
Sean Connery left Bond role behind in 1971, Connery felt he was getting too long in the tooth for the rough and tumble required of the Bond blockbusters. But in the early 80s, the Scottish
star had found himself backed into a corner by a series of movie flops and an ongoing legal dispute with a former accountant which had bled the coffers dry.Back on the 27 September
1982, Sean Connery taped on his James Bond toupee one last time to start
filming Never Say Never Again on the French Riviera. Boasting an all-star cast
that included Kim Basinger, Max Von Sydow, Klaus Maria Brandauer, Barbara
Carrera, Bernie Casey, Rowan Atkinson, and Edward Fox, Connery’s 00-seventh
Bond film would also shoot in the Bahamas and Elstree Studios.
It had been 12
years since his last outing as 007 in 1971’s Diamonds Are Forever, after which
he’d sworn, he would ‘never again’ play Ian Fleming’s secret agent, but he’d
been tempted back for one last mission with a deal that offered more than just
a huge payday.
His return in
the unofficial, non-canon Bond film came with a side dish of revenge that would
leave the producers of the official 007 films shaken and stirred.
To play Bond
again in Never Say Never Again, Connery asked for — and reportedly got — $5m,
casting and script approval, and a share of the profits. On top of the money,
the film also represented an opportunity to get revenge on Albert R ‘Cubby’
Broccoli, the producer of the James Bond films, who Connery felt had cheated
him out of millions when he refused to make him an equal partner on the films
in the 1960s.
But for Never
Say Never Again, Connery wouldn’t have to deal with Broccoli (he’d split from
Saltzman in 1971 over another money issue) as McClory had the rights to make a
Bond film without him.
Having helped
Ian Fleming formulate the story for his 1961 Bond book Thunderball — which
crucially introduced Bond's nemesis Ernst Stavro Blofeld — the Irishman had
gone to court to claim co-authorship of the book and any film adaptations.
Broccoli and
co-producer Harry Saltzman made a deal with McClory to make Thunderball
starring Connery in 1965, and McClory agreed to not adapt it again for at least
ten years. With that moratorium over McClory had been doggedly trying to remake
Thunderball for years (and had blocked the use of Blofeld in the official
films) when the Connery situation reached critical mass.
So not only
would Connery earn a fortune with a guaranteed box office hit, and give him the
chance to have a hand in production on a Bond film for the first time ever, it
would be a chance to settle an old score.
Never Say Never
Again would go toe-to-toe with Octopussy at the box office giving Connery the
chance to prove to Cubby that he was bigger than Bond and not the other way
around.
Legal battles
continued behind the scenes, with Broccoli’s lawyers doing all they could to
delay or block the release of Connery’s 007 swansong.
But in 1983,
after a myriad of production issues and escalating budget, Never Say Never
Again was ready to go up against Octopussy, the official, Cubby Broccoli-produced,
James Bond film starring Connery’s friend Roger Moore as 007. It was dubbed in
the press as the Battle of the Bonds, but neither actor was prepared to bad
mouth the other in the press.
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