(Welcome to Tales from the Box Office, our column that examines box office miracles, disasters, and everything in between, as well as what we can learn from them.)
There was a period when the "James Bond" franchise was dead for a few years, following Timothy Dalton's somewhat disappointing (commercially speaking) two-film run in the late '80s. After 1989's "License to Kill," the series was in need of reinvention, which would eventually come in a big way with 1995's massive hit "GoldenEye." Pierce Brosnan managed to bring Bond to the '90s in style, with the huge help of ace director Martin Campbell behind the camera. 007 was back in a big, bad way. But as is so often the case with a big, long-running series such as this, attention immediately turns to what comes next.
In this case, the answer to that question came in December 1997 in the form of "Tomorrow Never Dies,...
There was a period when the "James Bond" franchise was dead for a few years, following Timothy Dalton's somewhat disappointing (commercially speaking) two-film run in the late '80s. After 1989's "License to Kill," the series was in need of reinvention, which would eventually come in a big way with 1995's massive hit "GoldenEye." Pierce Brosnan managed to bring Bond to the '90s in style, with the huge help of ace director Martin Campbell behind the camera. 007 was back in a big, bad way. But as is so often the case with a big, long-running series such as this, attention immediately turns to what comes next.
In this case, the answer to that question came in December 1997 in the form of "Tomorrow Never Dies,...
- 2/8/2023
- by Ryan Scott
- Slash Film
Charles ‘Jerry’ Juroe, a veteran marketing and public relations professional best known for handling the promotion of 14 installments of the James Bond film franchise dating back to the very first, has died at 98.
Juroe died Sept. 30 of natural causes at his home near Valencia, Spain, his friend Mark Cerulli, who edited his 2018 memoir Bond, the Beatles and My Year with Marilyn: 50 Years as a Movie Marketing Man, told The Hollywood Reporter.
“He made a huge contribution to the success of the series from the very first promotional tour to Italy in 1962 for Dr. No with Sean Connery to his ...
Juroe died Sept. 30 of natural causes at his home near Valencia, Spain, his friend Mark Cerulli, who edited his 2018 memoir Bond, the Beatles and My Year with Marilyn: 50 Years as a Movie Marketing Man, told The Hollywood Reporter.
“He made a huge contribution to the success of the series from the very first promotional tour to Italy in 1962 for Dr. No with Sean Connery to his ...
- 10/7/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
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