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Two Princes At 007 Premiere

Agent 007 received the royal stamp of approval Wednesday, with Princes William and Harry attending the world premiere of the new James Bond thriller, "Quantum of Solace."

The princes, dressed in dinner jackets and cheered by fans, joined star Daniel Craig and other celebrities on the red carpet in London's Leicester Square. They spent nearly a half-hour greeting cast and crew inside the Odeon cinema.

Proceeds from the gala are going to charities for military veterans, and 200 soldiers and their families were invited to the screening.

William, 26, and 24-year-old Harry are both officers in the British army. Harry spent 10 weeks this year serving on the front line in Afghanistan.

The 22nd official Bond film, "Quantum of Solace," features Mathieu Amalric as the villainous Dominic Greene, Olga Kurylenko and Gemma Arterton as the spy's love interests and Judi Dench as spymaster M.

It took Prince Harry 20 minutes to reach Arterton, and he joked: "What took us so long to get down this end?" Arterton said afterward that she "had a giggle" with the princes.

The film is Craig's second outing as 007, and picks up where its 2006 predecessor "Casino Royale" let off, with the secret agent out for revenge for the death of his girlfriend, Vesper Lynd.

CBS News correspondent Sheila MacVicar talked to Craig about it on the red carpet.

"What is Bond looking for in this film?" she asked.

"His quantum of solace, literally," Craig responded.

And and what is a quantum of solace?

"He's had his heart broken, he's been betrayed, and he needs to find some peace of mind," Craig explained.

"This seems to be a darker Bond," MacVicar observd.

"It is this time," Craig agreed, "but his girlfriend's just been killled, the love of his life, the woman he was going to run off and marry, she killed herself because of somebody, so he's dealing with that."

MacVicar says this Bond "still wears a tux well, but his sense of humor has been lost in the previous film."

"Casion Royale," which glossed over the gadgets and one-liners in favor of a more wrenching love story and intense action sequences, was widely praised for that darker take on the Bond franchise. But "Quantum of Solace" has gotten mixed reviews.

"I think it's a good follow up, it's not a great follow up," film critic Olly Richards said. "Casino Royale was this complete invention and just surprised everyone. ... This goes slightly more traditional with the story - you've got someone trying to take over the world with a very bizarre plot that you can't quite make sense of. But there's still all of the things you love in there: There's fantastic action, very beautiful girls, lots of stunts, some very very good stuff with Judi Dench."

The Sunday Times called it "an action film on auto-pilot."

According to MacVicar, "This film owes a lot less to the creative genius of Bond originator Ian Fleming than it does to the desore of the procers to keep what is now the longest-running and highly lucrative movie franchise going. In fact, the last Bond outing, "Casino Royale," was the highest grossing bond film ever.

"Whatever the critics say, and however bad the economy, film industry analysts say Bond is recession-proof, and still worth hundreds of millions at the box office."

Director Marc Forster said he wouldn't be working on the next Bond film.

"I was happy to make Quantum of Solace," he said at the premiere. "They asked me to do the next one. I was very honest: I passed because I'm working on something else."

Quantum of Solace was filmed around the world, with scenes shot in Panama, Chile, Italy, Austria and Mexico.

The film was getting its first screening for the general public later Wednesday as part of the London Film Festival. It opens around the world starting Friday.

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