LEAD STORY
Man with the Golden Run
On location with Pierce Brosnan's Bond — and his sexy foil, Halle Berry

View To A Sell
Product placement means Die Another Day is a sure-fire money spinner

Family Man
The Broccolis and their intimate relationship with 007

Blame the Weather
The challenge of making Die Another Day

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Bond Just Wants to Have Fun
Ursula Andress, the first Bond girl

The Good, The Bad and The Ugly:
Die Another Day star Halle Berry

Bond's Favorite Villain
The man known as Jaws, Richard Kiel

Grown-Up Fairy Tale
The longer-lasting Bond, Roger Moore

Welcome to the Theme Park
Die Another Day star Rosamund Pike

Going Easy on an Icon
Die Another Day director Lee Tamahori

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DRIVE CAREFULLY: The ice and snow of Iceland provides the backdrop for a dramatic car chase

A View To A Sell
If no-one goes to see the new Bond movie, product placement means it will still be a money spinner

Posted Sunday, Nov 3, 2002; 2.02 p.m. GMT
The 20th Bond film will ride into the record books on one of the biggest movie-promo bandwagons ever. 007's business partners are spending an estimated $120 million on tie-in advertising, and millions more have already been invested in products and services for the making of the film itself. Maybe they should have called it Buy Another Day.

The Bond franchise is one of the pioneers of product placement. "Bond has always been a brand-aware character," says David Wilson, EON's vice president of global business strategy. Dr. No "placed" Pan Am, Red Stripe and Smirnoff. But Die Another Day sets a new standard for promotional deals, pitching about 20 brands, from Finlandia vodka (yep, he switched) to 7-Up and Norelco shavers.

Some publicity-hungry firms pay for screen time. But far more product placement actually works on barter. For example, Ford provided several Aston Martins (for Bond), Jaguars (for the bad guy Zao), Thunderbirds (for Jinx), Range Rovers (utility vehicles), spare parts and technical help. That in-kind contribution saved EON millions in production costs — "the value that we got far exceeded the cash they could give us," Wilson says. In return, Ford will get invaluable screen time for its vehicles. Millions more in promised movie tie-in promos from the carmaker will also cut the ad budgets of the distributors — MGM in the U.S. and Fox overseas.

Not every product placer gets such a high profile. Jinx won't walk around with a Revlon sign to let us know who made her makeup, and Bond won't have a Brioni tag hanging off his tux. But the firms hope for gilt by association — and the chance to slap a 007 seal of approval on their ads. Bollinger champagne can freshen its traditional image with the help of the "debonair and charming James Bond," says president Ghislain de Montgolfier. "What could be more stylishly up-to-date?"

On the other hand, what could be more off-putting than a two-hour-long ad you're paying upwards of $10 to see? Wilson insists "we're making movies, not commercials." And doing a little smart business on the side.


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