MILAN, Italy (AP) -- A stuntman was seriously injured in a car crash while filming an action sequence for the new James Bond movie "Quantum of Solace" on a famously windy lakeside road in northern Italy, a local official said Thursday.

A general view of the James Bond film set in Limone sul Garda, on the Garda Lake in northern Italy.
An experienced stunt driver of an Alfa Romeo car remained hospitalized in serious condition following the accident Wednesday, the film's London-based production company said.
A second stunt driver in the same car also was injured, but less seriously.
"Filming with the second unit on 'Quantum of Solace' will be suspended while the accident is investigated," a statement said.
It noted that neither director Marc Forster, actor Daniel Craig nor any cast members were at the location when the accident occurred.
The stunt drivers' identities were not released.
The accident was the second on the Bond set in four days, after an Aston Martin being delivered to the set skidded off the road in heavy rain and landed into Lake Garda on Saturday. No one was injured and the car was later fished from the lake.
A spokesman for the town of Limone sul Garda, where the second unit had been filming for the past two weeks, said the Alfa Romeo crashed into a wall during a chase sequence involving a truck and Bond's Aston Martin along the Gardesana -- a curvy, two-lane lakeside road with gorgeous panoramas and many tunnels.
A helicopter on standby during the filming flew the seriously injured stunt driver to Verona, where he underwent surgery, said town spokesman Marco Girardi, who also was acting as a liaison to the production company.
"They chose this road because it is full of curves and tunnels. It will give the film a lot of impact," Girardi said.
He said that the filming was scheduled to wrap up Wednesday, and that they were in the final hours when the accident occurred.
On Thursday, the production company was packing up equipment, including cars, to close the set. Workers and officials refused any comment to an Associated Press photographer. E-mail to a friend ![]()
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