$45 Million Paid for Product Placement in New James Bond Flick

May. 4, 2011
Dan grew up in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. He went to college in western Massachusetts. He can be reached at ...

According to a report in The Australian, $45 million is going to be raised for product and brand placement in the latest installment of the James Bond series. This figure will mean the new film, yet untitled other than by its codename “Bond23,” will command the highest price for product placement in cinema history. Steven Spielberg’s Minority Report comes in at number 2; that film received about $20 million from Lexus, Bulgari and American Express to feature their products and brands.

None of this is particularly novel, and mainstream cinema has featured strategically placed products and brands for a while now. But the $45 million is causing fans to worry that product placement concerns will harm the quality of the movie. This point is articulated in Morgan Spurlock’s (director of Super Size Me) new documentary The Greatest Movie Ever Sold.

Product placement undoubtedly has the potential to detract from the quality of a film, but that it’s reached these levels comes as no surprise. Mainstream cinema by it’s very nature creates and reinforces an image of our lives and our relationships with each other. With few exceptions, it has always depicted us as being capitalist consumers, and even a Hollywood flick made 60 years ago implicitly sells a product – the difference is that in 1951 that product was a lifestyle or a way of life that Hollywood purported to be normative, and this lifestyle naturally included being a consumer. In 2011, the only real difference is that now, with the increasing omnipresence of advertising, we’re shown specifically what to consume. TC mark

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  • PERFECTCIRCLES

    I can't WAIT to find out what to buy!

  • Tristancloy

    Patently absurd.

  • alans

    As someone who loves Bond movies, I came into this article ready to swing. But your take is insightful and rational and not at all what I expected. Hope it's a fun movie.

  • http://www.facebook.com/brad.pike Brad Pike

    Q: “And over here James, we have the brilliant and versatile new Apple iPad2, but push this button on the side and it shoots out a ten foot stream of flame.”

  • Guest

    Product placements have been a feature of Bond films since the first movie made in, what, 1962? It's what makes them fun.

    It's when the plot and dialog of the film or TV show includes descriptions of the features of the products that you've lost me forever. For reference, see the latest Hawaii 5-0 episode. The series is already a shill for Chevrolet and Hawaiian Air, but this last episode was just a blatant sales pitch for the car being driven by one of the characters.

    Hollywood has sold out and we're not going to buy it anymore.

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