

Why no Bond screenplays in book form?
#1
Posted 10 March 2004 - 08:23 PM

#2
Posted 10 March 2004 - 08:26 PM
#3
Posted 10 March 2004 - 08:29 PM
I really don't know alot about it, but I would buy them.
There is the Tomorrow Never Dies reprint script that came in a VHs box set, but that's not exactly what you mean.
#4
Posted 10 March 2004 - 08:43 PM
#5
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:06 PM

#6
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:08 PM
#7
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:14 PM
to publish the screenplays...I don't see any reasons for that..sorryWhat do you mean Agent76?

#8
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:16 PM
Well, it all depends what kind of a Bond fan you are, and if you like to buy all the neat things, such as these screenplays, I'd love to get my hands on them, but mccartney007 has a very good point, in that probably only the hardcore Bond fans would purchase them.
#9
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:22 PM
yes you're right!Oh, I see.
Well, it all depends what kind of a Bond fan you are, and if you like to buy all the neat things, such as these screenplays, I'd love to get my hands on them, but mccartney007 has a very good point, in that probably only the hardcore Bond fans would purchase them.

some screenplays I wouldn't mind to buy , for example From Russia With Love or GoldenEye & For Your Eyes Only!
let's wait and see...

#10
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:27 PM
#11
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:28 PM
don't know how much of a market there would be on these....
#12
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:32 PM
If I'm not mistaken, Faber & Faber publishes a wide selection of screenplays, of well-known and not so well-known films. I'm sure Bond scripts would sell better than most of them (I imagine that the only screenplays that have really sold truckloads in book form are RESERVOIR DOGS and PULP FICTION, and that's due only to the extraordinary personality cult of Tarantino back in the mid-90s). Sure, the market would be small, but, hey, people have still made money by catering to small markets. Heck, I reckon the Bond scripts, if they published them, would sell quite a bit more than the last few continuation novels.I imagine that they aren't being published because the market for them would mainly include only hardcore fans -- and that isn't a large enough group to deem it worthwhile.
#13
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:39 PM
I think Bond one's would sell though.
#14
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:43 PM
I've got DAF, TMWTGG, TLD, an early version of NSNA called Warhead, and an OHMSS continuity script. Also have the GE and TND scripts that were given with videos. Several scripts are available commercially, but FRWL, GF, YOLT, OHMSS and LALD never seem to be available outside of continuity scripts. Those are just the action and dialogue given verbatim for people who change the reels in the cinema.
Some places even have different drafts of scripts also.
#15
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:44 PM
What video release of GoldenEye had a script with it, Turn? I'm very interested!I've got DAF, TMWTGG, TLD, an early version of NSNA called Warhead, and an OHMSS continuity script. Also have the GE and TND scripts that were given with videos. drafts of scripts also.

#16
Posted 10 March 2004 - 09:53 PM
Back in 1995 or 96, when you signed up for a Bond video of the month club with the VHS sets, they gave the screenplay as a bonus. You got the screenplay at the end or something. Having bought them from a Best Buy, I never got it. But I found a used copy at a bookstore a few years ago.What video release of GoldenEye had a script with it, Turn? I'm very interested!I've got DAF, TMWTGG, TLD, an early version of NSNA called Warhead, and an OHMSS continuity script. Also have the GE and TND scripts that were given with videos. drafts of scripts also.
![]()
#17
Posted 10 March 2004 - 10:12 PM
#18
Posted 10 March 2004 - 10:12 PM
Thanks for the information!
#19
Posted 10 March 2004 - 10:24 PM

#20
Posted 10 March 2004 - 10:27 PM
#21
Posted 10 March 2004 - 11:01 PM
cool man!The screenplay for GOLDENEYE was published in book form and was part of a special MGM Home Entertainment marketing campaign in the mid-1990s. I have it at home, signed by Pierce Brosnan no less


#22
Posted 10 March 2004 - 11:47 PM
They're more like adaptations than anything else and in the case of the Spy book, almost totally different from the movie. Usually the novelizations are adapted from early drafts in order to get the books out around the time the film is released.Arn't the novelizations for The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker, Licence To Kill, GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies, The World Is Not Enough and Die Another Day the screenplays in book form?

#23
Posted 10 March 2004 - 11:55 PM
#24
Posted 10 March 2004 - 11:58 PM

#25
Posted 11 March 2004 - 02:42 AM
#26
Posted 11 March 2004 - 05:00 AM
I can think of only a few screenplays that have gotten a perfect bound printing from a major publishing company. Miniscule when compared to the number of movie novelization titles that are printed.
#27
Posted 11 March 2004 - 10:12 AM
Of course, being a Bond fan I'd buy them anyway should they ever be published.
#28
Posted 11 March 2004 - 10:35 AM
For instance, Elvis has a huge following and yet you can't get all of his films on DVD because, while the hardcore fans would buy them, there isn't much of a market beyond that. That's exactly what Elvis Presley Enterprises says anyway, and I'm sure the James Bond scripts wouldn't be any different.
#29
Posted 11 March 2004 - 12:31 PM
There is. I've conceded that the market is small, but, nonetheless, the market exists.Like I said before, there isn't a market for the scripts.
Check out Faber & Faber's site (http://www.faber.co....re=5&subgenre=1) - you may be surprised by some of the screenplays that are out there in book form. If the scripts for (to give a couple of random examples) 28 DAYS LATER and WELCOME TO SARAJEVO were deemed sufficiently marketable to be published, why assume that there would be no demand for the script for, say, THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH or DIE ANOTHER DAY?
Granted, most of the screenplays published by Faber & Faber seem to be for established classics/works by critically-lauded, "serious" directors/written by famous names (for instance the novelist Alex Garland). Clearly, they are targeted at cineastes, who probably wouldn't be caught dead reading a Bond script when they might just as easily be caught dead reading the script for a Scorsese flick, or something by the Coens.
And yet.... aren't the likes of FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE, GOLDFINGER and ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE taken pretty seriously by film buffs these days? Rightly or wrongly, they now have a classic status that other Bond outings don't. Wouldn't their screenplays be viewed as "acceptable" by the Faber & Faber crowd?
And as for Purvis and Wade, if their profile is sufficiently high for them to be invited to take part in a series of screenwriters' lectures in London, is it really inconceivable that their Bond scripts would sell in book form?
#30
Posted 12 March 2004 - 05:07 AM
I imagine that they aren't being published because the market for them would mainly include only hardcore fans -- and that isn't a large enough group to deem it worthwhile. If you really want the scripts you can find them online in the traditional script format, though (which is they way I'd prefer to have them).
Where on the net?