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Comments
I agree about the often very clunky dialogue. I usually put it down to Benson being American. Gardner does Bond dialogue much more convincingly . I'm just about halfway through Never Send Flowers at the moment, and I'm honestly finding the dialogue a treat.
The nature of the story (as a a biography of the "real" James Bond and not the literary one) allows for departures from Fleming in ways I don't exactly believe: the complete ficitionalisation of MR, or even things such as Bond having a brother don't exactly ring true to me.
I don't think I'd pick it up over any continuation novel though; there isn't really a narrative that drives the story and ultimately it exists as a cool companion piece (along with Amis' Dossier and Benson's Bedside Companion) to the other novels
I enjoy it as well. It is very meta and reads more like a commentary on the original books. Hard to take it seriously as a narrative, although the kangaroos are not far off from the plot of For Special Services.
The film adaptation is even better and you can see exactly where the producers made inroads.
I really don't.
Applying Fleming as such is a bit like appealing to the older films of 60s lore, but Fleming's Bond belongs in the 1950s.
I agree, Bond needs to move on with the times, I liked Fleming, I do, I'm a fan of the books, but if applying Fleming in films, it would've killed the series, the new and younger generations would likely to be turned off by the old attitudes, just from a marketing and business perspective, the box office numbers needs to maintain.
Bond in this era is a very hard one to navigate.
I'm fine with the films using some of unused materials from Fleming.
Yes, Fleming wrote his books in the 50s and early 60s when rations were still a thing and no one had any idea what an avocado “pear” was.
Fleming wrote the fantasy of a spy who dove deeply into hedonism, indulging in food , alcohol and women that his readers could only dream of.
So when people say go back to Fleming, I think most are thinking of how he lives a life that’s just beyond most of us to grasp (high stakes poker games, fast cars, gadgets where guns are hidden in the tips of walking sticks, and our hero drinks pink champagne and eats like tomorrows won’t come).
Yes, always go back to Fleming to capture the special flavour that differentiates him to the other cinematic heroes. Fleming IS what makes James Bond special.
Fleming also chimed in with conservative mores of the 1950s. 'Coloured' (his words) people knowing their place, women as sexual whims and Reds under the bed. If only Britain got its teeth out....
Attitudes the films did away with.
Bond now is the film. Fleming is but a courtier.
But nothing of what you said has any relevance to my point: Fleming brought the fantastical. Go back to Fleming’s flavour, and you separate Bond from every hero today.
I’m not understanding your point here, Captain?
It did have relevance to your 'beat to beat' point.
Fleming was very much a political animal, firmly ensconced in the hard-right of Britain's empire thinking.
The films wisely eschew such nonsense for the true fantastic.
That's why we want that. I don't want to see James Bond on Mars.
Bond’s just had his testicles tenderised.
I also like Fleming's creation of Mr Big, as the first successful black master criminal. Who turns out to be a formidable opponent for Bond.
Also cool are Fleming's descriptions of Mr Big's skilful operation and it's far reaching dominion over his community.
I only intended to read a couple of chapters while enjoying a beer in the garden. But damn if i'm not going to read this all over again!