At the 21st Marrakech International Film Festival, Alfonso Cuarón opened up about a pivotal moment in his career when he turned down the opportunity to direct a James Bond movie.
During a candid conversation with Moroccan directors Alaa Eddine Aljem and Talal Selhami, Cuarón shared anecdotes from his life and career, including some surprising revelations about his filmmaking journey.
One of the more surprising stories was his experience directing Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. Cuarón admitted that before being offered the film, he had never read a single Harry Potter book.
In fact, he was initially hesitant to take on the project, explaining, “I had written Children of Men that nobody wanted to do. I was unemployed. I was going to have a child. This film was offered to me, and I didn’t want to do it because I didn’t know anything about Harry Potter.”
However, after reading the books, Cuarón had a change of heart. He said, “There is something good here! I will give it a try.” This decision turned out to be a pivotal one in his career. Cuarón recalled the experience as “the best experience making a film I ever had,” praising the film’s visual effects and the creative freedom he found working on the third installment of the franchise.
The success of Prisoner of Azkaban opened doors for his next major project, Children of Men, which he was finally able to make with Warner Bros.
But it was his decision to turn down a James Bond film that stood out as a key moment in his career trajectory. Cuarón shared that he had been offered the opportunity to direct a Bond film but ultimately decided against it after reflecting on the challenges of such a project.
He described the process of making a Bond movie as feeling “weird” because of how the action scenes were handled by a separate team, separate from the dialogue and character-driven scenes he would direct.
The turning point came during a dinner with acclaimed filmmaker Joel Coen. Cuarón recalled asking Coen, “Would you do a Bond film?” Coen’s response was a candid one: “It probably falls into the category of a film I want to watch but not do.” Cuarón explained that this conversation helped him realize a valuable lesson: “Some films I prefer to watch and not do.”
Cuarón’s decision to pass on the Bond franchise was driven by a deeper understanding of his own creative interests and what types of films truly inspire him.
While Harry Potter gave him the chance to hone his skills in visual effects and filmmaking, James Bond—despite being a thrilling prospect—was a project he felt wouldn’t align with his personal vision for filmmaking.