The Commercial Appeal

James Bond director on ‘No Time to Die’

- Jake Coyle

NEW YORK – The film business is inherently full of starts and stops, but few have experience­d the phrase “hurry up and wait” quite like “No Time to Die” director Cary Fukunaga.

Fukunaga, the 44year-old filmmaker of “Beasts of No Nation” and the first season of “True Detective,” took the job directing the 25th Bond film after Danny Boyle dropped out. What followed was, for a big-budget movie like “No Time to Die,” a sprint to rewrite the script (with Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and Phoebe Waller-bridge), begin production in spring 2019, wrap by the fall and have the film ready for release in April 2020.

But when the pandemic arrived, the fittingly titled “No Time to Die” was put on ice for a year and a half while MGM and United Artists Releasing awaited the right conditions to open a film that cost at least $250 million to make.

Fukunaga, the first American to direct a Bond film in the franchise’s 58 years, has since moved onto other projects. But the wait for the biggest movie of his career has been – like most things during the pandemic – discombobu­lating. It’s even affected his dreams. Fukunaga recently spoke by phone from London to The Associated Press ahead of “No Time to Die” finally coming out, on Sept. 30 in the United Kingdom and Oct. 8 in the U.S.

AP: What’s this experience been like, waiting for “No Time to Die” to be released?

Fukunaga: I’ve never experience­d anything like this. There have been releases that come out later but never by that much – especially because we broke our backs just trying to get done in time. So it’s been strange. You want to watch it with an audience and see how people react. But you just kind of put it behind you. What I haven’t gotten on this one is the satisfacti­on of anyone else seeing the film and saying “I hated it” or “I like it.” That’s the part you’re waiting for. Some people are going to like. Some people aren’t going to like it. But you still want to hear it. Even if you don’t want to hear it, you want to hear it.

AP: Do you ever wake up and wonder: Did I really make that movie?

Fukunaga: I had a dream last night where (“Skyfall” and “Spectre” director) Sam Mendes was there. We were on vacation on some frozen lake. There was a feeling like: He was done with Bond films. And he was like, “Oh, you finished one. Now you get a break.” Then we started, like, water skiing on a frozen lake. It was a weird dream.

AP: Hollywood has been struggling during the pandemic to decide what’s best for its most expensive films, like “No Time to Die,” which need to sell a huge amount of tickets to break even. Do you feel that pressure?

Fukunaga: Of course. You want the film to perform as best it can. You have the industry profession­als telling you everyone’s optimistic, but no one really knows what’s going to happen. You have the out to say COVID is the reason it underperfo­rmed. You want to be the exception and have people show up in mass. You don’t want a pandemic to be the reason people didn’t show up to see your film.

AP: What was your original interest in making a Bond film?

Fukunaga: I talked about doing Bond films quite a ways back. I talked to (producer Barbara Broccoli) even about doing one of these shortly after “Spectre.” I always wanted to have a chance of competing – and I consider it competing even though I want my fellow filmmakers to do well – to see if I could make a movie that people actually wanted to show up to cinemas for. To me, Bond always made the most sense out of any of the tentpole, iconic figures out there as a character. If you were to look at my work in the past, I’ve always kind of focused on outsiders. This guy is somebody that for 60 years now has been an outsider. He felt like the kind of character that I would want to take on. Almost every one of my characters has been an orphan.

AP: You crafted a sixminute single take on “True Detective.” Should we expect a long shot in “No Time to Die”?

Fukunaga: If we had more time, that would have been something on my radar. You have your priorities. I came on after Danny Boyle left the project and we had a very short amount of time to get the script ready and go into pre-production to make this thing. That meant all hands were on deck to get the story right and try to make sure this did justice to Daniel’s run. We wanted to tie up a lot of loose ends or story threads that were set up in the last four films. So my biggest focus was trying to get the story to work on all levels. My ability to focus on specialty shots was obviously a primary concern but second to satisfying plot and emotional story.

AP: The film has been called more a psychologi­cal thriller. Is that accurate?

Fukunaga: If there’s a needle that bent one way or the other based on genre, it’s still categorial­ly a Bond film. But it would lean to the psychologi­cal side.

AP: It seems there were some Bond traditions you and your collaborat­es were set on losing or inverting, like the old-fashioned Bond woman.

Fukunaga: I think we all wanted to – and I would say Barbara included – that we didn’t want to fall into the trope of abandoning the last girl and moving on to the next one. There’s even a technical term for that, which is called “fridging,” which is just an awful word. It was actually pretty fun to play with the expectatio­n of the disposabil­ity of the Bond woman. The fun part is to not feel like you’re being reactionar­y to the currents of the time but nodding to the currents of the time with respect and awareness to character, story and place.

 ?? NICOLA DOVE/MGM ?? Director Cary Joji Fukunaga, center, with actors
Daniel Craig, left, and Lashana Lynch on the set of the James Bond film “No Time to Die.”
NICOLA DOVE/MGM Director Cary Joji Fukunaga, center, with actors Daniel Craig, left, and Lashana Lynch on the set of the James Bond film “No Time to Die.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States