50 Yr Old Hot Monica Bellucci Is Next Bond Girl In “Spectre”
Fans of James Bond are receiving a bit more footage in the newest trailer for “Spectre.” Daniel Craig makes a come back to the role for a fourth outing. Bond arrives in Italy looking for info from the widow, whose Mafioso husband has been killed — a fate that might be coming up for her as well.
This 50-year-old actress and model was seen laid back and calm as she strolled around the beautiful Croatian city with a female friend. The Italian star exchanged her vampy Bond girl dress for a reserved black-and-white polka dot dress, which she paired with a black cardigan for the outing.
Speaking about her character “She comes from a man’s world,” Monica Bellucci said to eminent newspaper. “But when the attraction between them takes place and she realizes her feminine power on him, then she trusts him to save her.”
There’s also a newly prolonged synopsis for the November 6 release:
A mysterious message from the past sends James Bond on a rogue assignment to Mexico City and in due course Rome, where he runs into Lucia Sciarra ,Monica Bellucci the stunning and forbidden widow of an scandalous criminal. Bond breaks into a secret conference and exposes the presence of the ominous group known as SPECTRE.
In the meantime back in London, Max Denbigh (Andrew Scott), the new chief of the Centre for National Security, questions Bond’s schedules and tests the relevance of MI6, led by M (Ralph Fiennes). Bond secretly recruits Moneypenny (Naomie Harris) and Q (Ben Whishaw) to help him try to find out Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux), the descendant of his old nemesis Mr White (Jesper Christensen), who may embrace the clue to unraveling the web of SPECTRE. As the daughter of an killer, she understands Bond in a way most others cannot.
Spectre, the 24th portion in the franchise and Craig’s fourth time as 007, marks the title organization’s first presence in a Bond film from the time when in 1971’s Diamonds Are Forever was released. The movie was directed by Skyfall’s Sam Mendes and co-written by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and John Logan.