Controversial opinions about Bond films

1691692694696697705

Comments

  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,526
    @Seve Moving this to maybe a more appropriate thread, but I liked Pam kicking ass while Bond readied their escape.

    This maybe be a very controversial opinion around here but I think the lair escape scene in Spectre would have been vastly improved if Bond had required Madeleine to help him escape, rather than come out of the torture sequence killing baddies and escaping on Agent difficulty.
  • SeveSeve The island of Lemoy
    Posts: 357
    @Seve Moving this to maybe a more appropriate thread, but I liked Pam kicking ass while Bond readied their escape.

    Well, maybe I'd have settled for a 50/50 share of the arse kicking, or maybe I just didn't warm to that particular actress or the maybe it was the way the part was written?

    Pam Bouvier has been ranked 7th worst Bond girl ever (Dr Christmas Jones at #1)
    This maybe be a very controversial opinion around here but I think the lair escape scene in Spectre would have been vastly improved if Bond had required Madeleine to help him escape, rather than come out of the torture sequence killing baddies and escaping on Agent difficulty.

    I'd be ok with that, if it was done right, if Bond is still a bit under the weather. But Madeleine is only a psychologist, so she should help Bond with her brain rather than by kicking arse. Maybe shoot the odd henchman or brain them with a blunt instrument?



  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,526
    I think it would've given weight to Blofeld's torture if Bond was struggling afterwards, and they went through these pains to explain to us that Madeleine is a badass on the train, they could have showed us in this scene.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    Seve wrote: »
    But Madeleine is only a psychologist, so she should help Bond with her brain rather than by kicking arse. Maybe shoot the odd henchman or brain them with a blunt instrument?

    Why? It’s established earlier in the film that she knows how to handle guns, so I see no reason why they couldn’t have had her using a gun to help assist Bond escape.

    If I had to rewrite the scene, I’d have BOTH Bond and Madeleine shoot their way out of the complex. Would even give Craig a Lazenby moment where he looks over at her and says to himself “good girl” with a twinkle in his eye.
  • Posts: 1,394
    Seve wrote: »
    But Madeleine is only a psychologist, so she should help Bond with her brain rather than by kicking arse. Maybe shoot the odd henchman or brain them with a blunt instrument?

    Why? It’s established earlier in the film that she knows how to handle guns, so I see no reason why they couldn’t have had her using a gun to help assist Bond escape.

    If I had to rewrite the scene, I’d have BOTH Bond and Madeleine shoot their way out of the complex. Would even give Craig a Lazenby moment where he looks over at her and says to himself “good girl” with a twinkle in his eye.

    It is strange that they devote an entire scene earlier to show that she knows her way around handguns and then do absolutely nothing with it.She just goes into Mary Goodknight mode when Bond starts shooting the place up.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    The gun scene was setting up the moment she starts shooting at Hinx when he least expected it. But I agree, they should have done more than that.

    I wouldn’t say she stooped to Goodnight levels. It’s not like her bum presses a button that sets of the demolition of MI6.
  • MinionMinion Don't Hassle the Bond
    Posts: 1,165
    The gun scene was setting up the moment she starts shooting at Hinx when he least expected it. But I agree, they should have done more than that.

    I wouldn’t say she stooped to Goodnight levels. It’s not like her bum presses a button that sets of the demolition of MI6.

    Oh, what I wouldn't give for that to be a deleted scene.
  • Posts: 14,835
    Ludovico wrote: »
    cwl007 wrote: »
    Genuine question, because the more I understand about Vesper the more I like CR. At times I find her betrayal a little confusing.
    So, if she was a wrong 'un the whole time why bother saving Bond's life from the poisoning?
    With him out of the way the correct people would get the money, from her point of view, as Le Chifre was the likely poker winner.
    Why complicate it by risking Bond winning only to then have to steal the money?
    It's for that reason I assumed she was turned sometime around the torture scene.

    She saved his life because she was already in love with him. That’s partly why she was refusing to buy him in as well because she didn’t want to put him in any more danger now that he was out of the game.

    Even if she'd hated him, Vesper is not a murderer: she's a mole who is the subject of blackmail. She must make sure Le Chiffre wins, I don't think she'd be able to have Bond's death on her conscience. When he recovers, she tries to dissuade him to play.

    Yes, but I’m not sure how much it would weigh on her conscience if Valenka poisoned Bond, and Bond went to save himself, and failed to do so. If anything, that *might* be criminal negligence causing death, but not really murder, I don’t think. I tend to agree with @MakeshiftPython; I think they’re communicating some feelings Vesper has for Bond at that point.

    I still think she wouldn't want to be responsible, directly or indirectly, of his death.
  • Posts: 631
    The gun scene was setting up the moment she starts shooting at Hinx when he least expected it. But I agree, they should have done more than that.

    I wouldn’t say she stooped to Goodnight levels. It’s not like her bum presses a button that sets of the demolition of MI6.

    I always felt there was something missing from SP and now I know what it is
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,963
    Gerard wrote: »
    My controversial opinion : It was a good thing that Pierce Brosnan didn't get the Bond part in the 80s. If he had, he would have been seen as another Roger Moore on the strength of Remington Steele, that is, a light comedy actor. He needed a few movies where he could display his harder side, such as The Deceivers or The Fourth Protocol before we could see him as Bond. Feel free to disagree.

    I don't think we had to imagine him as Bond before he got cast though, he just had to be capable. And I'd say Fourth Protocol shows it very well, and I'd have liked that version of Pierce in Daylights. I'm glad we got both Dalton and Brosnan in the end, but I can imagine Daylights being more popular with him in the lead and changing the direction of the series. I guess the issue is that he may well have been a two and done lead as well, considering the legal problems.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,034
    Seeing Brosnan in The Fourth Protocol and then recently watching him as the nasty assassin in Survivor (an admittedly ropey film but he's good in it), he really was used in all the wrong ways creatively. I love him in the part, still, but I often yearn for what could have been...
  • If Spectre went all-in on the humor I would have liked it more. At least we have the old guy getting pushed in his little Fiat to 90km Go to [1.30]
    Just needed a Roger quip!
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    mtm wrote: »
    Gerard wrote: »
    My controversial opinion : It was a good thing that Pierce Brosnan didn't get the Bond part in the 80s. If he had, he would have been seen as another Roger Moore on the strength of Remington Steele, that is, a light comedy actor. He needed a few movies where he could display his harder side, such as The Deceivers or The Fourth Protocol before we could see him as Bond. Feel free to disagree.

    I don't think we had to imagine him as Bond before he got cast though, he just had to be capable. And I'd say Fourth Protocol shows it very well, and I'd have liked that version of Pierce in Daylights. I'm glad we got both Dalton and Brosnan in the end, but I can imagine Daylights being more popular with him in the lead and changing the direction of the series. I guess the issue is that he may well have been a two and done lead as well, considering the legal problems.

    Unlike Dalton, I think Brosnan would have gladly want to return after the hiatus.
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,115
    If Judi Dench can get away with it, and be treated like Bond-Royalty, the other characters and their actors should be given a chance as well. The reboot CR had more than one Bond alumni come back, Martin Campbell, Purvis and Wade, and of course the Broccoli family. Some people are staying in the Bond family, if we like it or not.

    And here’s something controversial: Judi Dench didn’t do much with the part, aside from GE and TND. Yell at Bond, say that he’s the best person they have, and take all the credit for herself. I know that’s a trademark of a Purvis and Wade script, but they can improve with Ralph Fiennes coming back without them. That’s why I like Bond and M’s relationship in TND: she trusts him, gives him the assignment, and is happy to help him, while giving him credit.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 14,963
    mtm wrote: »
    Gerard wrote: »
    My controversial opinion : It was a good thing that Pierce Brosnan didn't get the Bond part in the 80s. If he had, he would have been seen as another Roger Moore on the strength of Remington Steele, that is, a light comedy actor. He needed a few movies where he could display his harder side, such as The Deceivers or The Fourth Protocol before we could see him as Bond. Feel free to disagree.

    I don't think we had to imagine him as Bond before he got cast though, he just had to be capable. And I'd say Fourth Protocol shows it very well, and I'd have liked that version of Pierce in Daylights. I'm glad we got both Dalton and Brosnan in the end, but I can imagine Daylights being more popular with him in the lead and changing the direction of the series. I guess the issue is that he may well have been a two and done lead as well, considering the legal problems.

    Unlike Dalton, I think Brosnan would have gladly want to return after the hiatus.

    I think it's less about whether the actor wanted to return and more about if the studio wanted them :)
    As I say, I suspect Brosnan may have been a bigger hit, so they may well have wanted him back. We just had a similar-sized gap between Craig films, after all.
  • cwl007cwl007 England
    Posts: 611
    mtm wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    Gerard wrote: »
    My controversial opinion : It was a good thing that Pierce Brosnan didn't get the Bond part in the 80s. If he had, he would have been seen as another Roger Moore on the strength of Remington Steele, that is, a light comedy actor. He needed a few movies where he could display his harder side, such as The Deceivers or The Fourth Protocol before we could see him as Bond. Feel free to disagree.

    I don't think we had to imagine him as Bond before he got cast though, he just had to be capable. And I'd say Fourth Protocol shows it very well, and I'd have liked that version of Pierce in Daylights. I'm glad we got both Dalton and Brosnan in the end, but I can imagine Daylights being more popular with him in the lead and changing the direction of the series. I guess the issue is that he may well have been a two and done lead as well, considering the legal problems.

    Unlike Dalton, I think Brosnan would have gladly want to return after the hiatus.

    I think it's less about whether the actor wanted to return and more about if the studio wanted them :)
    As I say, I suspect Brosnan may have been a bigger hit, so they may well have wanted him back. We just had a similar-sized gap between Craig films, after all.

    I've always felt there is more than an element of truth in that. The official story goes that Dalton wanted to move on by 1994. Despite what many of us in the fan community think of him (I think he was great, as was his 2 outings BTW) the general public didn't seem to take to him. At least that's what the box office numbers said at the time.
    I believe there was more to it than that and he was released from the role to boost and relaunch the series.
    There is precedent for telling fibs to protect the actor don't forget. " Yes Timothy Dalton was always our first and only choice circa 1986" as Brosnan drowns his sorrows!
    And yes I know the creative team were pressing on with films number 3 and maybe even 4 with TD in the role and he was close with the Broccoli family etc etc but I think at best it was a 'mutual' decision taken for the health of the property spun to show Dalton the respect he deserved.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 14,963
    cwl007 wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    Gerard wrote: »
    My controversial opinion : It was a good thing that Pierce Brosnan didn't get the Bond part in the 80s. If he had, he would have been seen as another Roger Moore on the strength of Remington Steele, that is, a light comedy actor. He needed a few movies where he could display his harder side, such as The Deceivers or The Fourth Protocol before we could see him as Bond. Feel free to disagree.

    I don't think we had to imagine him as Bond before he got cast though, he just had to be capable. And I'd say Fourth Protocol shows it very well, and I'd have liked that version of Pierce in Daylights. I'm glad we got both Dalton and Brosnan in the end, but I can imagine Daylights being more popular with him in the lead and changing the direction of the series. I guess the issue is that he may well have been a two and done lead as well, considering the legal problems.

    Unlike Dalton, I think Brosnan would have gladly want to return after the hiatus.

    I think it's less about whether the actor wanted to return and more about if the studio wanted them :)
    As I say, I suspect Brosnan may have been a bigger hit, so they may well have wanted him back. We just had a similar-sized gap between Craig films, after all.

    I've always felt there is more than an element of truth in that. The official story goes that Dalton wanted to move on by 1994. Despite what many of us in the fan community think of him (I think he was great, as was his 2 outings BTW) the general public didn't seem to take to him. At least that's what the box office numbers said at the time.
    I believe there was more to it than that and he was released from the role to boost and relaunch the series.
    There is precedent for telling fibs to protect the actor don't forget. " Yes Timothy Dalton was always our first and only choice circa 1986" as Brosnan drowns his sorrows!
    And yes I know the creative team were pressing on with films number 3 and maybe even 4 with TD in the role and he was close with the Broccoli family etc etc but I think at best it was a 'mutual' decision taken for the health of the property spun to show Dalton the respect he deserved.

    Some of the high-up folks in MGM/UA have since said that they made it clear they didn't want him back for B17.
    Maybe it was indeed mutual and Dalton didn't want to do it either, but I think the key thing is that even if he had wanted to do it, he wouldn't have actually been in it :)

    I also wonder why he wouldn't want to do it. It's not like he had a load of pressing important work to do. Playing Rhett Butler? Beautician and the Beast? Considering he has this image of a great thespian of the stage, he doesn't half do a lot of crap :D
    So the idea he'd refuse to star in a massive popcorn movie doesn't quite seem to align with his resumé of work..
  • cwl007cwl007 England
    Posts: 611
    Have they really, interesting, I didn't know that. Not surprising though because the only thing that talks in those situations is money not fan opinion or how much Fleming Timothy Dalton is channelling. Cold hard box office takings is where it's at.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 14,963
    Yeah here you go, I just happened to find the appropriate quote quickly which is lucky! :)

    From Some Kind of Hero

    Jeff Kleeman and Alan Ladd Jr both say there how they didn't want to develop a new film with Dalton, and although the Broccolis made the case for him they had to accept the decision.
  • Posts: 2
    cwl007 wrote: »
    Have they really, interesting, I didn't know that. Not surprising though because the only thing that talks in those situations is money not fan opinion or how much Fleming Timothy Dalton is channelling. Cold hard box office takings is where it's at.

    Yes, MGM / United Artists refused to fund Bond 17 unless Dalton was replaced. Jeff Kleeman, who was the Executive Vice President of Production at the time, told Ajay Chowdhury and Matthew Field in 2015 that "The Dalton Bonds had not performed significantly well at the box office. We were trying to grapple with the fact that the Dalton movies were not the most beloved of Bond films. We were trying to introduce Bond to a new audience. It seemed counterintuitive to what we were trying to accomplish, to continue with Timothy at that point [...] Barbara, Michael and Cubby made the case for Timothy. They did genuinely love him and for good reason. I'm sure they were disappointed we didn't want to make it with Timothy."
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    For what it’s worth, Dalton said he was open to come back but only for one more film, but Cubby wanted Dalton for multiple films. So even if UA wasn’t against Dalton coming back, they wouldn’t have been able to convince him of sticking around for the remaining decade.
  • edited October 2021 Posts: 2,896
    I think Dalton's "coming back for only one more" film story is something he and the Broccolis agreed on to save face after the highest-ups vetoed the idea of Dalton's return. From a financial viewpoint, getting rid of Dalton was the obvious thing to do, and since MGM/UA was under new management it also made sense for the new bosses to clear the decks and bring in a Bond whose likely success they could take credit for. Had it been in their power they would have probably gotten rid of Wilson and the Broccolis too.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,963
    Revelator wrote: »
    I think Dalton's "coming back for only one more" film story is something he and the Broccolis agreed on to save face after the highest-ups vetoed the idea of Dalton's return. From a financial viewpoint, getting rid of Dalton was the obvious thing to do, and since MGM/UA was under new management it also made sense for the new bosses to clear the decks and bring in a Bond whose likely success they could take credit for. Had it been in their power they would have probably gotten rid of Wilson and the Broccolis too.

    Yeah I tend to agree there. Why would Dalton only want to do one? Look at the other rubbish he was doing :D
    I do also wonder if Kleeman/Ladd might also be retroactively taking the credit for Brosnan's success by saying they specified no-Dalton, but you'd think they would have said they told Eon to 'get Brosnan' if that were the case.
  • Posts: 1,883
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    And here’s something controversial: Judi Dench didn’t do much with the part, aside from GE and TND. Yell at Bond, say that he’s the best person they have, and take all the credit for herself. I know that’s a trademark of a Purvis and Wade script, but they can improve with Ralph Fiennes coming back without them. That’s why I like Bond and M’s relationship in TND: she trusts him, gives him the assignment, and is happy to help him, while giving him credit.
    I've said this for years. Was it because of her reputation as an actress? She's obviously a great one, but it's like the character as written goes out of her way to put Bond down and is given too much time onscreen. Much of Bond's time in her tenure is helping overcome M's mistakes or suffering from them.
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,115
    Relating the authors to movie people, history seems to repeat itself. Here’s my consensus, based on others on these boards. Enjoy!

    Ian Fleming-Richard Maibaum, Terence Young, Sean Connery. They defined James Bond forever, and the role models for all of the people who make James Bond materials.

    Kingsley Amis-Peter Hunt, George Lazenby. They learned from the best, and it showed. It’s a bit sad that they didn’t get a second Bond adventure.

    John Gardener-Lewis Gilbert, Guy Hamilton, Roger Moore, John Glen, Michael G. Wilson. They may have stayed on the series too long. They also made the series too silly. However, they deserve credit for helping keeping the series alive.

    Raymond Benson-Judi Dench, Roger Spottiswoode, Pierce Brosnan, Barbara Broccoli, Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, Sam Mendes. They helped modernize Bond, but their styles and themes could be a bit cringe-worthy at times.

    Sebastian Faulks-Lee Tamahori, Marc Forster. They didn’t get or even like James Bond. What were the higher level people thinking of hiring these overdramatic art-house hacks? Thankfully, we got a better follow up because of them.

    Jeffery Deaver-Michael Apted, Bruce Feirstein. They gave a more humanized Bond, with feelings and emotion about others. They also gave us some great female villains. I’m personally biased towards them as TWINE was the first Bond movie I watched, and CB was the first Bond novel I read.

    William Boyd-Timothy Dalton. Solo could have been TD’s final film. Their portrayals of Bond are very similar. Flawed, but could be seen as aging well for everyone to look at in more ways than one.

    Anthony Horowitz-Martin Campbell, Daniel Craig. The true successors to their original people who started the series: Novelists, directors, and actors. They get Ian Fleming and James Bond more than anyone working (and alive). As of now, they have ended on a high note in their time with James Bond.
  • Posts: 1,394
    The gun scene was setting up the moment she starts shooting at Hinx when he least expected it. But I agree, they should have done more than that.

    I wouldn’t say she stooped to Goodnight levels. It’s not like her bum presses a button that sets of the demolition of MI6.

    She’s pretty much useless during the final act though I would love to have seen what you suggested there! 😆

  • M16_CartM16_Cart Craig fanboy?
    edited October 2021 Posts: 538
    One of the most brilliant scenes in the whole franchise

  • MaxCasino wrote: »
    William Boyd-Timothy Dalton. Solo could have been TD’s final film. Their portrayals of Bond are very similar. Flawed, but could be seen as aging well for everyone to look at in more ways than one.
    Definitely! I may be in the minority, but I really liked Solo when it was published and, although I visualized Connery at first when reading the novel for the first time, it's quit easy to imagine Dalton as Bond in a translation from the page to the screen. All the more since the story could have taken place in the early 90s. In fact, it could even have been better and more relevant than the Hong Kong treatment written by Wilson and Ruggiero.
  • VenutiusVenutius Yorkshire
    Posts: 2,932
    Actually, yeh, I can see that clearly. Good one.
  • edited October 2021 Posts: 12,837
    I’ve seen a lot of comments lately saying that the Craig era never lived up to the promise of CR. Watched it again last night and it reminded me of a controversial opinion I have: CR is not the best Craig film.

    It’s good, but I think it’s bloated and lacks focus. I remember reading a review saying it’s essentially three films in one, and I think that’s bang on. The first film is an action thriller about the bombmaker and the plane. It’s a good introduction to this dangerous and reckless new Bond, with some thrilling action, but a lot of it feels superfluous. I think everything it needs to do (establish this new Bond’s recklessness and set up Le Chieffre’s money troubles) it could do in one set piece. Make the failed attack part of the parkour somehow. Not sure you need the stuff in Miami, despite it being fairly enjoyable. The next film is an adaptation of the novel. That bit is perfect, I wouldn’t change any of that. But I think getting there sooner by trimming down Miami would give us more time there, and put more focus on Bond and Vesper. Finally the last film is Venice. Never liked that bit, and that review summed up why it doesn’t work for me. It suddenly turns into Quantum of Solace. Puts the action first to the point that its grounded twisty spy narrative gets confusing. I think I’d have gone with the book ending myself. It’s already an unconventional Bond film, they could’ve beefed up the car chase if we needed a final setpiece, and the plot is essentially over when Le Chiffre dies. That bit is a character focused epilogue.

    Do that and you’d have a much shorter film, but a much better one imo. As it stands, while there’s a lot to admire in CR, I prefer the Mendes movies and NTTD. As well as better succeeding in what they’re trying to do (imo of course), I think they just have more style about them too. Campbell could do an action scene like nobody else, but I don’t think the casino scenes feel as sexy and dangerous as they should, and CR as a whole feels quite “standard 2000s action thriller” at times aesthetically. The later Craig films feel a bit more elegant and Bond to me. And NTTD managed that without sacrificing any of CR’s virility and brutality, showing that it doesn’t have to be one or the other.
Sign In or Register to comment.