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Denis Villeneuve’s James Bond Casting Expected Mid-Year, With Filming Targeted for Early 2027

After years of speculation, shortlists, and tabloid-fueled obsession, the next chapter of James Bond is finally beginning to take tangible shape. While the British press continues to rotate through a new “frontrunner” every few months, a clearer and far more credible timeline has now emerged from industry insiders.

According to Justin Kroll of Deadline, speaking on the My Mom’s Basement podcast, the long-awaited casting of the next James Bond is expected to take place around the middle of this year. Filming, meanwhile, is tentatively planned for late 2026 or early 2027, placing the official start of production closer than many fans may have expected.

The project will be directed by Denis Villeneuve, whose recent work on the Dune franchise has solidified him as one of the most visually ambitious and disciplined filmmakers working today. Realistically, however, a late-2026 shoot seems unlikely. Villeneuve is expected to spend November and December promoting Dune: Part Three around the globe, making January 2027 a far more plausible launch window for cameras to roll.

Perhaps the most intriguing creative development is the involvement of screenwriter Steven Knight, who is penning Bond 26 for Amazon MGM Studios. Knight’s résumé—most notably Peaky Blinders and Eastern Promises—signals a darker, more physically imposing interpretation of 007. One insider reportedly told Kroll that the new Bond must look like “he could kill you with his bare hands in a trice,” a description that echoes the brutal edge of Ian Fleming’s original novels.

Sources suggest Knight is drawing heavily from Fleming’s earliest Bond stories, potentially returning the character to his Royal Navy roots and charting his ascent through MI6 before earning his coveted “00” status. That approach opens the door to something fans have long hoped for: a true Bond origin story. While not officially confirmed, industry chatter increasingly points toward a period-set film, possibly unfolding in the 1950s or 1960s, grounding Bond once again in Cold War paranoia rather than modern geopolitics.

As for casting, speculation remains just that—speculation. One consistent name circulating internally has been Jacob Elordi, whom Amazon/MGM is said to favor. However, no auditions have reportedly taken place, and Villeneuve has final authority over the decision. With months still to go before a formal announcement, the search remains wide open.

What is clear, though, is that this Bond reboot is shaping up to be less about reinvention through gimmicks and more about restoration—returning 007 to his raw, dangerous, and unapologetically lethal origins. If Villeneuve and Knight deliver on that promise, the wait may well be worth it.