broken
bones, mangled fingers, and facial lacerations that required plastic
surgery.
With his right arm still confined to a sling thanks to a shoulder
injury he sustained on the Quantum set, Daniel Craig sat down with Reelzchannel to chat about his latest turn as 007.
ReelzChannel: What happened to your arm?
Craig: Who knows? It could have been any number of things that could
have done it. I genuinely don't know. They've put six pins in it. It's
called a "slap tear" and it goes -- 50 percent from the top posterior
all the way around and right into the middle. It's a pain in the ass
because it doesn't heal quickly.
RC: So how much longer will you be in a sling?
Craig: Another six years. (laughs) I'll be probably fit by Christmas
but I won't be able to put any pressure on it -- like hang from a train
or do something stupid like that -- till next year.
RC: Do the physical challenges of the role ever get easier? Is it ever
fun, or is every day on set just another hard day at work?
Craig: It's just incredible, actually. I pinch myself, genuinely. It's
a really good job. I could be doing so many other things apart from
this. And my favorite part of this whole process is the collaboration
with the people I work with. We're working with some of the best people
in the world: the special effects, the stunt people, the director, the
actors, all those things. It's a thrill.
RC: More than any other actor who's portrayed this character, you've
had to delve into the pain associated with being 007. Is that difficult?
Craig: It's not at all difficult. We started off something in Casino
Royale. We had a great storyline, we had a great book, we had a novel
by Ian Fleming that was solid and had a love story in it -- a really
strong love story. And Eva Green played this great part, a wonderful
performance, and when it came around to shooting this movie it was
like, we can't just push that aside. We have to develop that; we have
to tie up the loose ends here. And that's what Quantum of Solace is
about -- it's him finding his quantum of solace. He's not on a
vendetta. He's not after revenge. He's after finding his place. And his
relationships with M and Felix and obviously with Mathis -- and
subsequently with Camille -- in the movie are about solidifying his
place in the world and who his allies are. And I think by the end of
the movie we're sure, and he's Bond, and now we can do whatever we want.
RC: Do you think he can lighten up a little bit now?
Craig: Ah, no. (laughs) I mean, of course we can do anything. But
writing gags for a movie like this is wrong. You can't write gags for a
movie like this; they either come or they don't. We dealt with this in
a way and that is the way the story went, but honestly, the lines and
all the -- not the Bond clichés, but the Bond clichés -- we can put in
as long as we earn them. This is not what this has been about. But
there's a few gags in there. There's some belly laughs in there.
Somewhere.
RC: Have you had any discussions with the producers in terms of a road map of where you'd like to take this character?
Craig: No. We've got so much on our plate just trying to get one movie
out. We've had discussions, but there's never anything nailed down.
Whether Paul Haggis does the next one or we get another writer
involved, we want their ideas. We want their creative input. And to
just say, "This is what we want." -- it puts up barriers. It puts up
walls. We want people with creativity and talent to come in and go,
"I've got a good idea."
RC: You do have something to build on, going after the Quantum organization.
Craig: We could do that. I think that there's definitely room to get
involved with that. We know (Quantum) kind of reaches up into
governments now, so we could take it anywhere.
RC: When you're working on a franchise like this, audiences always
expect the latest episode to be better than the last. Is that the
downside of your line of work?
Craig: It's a high-class problem, to be honest. I think that as long as
we're keeping the product good -- it feels horrible to say that word,
but let's be honest, that's what it is -- keeping the quality up,
keeping the money on the screen, keeping audiences interested. I can't
predict what's going to happen. If we're fighting an uphill battle then
it's time to rethink, but if that's a challenge, then I think it's a
good challenge.
RC: Your director, Marc Forster, is a newcomer to the franchise. Did you have any advice for him?
Craig: I couldn't warn him about how long this could take and how it
would feel when you're three months into it and you realize that you've
got another three months to go. You can't warn somebody about that
because you have to experience it for yourself. He's an incredibly
active director. He is involved at every level. He plans meticulously,
he covers every base, and we did our work before we started. Once we
wound it up and let it go, we'd come on set and we'd talk, but we made
most of the plans about what we wanted to do before we started
shooting. That was a relief, because it meant we could concentrate on
what we were doing.
RC: It seems that Judi Dench's role as M was greatly expanded in both Quantum of Solace and Casino Royale.
Craig: Yeah. It's a great thing to have, because I think (Bond) can
behave misogynistically, badly. He does the things that he shouldn't
do. He's amoral, or morally ambiguous at the very least, and M is his
grounding. She kind of makes it make sense.
RC: What did you think of your costar, Olga Kurylenko?
Craig: She's fantastic. She's done a great job. She was thrown in the
deep end with this. And the part was about somebody on a vendetta,
somebody with a deep past, and they come together – they're a foil for
each other in this because Bond actually isn't on a vendetta. He's
trying to come to terms with losing the love of his life and kill the
bad guys, which obviously goes without saying.
RC: They added the iconic gun barrel sequence, which was absent from
Casino Royale, to the end of this movie. What was it like shooting that?
Craig: Probably that was the scariest bit, if I was being totally
honest. Forget the jumping off buildings and the fires and all that.
That was probably the scariest bit. We did it twice. We did it once and
it didn't work, so we did it again. I just thought, it has to be right
and it has to be aggressive and it has to work.
RC: How many Bond films are you under contract for?
Craig: There's four I'm under contract for. This is the second one.
RC: How do you intend to keep the franchise fresh?
Craig: I just think what we've got to keep doing is inventing new
questions. There are kind of strict guidelines within a Bond movie that
you have to adhere to because it's a Bond movie. We try and do that,
but within the parameters of that you mess it up, you muck it about.
That's been the challenge with this, but that's also been the exciting
thing about doing the film, because it's a really good place to start.
The books were great. Sean Connery set the movies up and has probably
given it the impetus it needed to last so long. The Broccoli and
Saltzman partnership put the money on the screen -- they genuinely did.
They took Bond on location, and they make them stylish, and it's given
this impetus that's lasted this long. They love these movies, they love
this franchise, and they protect it fiercely. It's an unusual
situation, but it's a very exciting situation as far as filmmaking is
concerned.
RC: Is there a sense in your mind that people treat you differently now because you've played James Bond?
Craig: It's worse than ever! No respect. I can't tell you, it's just
dreadful. (laughs) I try not to.... I go home. The only place that
matters to me is my private life, if we're talking about those things.
And I get no respect at home -- of course I don't. My family and my
friends treat me as they've always treated me, and I would want that to
always remain the same. What happens at work and this kind of crazy
world that I'm living in at the moment with the movie coming out and
things, it's showbiz and it's kind of part of the deal. I love it and
hate it and all the things that go along with it, but I want people to
treat me as normally as they can possibly do, and anybody who doesn't,
I feel awkward with. I kind of like say, "Cut the bulls**t; let's
talk." I want to remain like that. I want to stay grounded, man.
(laughs) My private jet's on the runway.
RC: You've managed to avoid being pigeonholed by making films like Defiance, which is getting a lot of awards buzz.
Craig: I'm very pleased with (Defiance). It's come out really well. Ed
(Zwick) has done a really great job. Eduardo Serra, who shot it, has
done a beautiful job, as well. It's quite emotional. It deals with very
important subject matter and it's really a good story that needs
telling.
Источник:
http://www.mi6.co.uk/news/index.php?itemid=6969&t=mi6&s=news