
New contender to play James Bond is 31-year-old British rising star
Since Daniel Craig wrapped up as 007 in 2021 with No Time to Die, there has been wild speculation for three years, with many fans convinced they know which actor is going to take up the spy's licence to kill.
This speculation has only intensified following a historic deal in which creative control of the franchise was handed to Amazon after Amazon Studios purchased MGM+ for $8.45billion (£6.7billion).
Aaron Pierre, the 31-year-old British actor whose been gaining a huge following in recent months, is now emerging as a frontrunner for the iconic role, with industry insiders and bookmakers taking serious notice.
Best known for his performances in The Underground Railroad, Rebel Ridge, and Disney's upcoming Mufasa: The Lion King, the actor's buzz is leading some to wonder if he's 007 material.
The revelation comes from a leak by entertainment insider Daniel Ritchman, according to GBNews, sparking a wave of interest from Bond fans.
For years, the Bond rumour mill has revolved around familiar names like Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Henry Cavill, and Jack Lowden. But a sharp shift in betting odds suggests the tide is turning.
Pierre's odds have narrowed significantly, positioning him alongside the top-tier contenders.
Currently, Theo James leads the pack with odds of 5/2 (a 28.6% implied chance), followed by Cavill at 3/1 and Lowden at 4/1.
Taylor-Johnson, once a hot favourite, has slipped back to 5/1, even thoguh some think he may have already accepted the role, as he's insisted he 'can't talk about' his next film project.
The 35-year-old actor has long been heavily rumoured to be the next James Bond, from as far back as 2022 – although reports of his official casting were promptly rubbished in March 2024.
He gave a very coy response when asked about what he'll be doing after working on 28 Years Later and its sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, back-to-back. More Trending
Questioned by Deadline at the horror movie's premiere on Wednesday night he said: 'I can't talk about it.'
Meanwhile, more far-fetched candidates such as Stephen Graham and Harry Styles remain on the books at longshot odds of 66/1.
The buzz suggests that producers may be looking toward a younger actor with franchise longevity. At 31, Pierre strikes that balance.
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MORE: Aaron Taylor-Johnson remains tight-lipped about Bond but there are other 007 candidates
MORE: What will the new head of MI6 actually do?
MORE: A-list heartthrob new favourite to play next Bond villain
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The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘Everybody's starved of affection': Past Lives director Celine Song on the brutal dating scene and her realistic new romcom
'Our financial literacy is so fucked,' says Celine Song. We're having breakfast in Manhattan on a sunny Saturday in early July, a few weeks after her new film, Materialists, has opened in New York City. She's wearing a charmingly ironic outfit: a T-shirt that says 'HOWDY' and a baseball cap that says 'Big' (she's petite, 5ft 4in, for the record) – but she speaks with almost disarming earnestness. She's frustrated, she tells me, that people have described one of the characters in her film, a private equity manager with a $12m apartment, as a 'billionaire'. 'If you're a billionaire, your big apartment is not $12m!' she exclaims. 'The average income of an American adult is $35,000. What that means is half of America makes less than $35,000. Three times that is $100,000. Ten of that is $1m. And a billion dollars is not a hundred of that. No, it's a thousand of that.' She's offended because a billionaire would never be a likable character in her movie. 'I think because of how visible billionaires are, we think that's what wealth is. And I'm like: no, that's just crime.' It's a bit unusual to be talking about financial literacy in the context of a romcom, the genre that Materialists defiantly embraces with its story of a high-end matchmaker (Dakota Johnson) torn between an old flame with no money (Chris Evans) and a suave, moneyed suitor, the 'not-billionaire' in question (Pedro Pascal). Romantic comedies, particularly those set in New York City, tend to be escapist fantasies: you're not supposed to wonder how the heroine can afford to live in a swanky one-bedroom in Manhattan or wear Louboutins; you're certainly not supposed to ponder the moral implications of the hero's wealth. But in Materialists, every detail is spelled out. Early in the film, Lucy (Johnson) announces to Harry (Pascal) that she makes '$80,000 a year before taxes' – something the private equity partner should keep in mind before pursuing her. The characters' apartments, Song says, were carefully researched and designed based on their economic situations. There's Harry's $12m penthouse in the expensive Manhattan neighbourhood Tribeca. Lucy lives in an aspirational studio in the posh neighbourhood of Brooklyn Heights that she rented right before the Covid-19 pandemic (Song looked on US real estate website Zillow to estimate the rent); Evans's character John lives with three roommates in south-west Brooklyn's Sunset Park. (It was supposed to be in Williamsburg, before the film's construction crew said that he'd never be able to afford that.) It's not that Song is a mercenary realist. The only subject that makes her eyes light up as much as money is love, which she describes as 'being hit by lightning'. Song's first feature film, Past Lives, which nabbed two Oscar nominations in 2024, spins a beautiful time-crossing and bicultural saga around a happily married Korean immigrant in the US – a stand-in for Song – who re-encounters a childhood sweetheart and confronts the life that could have been. The characters talk about inyeon, a Buddhist belief in relationships as something fated and cosmic, cutting across life cycles. There's no such wistful dreaming in Materialists. Harry's romantic overture to Lucy is to tell her that he's interested in her 'intangible assets'; he wants to date the broker, the person who decides who is and isn't valuable. 'I feel like as we grow into this efficiency-focused, productivity-focused way of thinking about the world, everything we do is so that we can be better, faster, stronger,' Song says of our culture of relentless optimisation. 'Where is the place where you're just like an animal who's trying to live?' Song, 36, was born in Seoul to artist parents. She says her father, a film-maker, named her after the impish stage magician played by Juliet Berto in Jacques Rivette's French new wave classic Céline and Julie Go Boating. When Song was 12, the family emigrated to Ontario, Canada, where she lived throughout her college years, before moving to New York to pursue a master of fine arts degree in playwriting at Columbia University. By the time she started making movies, she had achieved considerable success in theatre for deeply personal, yet daringly experimental plays, including 2019's Endlings, which weaves together the stories of three female Korean divers and a Korean-Canadian writer in New York, and a live production of The Seagull on the Sims 4, staged during lockdown in 2020. Song never really suffered the indignities of modern dating. As portrayed in Past Lives, she met her husband, the screenwriter Justin Kuritzkes – who recently wrote Luca Guadagnino's tennis film Challengers – at a writing residency in Montauk in Long Island when she was 24. But in her early years in New York, she got a pretty acrid taste of dating culture when she worked as a matchmaker for six months, after hearing about the gig from a friend in the industry. It seemed like an 'HR job' with a more 'involved client-facing element' – and Song had studied psychology in her undergraduate years. But she knew she couldn't make lightning strike for her clients, and they knew it, too. 'I was basically given instructions on who to say no to,' she says of the job. 'They were saying: 'I'm not even available to get hit by lightning by certain people who don't meet my criteria.'' The worst of them, sampled in the film, were brazen with their bigotry. 'People would rank what races they wanted. They would literally say: 'No Asians'. They wouldn't admit that even to their therapist.' She had wanted to make a film about the experience for years, but the script had never quite worked. Then she realised why. 'I thought the focus was on the clients. But the problem is that the clients are not that interesting, because they all want the same thing. If I asked 10 clients what kind of guy they wanted, they would all say: over 6ft tall, makes more money than me, great body, strong hairline.' Things clicked when one day, years ago, she ran into an old friend from graduate school at a fancy gala dinner for theatre donors. She was there as one of the rising playwrights that wealthy patrons could rub shoulders with; he, once a very promising acting student, was there as a server. When she went over to greet and hug her friend, she sensed that they were both embarrassed. It was as if they were breaking an invisible barrier – like Rose going below deck to fraternise with Jack in Titanic. 'How Victorian is that?' she says. 'But it's 2017!' Sign up to Inside Saturday The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. after newsletter promotion She realised that the movie she was trying to make was about class, which is what all the great romances are really about, anyway. Early in Materialists, when Lucy meets Harry at a fancy wedding she's helped facilitate, John interrupts them – he's there as a waiter. It's our first indication that Lucy is an impostor in the world of wealth that she's insinuated herself into so elegantly and seamlessly. The cold calculus with which she surveys people as dating prospects hits something of an iceberg whenever she's with John: love, as always, gets in the way of logic. Lucy eventually undergoes a reckoning in Materialists, but Song doesn't judge her protagonist too harshly. She has deep empathy for women like her, who trust in logic to rescue them. She brings up the 'tradwife' trend taking over social media, where women embrace traditional gender roles and domesticity, as a symptom of a crisis beneath the surface. 'I think it has so much to do with how deeply broken our economic systems are, especially in the US. As we have learned, the American dream is not achievable. You cannot jump your class. But what's one of the few ways that you can still jump your class? Well, marriage.' If there is an element of escapist fantasy to the film, it's that the protagonists, all deeply insecure in their own ways about their desirability, are played by three of the most beautiful people in the world. To have Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans vying for your hand is an embarrassment of riches, and Song admits that even casting Dakota Johnson as Lucy – a woman who believes there's nothing special about her – was a bit of a 'fantasy trick'. 'But the thing is, it wasn't a stretch for my actors to play these roles; they got it better than me. Who feels more like merchandise than the guy who plays the Mandalorian or Captain America?' For all its hard-nosed cynicism, Materialists is even more sentimental of a romance than Past Lives; its declarations about romance are all the sweeter for the superficial, number-crunching conventions they resist. Even so, making a star-studded romantic comedy after the critical success of Past Lives is a bold move. The genre is more or less dead today, or relegated to Christmas specials on streaming services. Even A24, which distributed the movie in the US, seemed to be self-conscious about releasing a romcom: the company published a 'syllabus' for Materialists, a list of Song's reference films, replete with highbrow names such as Thomas Vinterberg and Mike Leigh, as well as Merchant Ivory productions and Martin Scorsese's The Age of Innocence. But Song herself is unselfconscious about her love for romances. 'I still remember showing Past Lives at this festival in Ireland,' she says. 'This one really burly Irish guy was asking me a question during the Q&A. And he started crying, telling me the story of his own childhood sweetheart. And I remember thinking: it's funny that when it comes to the matters of love, we relegate it to the girlies. But the truth is that everybody's just actually starved of love and affection. I knew, when I was making Materialists, that there is a very real market for it.' She embraces the idea that Materialists might spark more conversations about love and romance. 'It is so romantic that I get to invite the audience to the movie theatre for two hours to do nothing but talk about love and dating and relationships and marriage.' But then again, there's always the matter of money. 'We get to be so real! I get to say things like $12m [apartment]! You know, the most reliable, audible response in every screening I've been in is the moment when Harry says '$12m'.' Materialists is in UK cinemas from 13 August.


Wales Online
5 hours ago
- Wales Online
Lions star's wife gives birth in back of a car hours before Australia Test
Lions star's wife gives birth in back of a car hours before Australia Test Lions and Ireland star Bundee Aki says his wife called him from a car on the way to hospital hours before he faced the Wallabies Bundee Aki (centre) says he is looking forward to meeting his new-born child (Image:) Lions centre Bundee Aki has revealed that his wife gave birth on the day of the first Test in Brisbane - with the Ireland international yet to meet his new-born daughter. Aki, who featured in all three Tests for the British and Irish Lions here in Australia, was on the bench for the first Test in Brisbane. However, following the third Test defeat in Sydney, Aki revealed that he recently welcomed a fifth child - although he's yet to see his newest daughter. "I want to enjoy my break, my family time," said the 35-year-old as he reflected on the end of a long Lions tour. "I haven't seen my family for eight weeks. "I have a new-born child who I haven't met yet. She was born when we were playing in Brisbane, so I haven't met her. "Her name is Aine, so I'm looking forward to going and meeting my new-born child and we'll go from there." Aki and his wife have a simple theme when it comes to naming their children, with Aine joining Armani-Jade, Adrianna, Andronicus and Ailbhe. Article continues below "All my kids start with A," he added. "So my wife loved the name Aine. That's five As in the family." When asked if it had been difficult not seeing his new-born daughter and the rest of his family, Aki ultimately told the remarkable story of how his wife gave birth in New Zealand on the same day he was facing the Wallabies. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack to get exclusive news stories and insight from behind the scenes in Welsh rugby. "Credit to my wife," he said. "She's a powerful woman, a strong woman. "I have to say it to her. If you only knew the story of what happened, it's a funny story in itself. It was a good day. "I was in the hotel. I knew we were overdue. The missus calls me and she's like, 'Water hasn't broke but I'm going to the hospital, I'm feeling contractions.' "I go, 'Yeah, fair enough.' She goes to the hospital, we're getting ready for the team meeting pre-match, and then she calls me and says she's on the way to the hospital, so I said, 'Fine, be safe.' "Five minutes later, she sends a photo, her water broke. I was like, 'Cool, OK, are you almost there?' This is like 30 or 40 minutes away from the hospital, so I said, 'You'll be all right, Mum is there.' "Ten minutes later, she video calls me and I was like, 'S**t, what's going on?' I saw a baby on the video call, so she had it in the car on the way to the hospital. They're both strong and healthy, so happy days. "In New Zealand, yeah. So happy days." Article continues below Given the nature of the day, it might have been difficult for Aki to focus on the rugby, but the centre admitted he had no issue getting on with the task of taking on Australia at Suncorp Stadium. "I knew it was good Juju, I knew it was good Juju," he said. "So I knew we were going to have a good day."


STV News
5 hours ago
- STV News
Musicians head to Berlin as part of 'Brand Scotland' trade mission
Young Scottish musicians will perform in Berlin this week as part of a UK Government effort to promote Scottish culture and attract international investment. Members of the National Youth Orchestra of Scotland (NYOS) and their guest soloist, Ryan Corbett, will perform at a business and government breakfast event at the British Ambassador's residence, hosted by Scottish secretary Iain Murray and UK's ambassador to Germany, Andrew Mitchell. The event, dubbed 'Symphony and Sausages', will see guests served smoked salmon, haggis, black pudding and homemade potato scones while showcasing Scottish music. It comes as part of efforts by the Scotland Office to boost 'Brand Scotland', promoting Scottish produce and culture in a bid to help economic growth. UK Government/Lauren Hurley Secretary for Scotland Ian Murray Murray said: 'Scotland's cultural excellence is one of our greatest assets in attracting international investment and driving economic growth. The National Youth Orchestra of Scotland represents some of our most extraordinary musical talent. I'm delighted that they are able to join me in Berlin, and this performance will demonstrate Scottish culture at its finest. 'My 'Brand Scotland' campaign is about selling all that is fantastic about Scotland to the world, to encourage both exports and inward investment in Scotland, and I'm very pleased that we have been able to fund this event in Berlin.' Brand Scotland is a key part of the UK Government's Plan for Change, bringing real rewards for people in Scotland.' The visit is part of Murray's 'Brand Scotland' trade mission to 'sell the best of Scotland to the world', forming part of the UK Government's Plan For Change. The orchestra is in Berlin to perform at the Young Euro Classic festival, premiering a new accordion concerto by Scottish composer Jay Capperauld under the baton of Catherine Larsen-Maguire. During his two-day trip, Murray will also meet German officials, including Michael Meister, Minister of State for Federal-State Relations, and representatives from Germany's 16 federal states. The breakfast is funded by a £2,700 grant from the Scotland Office's Brand Scotland fund, part of a wider UK Government programme to boost Scotland's trading relationship with Europe. Murray's visit follows the signing of a new UK-Germany treaty and comes ahead of a speech in Edinburgh where he will outline the role of Scottish culture in economic growth. The minister is also set to travel to India and Sweden as part of the 'Brand Scotland' initiative. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country