Controversial opinions about Bond films

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  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited August 8 Posts: 18,755
    Yes I think as it was, even with Connery and Moore's star power, Bond was struggling and could have faded away with TMWTGG but Cubby wisely regrouped and relaunched it with Spy; a Lazenby DAF may well have seen O'Rahilly's prediction come true.
    Ah, yes, I thought you were talking about Young. It would have made sense to bring him back for DAF instead of Hamilton.

    I don't know, TB doesn't feel the strongest directed to me. I think he probably stopped at the right point, and apparently he quit during editing anyway didn't he?
  • edited August 8 Posts: 5,711
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    I'm a huge Lazenby defender and I think OHMSS couldn't have had a better lead. Sure he lacks the charisma of Connery, but doesn't everyone? What OHMSS needed was a softer less self-condifent Bond and even though I think George did have enough screen presence to pull of Bond, he didn't look as much 'in control' as Connery did and I think OHMSS benefits from that. Also, that last scene is one of the best acted scenes in the series.

    I agree, no one could do it better than Laz, he fits well in the film.

    And really he looked the part, could handle the essential aspects of the character, and I think he had the Masculine boyish charm like the Bond of the books, and was an actual fighter (he's great in martial arts), as for romance, that's the best I could expect from a Bond film, and Lazenby delivered the romance in the most Bondian way possible.

    The Bond character, probably another controversial opinion of mine, doesn't require much, actually, its not that I have lower standards, heck no, but as far as cinematic Bond goes, and speaking on behalf of the casual audiences, the cinematic Bond is not that much of a demanding role (cinematic Bond is different from the books, hence why I emphasized that word 'Cinematic'), the cinematic Bond doesn't require much, as long as you look the role, can handle the essential aspects of the character, has that masculine charm, believable in fight scenes, and just be Bond, you're in, maybe it's us in fandom (us, fans in general) that we tend to be very nitpicky, this argument could also be applied for the next Bond as well.

    That could be true back then, before the modern films came out, hence, why the people accepted the likes of Barbara Bach, Claudine Auger, Daniela Bianchi, because in their POV, those women carried the roles well.

    But on the other hand, we have misfires from A list actors like Christoph Waltz that couldn't even managed to save that Blofeld character in SPECTRE, Rami Malek (an Oscar winning actor) as Safin in NTTD, or Denise Richards as Dr. Christmas Jones despite that she had acting experience or Halle Berry (another Oscar winner) as Jinx in DAD.

    It's on the character and how a person could carry the role.



    I wouldn’t say it’s an easy role (actually I suspect it’s deceptively tricky to play for an actor, and I reckon even some great actors would struggle a bit with it). There is a good deal of natural charisma and screen presence which comes into it. If you don’t ’have it’ then it’s tricky for an actor to play a believable Bond, which I think is where Lazenby’s problem came in. Acting ability aside I don’t think his real life charisma quite made its way onto the screen.
  • edited August 8 Posts: 2,298
    Lazenby has a rock star's charisma but James Bond is not a rock star ;)
    He makes Connery look like the Prince of Wales
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited August 8 Posts: 18,755
    I don't see any charisma at all. He's a blank.
    And as Peter said, not really an actor at all: he barely knows where to look. Like the bit where he finds the chips in his drawer after spending the night with Tracy- what's he thinking? I have no idea, there's nothing going on behind his eyes at all.

    Which funnily enough makes him kind of easy to picture as Fleming's Bond when reading one of the novels, because he looks sort of right but brings almost no personality to the part at all, so it's easy to overlay book Bond's personality and imagine him saying the lines in the book. If I try and picture Connery when reading a Fleming it doesn't work for me as his screen persona is too strong and different to Fleming's 007.
  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    edited August 8 Posts: 4,068
    007HallY wrote: »
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    I'm a huge Lazenby defender and I think OHMSS couldn't have had a better lead. Sure he lacks the charisma of Connery, but doesn't everyone? What OHMSS needed was a softer less self-condifent Bond and even though I think George did have enough screen presence to pull of Bond, he didn't look as much 'in control' as Connery did and I think OHMSS benefits from that. Also, that last scene is one of the best acted scenes in the series.

    I agree, no one could do it better than Laz, he fits well in the film.

    And really he looked the part, could handle the essential aspects of the character, and I think he had the Masculine boyish charm like the Bond of the books, and was an actual fighter (he's great in martial arts), as for romance, that's the best I could expect from a Bond film, and Lazenby delivered the romance in the most Bondian way possible.

    The Bond character, probably another controversial opinion of mine, doesn't require much, actually, its not that I have lower standards, heck no, but as far as cinematic Bond goes, and speaking on behalf of the casual audiences, the cinematic Bond is not that much of a demanding role (cinematic Bond is different from the books, hence why I emphasized that word 'Cinematic'), the cinematic Bond doesn't require much, as long as you look the role, can handle the essential aspects of the character, has that masculine charm, believable in fight scenes, and just be Bond, you're in, maybe it's us in fandom (us, fans in general) that we tend to be very nitpicky, this argument could also be applied for the next Bond as well.

    That could be true back then, before the modern films came out, hence, why the people accepted the likes of Barbara Bach, Claudine Auger, Daniela Bianchi, because in their POV, those women carried the roles well.

    But on the other hand, we have misfires from A list actors like Christoph Waltz that couldn't even managed to save that Blofeld character in SPECTRE, Rami Malek (an Oscar winning actor) as Safin in NTTD, or Denise Richards as Dr. Christmas Jones despite that she had acting experience or Halle Berry (another Oscar winner) as Jinx in DAD.

    It's on the character and how a person could carry the role.



    I wouldn’t say it’s an easy role (actually I suspect it’s deceptively tricky to play for an actor, and I reckon even some great actors would struggle a bit with it). There is a good deal of natural charisma and screen presence which comes into it. If you don’t ’have it’ then it’s tricky for an actor to play a believable Bond, which I think is where Lazenby’s problem came in. Acting ability aside I don’t think his real life charisma quite made its way onto the screen.

    I do think Lazenby had the charisma, because if he hadn't, then Cubby wouldn't likely to bat an eye on him in that Barber Shop or in that Chocolate Advert they've seen him in, the Producers thought that he had potential, these are the same people who chose Connery over Fleming's choice, David Niven, and Fleming disliked Connery for looking more like an overgrown stuntman who thankfully was guided and molded into shape with Terrence Young's guidance (hence, why I wished Young had directed Lazenby) and Connery's casting succeeded, these are the same producers who have Dalton and Brosnan on their radar, so they know what they're doing, when they've seen potential in Lazenby, they knew it, if not for Lazenby quitting from the role.

    That's said, for some casual audiences, the 'Cinematic' James Bond, just like Bourne, Hunt, and Wick, is still an action hero, if they looked good in a suit, sophisticated, classy, believable in fight scenes and action, sexy, could handle the essential aspects of the character, then any actor could've gotten the role, there's a criteria already laid on for the Cinematic Bond role through screen tests, if they've passed it, then, they could be Bond, this is not just about Lazenby, it's about choosing the Next Bond, in general, it's just the same as Bond Girls, think of why people prefer the performances of Barbara Bach, Claudine Auger, and Daniela Bianchi over the likes of Halle Berry (an Oscar winning actress) and Denise Richards, for example? It's on how they carry the role, and the quality of the material they're going to be given with, we don't need an A List, Oscar Winning Actors and Actresses in this:
    1.) As long as the material is good
    2.) As long as they could carry the role, then they could be in.

    I mean Halle Berry could've been great as Anya Amasova, but just imagine Barbara Bach as Jinx, for example, but why many people prefer the latter to the former? Because of the material they've been given with.


    And Lazenby, I think carried it well, like what I've said, the romance in OHMSS are the best that I could expect from a Bond film (not that the romance in the book was anything that convincing either), Lazenby carried it in the most Bondian way possible (that montage scene is really great, so them skiing together).

    This is just my Controversial Opinion, but I don't think the role of Cinematic James Bond is really that demanding, if they pass the criteria, they could go for the role.
  • edited August 8 Posts: 5,711
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    I'm a huge Lazenby defender and I think OHMSS couldn't have had a better lead. Sure he lacks the charisma of Connery, but doesn't everyone? What OHMSS needed was a softer less self-condifent Bond and even though I think George did have enough screen presence to pull of Bond, he didn't look as much 'in control' as Connery did and I think OHMSS benefits from that. Also, that last scene is one of the best acted scenes in the series.

    I agree, no one could do it better than Laz, he fits well in the film.

    And really he looked the part, could handle the essential aspects of the character, and I think he had the Masculine boyish charm like the Bond of the books, and was an actual fighter (he's great in martial arts), as for romance, that's the best I could expect from a Bond film, and Lazenby delivered the romance in the most Bondian way possible.

    The Bond character, probably another controversial opinion of mine, doesn't require much, actually, its not that I have lower standards, heck no, but as far as cinematic Bond goes, and speaking on behalf of the casual audiences, the cinematic Bond is not that much of a demanding role (cinematic Bond is different from the books, hence why I emphasized that word 'Cinematic'), the cinematic Bond doesn't require much, as long as you look the role, can handle the essential aspects of the character, has that masculine charm, believable in fight scenes, and just be Bond, you're in, maybe it's us in fandom (us, fans in general) that we tend to be very nitpicky, this argument could also be applied for the next Bond as well.

    That could be true back then, before the modern films came out, hence, why the people accepted the likes of Barbara Bach, Claudine Auger, Daniela Bianchi, because in their POV, those women carried the roles well.

    But on the other hand, we have misfires from A list actors like Christoph Waltz that couldn't even managed to save that Blofeld character in SPECTRE, Rami Malek (an Oscar winning actor) as Safin in NTTD, or Denise Richards as Dr. Christmas Jones despite that she had acting experience or Halle Berry (another Oscar winner) as Jinx in DAD.

    It's on the character and how a person could carry the role.



    I wouldn’t say it’s an easy role (actually I suspect it’s deceptively tricky to play for an actor, and I reckon even some great actors would struggle a bit with it). There is a good deal of natural charisma and screen presence which comes into it. If you don’t ’have it’ then it’s tricky for an actor to play a believable Bond, which I think is where Lazenby’s problem came in. Acting ability aside I don’t think his real life charisma quite made its way onto the screen.

    I do think Lazenby had the charisma, because if he hadn't, then Cubby wouldn't likely to bat an eye on him in that Barber Shop or in that Chocolate Advert they've seen him in, the Producers thought that he had potential, these are the same people who chose Connery over Fleming's choice, David Niven, and Fleming disliked Connery for looking more like an overgrown stuntman who thankfully was guided and molded into shape with Terrence Young's guidance (hence, why I wished Young had directed Lazenby) and Connery's casting succeeded, these are the same producers who have Dalton and Brosnan on their radar, so they know what they're doing, when they've seen potential in Lazenby, they knew it, if not for Lazenby quitting from the role.

    It’s not that Lazenby didn’t have charisma as a man. He clearly did and any interview with him will show it. But conveying that charisma as an actor onscreen, and in this case as James Bond, is another matter. It doesn’t matter how much charisma he had, the fact that he didn’t always seem comfortable in the role, didn’t always naturally know where to look, and indeed had this tendency to recite his lines in a stiff, wooden manner kills that slightly. It’s what I mean when I say playing Bond isn’t as easy as it looks. A lot of great actors simply won’t be able to play the role convincingly, but it’s also a case where a non-actor is even unlikelier to succeed, even if they have the look. Honestly, I don’t think the producers struck gold with him (although from auditions I can definitely see how he was the best option), and after Connery they clearly wanted a Bond in the role long term to steady the ship.

    I really don’t think Young would have gotten anything better out of him. Despite Connery being a slightly left field pick he was an actor ultimately, and he was very natural onscreen. It’s very much a case where getting the right actor is key for a director - hell, for Bond in general it’s a case where the actor doesn’t really need to be ‘moulded’ into the character because they have the ability to play him naturally. In that sense Connery wasn’t transformed into Bond just because they took him to Saville Row and taught him about fine dining. That’s just preparation, and to some extent Lazenby would have gotten that too.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,724
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    peter wrote: »
    the director is the heart of every film, next to the scriptwriter.

    Yeah, that’s why even with a very weak leading man in the most iconic role of the 60s, OHMSS is still one of the best Bond films. Hunt held that film together despite Lazenby’s many weaknesses.

    @peter
    I truly believe it's a missed opportunity that Hunt didn't continue directing more Bond films. Imagine if he had overseen films like DAF, LALD, and TMWTGG in the early '70s. I'm confident we wouldn't have seen some of the comedic elements that, in my humble opinion, didn't quite fit the Bond series.

    @DarthDimi — that’s an alternative universe I’d love to see.
  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    edited August 8 Posts: 4,068
    Whether we liked or not the comedic aspects of the 70s Bond films, they're the ones who made the franchise survived, those are necessary.

    DAF, for how much I disliked that film due to being a disappointment of a follow up, I couldn't deny the success it brought the franchise like a lifeline when people back then are shocked of Lazenby, Bond getting married, and that tragic ending which alienated the audiences, and of course, Connery's return, I think it could've possibly worked at some point had Lazenby returned doing a follow up to OHMSS, but in terms of box office, it could've done worse than LTK, as people are not used to seeing Bond being brutal and violent for revenge, people back then are always expecting Bond to be fun and spectacular.

    LALD continued on that and bringing an already famous star that's Roger Moore, from what I've read, TMWTGG didn't do well due to poor marketing, according to Wikipedia, so not to the style of the film itself.

    I don't know if the franchise would've survived had Hunt directed those films, people back then are alienated with the tone and style of OHMSS, people wanted another Goldfinger, those 70s Hamilton Bond films delivered it, the spectacle and If the humor would remain, could Hunt handle them? The closest we could ever get to him directing a lighthearted scene was with the Ruby Bartlett scenes in OHMSS, which I think was a bit off (maybe part of that was because of Angela Scoular's acting).

    I think people started to accept a serious Bond when Craig took over in CR'06, but back then, a serious Bond was more of an outlier, think of how LTK underperformed in Box Office, only for the triumph to return with Goldeneye.

  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 18,755
    I recently watched this scene and tried to imagine Lazenby doing it (not so much the bath stuff, more the Rosie scene) and I just picture his flat, charisma-free delivery killing it. Roger is doing so much in this, he's being self-deprecating at points, he's making fun of Rosie, he's showing us Bond's disappointment, his playfulness, sometimes he's the butt of the joke, sometimes she is- and all the way through we know exactly what Bond is thinking and he's winking at us, creating that connection between the audience and the character. Lazenby wasn't able to do that, you never quite know what he's thinking and he has no ability to create that link with the audience.
    I know it wouldn't have happened, but just the thought of him sticking around long enough to make LALD is a horrible one! Imagine him doing this scene with the same kind of dead-eyed look he brings to the 'please stay alive, if just for tonight' scene.

  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    edited August 8 Posts: 4,068
    To be honest, there's nothing to be changed in the franchise, we just let them stay as it is.

    Lazenby wouldn't really worked in LALD, the script was very much fitted for Roger Moore, probably the script would've been different had he stuck around, who knows? Each scripts fits the current Bond actor for the role, I couldn't even imagine Connery in LALD.

    It's the same thing as I couldn't imagine Dalton in Goldeneye, the script was very much fitted for Brosnan, as much as many people wanted to see Dalton in that film, the sauna scene with Xenia, I can't imagine Dalton being in that scene, that certain playfulness, or Brosnan's reaction when he saw Trevelyan in the Cemetery.
  • Posts: 2,298
    Connery came back twice for a reason. Some things are just meant to be.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 18,755
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    To be honest, there's nothing to be changed in the franchise, we just let them stay as it is.

    Lazenby wouldn't really worked in LALD, the script was very much fitted for Roger Moore, probably the script would've been different had he stuck around, who knows?

    I'm not saying that the future of the series depended upon this one specific scene, but it did depend to some extent upon the talent and ability of the lead actor.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,724
    mtm wrote: »
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    To be honest, there's nothing to be changed in the franchise, we just let them stay as it is.

    Lazenby wouldn't really worked in LALD, the script was very much fitted for Roger Moore, probably the script would've been different had he stuck around, who knows?

    I'm not saying that the future of the series depended upon this one specific scene, but it did depend to some extent upon the talent and ability of the lead actor.

    Very true. You watch a simple scene like the one above and it takes talent and gifts to pull it off (and make it look easy), and it’s clear there’s a universe between what Lazenby brought to the table and the other Bonds that were cast. There’s just absolutely no getting around the fact that Lazenby was quite vacuous, with zero charisma and absolutely no talent. He does come off as a little slow, not engaged and mentally out of his depth. Is he fine in some scenes— thankfully yes, but all in all he was a dud, a non-actor in a role that is much more difficult than what one would assume, and the proof is in the pudding: we’ve had a non actor fake his way in the role and it shows. You can’t fake being James. You have to make him yours and wear him like the best of your comfortable clothes. Lazenby couldn’t do it.

    But I still love the film immensely .
  • Posts: 15,971
    007HallY wrote: »
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    I'm a huge Lazenby defender and I think OHMSS couldn't have had a better lead. Sure he lacks the charisma of Connery, but doesn't everyone? What OHMSS needed was a softer less self-condifent Bond and even though I think George did have enough screen presence to pull of Bond, he didn't look as much 'in control' as Connery did and I think OHMSS benefits from that. Also, that last scene is one of the best acted scenes in the series.

    I agree, no one could do it better than Laz, he fits well in the film.

    And really he looked the part, could handle the essential aspects of the character, and I think he had the Masculine boyish charm like the Bond of the books, and was an actual fighter (he's great in martial arts), as for romance, that's the best I could expect from a Bond film, and Lazenby delivered the romance in the most Bondian way possible.

    The Bond character, probably another controversial opinion of mine, doesn't require much, actually, its not that I have lower standards, heck no, but as far as cinematic Bond goes, and speaking on behalf of the casual audiences, the cinematic Bond is not that much of a demanding role (cinematic Bond is different from the books, hence why I emphasized that word 'Cinematic'), the cinematic Bond doesn't require much, as long as you look the role, can handle the essential aspects of the character, has that masculine charm, believable in fight scenes, and just be Bond, you're in, maybe it's us in fandom (us, fans in general) that we tend to be very nitpicky, this argument could also be applied for the next Bond as well.

    That could be true back then, before the modern films came out, hence, why the people accepted the likes of Barbara Bach, Claudine Auger, Daniela Bianchi, because in their POV, those women carried the roles well.

    But on the other hand, we have misfires from A list actors like Christoph Waltz that couldn't even managed to save that Blofeld character in SPECTRE, Rami Malek (an Oscar winning actor) as Safin in NTTD, or Denise Richards as Dr. Christmas Jones despite that she had acting experience or Halle Berry (another Oscar winner) as Jinx in DAD.

    It's on the character and how a person could carry the role.



    I wouldn’t say it’s an easy role (actually I suspect it’s deceptively tricky to play for an actor, and I reckon even some great actors would struggle a bit with it). There is a good deal of natural charisma and screen presence which comes into it. If you don’t ’have it’ then it’s tricky for an actor to play a believable Bond, which I think is where Lazenby’s problem came in. Acting ability aside I don’t think his real life charisma quite made its way onto the screen.

    I do think Lazenby had the charisma, because if he hadn't, then Cubby wouldn't likely to bat an eye on him in that Barber Shop or in that Chocolate Advert they've seen him in, the Producers thought that he had potential, these are the same people who chose Connery over Fleming's choice, David Niven, and Fleming disliked Connery for looking more like an overgrown stuntman who thankfully was guided and molded into shape with Terrence Young's guidance (hence, why I wished Young had directed Lazenby) and Connery's casting succeeded, these are the same producers who have Dalton and Brosnan on their radar, so they know what they're doing, when they've seen potential in Lazenby, they knew it, if not for Lazenby quitting from the role.

    It’s not that Lazenby didn’t have charisma as a man. He clearly did and any interview with him will show it. But conveying that charisma as an actor onscreen, and in this case as James Bond, is another matter. It doesn’t matter how much charisma he had, the fact that he didn’t always seem comfortable in the role, didn’t always naturally know where to look, and indeed had this tendency to recite his lines in a stiff, wooden manner kills that slightly. It’s what I mean when I say playing Bond isn’t as easy as it looks. A lot of great actors simply won’t be able to play the role convincingly, but it’s also a case where a non-actor is even unlikelier to succeed, even if they have the look. Honestly, I don’t think the producers struck gold with him (although from auditions I can definitely see how he was the best option), and after Connery they clearly wanted a Bond in the role long term to steady the ship.

    I really don’t think Young would have gotten anything better out of him. Despite Connery being a slightly left field pick he was an actor ultimately, and he was very natural onscreen. It’s very much a case where getting the right actor is key for a director - hell, for Bond in general it’s a case where the actor doesn’t really need to be ‘moulded’ into the character because they have the ability to play him naturally. In that sense Connery wasn’t transformed into Bond just because they took him to Saville Row and taught him about fine dining. That’s just preparation, and to some extent Lazenby would have gotten that too.

    I don't know if it's a controversial opinion, but I think playing Bond is and will be increasingly difficult.
  • j_w_pepperj_w_pepper Born on the bayou, but I now hear a new dog barkin'
    Posts: 9,353
    peter wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    To be honest, there's nothing to be changed in the franchise, we just let them stay as it is.

    Lazenby wouldn't really worked in LALD, the script was very much fitted for Roger Moore, probably the script would've been different had he stuck around, who knows?

    I'm not saying that the future of the series depended upon this one specific scene, but it did depend to some extent upon the talent and ability of the lead actor.

    Very true. You watch a simple scene like the one above and it takes talent and gifts to pull it off (and make it look easy), and it’s clear there’s a universe between what Lazenby brought to the table and the other Bonds that were cast. There’s just absolutely no getting around the fact that Lazenby was quite vacuous, with zero charisma and absolutely no talent. He does come off as a little slow, not engaged and mentally out of his depth. Is he fine in some scenes— thankfully yes, but all in all he was a dud, a non-actor in a role that is much more difficult than what one would assume, and the proof is in the pudding: we’ve had a non actor fake his way in the role and it shows. You can’t fake being James. You have to make him yours and wear him like the best of your comfortable clothes. Lazenby couldn’t do it.

    But I still love the film immensely .

    Yet another time, @peter, where you sort of took the words right out of my mouth. I'd add that I always considered his facial expressions, all maybe two of them, plainly stupid, which is why I never bought him as a smart secret agent. It's a miracle that in spite of this miscasting, OHMSS turned out so good. Imagine having an accomplished actor playing Bond instead.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 18,755
    peter wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    SIS_HQ wrote: »
    To be honest, there's nothing to be changed in the franchise, we just let them stay as it is.

    Lazenby wouldn't really worked in LALD, the script was very much fitted for Roger Moore, probably the script would've been different had he stuck around, who knows?

    I'm not saying that the future of the series depended upon this one specific scene, but it did depend to some extent upon the talent and ability of the lead actor.

    Very true. You watch a simple scene like the one above and it takes talent and gifts to pull it off (and make it look easy), and it’s clear there’s a universe between what Lazenby brought to the table and the other Bonds that were cast. There’s just absolutely no getting around the fact that Lazenby was quite vacuous, with zero charisma and absolutely no talent. He does come off as a little slow, not engaged and mentally out of his depth. Is he fine in some scenes— thankfully yes, but all in all he was a dud, a non-actor in a role that is much more difficult than what one would assume, and the proof is in the pudding: we’ve had a non actor fake his way in the role and it shows. You can’t fake being James. You have to make him yours and wear him like the best of your comfortable clothes. Lazenby couldn’t do it.

    But I still love the film immensely .

    Yeah, he gets by. Some of his scenes I like include the M scene where M seems to fire him: he looks suitably miffed there and it works quite well. But otherwise, as I say, you can't really tell what he's thinking half the time, and the other half is indistinguishable from 'smell the fart' acting. There's just no connection with the audience there, he's just not an actor.
    Oddly you watch some of those Italian knock-off Bonds from the 60s and he's probably better than some of their stars, however. I guess he's better than Neil Connery.
  • Posts: 2,642
    Regardless of individual opinions on Lazenby's performance - it ultimately served the series at the end of the day; and without the experiment of casting Lazenby - we wouldn't have gotten a much more experienced actor like Moore for the 70s which means no more Bond films. Laz served his purpose. But I still believe that no other Bond actor could've done that ending scene as well as George did.
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