'' 'BLACK 007 BOND' ''
IN A DEVELOPMENT ONLINE that will surprise absolutely no one, an article in the British Tabloid Daily Star last week about a British spy - based on a snippet of a -
Repeated conversations, where no one seems to have contacted the primary source for confirmation - has set off an international firestorm.
The British spy in question was not Christopher Steele, creator of the infamous Trump-Russia dossier. Rather it was James Bond, a fictional character created during the 1950s by English novelist and former spy Ian Fleming.
According to the Star, a film director Antoine Fuqua was told by Bond producers Barbara Broccoli that ''it is time'' for a black actor to star as 007, and then she is certain ''it will happen eventually.''
This, cue the excitement, the outrage, the arguments and the 280-character transforms whether a black actor can, or should, play Bond.
Even actor Idris Elba, the candidate most often mentioned for the role, weighed in with a teasing tweet saying, ''My name is Elba, Idris Elba,'' and then walked it back a bit with a follow-up : ''Don't believe the hype.''
As a someone who was lucky enough to work the 007 franchise, I can tell you that none of this is new.
As far back as 1994, according to Bond Films historian John Cork, Entertainment Weekly proposed that the producers cast Eddie Murphy as Bond, to bring in new audiences and revitalise the franchise. [And on the question of a female Bond - which seems to be floated a new every year or so - the first time I heard it proposed was in 1986, from Kathleen Turner, who wanted to play 'Jane Bond']
That said, is it time for black James Bond? Speaking for myself and, and the franchise, I say : Of course. Why not?
Is it really a stretch of anyone imagination to think that, right now, in real life, there's a handsome, suave and altogether lethal black Brit walking around London, or some exotic den of international intrigue, who's carrying a Walther PPK and works for MI6?
Wouldn't it be more surprising - and perhaps worrisome - if there weren't?
Arguing against this, traditionalists counter that from the very first Bond novel, Casino Royale in 1953, Fleming described 007 as a white Englshman, with a Scottish father and a Swiss mother, who went to the ultra-tony Fettes boarding school after having been kicked out even tonier Eton.
To which I'd respond : perhaps you guys haven't noticed, but the films are not locked in the of 1953. They have changed and adapted to reflect the times - Daniel Craig's 007 would be lost without his cellphone.
For all the cultural criticism of Bond movies - they're sexist, a colonialist, etc - the films have also had their share of progressive moments, including the casting in 1973 of the black actress Gloria Hendry and introducing Judi Dench - a woman! as the head of MI6 in the 1995 release of GoldenEye.
I realise that I have opened the door here to inevitable questions in the age of vengeful social media well, what about gay bond? What about a transgender bond? Can a straight actor play a gay bond? Should a writer who is cisgender, straight and white be writing about any of this?
These cross-examinations have tarted to feel like re-education-camp interrogations, wherein no matter you say, no matter what you agree to, it's never enough. Sorry, but I decline to play.
Would Elba make a great Bond? Absolutely. He's a terrific, charismatic actor. For that matter, what about Fuqua, an African-American, as the director? If the Bond producers wanted to break with the tradition of hiring only British passport holders for the position, the guy behind Training Day would be a great choice.
In the meantime, last I checked, Craig's 007 is still on the case, doing an excellent job fending off the forces of evil hell-bent on global world domination, and won't be retiring to a bead-and-breakfast in Barbados any time before late 2019.
Until then - dare I say it - there's nothing to get all shaken and stirred about.
The World Students Society thanks author Bruce Feirsten. And with that respectful dedication to the Students, Professors and Teachers of the world. See Ya all ''register'' on The World Students Society -for every subject in the world and Twitter - !E-WOW! - the Ecosystem 2011:
''' Films & Fans '''
Good Night and God Bless
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