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Comments
But that could also be more of a reference to the infamous Wall Street “Yuppie” of the mid to late 80’s.
Yes, I don't think it's a direct link, and Wright was probably on their radar after starring in The Invasion made years previously with... well, Daniel Craig, and of course his other great previous performances. I suppose you can argue that since it'd been done before there was a precedent... but again, not a direct link or anything, and things repeat themselves over time.
I never found Largo in NTTD that much of a full fledged psycho if I'm honest. I'm actually a bit iffy about Braundauer's performance in that film. But again, if that in any way inspired them to write and cast Zorin, that's absolutely fine in my opinion and a vast improvement.
Anyway, NSNA isn't that movie nobody saw. I think its impact is being underestimated. Even James Cameron copied the Tango scene.
I’m not sure how you mean? I don’t think they’re associated with being psychos on the level the two Maxes display.
Yeah, I prefer Zorin too; well it’s Walken isn’t it, he’s always amazing. But I think Braundauer is going pretty full psycho: all that weird giggling he does, doesn’t he smash the dance studio up when he thinks Domino is with Bond? Bond villains hadn’t really been fully crazy before, mostly urbane and threatening Christopher Lee types. Reg Grant is maybe the closest to dangerously insane. With Max & Max you suddenly have these guys who act unpredictably, are rather sadistic, laugh at very strange things, and are prone to violent outbursts; it’s a progression.
It's a very bizarre and uneven performance from Braundauer for me. Not unsettling or dangerous as much as he comes off as a bit of a weirdo. Maybe they're going for full unstable, but I don't quite get it in the performance. He's relatively benign (although he doesn't exactly get much to do in the film - ie. 'here's my video game Mr. Bond! It will give you a mild to painful electric shock if you lose!')
I think Walken just works a lot better because he's a naturally quirky and off kilter actor. You can believe he's insane and unpredictable. And he's far more domineering and charismatic.
They are - yuppie culture was full of narcissists and sociopaths because the financial sector (especially back in the 80’s) attracted those kinds of high risk taking people. That’s where the character of Patrick Bateman from American Psycho comes from after all. Walken’s Max Zorin came right out of that scene even if the character’s backstory didn’t necessarily reflect that.