Where does Bond go after Craig?

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  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,948
    JustJames wrote: »
    Bond died in the books. (He got better…) Bond had a kid he didn’t know he had in the books. I don’t think a M died in the books. Leiter sorta kinda died, but turned out to just be maimed.

    We never knew if the kid was even born, and Bond certainly didn't die in the books, ever.

    He pretty much dies at the end of FRWL; Fleming just changed his mind.
    What is the issue with the child then? Is it okay for him to have a child if he didn't know about it, as in YOLT? Where is the line drawn, and what's the actual problem?
    007HallY wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    To be fair, there's a valid criticism in the idea that BB and MGW have perhaps prioritised what they think will be 'popular' rather than fresh and interesting for a Bond film specifically.

    I think that would be a curious criticism for films which are supposed to appeal to mass audiences though. And also they took the boldest decision so far in the entire series to ditch (the still very successful) Brosnan and reboot the series, both in continuity and tonally, with CR.

    It's a valid one if you don't feel that those creative choices work in the context of the story they're telling. Even if you don't believe some of these decisions were made because of the success of other films/for more commercial and even critical appeal you can still criticise them if you feel they don't work. Bond's death in NTTD is a big one. A lot of viewers in my experience simply don't seem to find it even works emotionally. I get it.

    I don't think so, CR does remain a fresh and interesting approach for a Bond film, even in retrospect.
    Personally I don't understand how folks can find Bond's death doesn't work emotionally- I don't love NTTD but the whole film is moving towards that moment and it's perfectly set up.

    Yeah, there's a lot that feels fresh in CR. Like I said the Craig era has had its highs and lows for me and clearly for others.

    Bond's death never worked for me emotionally if I'm honest. I dunno, there are probably people who have thought about and rewatched NTTD much more than me. Calvin Dyson had some good thoughts about it in his video. A lot of it boils down to the individual viewer's ability to truly believe the information the film is giving you about nanobots and tramistting them in the lead up to the death, and indeed be invested in the final act of the film. Things like Safin waxing lyrical at the end for me is cringey and takes me out of the moment, a part of me always thinks in the back of my head 'why's Bond being so daft? Just get off the island and have Q-Branch adapt their EMP watch to nuke those nanobots from your system'. I'm not saying the film doesn't work for a lot of people, it does. But it's telling that it can be hit or miss with viewers. It's a shame because I want to like NTTD more than I do, and there's a lot in it that I enjoy. It's just the ending is such a bum note for me.

    I guess if you don't believe what you're being shown then you can never really engage, but I'd say Bond always requires suspension of disbelief otherwise you'll get nowhere. Even CR has a completely insane plot (a secret agent getting sent to gamble a baddie into submission?) but unless you swallow what they're telling you, you can never have fun.
    007HallY wrote: »
    Weren't they originally planning on Brosnan returning for a CR adaptation in the early stages? (not the one Tarrantino suggested, but early drafts). I'm not 100% sure but to me that suggests it was the story they were keen to adapt after getting the rights back and they leant into the whole 'young/rebooted Bond' after Brosnan left and word had gotten around that Batman was working on rebooting its own franchise in a similar way and at that time had Darren Aronfosky working on the script.

    According to Some Kind of Hero P&W had started to look at CR as Brosnan's 5th, but Brosnan was gone in 2004.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 23,544
    slide_99 wrote: »
    The further we move away from the world of Fleming's lifetime, the less sense James Bond is going to make as a character, and the more drastic alterations they're going to make to fit him into our current world. I'm not sure I'd want that. I'd rather they just stop making these movies, maybe after giving a formal apology for the post-CR Craig era.

    @slide_99
    This is exactly the kind of arrogance that gives the "Bond fan" a bad name. Why would these people, who know more about making Bond films than you and I, apologize for delivering some of the most financially and critically successful Bond films ever made with one of the most committed actors ever in the series?

    We are still waiting for a formal apology from those who clogged our NTTD threads with caustic comments without actually having seen the film.
  • JustJamesJustJames London
    Posts: 203
    JustJames wrote: »
    Bond died in the books. (He got better…) Bond had a kid he didn’t know he had in the books. I don’t think a M died in the books. Leiter sorta kinda died, but turned out to just be maimed.

    We never knew if the kid was even born, and Bond certainly didn't die in the books, ever.

    And if you consider people who have been maimed as 'sorta kinda dead', I'd suggest a career in trauma therapy wouldn't be a wise move for you, (ha ha!).

    From Russia With Love ended with Bond dying of poison. Had Fleming not changed his mind, that would have been it.
    Bond is believed dead at the end of You Only Live Twice, but they did that one already.
    Leiter dies in the original draft of Live and Let Die, US editor persuaded a change, but it is still presented as a death right until it isn’t, rather than being completely dropped.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    mtm wrote: »
    JustJames wrote: »
    Bond died in the books. (He got better…) Bond had a kid he didn’t know he had in the books. I don’t think a M died in the books. Leiter sorta kinda died, but turned out to just be maimed.

    We never knew if the kid was even born, and Bond certainly didn't die in the books, ever.

    What is the issue with the child then? Is it okay for him to have a child if he didn't know about it, as in YOLT? Where is the line drawn, and what's the actual problem?

    This is the kind of thing I hate seeing in fandom. Is there some rulebook that Fleming wrote before he died? Did he stipulate that Bond should never become aware that he’s a father, or that a pregnancy actually came to term just because Fleming never went there? Is it just an assumption that “if Fleming didn’t do it, then he was opposed to it?”

    Is there a Fleming religion at play? Are his books being treated like sacred scrolls or holy bibles that we have to interpret in a very strict orthodox manner? Is Bond wearing a windsor knot sacrilegious because Fleming once wrote that Bond didn’t trust people with windsor knots?
  • edited May 2022 Posts: 1,004
    mtm wrote: »
    JustJames wrote: »
    Bond died in the books. (He got better…) Bond had a kid he didn’t know he had in the books. I don’t think a M died in the books. Leiter sorta kinda died, but turned out to just be maimed.

    We never knew if the kid was even born, and Bond certainly didn't die in the books, ever.

    He pretty much dies at the end of FRWL; Fleming just changed his mind.
    What is the issue with the child then? Is it okay for him to have a child if he didn't know about it, as in YOLT? Where is the line drawn, and what's the actual problem?

    No problem here. I was just pointing out that Bond didn't have a child in the books. Certainly not one he met like in NTTD. He didn't know that KS was carrying his child, but we never found out if the child was born, or anything about it. It's not the same as in the last movie, which is where the comparison came from.

    I don't think you can say he 'pretty much died', if he didn't die. I'd say death is pretty much a black and white thing, there's no grey area really. It's like saying "he died, a little bit". It doesn't work.
    He either died or he didn't, and he didn't. I know you like to offer counter-arguments on here, but at least allow me this one fact. Fleming didn't kill Bond off.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    Fleming didn't kill Bond off.
    Just because he never killed Bond doesn’t mean writers aren’t allowed to.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 23,544
    Fleming didn't kill Bond off.
    Just because he never killed Bond doesn’t mean writers aren’t allowed to.

    I'm glad the writers are bold enough to go beyond Fleming. You can't milk the same cow for over 60 years.
  • Posts: 1,707
    Fleming didn't kill Bond off.
    Just because he never killed Bond doesn’t mean writers aren’t allowed to.

    But he did in FRWL. Fleming said so and then he retconned the story when he decided to continue with the character.
  • slide_99slide_99 USA
    edited May 2022 Posts: 652
    peter wrote: »
    @slide_99 ... Who is apologizing to who? And why?

    The arrogant entitlement of a ticked-off fan-boy...

    Sometimes my sarcasm doesn't come through over the interwebs. I don't expect or want any kind of apology.
  • Posts: 1,004
    Fleming didn't kill Bond off.
    Just because he never killed Bond doesn’t mean writers aren’t allowed to.

    Obviously not, because they did. They can do anything they want, and we can all choose to like it, or not.
    One day, they might even send him into space!

    . . . erm
  • edited May 2022 Posts: 15,804
    If I remember correctly, John Gardner gave Bond an Uncle Bruce who left 007 inheritance.
    I don't remember any Uncle Bruce in the Fleming novels, so I suppose Bond having a kid named Mathilde is alright then.
    In some ways the Craig era evokes Gardner more than Fleming to me. I could see John Gardner coming up with a SKYFALL type story or NTTD. That isn't really a bad thing, IMO. I'd still like to see some of the Gardner titles used for future films.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    Fleming didn't kill Bond off.
    Just because he never killed Bond doesn’t mean writers aren’t allowed to.

    Obviously not, because they did. They can do anything they want, and we can all choose to like it, or not.
    One day, they might even send him into space!

    . . . erm

    A delightful Bind film!
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    edited May 2022 Posts: 4,110
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    If I remember correctly, John Gardner gave Bond an Uncle Bruce who left 007 inheritance.
    I don't remember any Uncle Bruce in the Fleming novels, so I suppose Bond having a kid named Mathilde is alright then.
    In some ways the Craig era evokes Gardner more than Fleming to me. I could see John Gardner coming up with a SKYFALL type story or NTTD. That isn't really a bad thing, IMO. I'd still like to see some of the Gardner titles used for future films.

    One of his novels should be given the chance at a cinematic Bond adventure. I’d pick either Icebreaker or Nobody Lives Forever. Especially if MGW isn’t going to be in charge for much longer it seems. Ironically, some of his Bond ideas were lifted after Gardner’s novels were published.
  • Posts: 15,804
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    If I remember correctly, John Gardner gave Bond an Uncle Bruce who left 007 inheritance.
    I don't remember any Uncle Bruce in the Fleming novels, so I suppose Bond having a kid named Mathilde is alright then.
    In some ways the Craig era evokes Gardner more than Fleming to me. I could see John Gardner coming up with a SKYFALL type story or NTTD. That isn't really a bad thing, IMO. I'd still like to see some of the Gardner titles used for future films.

    One of his novels should be given the chance at a cinematic Bond adventure. I’d pick either Icebreaker or Nobody Lives Forever. Especially if MGW isn’t going to be in charge for much longer it seems. Ironically, some of his Bond ideas were lifted after Gardner’s novels were published.

    I liked both of those novels, too. Great titles as well.
  • Posts: 1,707
    Maybe they will follow Star Trek Strange New Worlds trend (and success) and simply do a Dr.No styled adventure that truly takes Bond back to his cinematic roots.
  • JustJamesJustJames London
    Posts: 203
    I just finished the Horowitz CR prequel… if it didn’t crib so shamelessly from the films, it would make a decent reboot period piece.
  • Posts: 3,279
    mtm wrote: »
    JustJames wrote: »
    Bond died in the books. (He got better…) Bond had a kid he didn’t know he had in the books. I don’t think a M died in the books. Leiter sorta kinda died, but turned out to just be maimed.

    We never knew if the kid was even born, and Bond certainly didn't die in the books, ever.

    What is the issue with the child then? Is it okay for him to have a child if he didn't know about it, as in YOLT? Where is the line drawn, and what's the actual problem?

    This is the kind of thing I hate seeing in fandom. Is there some rulebook that Fleming wrote before he died? Did he stipulate that Bond should never become aware that he’s a father, or that a pregnancy actually came to term just because Fleming never went there? Is it just an assumption that “if Fleming didn’t do it, then he was opposed to it?”

    Is there a Fleming religion at play? Are his books being treated like sacred scrolls or holy bibles that we have to interpret in a very strict orthodox manner? Is Bond wearing a windsor knot sacrilegious because Fleming once wrote that Bond didn’t trust people with windsor knots?

    Blasphemy! I am a true believer in all things Ian Fleming, the Holy One, and I condemn to Hell any disbeliever!

    The power of Fleming compels you! The power of Fleming compels you!
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited May 2022 Posts: 14,948
    mtm wrote: »
    JustJames wrote: »
    Bond died in the books. (He got better…) Bond had a kid he didn’t know he had in the books. I don’t think a M died in the books. Leiter sorta kinda died, but turned out to just be maimed.

    We never knew if the kid was even born, and Bond certainly didn't die in the books, ever.

    He pretty much dies at the end of FRWL; Fleming just changed his mind.
    What is the issue with the child then? Is it okay for him to have a child if he didn't know about it, as in YOLT? Where is the line drawn, and what's the actual problem?

    No problem here. I was just pointing out that Bond didn't have a child in the books. Certainly not one he met like in NTTD. He didn't know that KS was carrying his child, but we never found out if the child was born, or anything about it. It's not the same as in the last movie, which is where the comparison came from.

    If there’s no problem… I don’t know what point you’re trying to make, sorry.
    In the books he fathered a child. In the movies he fathered a child. There are differences between the movies and the books, that’s just how it’s always worked.
    I don't think you can say he 'pretty much died', if he didn't die. I'd say death is pretty much a black and white thing, there's no grey area really. It's like saying "he died, a little bit". It doesn't work.
    He either died or he didn't, and he didn't. I know you like to offer counter-arguments on here, but at least allow me this one fact. Fleming didn't kill Bond off.

    He did kill him off… until he didn’t. Much like Conan Doyle; and indeed Eon will (in a slightly different way: they’re not going to undo the death, just start a new continuity).
    I’m not sure if you’re just making counter arguments for the sake of it or if you’re trying to say something in this conversation about where the films go.
  • Posts: 1,004
    Perhaps just best to ignore me mate. I'm obviously making no sense at all.
    mtm wrote: »
    He did kill him off… until he didn’t.

  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited May 2022 Posts: 14,948
    I guess the quote means that you’re being sarcastic, but if you know The Final Problem then that’s the best way to explain it. The (very famous) hero is killed off, but a while later the writer changes his mind and explains that actually he wasn’t killed.
    James Bond will return.
  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    edited May 2022 Posts: 3,390
    Bond impregnated Kissy in the books, but we never get to know what happened to the child,
    maybe the child was died of miscarriage, We didn't even know the gender of the child if she's a boy or girl.
    But in the film, she's already a 5-year old girl.

    Fleming never made it explicit, we just knew that Kissy was pregnant that's all, we never get to know if the child survived, in the book it was just a fetus, in the film it's already a grown up kid.
    Because Bond was not meant to be a father.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    edited May 2022 Posts: 8,034
    MI6HQ wrote: »
    Bond impregnated Kissy in the books, but we never get to know what happened to the child,
    maybe the child was died of miscarriage, We didn't even know the gender of the child if she's a boy or girl.
    But in the film, she's already a 5-year old girl.
    Fleming never wrote what happened to the child or to Kissy for that matter, we just knew that Kissy was pregnant that's all, we never get to know if the child survived.
    Because Bond was not meant to be a father.

    She was 5 years old but Bond wasn't exactly a father to her so the parallels are the same. He cooked her breakfast, saved her from the bad guy and then died to protect her all within 24 hours of meeting her for the first time.

    He wasn't going to Sunday League games and threatening her suitors with violence if they mistreated her on school disco night.

    It's all a matter of perspective. I think a lot of people are getting hung up on the smaller details as if they're the big picture (and I'm not NTTD's biggest fan for numerous other reasons).
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited May 2022 Posts: 14,948
    MI6HQ wrote: »
    Bond impregnated Kissy in the books, but we never get to know what happened to the child,
    maybe the child was died of miscarriage, We didn't even know the gender of the child if she's a boy or girl.
    But in the film, she's already a 5-year old girl.

    Fleming never made it explicit, we just knew that Kissy was pregnant that's all, we never get to know if the child survived, in the book it was just a fetus, in the film it's already a grown up kid.
    Because Bond was not meant to be a father.

    I don’t get the point, I’m afraid. Is the idea that he can create a child but meeting them would destroy his quintessential Bondness? Fleming was going for the poignancy of having a child and never even knowing, which is a fine angle; the films went for the more dramatic angle of seeing what effect that would have on the character. I genuinely can’t see why only one of these is supposedly a valid route.

    Bear in mind that Raymond Benson also wrote a story in which Bond met Kissy’s child many years ago; was this unacceptable too? Should Bond really have so many tight parameters on what he can do?
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    MI6HQ wrote: »
    Bond impregnated Kissy in the books, but we never get to know what happened to the child,
    maybe the child was died of miscarriage, We didn't even know the gender of the child if she's a boy or girl.
    But in the film, she's already a 5-year old girl.

    Fleming never made it explicit, we just knew that Kissy was pregnant that's all, we never get to know if the child survived, in the book it was just a fetus, in the film it's already a grown up kid.
    Because Bond was not meant to be a father.

    So, what? Because Fleming never got around to writing a page where Bond finds out he’s a father, that means that scenario is completely verboten in future writings? That’s a ridiculous argument.
  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    edited May 2022 Posts: 3,390
    I know guys where you're coming from.
    It's just my opinion, but sorry to those who've been confused by this statement.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,025
    I wouldn’t go as far as saying “offended”. Befuddled, certainly.
  • Posts: 2,895
    mtm wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    To be fair, there's a valid criticism in the idea that BB and MGW have perhaps prioritised what they think will be 'popular' rather than fresh and interesting for a Bond film specifically.

    I think that would be a curious criticism for films which are supposed to appeal to mass audiences though. And also they took the boldest decision so far in the entire series to ditch (the still very successful) Brosnan and reboot the series, both in continuity and tonally, with CR.

    It's a valid one if you don't feel that those creative choices work in the context of the story they're telling. Even if you don't believe some of these decisions were made because of the success of other films/for more commercial and even critical appeal you can still criticise them if you feel they don't work. Bond's death in NTTD is a big one. A lot of viewers in my experience simply don't seem to find it even works emotionally. I get it.

    I don't think so, CR does remain a fresh and interesting approach for a Bond film, even in retrospect.
    Personally I don't understand how folks can find Bond's death doesn't work emotionally- I don't love NTTD but the whole film is moving towards that moment and it's perfectly set up.

    Yeah, there's a lot that feels fresh in CR. Like I said the Craig era has had its highs and lows for me and clearly for others.

    Bond's death never worked for me emotionally if I'm honest. I dunno, there are probably people who have thought about and rewatched NTTD much more than me. Calvin Dyson had some good thoughts about it in his video. A lot of it boils down to the individual viewer's ability to truly believe the information the film is giving you about nanobots and tramistting them in the lead up to the death, and indeed be invested in the final act of the film. Things like Safin waxing lyrical at the end for me is cringey and takes me out of the moment, a part of me always thinks in the back of my head 'why's Bond being so daft? Just get off the island and have Q-Branch adapt their EMP watch to nuke those nanobots from your system'. I'm not saying the film doesn't work for a lot of people, it does. But it's telling that it can be hit or miss with viewers. It's a shame because I want to like NTTD more than I do, and there's a lot in it that I enjoy. It's just the ending is such a bum note for me.

    I guess if you don't believe what you're being shown then you can never really engage, but I'd say Bond always requires suspension of disbelief otherwise you'll get nowhere. Even CR has a completely insane plot (a secret agent getting sent to gamble a baddie into submission?) but unless you swallow what they're telling you, you can never have fun.

    I'd say you're half right. Bond can be rather fantastical and I'm generally pretty good at going along with villains in weird lairs, outlandish plots... hell even Bond going into space. But I think the films have to earn the audience's suspension of disbelief by engaging them. Otherwise these concepts will fall flat. Even if Bond goes into space I want it to be treated seriously and come off as plausible in the context of the film.

    With NTTD's ending much of the nanobot stuff comes off to me as just a bit too contrived to be engaging (again, I've found it's not uncommon for first time viewers of the film to have have expected some sort of Chekov's Gun on instinct - what about the EMP watch or smart blood etc? Will that save Bond etc.) Again, I personally find Safin's odd rambling at the end cringeworthy, which really takes me out of the film (I feel so bad for Rami Malek as I'm a fan of his, but his performance can be so questionable at certain points for me) and I feel like the movie is trying to give us a big reveal that Mathilde is in fact Bond's daughter... which was handled a bit confusingly prior to that which doesn't help me be emotionally invested. I've spoken to a few people about this film, and it really is interesting how differently people feel about this ending. I really wish it did something for me on a gut level, but it just doesn't and I don't think I'm the only one who feels this.
  • Posts: 1,517
    Back to basics. No backstory. Just introduce him as done in Dr. No. This a younger Bond who's already vetted. Forget about all other Bonds and just start up as if he's always been Bond. Not related to any villains. And each story stands on its own.
  • BirdlesonBirdleson Moderator
    Posts: 2,161
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Back to basics. No backstory. Just introduce him as done in Dr. No. This a younger Bond who's already vetted. Forget about all other Bonds and just start up as if he's always been Bond. Not related to any villains. And each story stands on its own.

    Sounds simple. I'm with you, but not optimistic.
  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    edited May 2022 Posts: 3,390
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Back to basics. No backstory. Just introduce him as done in Dr. No. This a younger Bond who's already vetted. Forget about all other Bonds and just start up as if he's always been Bond. Not related to any villains. And each story stands on its own.

    Every introduction film in the classic era had done it successfully, no backstories, not serialized stories.

    Connery in Dr. No
    Lazenby in OHMSS
    Moore in LALD
    Dalton in TLD
    Brosnan in Goldeneye

    They're introduced without a backstory, and the franchise survived that.

    I really missed the classic era (1962-2002). 🥺
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