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Post by Cpt. Sir Dominic Flandry on Dec 5, 2008 19:45:36 GMT -5
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7766826.stmUnmade Bond script fetches £46K The script was written seven years before Never Say Never Again A screenplay for a James Bond film that was never made has been sold at auction in London for £46,850.
The script for Warhead, written by Sir Sean Connery, author Len Deighton and producer Kevin McClory, had been expected to fetch no more than £3,000.
In the 1976 script, Bond battles robot sharks attempting to plant a nuclear bomb in sewers underneath New York.
Legal battles stopped the film being made. Sir Sean eventually played 007 again in 1983's Never Say Never Again.
The lot, part of Christie's Pop Culture: Entertainment Memorabilia auction, also included a photo of Connery, McClory and Deighton working on the script in Ireland.
Photographs
If made, the film would have featured such familiar Bond characters as Ernst Stavros Blofeld, Felix Leiter, Moneypenny, M and Q.
It would also have seen James Bond encounter beauties like Justine Lovesit and Fatima Blush - a character who eventually appeared in Never Say Never Again.
Other items in the sale included a fur-trimmed stole worn by Hollywood star Marilyn Monroe which sold for £42,050.
A collection of vintage photographs of the actress Marlene Dietrich also went for £27,361.
"Numerous lots far exceeded pre-sale expectations, demonstrating the continued appeal and durability of the pop culture market," said Christie's Katherine Williams. "Justine Lovesit"
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FormerBondFan
00 Agent
Posts: 5,455
Favourite James Bond Films: The Dark Knight Trilogy, Mission: Impossible and any upcoming action films starring Pierce Brosnan (no, it's not James Bond which is good because he'll need it to expand his reputation as an actor, especially in the action realm)
Favourite Films: Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Star Trek, The Dark Knight Trilogy, Harry Potter, Middle-Earth, The Matrix, Mission: Impossible
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Post by FormerBondFan on Dec 6, 2008 13:14:07 GMT -5
Interesting stuff.
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Post by Stockslivevan on Dec 7, 2008 1:38:27 GMT -5
Sewer robot sharks?
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Post by Cpt. Sir Dominic Flandry on Dec 7, 2008 12:08:20 GMT -5
Why? What have they done?
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Post by poirot on Dec 7, 2008 13:40:19 GMT -5
Connery had already faced live sharks in TB, and had thwarted a space laser in his last Bond outing. How do you top it? After all, this was the 1970's, and the rival 007 production was going to be TSWLM. I remember reading about this years ago, and- perhaps surprisingly- it was supposed to be quite good. I believe the finale involved the Statue of Liberty.
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Post by Stockslivevan on Dec 7, 2008 19:41:40 GMT -5
It's still stupid. At least they didn't go for anything that ridiculous in NSNA, although unfortunately that turned out to be bland.
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FormerBondFan
00 Agent
Posts: 5,455
Favourite James Bond Films: The Dark Knight Trilogy, Mission: Impossible and any upcoming action films starring Pierce Brosnan (no, it's not James Bond which is good because he'll need it to expand his reputation as an actor, especially in the action realm)
Favourite Films: Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Star Trek, The Dark Knight Trilogy, Harry Potter, Middle-Earth, The Matrix, Mission: Impossible
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Post by FormerBondFan on Dec 7, 2008 23:08:06 GMT -5
Robotic sharks seem a bit OTT than invisible cars IMO.
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Post by Stockslivevan on Dec 7, 2008 23:43:19 GMT -5
Well, maybe not as far fetched, but it's pretty f**king dumb.
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alex
Commander
Posts: 344
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Post by alex on Dec 8, 2008 10:47:23 GMT -5
This film sounds like it would have cost a lot more to make than NSNA.
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Post by JackBurton on Dec 9, 2008 10:27:50 GMT -5
But not as much as Quantum Of Average.
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Post by Greg Haugen on Dec 11, 2008 11:00:57 GMT -5
Shrublands was a scuba diving-school in this script. Interesting that, if the film had gone into production, it would have gone up agaisnt The Spy Who Loved Me in 1977.
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alex
Commander
Posts: 344
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Post by alex on Dec 12, 2008 10:34:22 GMT -5
According to the Virgin Bond guide this script was fairly silly with a lot of gadgets which is strange because Sean Connery was involved and he always cited the gadgets and daftness as a reason for leaving the role.
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