Bond 18 was greenlit after the positive public reception to the
teaser trailer for
GoldenEye in May 1995. Following
GoldenEye's success in reviving the Bond series, there was pressure to recreate that success in the next production. This pressure came from
MGM which, along with its new owner, billionaire
Kirk Kerkorian, wanted the film's release to coincide with their public stock offering. Co-producer
Michael G. Wilson commented: "You realize that there's a huge audience and I guess you don't want to come out with a film that's going to somehow disappoint them." his agent said, "Martin just didn't want to do two Bond films in a row."
Roger Spottiswoode was chosen to direct in September 1996;
Writing Initial writers included
John Cork, Richard Smith, and novelist
Donald E. Westlake. In 1995, Westlake wrote two story treatments in collaboration with Wilson, both of which featured a villain who planned to destroy Hong Kong with explosives on the eve of the city's July 1997
transfer of sovereignty to China. Westlake used some of his ideas for a novel he completed the next year, though it was not published until 2017 under the title
Forever and a Death. Director Spottiswoode said that, in January 1997, MGM had a script also focused on the Hong Kong handover, but it could not be used for a film opening at the end of the year, so they had to start "almost from scratch at T-minus zero!"
Bruce Feirstein, who worked on
GoldenEye, wrote the initial script. He claimed that his inspiration was his own experience working with journalism and viewing both
Sky News and
CNN's
24-hour news coverage of the
Gulf War, stating that he aimed to "write something that was grounded in a nightmare of reality." The script was handed to Spottiswoode, who then gathered seven Hollywood screenwriters in London to brainstorm, eventually choosing
Nicholas Meyer to do rewrites. However, Spottiswoode himself said in a 2004 interview that "Carver is Rupert Murdoch". Wilson said, "We didn't have a script that was ready to shoot on the first day of filming", while Pierce Brosnan said, "We had a script that was not functioning in certain areas." In 2025, Hatcher highlighted that she loves the franchise and loves being a Bond girl. Actress
Sela Ward auditioned for the role; the producers reportedly said they wanted her "but ten years younger". Hatcher, at 32, was seven years Ward's junior, and playing
Lois Lane on the television show
Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, where she was voted the "Sexiest Woman on Television" by readers of
TV Guide the previous year. Brosnan also
screen-tested with Italian
Monica Bellucci, but the studio maintained that the role could be given only to an American actress. Brosnan remarked: "The fools said no." Bellucci subsequently had a role in the 24th Bond film,
Spectre. The role of Elliot Carver was initially offered to
Anthony Hopkins (who was also offered a role in
GoldenEye), but he declined in favor of
The Mask of Zorro.
Natasha Henstridge was rumoured as cast in the lead Bond Girl role, but eventually, Yeoh was confirmed. Brosnan was impressed, describing her as a "wonderful actress" who was "serious and committed about her work". She reportedly wanted to perform her own stunts, but was prevented because director Spottiswoode ruled it too dangerous and prohibited by insurance restrictions. When
Götz Otto was called in for casting, his hair had been cropped short for a television role. He was given 20 seconds to introduce himself, but did it in five: "I'm big, I'm bad, and I'm German."
Filming car with a steering wheel on the back seat, seen at an exhibition at Museum Industriekultur, Nuremberg. With
Vic Armstrong directing the
second unit, filming of the $11 million 4-minute pre-title sequence began on 18 January 1997 at ,
Peyragudes in the
French Pyrenees. The plane Bond is seen to purloin in the movie was a
Czech-built
Aero Vodochody L-39ZO Albatros weapons
jet trainer, supplied by a British company and flown by stunt pilots Tony "Taff" Smith and Mark Hanna. After completing work in France, the second unit moved on to
Portsmouth to film the scenes where the
Royal Navy prepares to engage the Chinese, with standing in for the various fictional
Type 23 Frigates in the story.
Anthony Waye says he believed the decision was caused after Vietnam's
Communist government had viewed the opening credits of
GoldenEye, which featured "semi-naked ladies smashing up
hammer-and-sickle emblems with sledgehammers, illustrating the
fall of communism." Two locations from previous Bond films were used: Brosnan and Hatcher's love scene was filmed at
Stoke Park, which had been featured in
Goldfinger, and the bay where they search for Carver's stealth boat is
Phang Nga Bay, previously used for
The Man with the Golden Gun. The
car chase sequence with the 750i took three weeks to film, with
Brent Cross car park being used to simulate
Hamburg, although the final leap was filmed on location. A stunt involving setting fire to three vehicles produced more smoke than anticipated, causing a member of the public to call the
fire brigade. The upwards camera angle filming the
HALO jump created the illusion of having the stuntman opening its parachute close to the water. Spottiswoode did not return to direct the next film; he said the producers asked him, but he was too tired. Barbara Broccoli subsequently chose
David Arnold to score
Tomorrow Never Dies on a recommendation from Barry. Arnold had come to Barry's attention through his successful cover interpretations in
Shaken and Stirred: The David Arnold James Bond Project, which featured major artists performing the former James Bond title songs in new arrangements. Arnold said that his score aimed for "a classic sound but [with] a modern approach", combining
techno music with a recognisably Barry-inspired "classic Bond" sound—notably Arnold borrowed from Barry's score for
From Russia with Love. The score was done across a period of six months, with Arnold writing music and revising previous pieces as he received edited footage of the film. The music for the indoor car chase sequence was co-written with the band
Propellerheads, who had worked with Arnold on
Shaken and Stirred. The soundtrack was well received by critics with Christian Clemmensen of
Filmtracks describing it as "an excellent tribute to the entire series of Bond score". At first, the theme song was to be written by Arnold himself, with the help of lyricist
Don Black and singer-songwriter
David McAlmont, who recorded the demo. However, MGM wanted a more popular artist, and invited various singers to write songs before one was picked through a competitive process. There were around twelve submissions, including songs from
Swan Lee,
Pulp,
Saint Etienne,
Marc Almond, and
Sheryl Crow.
Crow's song was chosen for the main titles. Arnold's composition, "Surrender", performed by
k.d. lang, was still used for the end titles, and features the same prominent melodic motif as the film's score. This was the fourth Bond film to have different opening and closing songs. Pulp's effort was re-titled as "Tomorrow Never Lies" and appeared as a b-side on their 1997 single "
Help The Aged". The original "Tomorrow Never Dies" rough mix of the song was eventually released on the bonus disc of the
This Is Hardcore deluxe edition in 2006.
Moby created a remake of the "
James Bond Theme" to be used for the movie. Two different versions of the soundtrack album were released, the first featuring only music from the first half of the film, and the second rectifying this but cutting several tracks, including the songs, to make room for the missing score tracks. In 2022 La La Land Records releases a two-disc expanded and limited edition of the complete score by Arnold. ==Release==