Veteran actor Sir Roger Moore regrets missing the opportunity to share the silver screen with his friend/actress Audrey Hepburn.
The former James Bond had been acquainted with the late ”Breakfast At Tiffany’’s” star during a UNICEF charity work.
“Audrey and I were neighbours in Switzerland. So it was because of our friendship that she called me and [...]
Posts Tagged ‘James Bond’
Sir Roger Moore wanted to make movie with pal Audrey Hepburn
13 Most Dangerous Movie Stunts Done Without Stunt Doubles
If Hollywood is known for one thing, it would be how faked everything is. Movies sets are reduced to green screens, props, and some great acting. Today, stunts have been made to look real by professionals sitting behind a computer editing film for hours on end – but the art of the stunt has not been completely forgotten by some actors that feel the need to put themselves in harm’s way to make a great performance.
Sir Roger Moore advises fans to learn to check own pulse
Veteran actor Sir Roger Moore has advised his fans to learn to check their own pulse, as it can be helpful in discerning irregular heartbeat.
The 82-year-old actor collapsed on stage a few years ago because of the medical condition known as arrhythmia.
“People should know their pulse as they would their weight. If I had been [...]
Zac Efron wants to play baddie in a James Bond movie
Hollywood heartthrob Zac Efron is keen to play a villain in a James Bond movie.
The 22-year-old ‘High School Musical’ star loves the series of films and wants a role in the next addition in the franchise, which currently stars Daniel Craig as the lead.
“I”m a huge James Bond fan. I”d love to be a Bond [...]
Mel Gibson missed Bond role because he was ‘too short’
Mel Gibson wanted to play the coveted role of James Bond but was turned down by legendary 007 producer Cubby Broccoli, scriptwriter Tom Mankiewicz has revealed.
Speaking at a Bond convention in Los Angeles, Mankiewicz, who scripted Live And Let Die and The Man With The Golden Gun, said Gibson’s 5ft 9in frame took him out [...]
Nuclear Bunker Becomes High Tech Green Data Center
With going green and saving money all the rage these days we wanted to show you just how high-tech and green a data center can actually be. Not to mention that it literally looks like it came straight out of a James Bond film. This is video of a former nuclear bunker, codenamed Pionen White Mountains, located in solid bedrock in central Stockholm 30 meters below ground, that hosts a state-of-the-art data center facility spread over 1,110 sqm. With greenhouses, waterfalls, German submarine engines, simulated daylight and 40 cm thick entrance doors.
– Video Content….
James Bond & Wolverine revive Broadway!
In this crumbling economy, it’s tough to put together a Broadway play that can survive, let alone turn a profit. To create such a show, you would need more than just a man. You would need a hero.
Hey, why not two?
A Steady Rain, the Broadway play starring Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman (James Bond and [...]
Tito’s playground
Former Yugoslavia under the late communist dictator Marshall Tito never fitted the Soviet template for its satellite states. Rebuked by Moscow for being "too independent" he was courted by statesmen, royalty and celebrities from all over the world, and whenever they visited him, they were entertained in decidedly un-Communist manner, as Frank Partridge discovered.

From the holiday coast of north-west Croatia, it is a 20-minute ferry ride to Brijuni, an archipelago of 14 islands that for the last 30 years of Josip Broz Tito’s extraordinary life became his private playground.
Tito would spend up to six months of the year on the islands, gardening, fishing and enjoying a lifestyle of luxury unimaginable to most of his people, if they had ever known about it.
But most did not because the islands were closed to all but their leader’s coterie of hand-picked staff and labourers and a guest-list of glitterati that an American president would have found hard to match.
And if word did slip out about Tito’s banquets and parties, there was no public indignation.
Playboy president
Most Yugoslavs liked the idea of their president cutting a dash for the cameras, kitted out in double-breasted suits from New York’s Fifth Avenue and smoking fat cigars in the company of world leaders.
"Tito would spend up to six months of the year on the islands, gardening, fishing and enjoying a lifestyle of unimaginable luxury"
The most head-turning exhibit in the island’s museum is a picture gallery of visiting VIPs, smiling in the company of the handsome, charismatic leader whose statesmanship and force of personality postponed the inevitable disintegration of the Balkan states for 40 years.
There is Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, visiting in 1954; Nasser of Egypt and Nehru of India, two years later, signing the declaration that spawned the Non-Aligned Movement that thrives today, with more than 100 member nations.
There is Queen Elizabeth II, paying a visit in 1972, Chancellor Willy Brandt of West Germany in 1973 and King Hussein of Jordan in 1978.
But Tito took his pleasures seriously too. He had a circle of famous and glamorous friends, among them Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, Sophia Loren, Gina Lollobrigida.
Gandhi’s elephants
And many beautiful women came to Brijuni on private visits unrecorded by the official photographer.
Tito would collect them from the boat in his 1950s Cadillac, a gift from President Dwight Eisenhower, and drive them to one of four sprawling villas tucked away in the woods.
Four years after Tito’s death in 1980, the wider public was admitted to Brijuni for the first time since an outbreak of malaria had led to its evacuation hundreds of years earlier.
An Austrian industrialist had bought the islands in 1893, hired a Nobel Prize-winning bacteriologist to remove the mosquitoes, and turned the main island into an exotic retreat for himself and his friends.

Fresh water and electricity were brought in, and he transformed the landscape with villas, lawns and gardens, sub-tropical trees and shrubs, a zoo, the first 18-hole golf course in continental Europe, and even a casino.
By the time Tito discovered Brijuni in the late 1940s, the Depression, Italian rule and the war had taken their toll, but he declared the islands his official summer residence and set about recreating their former splendour.
The villas were updated, the zoo became a safari park with animals donated by heads of state, including Shetland ponies from the British Queen and two elephants from Indira Gandhi.
Herds of fallow deer roamed around the parkland, keeping down the grass on the golf course.
Today, the main island is a national park, and a toy-town train shuttles tourists around the sights.
The government-owned villas, hardly used now, are still polished and cleaned every day.
In Tito’s favourite, Villa Bijela, they preserved his basement gym, with its empty swimming pool, antiquated whirlpool and sauna.
Villa Jadranka is notable for its Japanese art and scrolls, Villa Brianka is done out in Argentine marble and exotica from other friendly, non-aligned nations.
Bond lair
But nothing compares with the fourth villa, Tito’s "secret jewel", hidden from all but his inner circle.
It lies on the neighbouring island of Vanga, which is strictly out of bounds unless visitors are granted a special permit by the authorities in Zagreb.
Brandishing my permit, I was delivered to Vanga’s jetty by a fast speedboat, where I was met and shadowed by a burly, silent guard in full military fatigues, looking absurdly out of place amidst the sub-tropical vegetation and the soothing sound of the waves and breeze.

Tito’s glassy, open-plan villa on Vanga is shielded from view by a bamboo plantation.
Inside, the brilliant white walls, futuristic furniture and splashy artwork, including a Picasso, is so 1960s it could be the villain’s lair in a James Bond movie.
The lone caretaker is a Communist-style babushka with scraped-back hair and without a scrap of make-up.
But her countenance softened when I asked her if she could still sense Tito’s presence. "Yes," she replied. "I feel it every day."
In the grounds, there are plantations of oranges and mandarins, and a vineyard laid out by Tito in 1956, from vines donated by South Africa and South America, from which several varieties of wine are produced for the very occasional visitors.
As I sipped on a glass of 2008 Malvazia, I drank in the beauty and tranquillity of this magical place, and considered just how wrong we were about the Communists.
Or one of them, at least.
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Mark Hartley: Welcome to the Wild World of Ozploitation
No matter what you think of the Australian films featured in Not Quite Hollywood, these Ozploitation masters had celluloid running through their veins.
Harry Smith: Just a Minute: Beer Profiling
As the big summit meeting at the White House draws closer, I’m wondering what we can learn from the beer preferences of Henry Louis Gates and James Crowley.
Winehouse’s ex Fielder-Civil blames her for wrecking Bond theme
Troubled singer Amy Winehouse’s ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil has blamed her excessive drink and drug-taking for wrecking her chance of recording the latest James Bond theme.
Winehouse was to team up with superproducer Mark Ronson to record a track for last year’’s ‘Quantum of Solace’, but the collaboration had to be dropped with Ronson insisting the singer [...]
Didn’t refuse bond girl role:Megan Fox
Megan Fox give notice to reports that she rejected an role to star in the about to appear James Bond flick.Claiming she’s huge fan of the action franchise.
As the part was not big enough in the next 007 moviethats why ‘transformer beauty’bring it to stop an offer which is with Daniel Craig.
However,a spokeperson [...]
Spies like them

From Ian Fleming to John Le Carre – authors have long been fascinated by the world of espionage. But, asks the BBC’s Gordon Corera, what do real life spooks make of fictional spies
Much of what the public knows about the UK’s Secret Service, or MI6, comes from the world of fiction – whether Ian Fleming’s James Bond or John Le Carre’s George Smiley.
FIND OUT MORE…- MI6: A Century in the Shadowsis a three-part series for BBC Radio 4
- The first episode, Gadgets and Green Ink, will be broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Monday 27 July at 0902 BST
- Orlisten againvia iPlayer
The intertwining of fact and fiction dates back to the birth of the British intelligence service. In the early years of the 19th Century, the British public was whipped into a frenzy of "spy mania" driven by novelists and newspapers.
It was an era in which the UK was fearful of the rise of Germany and particularly its navy.
William Le Queux wrote the novel, The Invasion of 1910, which was serialised in the Daily Mail. The paper took care to adjust the invasion route the Germans were supposed to take in order to include the towns where its circulation was highest.
There was a widespread belief that the Germans were everywhere, posing as waiters and barbers, stealing secrets and preparing for war. Public pressure grew to do something and so a Secret Service Bureau was established. One half, which would become MI5, was designed to hunt for German spies. The other, which would become MI6, was to steal German secrets.
Older mythology
Even at that early stage, fiction was rubbing off on the real world of espionage, says Alan Judd, the biographer of Sir Mansfield Cumming, who was the first head of what became MI6.
"Le Queux knew some of the people in the War Office, I had no doubt that he had some influence on it all – certainly the culture and the climate," says Judd.

But the mythology created by fiction may have gone back even further, to the era of the Great Game – the battle between the British and Russian empires for supremacy of Central Asia, which began in the early 19th Century.
Britain had no professional spying service at the time, just the occasional gentleman amateur and soldier. But their stories were written up for the public, most dramatically in Rudyard Kipling’s Kim.
These forerunners of the professional spy "did some very brave things" says Sir Colin McColl, MI6′s chief between 1989 and 1994.
"And so there was a sort of general feeling that this was a good thing done by brave people. And that was followed by a whole series of authors in the first part of the 20th Century – [John] Buchan and so on. I mean terrific stuff."

The fiction created a romanticism around spies which attracted many people to work for the service.
Among them was Daphne Park, who joined in the 1940s and rose to become a controller at MI6.
"I suppose it did start with reading [Rudyard Kipling's] Kim, reading John Buchan and reading Sapper and Bulldog Drummond and I think from a quite early age I did want to go into intelligence. I didn’t know what kind or how it would be. But I always wanted it."
As well as attracting individuals to sign up for desk jobs, the daring antics of fictional spies also helped MI6 in its core work of recruiting agents – people willing to spy for the service and pass on secrets.
"There have been a lot of people with whom we’ve dealt across the world… [that] have come to us or worked with us because they felt we knew far more than anybody else knew," says Sir Colin.

And much of the world knows MI6 though the man known as 007. James Bond’s creator Ian Fleming never served in MI6 but he did work in naval intelligence during World War II and modelled Bond on a number of real life intelligence officers.
His creation – particularly once it moved to cinema – has done much to define public perceptions of MI6, although the real chief is called C not M. Egyptian intelligence services reportedly bought up copies of Fleming’s books to use on their training courses.
So do people think it is like Bond
"They usually do," says Sir Colin. "[But] no it isn’t you see… we were not in the business of going out and shooting people down dark allies. That was a completely different world."
But Bond still has his uses. "Everybody watches Bond. And so why shouldn’t a little bit of Bond rub off on our reputation," says Sir Colin. "If you looked at the number of people who helped us at any one time, a large number of them were Brits who were doing it for nothing – perhaps a bottle of whisky at Christmas. You know we had wonderful support and that is hugely valuable… based on the reputation."
However, Fleming’s character seems to have made less of an impression on the Russians, according to former KGB colonel Mikhail Lyubimov.

"Bond was never considered to be a serious film in the KGB," says Mr Lyubimov, curtly.
The other figure who has done much to shape the public understanding of MI6 is John le Carre. The portrayal of often flawed characters draws a mixed reception from real life spies.
"I mean there were two feelings I think in the service over the years," explains Sir Colin McColl. "There were those who were furious with John Le Carre because he depicts everybody as such disagreeable characters and they are always plotting against each other and so on… So people got rather cross about that.
"But I thought it was terrific because, again, it carried the name that had been provided by Bond and John Buchan and everybody else, it gave us another couple of generations of being in some way special."
Ms Park, it’s fair to say, is not a fan.
"He dares to say that it is a world of cold betrayal. It’s not. It’s a world of trust. You can’t run an agent without trust on both sides." Le Carre, who served briefly in MI5 and MI6, declined to be interviewed.
As the British Secret Service has come out of the shadows, some of the myth and mystery has certainly disappeared. Some insiders believe this is inevitable and for the best, laying to rest some of the crazier ideas about the world of MI6.
But there are a few, all the same, who may rather miss it.
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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Face value: Flush with ambition
Can Kunio Harimoto convert the rest of the world to the charms of the Japanese lavatory?
IT IS the Lamborghini of lavatories, the Cadillac of commodes. With its sleekly sculpted basin, high-tech control panel, automatic lid, heated seat and built-in bidet, the “Neorest” is the sort of lavatory that would surely be used by James Bond. Or so Kunio Harimoto, the boss of Toto, believes.
Toto, based in Japan, is one of the biggest bathroom- and kitchen-ceramics companies in the world. It earns around YEN500 billion ($5 billion) a year, over one-third of that from lavatories and related accessories alone. It is best known for its “Washlet” range including the Neorest, which in addition to all its other functions hides odours and plays sounds like running water or birdsong to drown out embarrassing noises. Introduced in 1980, such sophisticated lavatories have become a national institution, found in 70% of Japanese homes. Until recently more households had one than had a computer. Toto, as the market leader and technological pioneer, sells 1.5m of them a year. …
Megan Fox Bond Girl Snub
Megan Fox isn’t interested in becoming the next Bond girl.
The 23-year-old bombshell was being courted by producers to play one of the suave British spy’s conquests, but turned down the part because she didn’t believe it would have a positive impact on her career.
A source said: “Megan might be interested in a villainous [...]
Megan Fox turns down Bond girl role
Model-turned-actress Megan Fox has declined to be the Bond girl in a forthcoming 007 movie in which she would have starred opposite Daniel Craig as one of his conquests.
The 23-year-old was reportedly lined up by producers, but she turned down the offer as she didn’t believe the role would further her career, reported contactmusic.com.
“Megan might [...]
Potter may topple Bond as top-grossing movie franchise of all time
The ‘Harry Potter’ film series seems set to topple James Bond movies as top-grossing franchise in box office history.
The last five ‘Harry Potter’ films are said to have raked in a total of 4.48 dollars billion around the globe, while the James Bond movies stand at 5 billion dollars over the course of 22 films.
According [...]



