«Nunca fue una opción realista»

Idris Elba se aparta de la carrera por ser el nuevo 007

Todavía es un misterio quién tomará el testigo de Daniel Craig como el próximo James Bond. Recientemente se pusieron en marcha los casting para encontrar a la próxima encarnación de 007, en la que será la primera película de la saga bajo la dirección de Denis Villeneuve. Y cada vez que se habla del icónico agente secreto, resurgen los rumores vinculados con Idris Elba. Pero esta vez, el propio actor británico optó por desligarse definitivamente de la historia.

En una entrevista con GQ, Elba remarcó que los rumores que lo posicionaron como presunto candidato a ser el nuevo James Bond no fueron realistas. Asimismo, explicó que nunca existió una intención real por parte de los responsables de la franquicia de ofrecerle el papel.

Esta no es la primera vez que Idris Elba se distancia de sus supuestas chances de dar vida al primer James Bond negro. Pero ahora parece decidido a poner a dormir las especulaciones de una buena vez.

«Siempre sentí que no era una posibilidad realista. James Bond fue escrito como fue escrito por un motivo. Aunque siempre me sentí halagado [por los rumores], creo que, siendo realistas, algunos mercados simplemente no lo aceptarían. Bond es un fenómeno mundial, y a muchos espectadores no les gustaría que lo interprete un hombre negro y africano. No es algo que les pueda gustar en su cultura. Punto», sostuvo el intérprete.

Cuando Barbara Broccoli todavía ostentaba la gestión de la saga, había dejado en claro que James Bond era un hombre blanco y británico, y que no iban a cambiarlo. Cuando Amazon compró MGM Studios y luego asumió el control creativo de Bond, se multiplicaron las especulaciones sobre posibles modificaciones al personaje. Sin embargo, Idris Elba lo considera innecesario.

«Bond es tan irreal que [darle] un toque de realismo está bien, pero no intentemos hacerlo woke. Creo que hay que ser fiel a su esencia: el escapismo. No intentemos complacer los gustos del mundo. Que simplemente sea Bond», remarcó el actor.

La nueva película de James Bond todavía no tiene protagonistas ni fecha de estreno confirmada. El filme de Denis Villeneuve será el 26.° de la saga del agente secreto y se espera que llegue en algún momento de 2028.

Fuente: El Financiero

#CinemaGizmo #Destacado #IdrisElba #JamesBond #Noticias #PermanenciasVoluntarias #PermanenciasVoluntariasRadio
Idris Elba says James Bond audiences wouldn’t accept a Black actor playing spy
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/06/09/entertainment/idris-elba-james-bond-scli-intl
#idriselba #racism #culture #UK #jamesbond
Idris Elba says James Bond audiences wouldn’t accept a Black actor playing spy

British actor Idris Elba, who has long been rumored to be in the running to play James Bond, has said that audiences wouldn’t “go for a Black male, an African male” playing the 007 spy.

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Idris Elba’s Wife Says She Was Racially Profiled Days After His Knighthood

Just days after Idris Elba knelt before King Charles, accepted a knighthood, and smiled for the cameras, his wife Sabrina Dhowre Elba experienced something that should remind every Black person in Britain that proximity to power does not grant immunity.

Sabrina, a Canadian former model and UN goodwill ambassador, was racially profiled following a minor car accident in London. A woman backed into her parked car, then immediately turned hostile, not about the damage, but about where Sabrina was “from” and whether she had the right to challenge what happened.

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Proximity To Power Does Not Protect You From Racism

I am sorry this happened to Idris Elba’s wife. No one should be subjected to that kind of treatment. But the incident also makes Idris’s recent comments about not making Bond “woke” even more frustrating.

Originally, “woke” meant staying alert to racial injustice and recognising the systems that allow discrimination to continue. But now, the word has been repeatedly weaponised to dismiss conversations about racism, representation and discrimination. The same people who use it to attack Black actors and diverse casting will use it against Sabrina’s experience, too. They will call her complaint “woke,” minimise the racism she described, and reduce it to hurt feelings.

That is why Idris should know better. With his platform, he should not be borrowing language that so often serves the very people who deny the reality of racism in Britain. Fame does not protect anyone from racism, sexism or bigotry. It only delays the moment when that reality becomes impossible to ignore. Perhaps seeing his wife, a woman of colour who does not have his level of fame, face treatment that many ordinary Black people recognise immediately will force a more honest reflection.

Whether that happens is another question. But the lesson is clear: proximity to power does not make racism disappear. It only makes some people believe they are insulated from it until it reaches their own doorstep.

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Idris Elba says audiences would never accept a black actor playing James Bond: ‘That’s not what they like in their culture’

The star of Luther played down rumours that he was lined up to take over 007, adding that he’s against making the character ‘woke’

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2026/jun/08/idris-elba-audiences-would-not-accept-black-actor-james-bond

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Idris Elba Says Bond Rumors Were ‘Never Legit’ and ‘Not Realistic’: Audiences ‘Won’t Go for a Black Male Playing Bond’

Idris Elba says rumors about him playing James Bond were "never legit" and "not realistic," as audiences "won't go for a Black male" in the role.

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Idris Elba Accepted A Knighthood, Then Used The Right’s Favourite Anti-Woke Line

Let me start with this: I admire Idris Elba. The man has range, gravitas, and a screen presence that makes you believe he could save the world in a tuxedo or a durag. He has been in films I absolutely love. His advocacy for young people through the Elba Hope Foundation is real, tangible work. And I genuinely celebrated his success, even as I was critical of him receiving the knighthood from King Charles. But then GQ published an interview that made me put down my phone and stare at the wall for a solid minute.

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The GQ Interview Was Disappointing

Here is his GQ excerpt that did it. The setup is familiar: Idris Elba, the man who has been rumoured to play James Bond for nearly two decades, finally addressing it directly:

“It was never legit. It was always just a rumour. I’ve always felt that it’s not a realistic thing. James Bond was written how he was written for a reason. But I was complimented by it. And also, I think, in realistic terms, some markets just don’t go for that. Bond is big all over the world. And [audiences] won’t [all] go for a Black male, an African male, playing Bond. That’s not what they like in their culture. Period.”

Then he added the line that is now living rent‑free in my head:

“Bond is so unrealistic, so a hint of reality is good, but let’s not try and make it woke. I think you’ve got to be pure to what it is: escapism. Don’t try and answer the world’s taste. Just be Bond.”

Did He Just Use “Woke” Like That?

I know Elba is Black British, not Black American, but the word “woke” still carries a history that matters. But even so, something irks me when a Black person uses the word “woke” as a pejorative. Because here is the history that too many people have forgotten or chosen to ignore:

Originally, “woke” meant being alert and actively attentive to racial prejudice and systemic discrimination. Rooted in African‑American English, it was an in‑group term used as a survival tactic for decades before being adopted by modern civil rights movements. It was not an insult. It was a warning, a consciousness, a call to pay attention.

Then conservative think tanks and right‑wing media redefined it. They turned it into a catch‑all slur for anything that includes Black people, women, LGBTQ+ representation, or basic human empathy. And now, apparently, even Idris Elba is using it that way.

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The Problem With Saying “Don’t Make Bond Woke”

Did Idris just use “woke” the way racists and right-wing culture warriors use it? Because that is exactly how it sounded. He acknowledged that some global markets would reject a Black Bond, and instead of challenging that racism, he seemed to accept it. “Period,” he said, as if that ends the conversation.

There were a thousand ways to make his point without adopting their language. He could have said Bond is a specific fantasy. He could have said the franchise has commercial realities. Or perhaps, maybe black and brown people are not ready to see a Black man work to destabilise black and brown countries in the service of the British Empire. Instead, he reached for a word that has been weaponised against Black people.

And that is what makes it so awkward. This is a man who gained global fame playing Black American characters in The Wire, despite fair debates about whether Black British actors always understand the specific history behind those roles. He also played Heimdall, a Norse god, in Marvel. So where was the concern about purity then?

Apparently, crossing cultures is fine when it benefits him. But when Blackness enters Bond, one of Britain’s most protected white male fantasies, suddenly the worry is that it might become “woke.”

The Knighthood and the Conservative Turn

I have long wondered if Idris Elba is secretly a conservative, because he repeatedly says conservative‑adjacent things. Not in a firebrand, flag‑waving way, but in a quiet, “let’s not rock the boat” way. Accepting a knighthood from King Charles already told me something about how comfortable he is with establishment approval. We covered that last week: a talented Black man kneeling before a monarch, receiving a title tied to an empire built on colonialism and slavery. David Bowie turned down a knighthood. Benjamin Zephaniah refused an OBE because the word “empire” reminded him of brutality. Elba knelt, smiled, and posted a photo holding hands with his wife.

That is his choice. But choices signal values. Now, with this interview, the pattern feels clearer. He accepted the royal honour, adopted the right‑wing redefinition of “woke”, and told GQ that a Black Bond wouldn’t work in certain markets, not as a critique of the character, but as a statement of fact to be accommodated. How disappointing.

King Charles tapped a sword on the Luther star’s shoulders at Windsor Castle. Elba’s work with young people is undeniable. The monarchy’s role in handing out titles? That is another conversation. (Credit: PA Images / Alamy Stock Photo)

The Real Wokeness Is Just Existing

The thing that makes this so frustrating is that Idris Elba has been caught in the crosshairs of the very “woke” panic he seems to be dismissing. Take his new movie, Masters of the Universe. Even before its release, the film became a prime target for the anti-woke crowd. Their outrage was sparked by a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it gag in the trailer where the hero, He-Man, is shown at a desk with a nameplate that reads “He/Him.” For some, this simple nod to corporate identity culture was political indoctrination. Conservative commentators declared the franchise had been “given pronouns,” with one calling it “just woke because of the gay he/him pronouns”. They immediately branded the whole production “woke garbage” and “forced diversity”.

And who did the critics point to as a prime example of this alleged “race swap garbage”? Idris Elba himself. His casting as Duncan, the trusted Man-At-Arms, a role originated as a red-headed character, was singled out for criticism. In the eyes of the right-wing outrage machine, his very presence in the film was not just casting; it was an agenda.

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Final Thoughts

It does not matter what he says or does. He is a Black man in a high-profile role. That alone is enough for the anti-woke crowd to label the entire project as political propaganda. And yet, he hands them the language to do it. He validates their frame and says “don’t make it woke” as if including a Black actor in a role originally written for a white character is inherently political, as if the default is whiteness and any deviation is an agenda. Black people existing in movies, in video games, in positions of power is not “woke.” It is representation, it’s reality, and it is not “answering the world’s taste”, it is acknowledging that the world has more than one taste.

So here is the irony: Idris Elba collected his knighthood from King Charles, the head of the Commonwealth, Britain’s empire rebranded for the modern age, smiled for the cameras, knelt without hesitation, and then turned around and warned against making Bond “woke.” He may never play 007, but he still managed to do something very Bond-like: protect the establishment. No wonder Piers Morgan is so chuffed.

Well said, Mr Elba. 👏👏 https://t.co/AnrCBh5koi

— Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) June 8, 2026 #IdrisElba #KingCharlesIII