Where does Bond go after Craig?

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  • edited January 26 Posts: 487
    Often when a faithful adaptation of Moonraker is suggested, some say that it would not be big enough. But why does every modern Bond film have to be huge? If they make a huge Bond film every 5 or 6 years, why not make a smaller one between them every once in a while?
  • edited January 26 Posts: 2,080
    Feyador wrote: »
    They figuratively, not just literally, blew up the default Bond character.

    That was the meaning of the Craig run, with elements present since at least GE. It’s been an increasingly uneasy critique running alongside the traditional Bond. How much further can they take that? Would it even be desirable?

    Or is there an ideologically coherent, but still largely recognizable Bond that they can reestablished post-Craig, one not dependent upon nostalgia?

    Personally, I doubt it ...

    I don’t think the Craig era outright critiqued the character so much that I feel they deconstructed Bond to where it’s become a trope. An argument could be made that they wanted to replicate the concepts and ideas that made Casino Royale such a big success, which isn’t a bad idea by any means. But I think they also may have lost sight in the fact that Casino Royale had a perfect arc as it is. There really wasn’t much of a need to drag on the repercussions of that film past the ending more than they did. Incidentally that’s why I think Skyfall felt like such a fresh breath of air back before they retroactively fit it into the larger narrative they were attempting to build; it was the perfect blend of the classic Bond formula with those subversive/emotional elements that made Casino Royale land so well with audiences.

    On another note, I’m not sure about this obsession fans have with getting a faithful adaptation of Moonraker. Barbara Broccoli has said on numerous occasions that they will not do remakes, and will not to period pieces. Besides, I personally don’t think they’ll do any better than Goldeneye did at presenting a faithful version of Fleming’s original story; Goldeneye works extremely well as an “unofficial”adaptation of Fleming’s Moonraker.
  • Posts: 511
    Feyador wrote: »
    They figuratively, not just literally, blew up the default Bond character.

    That was the meaning of the Craig run, with elements present since at least GE. It’s been an increasingly uneasy critique running alongside the traditional Bond. How much further can they take that? Would it even be desirable?

    Or is there an ideologically coherent, but still largely recognizable Bond that they can reestablished post-Craig, one not dependent upon nostalgia?

    Personally, I doubt it ...

    I don’t think the Craig era outright critiqued the character so much that I feel they deconstructed Bond to where it’s become a trope. An argument could be made that they wanted to replicate the concepts and ideas that made Casino Royale such a big success, which isn’t a bad idea by any means. But I think they also may have lost sight in the fact that Casino Royale had a perfect arc as it is. There really wasn’t much of a need to drag on the repercussions of that film past the ending more than they did. Incidentally that’s why I think Skyfall felt like such a fresh breath of air back before they retroactively fit it into the larger narrative they were attempting to build; it was the perfect blend of the classic Bond formula with those subversive/emotional elements that made Casino Royale land so well with audiences.

    On another note, I’m not sure about this obsession fans have with getting a faithful adaptation of Moonraker. Barbara Broccoli has said on numerous occasions that they will not do remakes, and will not to period pieces. Besides, I personally don’t think they’ll do any better than Goldeneye did at presenting a faithful version of Fleming’s original story; Goldeneye works extremely well as an “unofficial”adaptation of Fleming’s Moonraker.

    Agreed on the last point. Big element from "Moonraker" I'd love to see in a film is a girl who Bond has fallen in love with but she rejects him in the end. I suppose one could squint and say QoS did that but I don't think Bond ever had desire for Camille.
  • FeyadorFeyador Montreal, Canada
    edited January 26 Posts: 735
    Feyador wrote: »
    They figuratively, not just literally, blew up the default Bond character.

    That was the meaning of the Craig run, with elements present since at least GE. It’s been an increasingly uneasy critique running alongside the traditional Bond. How much further can they take that? Would it even be desirable?

    Or is there an ideologically coherent, but still largely recognizable Bond that they can reestablished post-Craig, one not dependent upon nostalgia?

    Personally, I doubt it ...

    I don’t think the Craig era outright critiqued the character so much that I feel they deconstructed Bond to where it’s become a trope. An argument could be made that they wanted to replicate the concepts and ideas that made Casino Royale such a big success, which isn’t a bad idea by any means. But I think they also may have lost sight in the fact that Casino Royale had a perfect arc as it is. There really wasn’t much of a need to drag on the repercussions of that film past the ending more than they did. Incidentally that’s why I think Skyfall felt like such a fresh breath of air back before they retroactively fit it into the larger narrative they were attempting to build; it was the perfect blend of the classic Bond formula with those subversive/emotional elements that made Casino Royale land so well with audiences.

    On another note, I’m not sure about this obsession fans have with getting a faithful adaptation of Moonraker. Barbara Broccoli has said on numerous occasions that they will not do remakes, and will not to period pieces. Besides, I personally don’t think they’ll do any better than Goldeneye did at presenting a faithful version of Fleming’s original story; Goldeneye works extremely well as an “unofficial”adaptation of Fleming’s Moonraker.

    I love the films unreservedly, but just for arguments sake ... a problem with the Craig arc is going from a young-ish agent (CR/QOS) to grizzled old veteran struggling for relevancy (SF) with almost no middle[-aged] ground to speak of, or basically the default Bond we got with the other four actors [Lazenby being a special case]. SP played down the age question somewhat but not his relevancy and by the time of NTTD he had already retired.

    That question of relevancy seemingly necessitated a concentration on his character, almost as if in apology for carrying forward an icon from the 50s and 60s, and any negative cultural associations from that era, into the 21st century.

    They can't go back; but how do they go forward, finally dispensing with these questions of relevancy. Maybe they made a wrong turn somewhat with SF.

    Pulling this quote from Fleming in an interview conducted by the BBC in 1962, thanks to @Revelator in another thread:

    I didn’t wish him to obtrude his personality, I meant him to be read as simply a really good professional, without any particular trademarks, but of course he’s gathered them over the years, and now a sort of myth of James Bond has clouded what was a simple, straightforward pro.

    Wasn't that the secret sauce, which the films especially of Connery & Moore understood. Sure their Bonds had definable trademarks, and they were never exactly Fleming Bond; but they also had nothing we were meant to take as character flaws. In fact, character, in any high literary sense of the word, had nothing to do with it.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,987
    Whilst he was never a realistic character, the films right from the start are a celebration of his attitudes and approach to his job and life. He even has a cool swinging theme tune which kicks in whenever he’s doing anything particularly great. In terms of flaws, I think the audience is also supposed to take some of those attitudes as being somewhat extreme, the sort of thing you couldn’t get away with in real life, but Bond’s total lack of shame and superhuman confidence and luck allows him to- you are to an extent laughing at him as much as with him. So I think he’s always been a character and the films are almost totally about that, where the books aren’t so much.
  • edited January 26 Posts: 2,954
    Feyador wrote: »
    Feyador wrote: »
    They figuratively, not just literally, blew up the default Bond character.

    That was the meaning of the Craig run, with elements present since at least GE. It’s been an increasingly uneasy critique running alongside the traditional Bond. How much further can they take that? Would it even be desirable?

    Or is there an ideologically coherent, but still largely recognizable Bond that they can reestablished post-Craig, one not dependent upon nostalgia?

    Personally, I doubt it ...

    I don’t think the Craig era outright critiqued the character so much that I feel they deconstructed Bond to where it’s become a trope. An argument could be made that they wanted to replicate the concepts and ideas that made Casino Royale such a big success, which isn’t a bad idea by any means. But I think they also may have lost sight in the fact that Casino Royale had a perfect arc as it is. There really wasn’t much of a need to drag on the repercussions of that film past the ending more than they did. Incidentally that’s why I think Skyfall felt like such a fresh breath of air back before they retroactively fit it into the larger narrative they were attempting to build; it was the perfect blend of the classic Bond formula with those subversive/emotional elements that made Casino Royale land so well with audiences.

    On another note, I’m not sure about this obsession fans have with getting a faithful adaptation of Moonraker. Barbara Broccoli has said on numerous occasions that they will not do remakes, and will not to period pieces. Besides, I personally don’t think they’ll do any better than Goldeneye did at presenting a faithful version of Fleming’s original story; Goldeneye works extremely well as an “unofficial”adaptation of Fleming’s Moonraker.

    I love the films unreservedly, but just for arguments sake ... a problem with the Craig arc is going from a young-ish agent (CR/QOS) to grizzled old veteran struggling for relevancy (SF) with almost no middle[-aged] ground to speak of, or basically the default Bond we got with the other four actors [Lazenby being a special case]. SP played down the age question somewhat but not his relevancy and by the time of NTTD he had already retired.

    That question of relevancy seemingly necessitated a concentration on his character, almost as if in apology for carrying forward an icon from the 50s and 60s, and any negative cultural associations from that era, into the 21st century.

    They can't go back; but how do they go forward, finally dispensing with these questions of relevancy. Maybe they made a wrong turn somewhat with SF.
    .

    I don’t think the point of CR was to be about a young Bond though. Craig’s pretty obviously a man in his mid 30s, as is Bond in the original novel (I’ve never especially bought that Craig’s Bond even acts ‘immature’ in the context of the character - Fleming’s Bond in that novel acts childishly to the idea of a woman being sent to assist him and it’s clarified early on that he’s prone to womanising and is dedicated to his job. The film just switches up Bond’s ruthlessness for going ‘off grid’ and substitutes the old school sexism for tongue in cheek banter between him and Vesper).

    In that sense Craig’s Bond was always a ‘veteran’, or at least a professional. In SF he just happens to be at the end of the beginning of his 00 career. Honestly, it always mirrored the novels for me. Pretty much midway through the series (probably around DN) it’s noted Bond has been through it since WW2, both physically and personally. His effectiveness is questioned on and off for the rest of the series (sometimes even by himself), usually after he has near death experiences, or isn’t as physically fit as he should be, or goes through something traumatic. There’s a sense that the world around Bond is constantly changing too. That’s more the sense I get from SF - Bond’s simply an agent who’s been through the wars, and aside from M who has an extraordinary level of faith in him, his superiors are unsure if he’s truly effective anymore. It’s not about a grizzled agent months from retirement ‘struggling for relevancy’ in this sense as Bond’s struggles are due to his physical and even psychological issues, not him himself questioning his place in the modern world (really it’s only Silva that truly touches on that idea). As for SP, honestly I even that plays well going on from SF. It comes off that Bond is reinvigorated and probably in his prime really.
  • edited January 26 Posts: 731
    Craig's Bond wasn't 007 until Casino Royale. He can't be a "veteran".
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,987
    007HallY wrote: »
    Feyador wrote: »
    Feyador wrote: »
    They figuratively, not just literally, blew up the default Bond character.

    That was the meaning of the Craig run, with elements present since at least GE. It’s been an increasingly uneasy critique running alongside the traditional Bond. How much further can they take that? Would it even be desirable?

    Or is there an ideologically coherent, but still largely recognizable Bond that they can reestablished post-Craig, one not dependent upon nostalgia?

    Personally, I doubt it ...

    I don’t think the Craig era outright critiqued the character so much that I feel they deconstructed Bond to where it’s become a trope. An argument could be made that they wanted to replicate the concepts and ideas that made Casino Royale such a big success, which isn’t a bad idea by any means. But I think they also may have lost sight in the fact that Casino Royale had a perfect arc as it is. There really wasn’t much of a need to drag on the repercussions of that film past the ending more than they did. Incidentally that’s why I think Skyfall felt like such a fresh breath of air back before they retroactively fit it into the larger narrative they were attempting to build; it was the perfect blend of the classic Bond formula with those subversive/emotional elements that made Casino Royale land so well with audiences.

    On another note, I’m not sure about this obsession fans have with getting a faithful adaptation of Moonraker. Barbara Broccoli has said on numerous occasions that they will not do remakes, and will not to period pieces. Besides, I personally don’t think they’ll do any better than Goldeneye did at presenting a faithful version of Fleming’s original story; Goldeneye works extremely well as an “unofficial”adaptation of Fleming’s Moonraker.

    I love the films unreservedly, but just for arguments sake ... a problem with the Craig arc is going from a young-ish agent (CR/QOS) to grizzled old veteran struggling for relevancy (SF) with almost no middle[-aged] ground to speak of, or basically the default Bond we got with the other four actors [Lazenby being a special case]. SP played down the age question somewhat but not his relevancy and by the time of NTTD he had already retired.

    That question of relevancy seemingly necessitated a concentration on his character, almost as if in apology for carrying forward an icon from the 50s and 60s, and any negative cultural associations from that era, into the 21st century.

    They can't go back; but how do they go forward, finally dispensing with these questions of relevancy. Maybe they made a wrong turn somewhat with SF.
    .

    In that sense Craig’s Bond was always a ‘veteran’, or at least a professional. In SF he just happens to be at the end of the beginning of his 00 career. Honestly, it always mirrored the novels for me. Pretty much midway through the series (probably around DN) it’s noted Bond has been through it since WW2, both physically and personally. His effectiveness is questioned on and off for the rest of the series (sometimes even by himself), usually after he has near death experiences, or isn’t as physically fit as he should be, or goes through something traumatic. There’s a sense that the world around Bond is constantly changing too. That’s more the sense I get from SF - Bond’s simply an agent who’s been through the wars, and aside from M who has an extraordinary level of faith in him, his superiors are unsure if he’s truly effective anymore. It’s not about a grizzled agent months from retirement ‘struggling for relevancy’ in this sense as Bond’s struggles are due to his physical and even psychological issues, not him himself questioning his place in the modern world (really it’s only Silva that truly touches on that idea). As for SP, honestly I even that plays well going on from SF. It comes off that Bond is reinvigorated and probably in his prime really.

    Excellent post =D>
  • VenutiusVenutius Yorkshire
    edited January 26 Posts: 2,934
    MGW said explicitly that 'Bond's already a veteran, he's had some experience' and that's why the character should be in his 30s, not 20s. NewBond may be relatively new to the 00 Section at the start of his run (or not), but he's likely not going to be a kid in training either. That's the right place to gauge it, I think - maybe two-three years in, knows what he's doing, already proven his ability/worth, etc.
    Fleming stressing that Bond was a man of his era is something I took be him drawing a distinction between Bond and earlier 1930s-style 'adventure' heroes. I was actually reassured by Phoebe WB when she said that Bond 'needs to be true to his character.' That's better than remodelling him to suit the latest snarks of columnists who don't even like Bond films, no?
    With QOS and SF, I've always felt that there's a much bigger time jump in the internal storylines than the four years between the actual films. A lot's happened off screen - we're missing at least three films there! This is where Ludovico's graphic novels come in...
  • talos7talos7 New Orleans
    Posts: 7,983
    I love SF , but U think it was a mistake to make age an issue that soon in Daniel’s tenure; focusing on his disillusionment with MI-6 , particularly M, would have been equally effective and would have prevented Craig from being painted into a “ too old” corner.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,987
    talos7 wrote: »
    I love SF , but U think it was a mistake to make age an issue that soon in Daniel’s tenure; focusing on his disillusionment with MI-6 , particularly M, would have been equally effective and would have prevented Craig from being painted into a “ too old” corner.

    I guess the question is, as 007HallY pointed out: does it actually do that? Bond is referred to as old fashioned quite a lot in it (as is M and her methods in fact), and he's also 'lost a step' from his injury and near-death experience, but really I think it's pretty much only the Q scene where there's an old/young dichotomy brought up. Age isn't even mentioned in Bond's evaluation, so I don't think there's really a question of him being 'too old' as such. And the whole film has quite a bit to say about 'the old ways being the best'.
  • talos7talos7 New Orleans
    Posts: 7,983
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I love SF , but U think it was a mistake to make age an issue that soon in Daniel’s tenure; focusing on his disillusionment with MI-6 , particularly M, would have been equally effective and would have prevented Craig from being painted into a “ too old” corner.

    I guess the question is, as 007HallY pointed out: does it actually do that? Bond is referred to as old fashioned quite a lot in it (as is M and her methods in fact), and he's also 'lost a step' from his injury and near-death experience, but really I think it's pretty much only the Q scene where there's an old/young dichotomy brought up. Age isn't even mentioned in Bond's evaluation, so I don't think there's really a question of him being 'too old' as such. And the whole film has quite a bit to say about 'the old ways being the best'.

    Doesn’t Mallory specifically allude to it?
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,987
    talos7 wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I love SF , but U think it was a mistake to make age an issue that soon in Daniel’s tenure; focusing on his disillusionment with MI-6 , particularly M, would have been equally effective and would have prevented Craig from being painted into a “ too old” corner.

    I guess the question is, as 007HallY pointed out: does it actually do that? Bond is referred to as old fashioned quite a lot in it (as is M and her methods in fact), and he's also 'lost a step' from his injury and near-death experience, but really I think it's pretty much only the Q scene where there's an old/young dichotomy brought up. Age isn't even mentioned in Bond's evaluation, so I don't think there's really a question of him being 'too old' as such. And the whole film has quite a bit to say about 'the old ways being the best'.

    Doesn’t Mallory specifically allude to it?

    Yes, it's a fair point; he does say 'it's a young man's game'.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    edited January 26 Posts: 40,492
    talos7 wrote: »
    I love SF , but U think it was a mistake to make age an issue that soon in Daniel’s tenure; focusing on his disillusionment with MI-6 , particularly M, would have been equally effective and would have prevented Craig from being painted into a “ too old” corner.

    I've always had the exact same issue. Of course, they didn't know what the future holds at the time of writing and filming, but it's still a jarring leap to go from rookie agent in CR/QoS straight to Bond being seemingly past his prime one installment later. I'm surprised people don't see that as a running theme in SF. There are several quips from numerous characters throughout in regards to that.
  • talos7talos7 New Orleans
    Posts: 7,983
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I love SF , but U think it was a mistake to make age an issue that soon in Daniel’s tenure; focusing on his disillusionment with MI-6 , particularly M, would have been equally effective and would have prevented Craig from being painted into a “ too old” corner.

    I guess the question is, as 007HallY pointed out: does it actually do that? Bond is referred to as old fashioned quite a lot in it (as is M and her methods in fact), and he's also 'lost a step' from his injury and near-death experience, but really I think it's pretty much only the Q scene where there's an old/young dichotomy brought up. Age isn't even mentioned in Bond's evaluation, so I don't think there's really a question of him being 'too old' as such. And the whole film has quite a bit to say about 'the old ways being the best'.

    Doesn’t Mallory specifically allude to it?

    Yes, it's a fair point; he does say 'it's a young man's game'.

    This shows how a single line can change the focus of a story or character; remove this line and there is no age trap, or less of one.
  • edited January 26 Posts: 2,954
    Perhaps. But in fairness I'd argue his age isn't really what Bond struggles with in that film. It's certainly not the reason for his problems. At the beginning of the film he's arguably at his physical peak before getting shot. Again, he's not a 'rookie' in CR or QOS but a professional in his mid-30s who has been promoted to one of the top field jobs/sections at MI6. Bond is not a rookie in any film incarnation.

    Mallory chimes in with the 'it's a young man's game' line, which to me came across less about Bond's age, but simply that he's part of M's 'old guard' and he thinks it's best to make way for a new generation. In the context of the film she's on her way out, her 'best agent' is of questionable physical adequacy, and indeed seems to have deep seated personal issues which could prove compromising. There's the scene with Q and Bond at the Tate, and the only time Bond's age seems to specifically resonate with him (albeit in a scene played in part as comic) is when he appears annoyed at Q's little speech about the painting and time. Apart from that their jibes about each others' age is less overtly antagonistic and more banter. The furthest it goes with the idea of an aging Bond is perhaps with his (in some ways temporary) disillusionment with MI6 and his past being brought up, but even that's quite indirect and to me doesn't point to him being 'too old'. Just that he's slightly older.

    To me, Craig's Bond in SF came across as basically the equivalent of where Brosnan's Bond is in GE. Or even Dalton's Bond in TLD. He's part of the previous cohort at MI6, an experienced and even well regarded agent approaching or just about in his 40s. And yet he's at odds with some of his superiors who seem to think the world has changed fundamentally and question how effective his methods are for various reasons.
  • slide_99slide_99 USA
    Posts: 652
    007HallY wrote: »
    Mallory chimes in with the 'it's a young man's game' line, which to me came across less about Bond's age, but simply that he's part of M's 'old guard' and he thinks it's best to make way for a new generation.

    This is basically the same thing, though. Bond's advanced age and supposed irrelevancy inform nearly every aspect about SF, plot-wise and thematically. The audience can interpret things how they want but obviously the intention of the filmmakers was to turn Craig's Bond into a dinosaur character who didn't belong in the new digital world, even though she was shown hacking into M's computer six years earlier.
  • Posts: 1,525
    The reality is by the time NTTD was filmed, Craig himself looked noticeably older than when we first saw him in CR. The suspenders added to the look. We don't need any more Bond equivalents of the Dial of Destiny. Connery looked older and heavier during DAF, but age was never an issue as a character. Even Moore, whose age was showing by AVTAK, age wasn't an issue. I like the Craig series, even if I don't like a lot of the writing and creative decisions. In some respects aging Bond out seemed intended to anticipate Craig going out in a blaze of glory. Frankly, I don't know how far ahead P&W thought things through. I hope we don't have any more Bond films in which age and health are an issue. Been there, done that. As preposterous as Bond's liver is, I don't care. Nor do I want more films that pits old against new. It's a theme that already feels quite old. The new Bond needs to be healthy and energetic and a man of the present comfortable with modern technology. No more 'back in the day' stuff which won't mean a thing to younger audiences. Retain as much Fleming as possible as well as the Bond tone that defines the series, but let's move on from an aging, maybe losing his edge Bond.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,548
    slide_99 wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    Mallory chimes in with the 'it's a young man's game' line, which to me came across less about Bond's age, but simply that he's part of M's 'old guard' and he thinks it's best to make way for a new generation.

    This is basically the same thing, though. Bond's advanced age and supposed irrelevancy inform nearly every aspect about SF, plot-wise and thematically. The audience can interpret things how they want but obviously the intention of the filmmakers was to turn Craig's Bond into a dinosaur character who didn't belong in the new digital world, even though she was shown hacking into M's computer six years earlier.

    “I understand double-0s have a very short life expectancy…”

    In a short life, six years was a lifetime ago. He was entering his middle age as an agent in SF. Combined with life threatening injuries, he has lost a step.

    Until he completes his resurrection at Skyfall.
  • edited January 26 Posts: 2,954
    slide_99 wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    Mallory chimes in with the 'it's a young man's game' line, which to me came across less about Bond's age, but simply that he's part of M's 'old guard' and he thinks it's best to make way for a new generation.

    This is basically the same thing, though. Bond's advanced age and supposed irrelevancy inform nearly every aspect about SF, plot-wise and thematically. The audience can interpret things how they want but obviously the intention of the filmmakers was to turn Craig's Bond into a dinosaur character who didn't belong in the new digital world, even though she was shown hacking into M's computer six years earlier.

    Depends on what you mean by 'advanced age'. Like I said, Craig's Bond is essentially the equivalent to Brosnan's Bond in GE, and many of the same beats and ideas are explored, including Bond being a 'relic' (in many ways it's actually less prevalent in SF as you're not talking about an agent six years out from the Cold War, but an experienced MI6 agent attached to the generation on their way out). So yeah, I'm not saying these ideas aren't there, but I think most viewers can work out that Bond's not an old man, but an older one compared to the previous two films. If anything it seems fans have the most problems with this.
  • VenutiusVenutius Yorkshire
    edited January 26 Posts: 2,934
    Yes, indeed - after all, he was crocked from the irradiated bullet frags, not from any age-derived depletion in his abilities as a meat-eating, testosterone-driven, high thumos killing machine...
  • slide_99slide_99 USA
    Posts: 652
    It was still only his third mission (technically second if you count QOS as the same mission as CR, or not even a real mission at all since he's rogue for most of the movie), so it still feels like they jumped the gun in a way that didn't make sense for Craig's Bond. And clearly the filmmakers were indeed going for "Bond is old," not just "Bond is wounded from the bullet and the fall," otherwise the entire movie wouldn't revolve around his supposed obsolescence. I understand that it's not JUST his age that's a factor here, but clearly it's one of them.
  • Posts: 2,954
    Well, presumably he’s had missions offscreen… it’s not just his third.

    And like I said, Bond’s older age compared to the first two is there. But he’s basically in his early 40s (maybe). It’s not NSNA or NTTD territory.
  • VenutiusVenutius Yorkshire
    edited January 26 Posts: 2,934
    Well, the third mission we actually saw, anyway. There's a hint of it when Silva asks 'Is there any of the old 007 left?' That suggests that he's well aware of Bond's reputation - can that reputation be based just on CR/QOS (and maybe Bloodstone)? There must have been more for Silva to have been aware of him in that way. Although that could just be my undiminished longing for three more films like QOS, obvs... ;)
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,987
    I don't see it as jumping the gun regardless. If you have a good story to tell, tell it now; there's no point in waiting for years. And as 007HallY says, he was revitalised in SF, not put out to pasture.
  • edited January 26 Posts: 731
    It was the 50th anniversary. That's why Bond was old in SF




  • Jordo007Jordo007 Merseyside
    Posts: 2,520
    It's a shame DAD started with Bond being captured and tortured. That could have been the perfect way to start Skyfall
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,492
    Jordo007 wrote: »
    It's a shame DAD started with Bond being captured and tortured. That could have been the perfect way to start Skyfall

    Never thought of that prospect before but it would've helped clear up a few issues I had with the film, absolutely.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 14,987
    Jordo007 wrote: »
    It's a shame DAD started with Bond being captured and tortured. That could have been the perfect way to start Skyfall

    What's your thinking? I don't necessarily disagree, I'm just curious what you think it would add that the 'death' didn't.
  • Jordo007Jordo007 Merseyside
    Posts: 2,520
    mtm wrote: »
    Jordo007 wrote: »
    It's a shame DAD started with Bond being captured and tortured. That could have been the perfect way to start Skyfall

    What's your thinking? I don't necessarily disagree, I'm just curious what you think it would add that the 'death' didn't.

    Not that the "death" wasn't impactful mate, but just that it would have been interesting to see how they would have written the story with Bond being captured, discarded and then having to prove his importance to MI6.

    From a selfish perspective, I would have liked to see what Daniel did with that story thread like that and how it impacted his performance of the character. I doubt they would have shaved Bond's beard off then forgotten about it, like they did in DAD.

    It also could have explained the short haircut and Bond being over the hill a bit better too. But listen I love Skyfall as it is
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