By Lee Pfeiffer
Cinema Retro was
invited to cover the Daniel Craig/ Stephen Colbert interview event at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark on Friday, October 28 as part of the
Montclair Film Festival. It was quite an enjoyable evening and featured the best interview I've ever seen Craig give.
He has been on Colbert's chat show many times and by now they have an Abbott
and Costello-like relationship. The set was designed as a living room, with Craig and Colbert perched comfortably in facing chairs, which gave the impression you were observing two guys speaking privately even though it was in front of an auditorium of over 2,000 people. (Amusingly, if you looked closely, you could see a model Aston Martin DB5 placed on top of a table.)To keep the atmosphere loose, Colbert would periodically walk over to a bar and mix drinks for the two participants. Colbert got Craig to talk about his
hardscrabble early days in Liverpool, his early film career and his experiences working on specific films with specific co-stars. There was plenty of
time devoted to talking about 007. Craig said he only spoke personally with one of his
predecessors in the role, Pierce Brosnan, but said he appreciated Sean
Connery's public comments praising his work as Bond. He was extremely positive
about the producers and everything the series has afforded him, career-wise.
His said his favorite Bond film in which he didn't appear is "Goldfinger". Craig also spoke of his delight at being part of the "Knives Out" series and praised the writer/director Rian Johnson.
When it was announced
that the event would allow for questions for the audience, I had concerns. We
all know that an open microphone tends to attract at least a few people who can
be relied upon to ask cringe-inducing questions. But Artistic Director Tom Hall
defused this possibility early on and in a humorous manner by advising
attendees that asking the stars to review their personal film project or some
other such pipe dream was not going to happen. Consequently, the questions that
were asked were intelligent and lead to insightful answers.
There were some
well-chosen film clips demonstrating the evolution of Craig’s career and he was
also extremely funny throughout the night. It left me with the realization
that, while I greatly admire his Bond films, they never capitalized on his
talent for humor and witticisms the way previous films did for their lead
actors. At the end of the event, Colbert presented Craig with a career achievement award to rapturous applause. In all, a terrific evening. Well done, Montclair Film Festival.