James Bond films are a hotspot for product placement, but
sometimes the cost is not worth the potential damage to the character. After
the out-of-place $45 million Heineken promotion in Skyfall, the Bond
franchise decided to cut back on product placements in Spectre.
That included not giving Bond a smartphone, rejecting offers
from both Sony and Samsung made earlier in the year. Sony offered $5
million for Bond to carry the phone, with an $18 million bid to be the
exclusive vendor. Samsung offered the same $5 million deal for Bond, but beefed
the total payment to $50 million. Both offers were rejected by Bond actor
Daniel Craig and director Sam Mendes, after judging the phones to be
too lackluster for Bond.
“Sam and Daniel don’t like the Sony phone for the film,” said
president of worldwide business affairs Andrew Gumpert in an email that was
scooped up in the Sony
Pictures leak. “In their minds, the Sony phone is not the ‘best’.”
It seems Mendes and Craig — who received the first
co-producer credit as James Bond — had enough power to overrule the business
folks at Eon Productions. The success of Skyfall in 2012 cemented the
film duo’s position in the Bond franchise, with the producers of James Bond
eager to bring both back for Spectre.
Sony did get the chance to run a mini-series featuring
Moneypenny holding the Xperia Z5,
but the phone was not featured in Spectre. Even Q, Bond’s gadgeteer,
didn’t show off a smartphone in the film, instead offering him an Omega
Master watch.
Super high-end phones like the Vertu
Signature Touch for $6,500 run Android, but most people know the
platform for its price accessibility. That makes it a tough sell for James
Bond, the man that rides the latest Aston Martin and wears the most expensive
Tom Ford suits.
Viruses and malware could be another image problem
for James Bond if he were to choose Android. The Stagefright vulnerability only
happened a few months ago, and recent reports paint a ratherbleak
picture for security on the open-source platform.
Spectre managed to surpass Skyfall, the previous
Bond film, in the opening week at the box office. The film reached $80.4
million in the UK alone, with its debut in U.S. cinemas coming later this week.
Source: Yahoo
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Source: Yahoo
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