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Bond stars ‘excited’ ahead of movie cinema release
FILE PHOTO: Actors Lea Seydoux, Ana de Armas, Daniel Craig, Naomie Harris and Lashana Lynch pose for a picture during a photocall for the British spy franchise’s 25th film set for release next year, titled “Bond 25” in Oracabessa, Jamaica April 25, 2019. REUTERS/Gilbert Bellamy
LONDON (Reuters) – 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, 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.
“So 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, 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.”
PARIS (Reuters) -Lionel Messi said on Wednesday he wanted to power Paris St Germain to their first Champions League trophy, putting the tearful farewell he bade to Barcelona behind him after signing a two-year contract with the deep-pocketed French soccer powerhouse.
Messi joined the star-studded PSG as a free agent after Barcelona, where he begun and always imagined he would play out his career, acknowledged last week they could no longer afford him.
Thousands of PSG fans thronged the side’s Parc des Princes stadium, daring to believe their team would now deliver the Champions League having hoovered up domestic titles since free-spending owners Qatar Sports Investment European arrived in 2011 but always fallen short of European soccer’s top prize.
Messi said he was hungry to add more Champions League titles to the four he won with Barcelona.
“That’s why I am here (to win trophies). It’s an ambitious club,” Messi told a news conference.
After years of failing to get beyond the quarter-finals, PSG finally reached the final in 2020, but lost to Bayern Munich, while last season they went out in the semi-finals.
“My dream is to win another Champions League, and I think this is the ideal place to be to do that,” added Messi, who in a nod to his first squad number in senior football at Barcelona will wear the No. 30 jersey at PSG.
The Argentine conceded he did not know when he would make his debut, having not played since winning the Copa America with his country last month.
“I’m coming back from holiday. I need a bit of a pre-season to get myself going,” he said.
FAIR PLAY RULES
Messi will join former Barca team mate Neymar in Paris.
The Brazilian left Catalonia for the French capital in a world record 222 million euro ($259.94 million) deal in 2017, but never hid his desire to link up with his close friend once again on the pitch.
They will now line up with French Word Cup-winner Kylian Mbappe in a potent front-three attack.
“To play with the likes of Neymar and Mbappe is insane,” Messi continued.
France’s top soccer league has always been perceived as the poorer cousin to top flight leagues in neighbouring England, Germany, Spain and Italy.
PSG’s Qatari money is enabling PSG to compete at their level, though much of the rest of the league is way adrift in terms of resources. In unusual comments praising a club’s transfer dealings, Ligue 1 President Vincent Labrune celebrated Messi’s signing as a big win for French soccer.
“The arrival of Messi will bolster the attractiveness and visibility of our championship across continents,” Labrune said in a statement. He thanked the club’s owners for creating what he called one of sport’s biggest franchises globally.
However, some commentators have asked how PSG could afford to sign Messi within the Financial Fair Play (FFP) regulations of European soccer’s governing body, UEFA.
UEFA’s FFP rules are designed to prevent clubs spending more than they earn. Spain’s La Liga’s own FFP rules are more stringent than UEFA’s, with each club given a salary cap they must adhere to.
“We’re always attentive to Financial Fair Play. It’s the first thing we check with the commercial, financial and legal people before signing someone,” PSG chairman and CEO Nasser Al-Khelaifi told the same news conference.
“MAGICIAN”
Messi held up his new shirt to thousands of fans outside the stadium, waving shyly as they beat drums, released smoke flares and chanted his name.
Local fan Nelson Dross, 17, told Reuters: “Why do I love him? Because he makes us dream. He’s a magician, a genius.”
Messi wept on Sunday as he told Barcelona fans he was leaving his childhood club.
“I’ll always be thankful to Barca and their fans. I went there as a boy, and we had some good and bad times,” he said on Wednesday.
Asked how he would feel if the time came to square up against his old club, he replied: “It would be nice on the one hand to face them in the Champions League, especially with fans, but on the other strange to go back to my home in another team’s shirt – but that’s football.”