DACrowe said:Ah but Goldeneye and the much underrated TWINE are anything but bad though.
Kevin Roegele said:I think Craig is going to be awesome, and the film is going to be the best Bond movie for a long, long time.
It looks like EON suddenly woke up and said, "What the F*** have we been doing the last ten years when we've been supposed to be making Bond movies? Let's do it properly now."
I think THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH is the worst Bond film of all time. Brosnan I especially can't stand in it - it's Bond at his most politically correct. Bond touching a tear on a computer screen just doesn't work. It's just not who Bond is. Brosnan also just goes crazy in the overacting (something Marceau does as well). The one scene where Bond confronts Elektra about Stockholm syndrome is something that belongs in a soap opera and features some of the most awful overacting I've ever seen.DACrowe said:I like TWINE though because I think it is Brosnan's best performance as Bond (though I think GE is much better). He just seems so comfortable in it and does some pretty heartless **** in it but does so with such a swagger you don't mind. Then for him to fall in love (trying to play the Tracy story from a different angle) only to find out he was manipulated, just the end where he shoots Elektra King in cold blood makes it one of the best imo. But I do agree the action scenes were shot in a very standard meathod and the pacing on the ski scene and the warehouse (with the hliochopters) was too long winded.
Couldn't disagree more. I think he's quite handsome. I've said it before and I'll say it again - aside from Connery, Craig is the Bond I'd most want to look like.ChrisBaleBatman said:My gripe with Craig is that the dude is ugly.
ChrisBaleBatman said:My gripe with Craig is that the dude is ugly.

the gael said:Well, Connery is the Bond I'd most want to look like. As for Craig, I'd better stay myself. I'm far from being the most handsome guy on earth ( expecially compared to every other bond actors ), but I'm definitively much more handsome than him.
I think every one of those is vastly superior to TWINE, aside from perhaps A VIEW TO A KILL, which is a crap film, but still more entertaining than TWINE could hope to be.DACrowe said:I honestly can't see how you would rank TWINE below (takes a deep breath) Moonraker, A View to a Kill, Octopussy, Diamonds Are Forever, You Only Live Twice, License to Kill, The Man With the Golden Gun, Tomorrow Never Dies, Thunderball (yes I said it, Thunderball was mediocre and boring, and I stand by that), and Die Another Day.
There's a question at *which* point in the film OHMSS Bond fell in love with Tracy at, and he knew her and spent a long time together with her. It wasn't suddenly a "one-night stand" and then he's all in love, as is the case in TWINE.I agree that his connection to her was made too quickly, however I felt that she was made to resemble Tracy. If he fell into love with Tracy so quickly, I could see him making that connection.
Point being? He thinks plenty of it. Bond should *never* have confronted her. He would have waited in the shadows, made sure. That confrontation scene should have been cut. His conversation was M should have been the first time we were aware he was suspicious of Elektra.And the scene you complain about Bond was pretty cold to her. He mocks her and she slaps him and he thinks nothing of it. He still calls her a rat to M and fakes his own death.
Dalton's Bond was great for what he brought to the role. It wasn't in the same vein as previous Bonds, but he did a solid job. He's still better than Brosnan, even though he's not a favorite of mine.I think Connery's Bond (I never use Dalton's Bond as a good refference like Harry Knowles, who I consider a moron anyway) would have shot in her in a n instant, but Brosnan's Bond is a lot more brooding.
Oh really? He touches a tear on a computer screen in TWINE. Brozzy's Bond is far and beyond the most open emotionally of the film Bonds.He is not emotional. Well he is under the exterior but he never presents it.
He does hesitate. He's so desperately trying not to have to kill her - just the way he screams "CALL IT OFF" (a second time I might add) and just looks so weakly at her, pleading with her. Sappy, sappy, sappy.He offers her a way out and she doesn't take it, he then shoots her in the throat without hesitation.
Paris hadn't betrayed him and wasn't the villain. Bond had no business stroking the body of a girl who'd tortured him and played him for a fool the whole time. He wouldn't have given her a second thought.Sure he then strokes her hair but it is no different than what he did to Paris in TND in what was the only good scene in that movie (he coldly kills the doctor after a no-pun mock and then says goodbye to her and moves on) same thing here.
The stroking of her body definitely showcases regret.There is emotion but a brooding acceptance more than a sorrow or regret.
I've *read* the script to CASINO ROYALE and know how it plays it out. It's done really nicely and achieves a perfect balance that is true to the coldhearted core of who Bond is. I can't wait to see how Craig acts it out.Besides if you don't like Bond feeling something for Elektra (though still being so even handed with her) what did you think of the end of OHMSS (which IMO is one of the best Bond movies) and even more, you could be disappointed with the ending to CR, which according to Stax the script really overplays moreso than the novel then.
Nah, we had a terrifically thrilling pre-title sequence, a fantastic car chase, and a great bike chase, among other moments. At least it was fulfilling what it set out to be - an entertaining, but ultimately mindless, action film.DACrowe said:However, I think Brosnan has had worse Bond movies. I thought the action was dreadfully boring and slow and worst of all completely pointless (which it is, but should not seem that way) in TND.
I don't think DIE ANOTHER DAY is a great movie, but I do think it's just more selflessly entertaining with a vivacious energy than the heavy-handed and drab THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH. It has its own issues with the Bond characterization, but they're nowhere near as glaring as they are in THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH, which serves as a showcase for all the things the Brosnan Bond did wrong - just emphasized more.And DAD started like a peppy mix of Brosnan (tortured and captured and out for revenge) and Connery (low tech gadgets if any, wit, real spying and tactics and a Cuban flair). But by the end of the movie with the electric suit, terrible fighting (and after Goldeneye one-on-ones were set a lot higher than that) and the terrible Halle Berry, I was in pain. I suppose I could see why you liked in that movie that when Bond found out that the Miranda Frost was a traitor he immeadietly tried to shoot her in the head without hesitation (though it was empty and he acted like a dope in that movie, much moreso than in TWINE).
I generally agree... but I would never say Lazenby was a poor man's Connery (his characterization was *extremely* different from Connery), and I would characterize Brosnan's Bond as more of a female fantasy figure than a male one. It's the feminization of James Bond.Each has their own thing, Connery being the perfect mix, but Moore had his camp, Lazenby was a poor man's Connery in a bad imitation (his end scene was great but otherwise he was a physical poor imitation), Dalton had "anger" and Brosnan is a more brooding and I don't want to say introspective but definetly contemplative Bond.
In a situation where he still had substantial doubt, there was no reason to confront her right then.So I would not hold against Bond confronting Elektra, who he still thought was weak and the manipulated at this point (it was not until he was in the torture chair did he even realize that she was the real mastermind behind the whole thing).
Maybe not necessarily confront, but confront in that manner, yes, very much so.I'm merely pointing out even if you disliked Marceau's acting in the scene, it was not out of character for Bond to do something like that.
Oh come now - also in his sappy, pretentious confrontations with M throughout the series (notably in DIE ANOTHER DAY), in his many love scenes he's the "sensitive" lover, not the incredibly macho one, and all that jazz.Not that he displays it in front of other people. He never lets to see them bleed but his best moments are when he does, such as in Goldeneye when he confronts Trevelyan at the statue park or looks at the ocean and again in the killing of Paris.
I hate that line in GOLDENEYE (I think the dialogue in GOLDENEYE is awful altogether, horribly self-referential and heavy-handed... it's like Bond written by Oscar Wilde). Bond has sex because he wants sex.In TWINE I just tended to like it. While I agree that his care for her was rushed, his Bond seems to fit the description 006 gave him in GE (first saying his weakness was the women and again saying that he feels some sort of guilt for failing to protect them and hides in the arms of other willing women).
If Brosnan's Bond had been given character while maintaining the intense masculinity and macho-ness of the character, it would work for me. See THE TAILOR OF PANAMA for a Brosnan performance that, in many ways, his Bond portrayal should have been closer to.I'm not saying this is Fleming's Bond but I think it is probably the most interesting screen Bond so far and my second favorite.
Oh, the balloon scene was great. Dalton has issues with his performance, but that moment was wonderful and full of determination. Great stuff.Brosnan did this, but Dalton merely spoke all his lines through grited teeth and when in his first scene in a Bond film he has to growl through his mumbling voice "sit in the chair" to a fellow associate or pop a balloon in his his hands in full fledged anger, then it is just too forced.
I don't see a lot of Craig in that image, but I do see a ton of Craig in McLusky's image of Bond from the Daily Mail comic strip:spdrknight said:Below is a picture of Bond, based on the Flemming novels and done FOR the author when he was still writing the stories. Beside is Craig, he seems visually to be a pretty good match, minos the blonde hair (which I don't mind too much).
http://img134.imageshack.us/img134/4873/380pxfleming007impression2mk.jpg http://img235.imageshack.us/img235/7509/007danielcraig5pe.jpg
I think it's cringeworthy. Especially the M stuff, which is just really pretentious (though Dench's M reached a whole new low with TWINE... *that* is the epitome of pretentious, melodramatic junk). If I have one problem with CASINO ROYALE, it's that Judi Dench's M is retained.DACrowe said:Anyway, I appreciate a different approach and I enjoyed Goldeneye's script self-reference. At least when it came between 007 and 006 because who else would know how to mock Bond and his past than a fellow agent (Robbie Coltrane, one of the best parts of TWINE, was just for fun). And I stand by that the M interaction with Bond in GE has been their best backk-and-forth we have seen since OHMSS.
The dialogue in the teaser, for what it's worth, doesn't occur in that order and the lines are taken wildly out of context. I'm not a fan of the dialogue in that scene (it's the one scene I'd rewrite in the script), but at least it works better than that rather poor conversation in GOLDENEYE.I thought his disrespect to her and her to him was done in a much more clever and intelligent way than how the preview shows in the new one of her just bluntly saying "Your a thug and will die soon" (I know those aren't her exact words I'm paraphrasing the conversation shown, at least in the teaser's context).
I think he's the worst Bond of them all. Yes, I think even Lazenby is superior. By a wide margin. My actual ranking is:But I guess it is out of preference, as I consider Brosnan the best Bond since Connery and you obviously do not.
I didn't like how the scene was handled (as explained earlier), so no, I can't say I enjoyed that scene. I hate that "I never miss" line - nothing like a stupid quip to ruin a dramatic scene.I guess we can both say we at least enjoyed watching Bond shoot Elektra (though I thought it was in the throat? Granted I haven't seen it in a year or two, maybe it was high in the chest).
I know. It's one of my biggest problems with his portrayal - I do feel that other moments in his portrayal make up for it, though. But Dalton's relationships are *incredibly* sappy and cornball and out of place.And for the record Dalton was much more romantic to his Bond girls than Brosnan.
Nah, he showed compassion to Natalya pretty strongly (though I have *no* qualms with the Natalya relationship, as well as Paris (who he supposedly truly loved - I have issues with the Paris relationship, but it's such a small segment of the film, I just kind of shrug about it).Brosnan used them but used romance to bed them, however Elektra is the only one he showed any real compassion for.
Yeah... well I didn't want his Bond to exactly copy THE TAILOR OF PANAMA, because Bond is a different character, but I would have liked that darker style to accompany him. If they didn't do that direction, I would have preferred his performance to be in the style of THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR.P.S. And yes I saw Tailor of Panama btw. It is quite good and probably Brosnan's best performance after The Matador. It shows me he could have played a darker and more grounded in reality Bond, but alas they didn't let him. However, his overall performance in that was a little too....evil, to be the basis of Bond, really.