![]() The globetrotting shoot will take in Norway, Jamaica and Italy as well as London and Pinewood Studios, and Bond 25 is currently scheduled for a 3 April 2020 release. ![]() Craig, Waltz, Seydoux and Malek are joined in the cast by Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris, Rory Kinnear, Ben Whishaw, Jeffrey Wright, Lashana Lynch, Billy Magnussen, Ana De Armas, David Dencik, and Dali Benssalah. While promoting his new film Big Eyes, Waltz spoke with Collider, where the subject of the recent script leak was addressed. Alternatively, The Playlist's Rodrigo Perez suggests a Silence Of The Lambs scenario in which Léa Seydoux's Madelaine Swann plays Clarice Starling to Blofeld's Hannibal Lecter.Ĭary Joji Fukunaga is the director of the still-untitled Bond 25, working from a screenplay by regular Bond screenwriters Neal Purvis and Robert Wade and series newcomer Phoebe Waller-Bridge. However, Waltz is saying that fans have no reason to fret, since he apparently is not the head honcho at SPECTRE and there's a greater mystery in store for next year. If he is indeed back, at a guess we might predict a supporting role this time out, once again running his henchmen from the shadows (or custody) as he was, off-screen, in Casino Royale, Quantum Of Solace and Skyfall. With Rami Malek already announced as the villain of Bond 25, it's not quite clear yet how Blofeld will fit into the latest story – and with no official confirmation of Waltz's role, his inclusion is still at the very-very-strong-rumour stage. Narratively the name would have meant nothing whatsoever to Daniel Craig's Bond, but it at least meant plenty to the audience, who've been familiar with it since the 1960s. Bond's adoptive brother, seething with resentment at Bond's childhood encroachment in his family, only revealed himself to be Ian Fleming's arch-villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld late in the film. That film's story saw him operating under the Oberhauser moniker for most of the run-time. Waltz, you'll recall, swore blind that he wasn't playing Blofeld during the entire run-up to Spectre. Spectre (2015) Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of action and violence, some disturbing images, sensuality and language. When a visit from a group of middle schoolers ends in Woo’s death, the leadership vacuum is quickly filled by the surprise arrival of Regus Patoff ( Christoph Waltz ).
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