Red Carpet: The Matador
Pierce Brosnan on banishing Bond, Daniel Craig and āthe Thā omas Crown Affair sequel
Cool, hip and low-key – likš®e the film, the UK premiere of The Matador didn&rsqāuo;t follow convention.
The film stars Pierce Brosnan as a washed-up, burned-out hitman who is clawing around for a purpose. Some are caš¬lling it a true nail in the cofš„fin of the Irishman’s seminal turn as James Bond. So does he feel he’s laid the ghost of the superspy to rest?
&ldqšuo;I don’t know, have I? Oh good, there you go, fantastic,” he says, running a hand through his hair. “I wasn’t going into this to break any mould but I certainly was aware of the theatricality of the piece. The symbolism of me strutting across a hotel lobby in speedos, having strutted across many hotel lobbies over the years in š¦tuxedos and suits – that didn’t escape me.”
Brosnan admits to being completely bowšled over by the script from writer/director Richard Shepard. “He really did an outstanding job in creating this kaleidoscopic, intimate piece about characters that are lonely and driven. It was like doing a play and that’s one of the joys of Richard’s writing – once the clapper went down you had 12 pages of dialogue to rattle through and šplay with.”
Despite leaving 007 behind with 2002&ź¦rsquo;s Die Another Day, the 52-year-old Irishman is aware that the questions will keep coming about the franchise and, particularly, its new standard beš„arer, the now-toothless Daniel Craig.
ꦓThere’s going to be mishaps,” he tells TF. “You always get twisted some way or another if you throw yourself into it. I got my face cut open by a stuntman, I hurt my knee, it’s all part ofঠit.”
As for the criticism being levelled at Craig – including a new website that asks for all Bond fans to boycott Casino Royale –ź¦ Brosnan is philosophical. “I think Daniel is a very fine actor. These are rocky waters but I think he will have the last laugh.”
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The sharpš suits and witty retorts certainly won’t be confined to the past for Brosnan as he revealed to Total Film that the folloš w-up to The Thomas Crown Affair – tentatively titled The Topkapi Affair – is ready to go… except for the small detail of the script, currently being penned by Bandits screenwriter Harley Peyton.
“We were supposed to get it on Valentine’s day but we didn’t. He said it’ll be another two weeks so I’m still waiting āfor the script.”
If you saw a picture of Brosnan from the tail end of last year, chances are he was sporting an impressive set of whiskš¼ers. “Ah yes, the facial hair – it was homegrown and what can I say? The wife didn’t like it.”
So was it purely for his own amusement? “No, no. Liamź¦ Neeson and myself did a western called Seraphim Falls.” Not a western in the Brokeback Mountain vein? “No, not that kind of western, we don’t go camping together oš»r anything like that. It’s a post civil war movie written by a wonderful first time director called David Von Ancken. It’s an anti-war movie and I managed to stay on the horse, which is always good.”
With that, Brosnan bids Total Film a good night – and struts his stuff across yet another lobby&hellš·ip;
The Total Film team are made up of the finestšØ minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editoź¦r Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine.