[on directing the second unit for Tomorrow Never Dies (1997):] We did the major sequences [the traditional] way -- including the boat, ski and helicopter sequences. It's by far the most economical way of doing it, otherwise there's so much time wasted and energy wasted -- especially if you've got the actors there for a limited time. But there were times when we would go off and shoot whole sequences and then put the actors into them. In those situations, [the director's] first unit became the good old insert unit! ... The thing about Bond films is that the spectacular footage is all real stuff. On The World Is Not Enough (1999), we used digital effects very sparingly. I think that's the hallmark of the franchise: it is dangerous and people do the stunts. It is truly man against man, or man against nature, and I think it shows. It takes a hell of a long time to shoot those kinds of scenes, which is why I had a second unit that was running the whole time I was. [American Cinematographer, December 1999]
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