The Guardian (USA)

James Bond reality TV show seeks contestant­s for second season

- Nadia Khomami Arts and culture correspond­ent

Are you a couple prepared to take risks? Have you always wanted to team up with your bestie to conquer obstacles in glamorous and exotic locations; or do you just fantasise about Logan Roy pulling your strings in the vain hope of becoming a millionair­e? If so, a new James Bond reality TV show could be just the thing.

Producers on the forthcomin­g Prime Video series 007’s Road to a Million are looking for people to take part in the second season of the mysterious and much-anticipate­d show, which was announced this year and is yet to premiere.

What is known is that contestant­s will compete in pairs in a Bond-style race around the world to win a £1m cash prize – all while their fate is controlled by the Succession star Brian Cox. Contestant­s must correctly answer questions hidden in different 007-inspired locations around the world, from the Scottish Highlands to Venice and Jamaica.

“We’re now searching for more dynamic duos to jet across the globe using their wits and general knowledge to

answer questions hidden around the world,” the applicatio­n form states.

“You don’t have to be a Bond fan to apply but we are looking for teams of two that are very close in their relationsh­ip and who would enjoy an adventure.”

Early promotiona­l materials from Prime Video indicated it was leaning into Cox’s role as the patriarch Logan Roy in the multi-award-winning series Succession. A synopsis said: “The controller is villainous and cultured, and revels in the increasing­ly difficult journeys and questions the contestant­s must overcome.

“He has millions of pounds to give away – up to £1m per couple – but he doesn’t make it easy. Whilst he lurks in the shadows, he is watching and controllin­g everything.”

For his part, Cox said he got to see how ordinary people would cope with being on a 007 adventure. “As they travel the world to some of the most iconic Bond locations, it gets more intense and nail-biting. I enjoyed my role as both villain and tormentor, with licence to put the hopeful participan­ts through the mangle,” he said.

The show is a collaborat­ion between Amazon Studios, Eon Production­s, 72 Films and MGM Alternativ­e, and marks the first time Eon has allowed the Bond brand to be used in the unscripted world. Amazon’s $8.5bn deal to buy MGM in 2021 secured it the rights to create a wave of Bond remakes, reimaginin­gs and spin-offs.

The Bond franchise has been a global cultural phenomenon for six decades, and speculatio­n has mounted over what shape it will take in the new media landscape, especially as Daniel Craig’s incarnatio­n of the spy drew to a close with the release of No Time to Die in 2021.

Speaking to Variety last year, the Bond producer Barbara Broccoli said: “People have always come to us about doing a TV show, [saying]: ‘Oh, you should do a Bond challenge’, but we always stayed away from it because we didn’t want to put people in danger and have them do dangerous things, because it’s not for members of the public – it’s for trained profession­als.”

007’s Road to a Million was the first time a producer – Britain’s 72 Films (which is behind shows such as the BBC’s The Rise of the Murdoch Dynasty and Amazon’s All or Nothing football series) – proposed an idea that was deemed fun and safe.

“It wasn’t going to be dangerous to the participan­ts is the key thing,” said Broccoli’s fellow Bond producer Michael G Wilson.

Ajay Chowdhury, a spokespers­on for the James Bond internatio­nal fan club, the oldest establishe­d 007 fan organisati­on in the world, was positive about the show’s potential. “The casting of the best Bond villain never used, Brian Cox, is reason enough for hope,” he said.

While this show seems to be a first for the expansion of the Bond brand, Chowdhury added, there are some precedents. “Over the decades there have been James Bond-themed amusement park rides, competitio­ns to be an extra in Bond films and audience experience­s, such as the live orchestrat­ions of Bond music played to the films in concert venues the world over.

“A few years ago, Secret Cinema showcased a hugely inventive, interactiv­e experience with screenings of Casino Royale where one actually participat­ed in the plotline. It is generally accepted amongst Bond fans that these interestin­g ‘sidequels’ do not distract and deviate from the main franchise itself. They are the pre-titles to the pretitle sequences: the famous throughthe-gun-barrel opening of the Bond films.”

For Chowdhury, 007’s Road to a Million should be seen in the context of the current status of the franchise. “Broccoli’s words regarding the future of Bond are encouragin­g: reinventio­n and a new film within the next few years. With Daniel Craig’s 007 swansong being a commercial and critical hit, her comments have sent fans salivating over the future of Bond … the pressure is now on for secret agent 007 to earn back that Amazon investment,” he said.

Prospectiv­e applicants for the show’s second series are asked to record a short video of themselves with their partner, as well as fill out a number of questions about their relationsh­ip to each other and why they’d like to do the challenge together.

Filming is due to take place throughout 2024, and applicants have been told they will be away from home, possibly outside the UK, for short periods.

 ?? François Duhamel/Columbia Pictures/Eon/Danjaq/Allstar ?? Contestant­s will compete in pairs, playing out James Bond fantasies and racing around the world to win a £1m cash prize. Photograph:
François Duhamel/Columbia Pictures/Eon/Danjaq/Allstar Contestant­s will compete in pairs, playing out James Bond fantasies and racing around the world to win a £1m cash prize. Photograph:

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