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BT3366

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BT3366
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  • mtm wrote: » GadgetMan wrote: » I think Hitchcock's influence on the MI films started with Mission Impossible 2, where Hitchcock's Notorious(1946) plot was used. Tom Cruise is Cary Grant and Thandie Newton is Ingrid Bergman. Yes, that's…
  • While neither LALD or Kananga are among my favorites, Yaphet Kotto's performance scared me as a kid and still comes across as powerful now. Whether he's threatening Bond as himself or Mr. Big or his outburst at Solitaire, then his weird change to ch…
  • Ludovico wrote: » Since DAF is controversial to begin with what I'll say might paradoxically not be so controversial , but here it is: Blofeld is not the right villain for an adaptation of DAF or for a setting like Las Vegas. As terrible as Goldfi…
  • Revelator wrote: » I think it's hard to think of the film and not take into account that it was the first "this time it's personal" Bond. But I say that as someone who saw every Bond film from '89 onward in chronological order. Someone discovering…
  • CraigMooreOHMSS wrote: » octofinger wrote: » I've said this before, but one of the things I quite like about this sequence - and, now that I think about it, about the sniper sequence in LTK - is the emphasis on Bond's craft. It's unobtrusiv…
  • That first film got a lot of criticism at the time. Those included just a Cruise-starring film; the teamwork wasn't there (the original TV cast complained about and the press ran with it); Phelps being made a villain. But it really was a satisfyi…
  • Nice review, Pierce2Daniel. One thing occurred to me in reading it. Given how many films over the last 32 years have taken the "This time it's personal" approach, especially those that are hero/superhero-driven, does it make LTK actually seem les…
  • What a great 1-2 punch the pretitles and opening sequence of TLD were. It was really refreshing in '87 and is just as good nearly 35 years later. It's a somewhat scaled-down, but no less exciting teaser after years of overblown sequences with silly …
  • Dwayne wrote: » When you think about it, Nikki van der Zyl was a major part of the “feel” of those early Bond movies. It’s a shame that – except among hardcore fans – she received so little recognition for her work over the years. And not to be…
  • Like the reminder at the end of each film's credits, James Bond will return. Bond is a survivor and although I could see the character going away for a while amid this culture, he won't stay away for long. For one, the property makes money and someo…
  • mtm wrote: » DarthDimi wrote: » mtm wrote: » Is Dalton doing a lot of the physical stuff there? I think he does a few close-ups in the way most Bonds do but I don't think there's much of that sequence he can be doing. Hm, I must be …
  • DarthDimi wrote: » What I love about Dalton's Bond is that he treats funny one-liners as corrosive: he spits them out with contempt rather than enjoy them the way Moore's Bond did. But when he's with Kara, you can see Dalton's Bond soften up a lit…
  • I believe to add to the list, Connery sort of straightens his tie when Quarrel and Puss-Feller confront him in DN or maybe just touches it as he plots his move. Close enough. He may also straighten it and his cuffs after the dive into the boxes esca…
  • CommanderRoss wrote: » Personally I think LTK is too much hit-and-miss film. I don't like Carey Lowell as Pam. I think thry could've done without that character, or find someone who not only has the looks but the acting qualities as well. I find …
  • Agent_99 wrote: » peter wrote: » Handsome yet very sly and predatory; a wolf. Perfect for Bond. Nice work @mtm. I admire that kind of talent. Wolflike is exactly how I always think of him. (Wolves are my favourite animals, incidentally…
  • I remember the book, it was huge and vaguely remember the miniseries. Had no idea Dalton was in it either. In that photo, he looks like I picture he'd be if he was Bond for OHMSS or in the early '70s.
  • I know it's been discussed on these boards before, but there's a whole range of rejected LTK posters, most of which are much better than what we got. The former U.S. film magazine Premiere did a feature on them back when LTK came out in the summer o…
  • ToTheRight wrote: » As far as simplistic Bond posters go, I liked the teaser poster for LTK. My copy of this poster during my teen years proudly was displayed on my wall throughout high school. My version had the US spelling. Still, when c…
  • BonSimonLeBon_1 wrote: » mtm wrote: » This video of Pierce Brosnan, Irish Actor, using his totally normal and usual accent popped up earlier in the week and it's an absolute joy :) https://twitter.com/TourismIreland/status/13638027901208535…
  • I think it's interesting to note Davi had supporting roles in two of the biggest hit films of the '80s, The Goonies and Die Hard, but the least successful, at least financially, Bond film of that decade as a lead. That said, I still find Sanchez …
  • Revelator wrote: » I wasn't happy about Waltz's casting when it was announced and the end result did nothing to change my mind. EON hasn't had much luck in casting Oscar winners and hoping they'll repeat their magic. NTTD might prove an exception,…
  • MaxCasino wrote: » BT3366 wrote: » Ludovico wrote: » Controversial opinion: Adam Sandler is so ridiculously unfunny it's infuriating that he became a star. I have to say, I've always liked Adam Sandler, clear back to when he was on …
  • JerzyBondov wrote: » I can't believe it has taken me 27 years to notice this, and I also can't believe there isn't anyone else who would have had the same thought in the past 56 years, but when watching Thunderball a few days ago something hit me …
  • Ludovico wrote: » Controversial opinion: Adam Sandler is so ridiculously unfunny it's infuriating that he became a star. I have to say, I've always liked Adam Sandler, clear back to when he was on the MTV game show Remote Control in the lat…
  • NickTwentyTwo wrote: » Thunderfinger wrote: » BT3366 wrote: » MaxCasino wrote: » Do you ever lose respect for a artist when they show how they treat people around them? Here’s a few of mine, (although I never respected WA or SL). Wo…
  • ThighsOfXenia wrote: » I'm late to this, but I don't think DAF is lazy. I think DAF is seen as lazy because it doesn't conform to our ideas of what a Bond film is (or was, contextually at that point in time in the series' history). It has some …
  • MaxCasino wrote: » Do you ever lose respect for a artist when they show how they treat people around them? Here’s a few of mine, (although I never respected WA or SL). Woody Allen has been a creep in my eyes with no directing, writing or acting…
  • mtm wrote: » BT3366 wrote: » HASEROT wrote: » @mtm You got a point.. I guess I just see it as an overall trend outside of Bond even.. M:I and the slew of tv shows involving an agent of sorts where there is a team always helping whether di…
  • ToTheRight wrote: » Controversial opinion: SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER (1977) The PG version is far superior to the original R rated version. It's funnier, more family friendly and overall looks better. Just kidding, I barely remember the PG ver…
  • HASEROT wrote: » @mtm You got a point.. I guess I just see it as an overall trend outside of Bond even.. M:I and the slew of tv shows involving an agent of sorts where there is a team always helping whether directly or indirectly, and they all ha…