- Title: Bond stars excited ahead of movie cinema release
- Date: 27th September 2021
- Summary: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM (SEPTEMBER 22, 2021) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (ENGLISH) CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF UK CINEMA ASSOCIATION, PHIL CLAPP, SAYING: ''We're currently tracking something like 65 to 70 percent of what you might call kind of normal admissions during the late summer, early autumn. I think there's a hope that Bond will get those admissions back to at least the levels we are seeing in 2019 and hopefully beyond those. I think there's also an understanding that all the expectations in the industry can't rest on the shoulders of one film, no matter how big that film is. So we're also very confident that with a range of titles, 'Ghostbusters' and then later, towards the end of the year, 'West Side Story' and 'Downton Abbey' too, and a range of titles, not just in terms of genres, but also in terms of the likely audience, that Bond is a further kind of stepping stone on that path back to normality.''
- Embargoed: 11th October 2021 15:12
- Keywords: James Bond Lashana Lynch Lea Seydoux No Time To Die cinema
- Location: VARIOUS
- City: VARIOUS
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Arts/Culture/Entertainment,Europe,Film
- Reuters ID: LVA006EWHUMVH
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: After an 18-month delay, James Bond film "No Time To Die" finally begins its cinema rollout this week - a relief for its stars and movie theatre operators.
Daniel Craig returns for a final fifth outing as the suave British secret agent, known for his love of fast cars and cool gadgets.
The movie was originally scheduled to debut in April 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic forced cinemas to close and impose restrictions on audience numbers.
"This past 18 months has been a pretty terrible time for everybody," Craig told Reuters. "The great thing is we're here, we got to this point and we can actually now put it into the cinema and ... that's just all gravy from now on."
Costing an estimated $200 million to produce, "No Time To Die", the 25th Bond film, has been delayed three times since the start of the pandemic.
Despite this, its producers have held out to make sure it is released in cinemas.
"It was designed and filmed and produced to be in the cinemas, to be a cinema experience," producer Michael G. Wilson told the movie's official podcast. "So we're very excited now that it's going to finally come out, we're all raring to go."
Bond films are one of Hollywood's most valuable franchises, with the last two, 2015's "Spectre" and 2012's "Skyfall", grossing $880 million and more than $1 billion respectively globally.
On Monday (September 27), London-based cinema operator Odeon said "No Time To Die" was "set to be the biggest opening at ODEON cinemas since summer 2019", and it has sold more than 175,000 tickets.
UK cinemas began reopening in May, albeit with social distancing measures. As these have eased, admissions across the country have increased from 3.5 million in May to 10.4 million in August, according to the UK Cinema Association.
"We're currently tracking something like 65 to 70% of what you might call normal admissions during the late summer, early autumn," Phil Clapp, chief executive of the UK Cinema Association, told Reuters.
"There's a hope that Bond will get those admissions back to at least the levels we are seeing in 2019 and hopefully beyond those," he said, adding other upcoming films like "Ghostbusters: Afterlife" and "West Side Story" were also important.
On Tuesday (September 28), Craig will lead co-stars Lashana Lynch, Lea Seydoux and Rami Malek at the movie's world premiere in London.
"I'm really excited that it's finally coming out ... I'm very happy that (we will have a) reunion with all the people who've worked on the film, to be with them in person because I was afraid to do the whole promotion virtually," Seydoux said.
"For Daniel also because it's his last Bond, it's nice to be all together."
(Production; Sarah Mills, Marie-Louise Gumuchian) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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