Bond girls Monica Bellucci and Lea Seydoux give 007 fans a glimpse of spectre

007 Spectre
Bond girls Monica Bellucci and Lea Seydoux have given a glimpse of their characters in the new James Bond film, Spectre.
Monica, 50, who plays Lucia Sciarra, revealed: “She’s an Italian widow with secrets. Her first husband was killed and she risks the same thing happening to her.”
One clip in a new vlog shows Lucia at church in a sombre, dignified black outfit, talking with James Bond (Daniel Craig).
Lea, whose character Madeleine Swann is the second Bond girl in the film, said: “She’s a doctor, she’s intelligent and a very sensitive and human character.”
In behind-the-scenes footage shot at night, Lea is shown running up steps next to the river Thames in London, opposite the Houses of Parliament.
Director Sam Mendes also explained why he had cast the two actresses as Bond girls, saying: “In Spectre, the two women who Bond hooks up with – both have great mystery, they both have depths and for that you need fantastic actresses.
“And I just thought: Monica Bellucci… She’s an incredibly seductive presence in life and in the movie.”
He added that Lea’s character, Madeleine, “needed to be soulful, feisty and complicated, and I think it’s a pivotal relationship. So it probably couldn’t be a total newcomer because it needed someone with a certain amount of life experience, maturity.”
30-year-old Lea was the right choice for the part because “she’s the whole package”, Sam continued.
In the 24th James Bond adventure, a cryptic message from the past sends 007 on a rogue mission to Mexico City and then to Rome, where he meets Lucia, the widow of an infamous criminal. He starts to uncover he existence of a sinister organisation, Spectre, and infiltrates a secret meeting.
Back in London, he enlists Moneypenny (Naomie Harris) and Q (Ben Whishaw) to help him seek out Madeleine, the daughter of his old nemesis Mr White (Jesper Christensen), who may hold the clue to untangling the web of Spectre.
Spectre wil be released in the UK on October 26, 2015.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement