Not too long ago, Pierce Brosnan was the face of the worldâs greatest spy, James Bond. Much like those before him, Brosnan took the role in stride, often delivering â even in some of the secret agentâs most ridiculous adventures â some of the finest 007 work since Connery himself. Although he’s long since retired his crisp black tuxedo and shaken-not-stirred martini glass, Brosnan is back in the spy genre with his latest film, The November Man. âItâs a genre which really appeals to me,â said Brosnan. âI love these kind of movies as a kind of cinema-going geek myself. Those characters, you want to be like those characters when you go to the movies. You know, when you see a movie with a guy whoâs really cool and the killing is slick and easy. I donât know. Thereâs something intoxicating about it.â
So how did this all come about? “[Beau St. Clair] found the book, sent it to me.” Brosnan said. “I loved the title. I thought it was really punchy and kind of had an aura or mystique about it. The writing by Bill Grainger was complex, character driven. Then in came [Michael Finch Karl Gajdusek] and they just cleaved their way through it⦠Then one day it was [Roger Donaldson]. I said Rogerâs name. âRoger should direct this.â Roger said yes. And we were off to the races.â
âWe sat down at the house in Malibu,â continued Brosnan. âAnd my wife made lunch. Roger, Beau, myself, we talked about it and said, âLetâs go. Letâs do it.â Thatâs how it happened⦠We didnât have the money to shoot in Berlin, [laughs] because the story takes place in Berlin. So we kind of obscuredâBelgrade, Montenegro. Itâs as simple as that, really. They embraced us. They let us come in, the government there. They gave us palaces, and hotels, and buildings. When youâve got eight cars out in the street with camera mounts, live action, itâs kind of sketchy, but exhilarating.â
So what was it like working with his Danteâs Peak director again? âWe just hit the ground running. And heâs the boss. I go on the set and heâs the man. He directs me. He likes to go many takes. I like to keep it down to two or three and move on. But he likes to go, so thatâs OK, too.â Brosnan then added that he had a wonderful dynamic with his costars. âIt was a joy. What can I say? It was just a great treat to have [Bill Smitrovich], [Olga Kurylenko], [Luke Bracey]⦠Luke was a great find. Beau and Roger really looked at many, many guysâ work. Then one day I was in Santa Monica dropping my boy off and they said, âWhy donât you come by the office? Weâve got to show you some guys for the part of Mason.â There were three great guys and Luke was the dude. I sat there with headphones on and watched the laptop. They sat over there. I thought, âS**t, man. This is the moment of truth. Wow. Iâm going to pick one of these actors to play opposite me in this spy genre movie which has the potential to hopefully do some business. And because of my legacy as Bond, blah, blah, blah, one of these guys is going to be the dude.â And Luke was the man.â
As far as continuing his new found interest in the action genre, Brosnan stated âWell, weâre developing a piece called IT right now, which is a thriller. Thatâs got action in it. Thatâs as much as I know what Iâm going to do. My son, Sean Brosnan, weâre going to do a movie called Last Man Out. Craig Ferguson came to us with a piece which I really liked. Itâs a really violent, caustic little piece set in Belfast.â The actor went on to add, âItâs good. Itâs down and dirty. Go to Belfast, do it there, not do it in Ireland. Sean, whoâs my boy, heâs a writer/director/actor. Weâre doing that after Christmas.â
The November Man is in theaters now. You can read our interviews with director Roger Donaldson and Olga Kurylenko too.