Where does Bond go after Craig?

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Comments

  • Posts: 104
    Ultimately, we just have to accept that some of the changes made during the Craig era, such as the increased focus on character and emotional conflicts, are permanent.
    I disagree, after some more serious films, the series was always able to go back to more fun / adventurous films. I don't see why this shouldn't be possible nowadays.
    I agree with Mendes4Lyfe, a lighter Bond is probably more needed than ever.
  • edited March 2 Posts: 2,901
    talos7 wrote: »
    This article has some interesting comments from O’Connell and addresses “the gap” between films and why it’s not a bad thing.

    https://screenrant.com/james-bond-casting-chances-jack-oconnell-response/

    Nice, first time I've read O'Connell discuss Bond in years. Good answer too. Probably more or less the 'right' one at this point.

    The misspelling in that article of 'Barbara Groccoli' is one I find quite funny too, although I'm not entirely sure why...
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited March 2 Posts: 8,087
    "These changes in the Craig era will be Permanent"

    "Bond always adapts with the times to survive."

    These two statements are in conflict with eachother.
  • edited March 2 Posts: 2,901
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character? I'm not sure a one dimensional Bond is what we need really.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,502
    "These changes in the Craig era will be Permanent"

    "Bond always adapts with the times to survive."

    These two statements are in conflict with eachother.

    How??
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 8,087
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?
  • peterpeter Toronto
    edited March 2 Posts: 8,502
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?

    Bond and Blofeld aren't relatives.

    There is arguably a misfire with how they dealt with the Blofeld/Bond background, but that doesn't mean the concept of exploring Bond character is ill advised.

    When else, especially recently, has the exploration of Bond got in the way of the narrative, @Mendes4Lyfe ?
  • edited March 2 Posts: 2,901
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?

    Well, we've discussed this in the past, but usually those personal elements are the story and part of the foundation of these films - GE, SF, CR, and QOS being examples. Even TSWLM, LTK and many other Bond films.

    I think SP would have been improved by Bond and Blofeld not knowing each other as children, yes, but they're not conventional rivals at all. Blofeld never has been. They already had a backstory that involved each other. Blofeld headed the organisation that essentially killed Vesper and made Bond continue his career in the Service, and Bond thwarted Blofeld's plans more than once and led him to essentially take over Quantum/creating SPECTRE. Their paths crossed and they got in each other's way. They had an impact on each other's lives. Just like in the books/early films. There was plenty there already. If anything I feel what SP did by having Bond/Blofeld know each other made it less dramatic, less personal (why would Bond care about some kid he knew for a couple of months when he was 11? He doesn't even call him Franz after a point. It's not as though much can be done with the idea of Blofeld killing Hans as the audience didn't know this character, and they actually have little connection to each other when the ideas I wrote previously aren't emphasised). For all the dramatics, he is a conventional villain in the film we got.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited March 2 Posts: 8,087
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?

    Well, we've discussed this in the past, but usually those personal elements are the story and part of the foundation of these films - GE, SF, CR, and QOS being examples. Even TSWLM, LTK and many other Bond films.

    I think SP would have been improved by Bond and Blofeld not knowing each other as children, yes, but they're not conventional rivals at all. Blofeld never has been. They already had a backstory that involved each other. Blofeld headed the organisation that essentially killed Vesper and made Bond continue his career in the Service, and Bond thwarted Blofeld's plans more than once and led him to essentially take over Quantum/creating SPECTRE. Their paths crossed and they got in each other's way. They had an impact on each other's lives. Just like in the books/early films. There was plenty there already. If anything I feel what SP did by having Bond/Blofeld know each other made it less dramatic, less personal (why would Bond care about some kid he knew for a couple of months when he was 11? He doesn't even call him Franz after a point. It's not as though much can be done with the idea of Blofeld killing Hans as the audience didn't know this character, and they actually have little connection to each other when the ideas I wrote previously aren't emphasised). They may as well have been conventional allies in the film as we got.

    You've literally just demonstrated my point - remove the character angle and the story works much better for it. The fact blofeld did all that stuff because he was upset that bond "pushed him out of the nest" is what gets in the way of a better narrative.
  • edited March 2 Posts: 2,901
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?

    Well, we've discussed this in the past, but usually those personal elements are the story and part of the foundation of these films - GE, SF, CR, and QOS being examples. Even TSWLM, LTK and many other Bond films.

    I think SP would have been improved by Bond and Blofeld not knowing each other as children, yes, but they're not conventional rivals at all. Blofeld never has been. They already had a backstory that involved each other. Blofeld headed the organisation that essentially killed Vesper and made Bond continue his career in the Service, and Bond thwarted Blofeld's plans more than once and led him to essentially take over Quantum/creating SPECTRE. Their paths crossed and they got in each other's way. They had an impact on each other's lives. Just like in the books/early films. There was plenty there already. If anything I feel what SP did by having Bond/Blofeld know each other made it less dramatic, less personal (why would Bond care about some kid he knew for a couple of months when he was 11? He doesn't even call him Franz after a point. It's not as though much can be done with the idea of Blofeld killing Hans as the audience didn't know this character, and they actually have little connection to each other when the ideas I wrote previously aren't emphasised). They may as well have been conventional allies in the film as we got.

    You've literally just demonstrated my point - remove the character angle and the story works much better for it. The fact blofeld did all that stuff because he was upset that bond "pushed him out of the nest" is what gets in the way of a better narrative.

    No, it's just a dynamic between the characters you'd likely prefer. Like I said their paths crossed. For Bond there is a personal element in taking Blofeld/SPECTRE down even if they don't know each other previously. For Blofeld he wants to ensure Bond will not destroy his organisation/plans as he did with Quantum. The weird 'pushed him out of the nest' thing is so underbaked anyway that Blofeld may as well have been a conventional villain. It's still personal, just in my opinion a better starting point for a film with these two characters.

    'Personal' elements don't need to involve characters knowing each other as children, or even things from the past coming back. You seem to like a lot of Bond films that do have an element of drama and even things from Bond's past (TSWLM, GE) so I'm not quite sure why you paint all this with the same brush.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,502
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?

    Well, we've discussed this in the past, but usually those personal elements are the story and part of the foundation of these films - GE, SF, CR, and QOS being examples. Even TSWLM, LTK and many other Bond films.

    I think SP would have been improved by Bond and Blofeld not knowing each other as children, yes, but they're not conventional rivals at all. Blofeld never has been. They already had a backstory that involved each other. Blofeld headed the organisation that essentially killed Vesper and made Bond continue his career in the Service, and Bond thwarted Blofeld's plans more than once and led him to essentially take over Quantum/creating SPECTRE. Their paths crossed and they got in each other's way. They had an impact on each other's lives. Just like in the books/early films. There was plenty there already. If anything I feel what SP did by having Bond/Blofeld know each other made it less dramatic, less personal (why would Bond care about some kid he knew for a couple of months when he was 11? He doesn't even call him Franz after a point. It's not as though much can be done with the idea of Blofeld killing Hans as the audience didn't know this character, and they actually have little connection to each other when the ideas I wrote previously aren't emphasised). They may as well have been conventional allies in the film as we got.

    You've literally just demonstrated my point - remove the character angle and the story works much better for it. The fact blofeld did all that stuff because he was upset that bond "pushed him out of the nest" is what gets in the way of a better narrative.

    No, it's just a dynamic between the characters you'd likely prefer. Like I said their paths crossed. For Bond there is a personal element in taking Blofeld/SPECTRE down even if they don't know each other previously. For Blofeld he wants to ensure Bond will not destroy his organisation/plans as he did with Quantum. The weird 'pushed him out of the nest' thing is so underbaked anyway that Blofeld may as well have been a conventional villain. It's still personal, just in my opinion a better starting point for a film with these two characters.

    'Personal' elements don't need to involve characters knowing each other as children, or even things from the past coming back. You seem to like a lot of Bond films that do have an element of drama and even things from Bond's past (TSWLM, GE) so I'm not quite sure why you paint all this with the same brush.

    I’ve tried to engage with @Mendes4Lyfe about nuance, and things don’t have to be all white or all black. But, as demonstrated above, sometimes people want to read messages that they want to read and ignore what’s actually being presented… 🤷‍♂️
  • Posts: 2,065
    I think personal stakes have always been an elements of Bond films since the beginning, but the Craig era inevitably steered things in a different direction which I can understand why some may not like those stakes. Personally speaking by the time NTTD came around, those personal stakes began to feel more like a “trope” and less like something that was organically woven into the script/story. My hope we go back to the personal stakes of films like FRWL, TSWLM, or GE as opposed to what we’ve been getting with Bond in the latter half of Craig’s tenure.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited March 2 Posts: 8,087
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?

    Well, we've discussed this in the past, but usually those personal elements are the story and part of the foundation of these films - GE, SF, CR, and QOS being examples. Even TSWLM, LTK and many other Bond films.

    I think SP would have been improved by Bond and Blofeld not knowing each other as children, yes, but they're not conventional rivals at all. Blofeld never has been. They already had a backstory that involved each other. Blofeld headed the organisation that essentially killed Vesper and made Bond continue his career in the Service, and Bond thwarted Blofeld's plans more than once and led him to essentially take over Quantum/creating SPECTRE. Their paths crossed and they got in each other's way. They had an impact on each other's lives. Just like in the books/early films. There was plenty there already. If anything I feel what SP did by having Bond/Blofeld know each other made it less dramatic, less personal (why would Bond care about some kid he knew for a couple of months when he was 11? He doesn't even call him Franz after a point. It's not as though much can be done with the idea of Blofeld killing Hans as the audience didn't know this character, and they actually have little connection to each other when the ideas I wrote previously aren't emphasised). They may as well have been conventional allies in the film as we got.

    You've literally just demonstrated my point - remove the character angle and the story works much better for it. The fact blofeld did all that stuff because he was upset that bond "pushed him out of the nest" is what gets in the way of a better narrative.

    No, it's just a dynamic between the characters you'd likely prefer. Like I said their paths crossed. For Bond there is a personal element in taking Blofeld/SPECTRE down even if they don't know each other previously. For Blofeld he wants to ensure Bond will not destroy his organisation/plans as he did with Quantum. The weird 'pushed him out of the nest' thing is so underbaked anyway that Blofeld may as well have been a conventional villain. It's still personal, just in my opinion a better starting point for a film with these two characters.

    'Personal' elements don't need to involve characters knowing each other as children, or even things from the past coming back. You seem to like a lot of Bond films that do have an element of drama and even things from Bond's past (TSWLM, GE) so I'm not quite sure why you paint all this with the same brush.

    We're essentially in agreement, remove the character angles between Bond and blofeld so that their history results from the story and not the other way around, and the last half of his tenure would be greatly improved.
  • Posts: 2,901
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    Personally, if we hypothetically got a film that was strictly adapted along the lines of an early Connery Bond flick, I don't think it'd result in a successful or fulfilling Bond film. The same can be said if they tried to simply do a Craig film with a different Bond. Each new Bond and new era adds something while a) keeping the fundamentals of the character and adventures alive and b) adding onto, or even readapting, what came before it.

    It also has to be said that I think one of the reasons the Craig era resonated with general audiences as much as it did was because of how they explored Bond's character. It's really nothing new for the series anyway, conservatively we can go back to Dalton and find this (I'd argue you can go back much further). But the fact is Craig's era was praised by many people for this. It doesn't mean we'll always get elements from Bond's past in future films, nor that he'll now be brooding and angsty, nor does it mean we won't get a more lighthearted take on Bond (it's a bit pointless trying to claim Bond has to be one or the other fully - 'serious' or 'lighthearted' etc. Bond can be both and was during the Craig era especially, regardless of which way it skews with each film/actor). It just means we'll get a more human Bond, and as I said this is what the films have been skewing towards for a long, long time. Like I said, even the Bond of FRWL is different to the Bond of DN. And anyway, why wouldn't they try to explore something interesting with regards to Bond's character?

    Because often times, especially recently, that's exactly what gets in the way of the narrative.

    Would SPECTRE be improved if Bond and Blofeld weren't relatives, but merely conventional rivals?

    Well, we've discussed this in the past, but usually those personal elements are the story and part of the foundation of these films - GE, SF, CR, and QOS being examples. Even TSWLM, LTK and many other Bond films.

    I think SP would have been improved by Bond and Blofeld not knowing each other as children, yes, but they're not conventional rivals at all. Blofeld never has been. They already had a backstory that involved each other. Blofeld headed the organisation that essentially killed Vesper and made Bond continue his career in the Service, and Bond thwarted Blofeld's plans more than once and led him to essentially take over Quantum/creating SPECTRE. Their paths crossed and they got in each other's way. They had an impact on each other's lives. Just like in the books/early films. There was plenty there already. If anything I feel what SP did by having Bond/Blofeld know each other made it less dramatic, less personal (why would Bond care about some kid he knew for a couple of months when he was 11? He doesn't even call him Franz after a point. It's not as though much can be done with the idea of Blofeld killing Hans as the audience didn't know this character, and they actually have little connection to each other when the ideas I wrote previously aren't emphasised). They may as well have been conventional allies in the film as we got.

    You've literally just demonstrated my point - remove the character angle and the story works much better for it. The fact blofeld did all that stuff because he was upset that bond "pushed him out of the nest" is what gets in the way of a better narrative.

    No, it's just a dynamic between the characters you'd likely prefer. Like I said their paths crossed. For Bond there is a personal element in taking Blofeld/SPECTRE down even if they don't know each other previously. For Blofeld he wants to ensure Bond will not destroy his organisation/plans as he did with Quantum. The weird 'pushed him out of the nest' thing is so underbaked anyway that Blofeld may as well have been a conventional villain. It's still personal, just in my opinion a better starting point for a film with these two characters.

    'Personal' elements don't need to involve characters knowing each other as children, or even things from the past coming back. You seem to like a lot of Bond films that do have an element of drama and even things from Bond's past (TSWLM, GE) so I'm not quite sure why you paint all this with the same brush.

    We're essentially in agreement, remove the character angles between Bond and blofeld, so that their history results from the story, and not the other way around, and the last half of his tenure would be greatly improved.

    Well, it’s still a character angle with a personal element. But I get what you’re saying about their history coming from the story (not that that’s a hard rule either, just depends on how it’s done. In this case I agree though). So yeah, I’m sure we agree it would have made for a more satisfactory Bond/Blofeld antagonism (not sure about the rest of Craig’s tenure or even SP being vastly improved by this one thing though. I think SP has more issues).
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,502
    I think personal stakes have always been an elements of Bond films since the beginning, but the Craig era inevitably steered things in a different direction which I can understand why some may not like those stakes. Personally speaking by the time NTTD came around, those personal stakes began to feel more like a “trope” and less like something that was organically woven into the script/story. My hope we go back to the personal stakes of films like FRWL, TSWLM, or GE as opposed to what we’ve been getting with Bond in the latter half of Craig’s tenure.

    Obviously I’m one of the lot who loves what we got throughout Craig’s era.

    But I understand why it’s not to others tastes.

    But, as @007HallY is saying, this type of exploration doesn’t have to be what has come before (and it doesn’t have to be, and it definitely won’t be a Craig-repeat), but audiences tend to respond to a more complete, three dimensional character.

    We’ve seen this not just in Bond, but take a look at his cousin in Mission Impossible… In films one and two, Hunt is a far more simple character with less dimensions.

    By the third one, they started to layer more on top of him. There were now stakes in his life…

    And people respond to dilemmas and stakes, and, the more personal, the more value the suspense and tension delivers…
  • LucknFateLucknFate 007 In New York
    Posts: 1,430
    https://x.com/culturecrave/status/1763880008404320592?s=46&t=1n5Rcs-hD3txaEWwd9IFoA

    DV says he's not interested in other cinematic universes after Blade Runner burned him. Does Bond count as that, I wonder?
  • Posts: 2,065
    peter wrote: »
    I think personal stakes have always been an elements of Bond films since the beginning, but the Craig era inevitably steered things in a different direction which I can understand why some may not like those stakes. Personally speaking by the time NTTD came around, those personal stakes began to feel more like a “trope” and less like something that was organically woven into the script/story. My hope we go back to the personal stakes of films like FRWL, TSWLM, or GE as opposed to what we’ve been getting with Bond in the latter half of Craig’s tenure.

    Obviously I’m one of the lot who loves what we got throughout Craig’s era.

    But I understand why it’s not to others tastes.

    But, as @007HallY is saying, this type of exploration doesn’t have to be what has come before (and it doesn’t have to be, and it definitely won’t be a Craig-repeat), but audiences tend to respond to a more complete, three dimensional character.

    We’ve seen this not just in Bond, but take a look at his cousin in Mission Impossible… In films one and two, Hunt is a far more simple character with less dimensions.

    By the third one, they started to layer more on top of him. There were now stakes in his life…

    And people respond to dilemmas and stakes, and, the more personal, the more value the suspense and tension delivers…

    I get that, and for a long time probably before Spectre came out I’d always preferred the Bond films that do lean a bit more into his character and the dilemmas he faces. But after running through the first 21 films (still have Craig’s remaining four to go) recently, I found myself more appreciative of the films that manage to achieve a sense of personal stakes from other elements of the story. I really love the tension on Bond and Tatiana’s relationship after the death of Kerim in FRWL, and I really love the possibility of Anya killing Bond after he killed her lover in TSWLM.

    Like I said I’ve got Craig’s remaining four films left to go in my Bondathon this year so who knows what tune I’ll be singing afterwards, but if personal stakes are going to continue (which they will) I’d rather the writing team find some other means of achieving those stakes as opposed to dramatically revealing more and more about Bond’s character, which I think Craig’s tenure leaned a bit too much into for my own personal liking.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    edited March 2 Posts: 5,979
    I do think the personal angle "developed" between Bond and Blofeld is very odd. It was personal enough that Blofeld more or less killed Vesper.

    I understand that Mendes, emboldened by exploring Bond's past in SF, chose to double down with another trip to the past in SP.

    If Oberhauser had been a *separate* character from Blofeld (akin to a Klebb or a Largo), this could have worked very well. Blofeld could have toyed with both of Bond's distinct past traumas (losing his parents/Oberhauser, and later, Vesper) and felt like the criminal mastermind.

    Imagine if at the end of the PTS, the assassin mentioned "Oberhauser" to Bond instead of Bond finding the silly Spectre ring.

    Blofeld later could have dispatched Oberhauser in one of the great SPECTRE deaths from the days of yore, another element SP missed.

    SP remains, perhaps, the single biggest missed opportunity in the series. A bunch of half-baked ideas and the souffle never rose.

    This is why I blame Mendes.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 8,087
    Haha, yeah. Craigs last 2 Bond films could have been great, straightforward Bond films, but it's all the little character angles to try and make the stakes personal that spoil them. What difference would it really make, in the end, if Madeline and Safin were perfect strangers?
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,502
    Haha, yeah. Craigs last 2 Bond films could have been great, straightforward Bond films, but it's all the little character angles to try and make the stakes personal that spoil them. What difference would it really make, in the end, if Madeline and Safin were perfect strangers?

    This may not work for you @Mendes4Lyfe , but with 10 thousand-plus reviews on Rotten Tomatoes NTTD scored 88% positive reviews via audiences/ 83% with critics…. (https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/no_time_to_die_2021)

    Once again showing that EoN may actually know how to make an internationally satisfying film that the vast majority of audiences enjoyed.

    🤷‍♂️….



  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,473
    I don't see how Rotten Tomatoes scores, whether audience or critics, should negate someone's personal feelings about a film. SF has way better scores than NTTD but I still don't like it.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    edited March 2 Posts: 8,502
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    I don't see how Rotten Tomatoes scores, whether audience or critics, should negate someone's personal feelings about a film. SF has way better scores than NTTD but I still don't like it.

    As I’ve stated before: these films may not be for you, and I understand that @Creasy47 , and I understand that Mendes likes to bang-on about his dislike for, especially, the last two films of Craig’s run.

    I’ve made it clear: I get it. But my “thesis”, as has been the case pretty consistently, and it’s got me in trouble: these films are made for international audiences, and my point here was, we can criticize any film all we want, and I’m not belittling when I point out that 10thousand plus “fresh” votes is pretty significant.

    Someone like Mendes speaks as if his opinions/thoughts are actual facts. He's been quoted many times saying what audiences want (I’ve asked him if he’s spoken to moviegoers in Canada or India, Ohio or Portland, Hong Kong etc., etc).

    It’s not negating his feelings, it’s pointing out that his opinions are his, not everyone’s.

    If I insulted anyone, that wasn’t the intent.
  • Posts: 1,518
    No question EON can make a smash hit, which in no way invalidates opinions that a Bond film could be better. The RM era was huge and led to bigger Bond films, yet he is my least favorite Bond, contrary to the opinions of millions of others.

    Contrary to other opinions, I don't see the need for a substantial gap between Craig and the next Bond. I completely understand the opposing arguments with respect to wait time and creativity. I liked Craig in the role, but I am not so attached to him that I can't see anyone else in the role, and soon. As I've noted previously, it's happened so often it's just a changing of the guard.

    I still don't really know what a modern Bond is. Isn't each Bond a modern Bond? Mostly it seems the real issue is Bond's relationship with women. EON can sort that.

    Tone appears to be looming large. Craig's era was characterized by sturm und drang.
    I'm certainly for a less troubled Bond, but I don't want a Bond cut from the same cloth of RM. For me a lighter, less serious Bond undercut the drama and tension of the stories. After all these years, it's hard for me to believe Moore's Bond, with some few exceptions, ever seems truly treated. The humor and flippancy were too much. Connery's Bond was a better balance. I hope that's what the next actor and writers are capable of.

    Not interested in any more story arcs. Nothing speaks more clearly to how misguided the Quantum/SPECTRE angle was when in the final installment someone heretofore unknown is introduced to wipe out SPECTRE instead of Bond.

    Stand alone missions, please. The continuity will be baked in via Bond's cast of supporting characters (even if new) and the familiar Bond music.

    No more resignations, MI-6 infiltrations, is Bond dead or not, smart blood, nano-bots, DB-5, fights on top of trains, motorcycles, MI-6 C style makeovers, villains who can miraculously predict Bond's every move in a chase, and no more dinosaur and misogyny talk.

    Let the man be young and committed (if not enthusiastic) to his job.









  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 5,979
    CrabKey wrote: »
    No question EON can make a smash hit, which in no way invalidates opinions that a Bond film could be better. The RM era was huge and led to bigger Bond films, yet he is my least favorite Bond, contrary to the opinions of millions of others.

    Contrary to other opinions, I don't see the need for a substantial gap between Craig and the next Bond. I completely understand the opposing arguments with respect to wait time and creativity. I liked Craig in the role, but I am not so attached to him that I can't see anyone else in the role, and soon. As I've noted previously, it's happened so often it's just a changing of the guard.

    I still don't really know what a modern Bond is. Isn't each Bond a modern Bond? Mostly it seems the real issue is Bond's relationship with women. EON can sort that.

    Tone appears to be looming large. Craig's era was characterized by sturm und drang.
    I'm certainly for a less troubled Bond, but I don't want a Bond cut from the same cloth of RM. For me a lighter, less serious Bond undercut the drama and tension of the stories. After all these years, it's hard for me to believe Moore's Bond, with some few exceptions, ever seems truly treated. The humor and flippancy were too much. Connery's Bond was a better balance. I hope that's what the next actor and writers are capable of.

    Not interested in any more story arcs. Nothing speaks more clearly to how misguided the Quantum/SPECTRE angle was when in the final installment someone heretofore unknown is introduced to wipe out SPECTRE instead of Bond.

    Stand alone missions, please. The continuity will be baked in via Bond's cast of supporting characters (even if new) and the familiar Bond music.

    No more resignations, MI-6 infiltrations, is Bond dead or not, smart blood, nano-bots, DB-5, fights on top of trains, motorcycles, MI-6 C style makeovers, villains who can miraculously predict Bond's every move in a chase, and no more dinosaur and misogyny talk.

    Let the man be young and committed (if not enthusiastic) to his job.

    We haven't had a standalone mission since 1987. And the idea of a "company man" is also something from the past. Time marches on. [shrug]
  • DenbighDenbigh UK
    edited March 2 Posts: 5,869
    I also think we're not considering that other eras had their successes and their failures. The problems within the James Bond series don't live and die on the Craig-era alone. If people are nervous regarding following the same path, then why are we not discussing the same pitfalls that other eras fell into? Again, if we're assuming that following a similar path will lead to the same mistakes?

    For example, I agree that we need less MI6 moles going forward. It's overdone, but if EON do give me that again and it's the best I've ever seen it done? I'll eat my words straight away.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,502
    @Denbigh has that great little optimism that’s always nice to read around these corners!

  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    edited March 2 Posts: 16,330
    I'm ready for more of a lighter style Bond on a mission approach again. Exploring the depths of Bond's character was something I didn't like about the Craig era. I see Bond as more a pulp hero character. He's better when he's already developed. Sure he can go through the wringer on his missions but he still always comes out on top. It wouldn't be regression, it would be a breath of fresh air. To say it can't be done today is nonsense and close minded. I don't want reality in my Bond films. I want escapist fantasy! Bond is an escape from this world, not a reflection of it. If the next Bond era is just going to be Craig 2.0 with even more melodrama and terrible plot twists then it will crash and burn.
  • ForbseyForbsey Hampshire
    Posts: 8
    As long as there’s sophisticated adventurer with a wry attitude to the possibility of sudden death then I will be waiting.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,502
    Murdock wrote: »
    I'm ready for more of a lighter style Bond on a mission approach again. Exploring the depths of Bond's character was something I didn't like about the Craig era. I see Bond as more a pulp hero character. He's better when he's already developed. Sure he can go through the wringer on his missions but he still always comes out on top. It wouldn't be regression, it would be a breath of fresh air. To say it can't be done today is nonsense and close minded. I don't want reality in my Bond films. I want escapist fantasy! Bond is an escape from this world, not a reflection of it. If the next Bond era is just going to be Craig 2.0 with even more melodrama and terrible plot twist then it will crash and burn.

    But why is anyone assuming the next era could be a Craig 2.0?

    I’m a fan of the Craig era, but I don’t want Craig 2.0, and I don’t see the filmmakers going backwards to design and create a new era.

    Each era has had its own uniqueness, strengths and weaknesses… I don’t see this changing in the slightest.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,330
    peter wrote: »
    Murdock wrote: »
    I'm ready for more of a lighter style Bond on a mission approach again. Exploring the depths of Bond's character was something I didn't like about the Craig era. I see Bond as more a pulp hero character. He's better when he's already developed. Sure he can go through the wringer on his missions but he still always comes out on top. It wouldn't be regression, it would be a breath of fresh air. To say it can't be done today is nonsense and close minded. I don't want reality in my Bond films. I want escapist fantasy! Bond is an escape from this world, not a reflection of it. If the next Bond era is just going to be Craig 2.0 with even more melodrama and terrible plot twist then it will crash and burn.

    But why is anyone assuming the next era could be a Craig 2.0?

    I’m a fan of the Craig era, but I don’t want Craig 2.0, and I don’t see the filmmakers going backwards to design and create a new era.

    Each era has had its own uniqueness, strengths and weaknesses… I don’t see this changing in the slightest.

    I don't know what the next era will bring, I can only speculate. I hope it's good and to my liking. There's a lot at stake that's for sure.
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