Martin Campbell Offers Some Advice for Denis Villeneuve’s New James Bond Era - "Don't F**k With It"
Bond fans are gearing up for a massive shift. Amazon MGM Studios is taking the reins of the 007 franchise and Denis Villeneuve is set to direct the next chapter. It is a huge moment for a series that has already reinvented itself several times.
Few filmmakers understand that process better than Martin Campbell, the director who launched both the Pierce Brosnan and Daniel Craig eras. When he talks about what Bond should and should not become, it carries real weight, and Campbell has a very clear message for the team behind Bond 26.
Campbell has made two of the franchise’s most important updates with GoldenEye and Casino Royale, so he knows exactly how fragile a good Bond film can be.
His advice to Villeneuve and the Amazon MGM leadership is direct. “Don’t break what isn’t broken,” he says. He follows that with another reminder. “It doesn’t need to be a reboot, it just needs to be a bloody good Bond film.”
What works in Bond has worked for decades and Campbell stresses that the formula still has power. “If we released GoldenEye or Casino Royale again next week, they’d feel just as potent. So don’t f*ck with it, basically.”
His point is that the franchise does not need to chase trends or reinvent itself just for the sake of being different. What matters is keeping the character sharp and letting the world around him provide the new energy.
GoldenEye reset the franchise in the mid ‘90s with a modern tone and a fresh lead. Campbell returned in 2006 with Casino Royale, which rebuilt the Bond character from the ground up. Both movies stand tall because they stayed true to the spirit of Ian Fleming’s hero while giving the films a stronger emotional foundation. They were updated without losing the cool efficiency and confidence that define 007.
Campbell attributes their staying power to sticking with the core of Bond instead of cluttering him with too much reinvention. Bond needed freshness and clarity, not a complete rewrite. The action felt grounded, the humor came through naturally, and the tone adjusted to the decade without hiding what Bond is supposed to be.
The world has changed dramatically since No Time to Die, and Campbell believes that change actually gives the franchise room to strike again.
“There’s a lot of fertile ground for Bond, particularly the way the world is at the moment,” he says. Global politics, shifting power structures, cyber warfare and widespread distrust in institutions all feel built for a modern Bond story.
The franchise has always thrived when the world feels dangerous and unpredictable and Campbell sees the same opportunity today.
With Villeneuve directing and producers Amy Pascal and David Heyman joining Amazon MGM Studios, Bond 26 already feels like a major reset for the series. The challenge now is balancing innovation with tradition.
Campbell is certain they can do it as long as they respect what works. “I just hope that they don’t break what’s not broken.”
Villeneuve certainly has the talent. Now fans are waiting to see whether the next era of 007 will honor the legacy that Campbell helped shape or wander too far from what makes Bond timeless.
Source: GoldDerby