Production Notes
(Octopussy)
While the previous Bond film, For Your Eyes Only [1981], had been
in production, its financiers, United Artists were facing the biggest
crisis in its history. In 1980, they'd released Michael Cimino's
epic western Heaven's Gate, a film that had cost the company $40
million and which had stiffed at the box office. It became probably
the most infamous movie disaster of all time and pushed United Artists
to the brink of bankruptcy.
It was left to MGM to come to the rescue. They mounted a successful
take-over bid and the two companies were merged to form MGM /
UA, an arrangement that suited both companies as MGM weren't doing
so well financially either. But MGM chairman Kirk Kerkorian was
keen to see the two companies grow together and saw the Bond films
as one of the flagships of the new company.
Albert Broccoli and United Artists production head Steven Bach
officially announced the start of pre-production on the thirteenth
Eon Bond film, Octopussy, the title - but precious little else
- taken from another of Ian Fleming's short stories. MGM / UA
expressed their confidence in the series by upping the budget
for the new film to $25 million.
But before any serious work could begin, Broccoli had the hard
task of convincing Roger Moore to return to the series again.
Moore was still refusing to sign a long-term contract with Eon
and, just as he had prior to For Your Eyes Only, he'd decided
not to come back for Octopussy. Norbert Auerbach, president of
UA, and Broccoli lured Moore back with a $4 million salary and
a percentage of profits, but only after a number of other actors
[chief among them American James Brolin] had been considered for
the role. Moore was becoming increasingly concerned that he was
no longer the right man for the job - he was now 54 years old
and was increasingly frustrated by the fact that the role simply
wasn't all that demanding.
Broccoli had another problem to deal with, one that could have
been potentially even greater than losing his financiers and his
star. As part of his agreement that producer Kevin McClory had
entered into with Eon over Thunderball [1965], the script copyright
would revert to McClory after ten years and he agreed not to make
any other Bond films during that period.
In 1975, just as the ten year period was coming to an end, McClory
began planning a new Bond film. On 12 May 1976, he took out a
full page advertisement in Variety announcing the imminent arrival
of something called James Bond of the Secret Service, a new Bond
film that could boast Sean Connery on board as a script advisor
and thriller writer Len Deighton manning the typewriter. Filming
was due to have begun in February 1977 with Orson Welles being
hotly tipped to play Blofeld, Trevor Howard pencilled in as M
and with Richard Attenborough set to direct. The film, later retitled
Warhead, floundered in the courts when questions were raised as
to what exactly McClory now had the rights to.
Connery walked away from Warhead leaving McClory to work out
the fine details of his agreement with Eon. And by 1982, McClory
was in a position to finally mount his own Bond project, the first
non-Eon 007 movies since the disastrous Casino Royale [1967].
What was perhaps most worrying for Broccoli was that the new film,
now retitled Never say Never Again, had Connery back in the fold
and this time he was stepping in front of the cameras for one
last fling with Bond.
McClory had announced that Never say Never Again would commence
shooting at about the same time as Octopussy which meant that
Moore's sixth outing as 007 would be going head-to-head with the
return of Connery.
Disregarding McClory's attempts to start a rival franchise, Eon
began work on their new film. The script, which mentioned the
events of Fleming's original story only in passing and which also
included a scene [wherein Bond inflates the price of a Faberge
egg at an auction] from another story, The Property of a Lady,
was originally co-written by Broccoli, returning director John
Glen and George MacDonald Fraser, the author of the Flashman novels
and writer of The Three Musketeers [1974] and Force Ten From Navarone
[1978], directed by former Bond director Guy Hamilton. The script
was eventually superseded by one written by Bond veteran Richard
Maibaum and executive producer Michael G. Wilson [with, as Maibaum
pointed out, "none of that space station crap like they had
in Moonraker [1979]], though Fraser was to retain a co-screen
writing credit.
Swedish actress Maud Adams became the first Bond girl to appear
twice in the series since Martine Beswick's double appearance
in From Russia With Love [1963] and Thunderball [1965]. Adams
had appeared in The Man With the Golden Gun [1975] and got her
chance at a larger Bond girl role when she met Broccoli again,
quite by chance, on a flight. Other Bond girls this time included
Kristina Wayborn, who was spotted by Broccoli playing Greta Garbo
in a TV documentary, and Michaela Clavell, the daughter of Shogun
author James Clavell, as Moneypenny's assistant Penelope Smallbone.
Cast as chief villain was French actor Louis Jourdan, who bought
with him a wealth of experience from a career that had already
spanned some 40 years. He brought a quiet dignity and strength
to the role of the Kamal Khan and proved to be one of the film's
few saving graces. He was assistade by Steven Berkoff, an excellent
performer here giving a rather below-par performance as a renegade
Soviet General.
The forces of good were represented by the unlikely figure of
Vijay Amitraj, the former Davis Cup winning tennis star, here
making his acting debut. Robert Brown made his own debut of sorts,
despite a long career in films, here making his first appearance
in the series, replacing the late Bernard Lee as Bond's superior,
M. Brown and Moore had worked together more than 20 years previously
in Ivanhoe.
Production began for real on Octopussy with the second unit staging
the mid-air tussle between Gobinda and Bond on the outside of
Kamal Khan's aircraft. Moonraker veterans Jake Lombard and B.J.
Worth bought their wealth of airborne experience to bear on the
sequence which was supervised by action arranger Bob Simmons.
Back projection shots were also filmed and used to insert Moore
and Kabir Bedi into the action in the final days of studio shooting
during 1983.
The first unit opened its account on Tuesday 10 August 1982 at
the infamous Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin where they filmed Bond's
briefing by M. The crew decamped to Pinewood on Monday 16 August
where the production was based while British location work took
place. The Nene Valley steam railway in Peterborough stood in
for the many rail based scenes while nearby Wansford Junction
improbably saw service as Karl Marx Stadt.
Octopussy's circus tent was set up in the grounds of RAF Upper
Heyford in Oxfordshire and the same facility was re-dressed to
stand in for the USAF base at Feldstadt where Bond defuses the
nuclear warhead. Another air force base, RAF Northolt, doubled
for South America for the teaser and saw the belated debut in
the series of the Bede Acrostar one-man aircraft.
The Acrostar had originally been written into the climax of Moonraker
- Bond was going to use the aircraft to escape from Drax's headquarters.
That sequence was abandoned and it finally saw the light of day
in Octopussy where the aircraft's owner, Corkey Fornhof, flew
all of the stunt sequences.
On 12 September 1982, the Bond circus rolled into Udaipur, India
to start work on the many India based sequences in Octopussy.
The Lake Palace Hotel at Lake Pichola was the location used to
represent Octopussy's island home.
Much to Roger Moore's relief [he suffered a stomach infection
in the sweltering Indian heat] the production bade India farewell
and returned to Pinewood where the courtyard of Kamal Khan's palace
was recreated inside the 007 stage. Shooting continued right up
to Christmas Eve and resumed on 3 January 1983. As production
headed towards its 21 January completion, Roger Moore is reported
to have had dinner with Sean Connery who himself was back in Bondage
over at Elstree studios.
John Barry was again charged with writing the soundtrack and
the all important title song. For the latter, he called upon the
talents of Tim Rice and he and Barry were instructed not to write
a song called Octopussy - perhaps for obvious reasons. Rice had
wanted long-time collaborator Elaine Paige to perform the song,
but eventually, after Shirley Bassey had been briefly considered
for a Bond film hat trick, Rita Coolidge was chosen to sing All
Time High.
The song may not have been a huge success [it peaked at number
75 in the British charts and hardly did any better in the States,
reaching just number 38] but it did win Rice an award - for a
song that had achieved a million radio plays worldwide.
Octopussy's premiere took place, as ever, at the Odeon Leicester
Square on 6 June 1983 in the company of The Prince and Princess
of Wales. The film did better than the disappointing take for
For Your Eyes Only, grossing $183,700,000 worldwide and attracting
25.5 million punters in the States, the equal of Moonraker.
But for a while, US takings looked to be in some jeopardy when
the Los Angeles Times ran a story accusing the new film's title
of being 'tawdry', intimating that it might have been a turn-off
for women audiences. But Eon were not only vindicated by the respectable
box-office, but by the National Research Group who took a survey
of 600 women between the ages of 12 and 49 in Los Angeles, New
York, Charlotte, Houston and Kansas City and found that only 4%
of respondents gave negative responses.