It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
^ Back to Top
The MI6 Community is unofficial and in no way associated or linked with EON Productions, MGM, Sony Pictures, Activision or Ian Fleming Publications. Any views expressed on this website are of the individual members and do not necessarily reflect those of the Community owners. Any video or images displayed in topics on MI6 Community are embedded by users from third party sites and as such MI6 Community and its owners take no responsibility for this material.
James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
Comments
And he has had the best post Bond career of them all: I think even better than Sean. Sean had some good films (and an Oscar, yes I remember). Pierce has been blessed with lots of varied, good films since Bond. I'm happy for him in that regard, and I am really excited about November Man!
I've recently started watching the Pierce Bonds, and I must say, I did like Pierce. He was like a second coming of the Moore style of Bond. Debonair, charming, hugely likable, tongue in cheek, great at action and dependable. But I have noticed in watching the films how much he aged in the role.
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-yx2P8T6A_ug/UU3goQz7BWI/AAAAAAAAMko/3vI237owGpU/s1600/Pierce+Brosnan+Goldeneye.PNG
GoldenEye
http://www.wearysloth.com/Gallery/ActorsB/2171-23786.jpg
Tomorrow Never Dies
http://www.wearysloth.com/Gallery/ActorsB/2171-23786.jpg
The World Is Not Enough
http://thesuitsofjamesbond.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Charcoal-Pinstripe-Suit-Grey-Tie.jpg
Die Another Day
I think the most noticeable change occurs between GE and TWINE.
Of course he always looks good enough to play the role. But I've never really noticed that he did age quite a lot in the seven years he was Bond.
I agree about most people liking their first Bond. I grew up watching Roger and then Sean on TV, and then seeing Dalton on the big screen all within a very short period of time. Love all three of them, and even enjoyed Laz's performance in OHMSS.
AstonLotus, you are reminding me of many of the reasons I was so disappointed with this film when it came out. I really remember watching Bond machine gun all those Russian soldiers and thinking - hang on a sec' - that's not something my Bond would do. In all the decades that Bond was actually involved in the real cold war, the Russians were rarely, if ever, the actual real adversaries. Bond never went round just machine gunning Russians for the hell of it. Some people will claim this is unimportant or a mere detail - I think that suggests they don't get the tone and feel of the pre-Brosnan films. Seeing Bond smashing his way through St Petersburg - one of the most beautiful cities in the world - just made me think Bond had become another British hooligan abroad. The whole scenario was absurd and his actions seem totally out of character. TND was actually a much better film, and much more in line with the screen Bond of old.
Natalya too is also a better character than any of the other Bond girls in the Brosnan era (the closest rival is Wai Lin).
Whenever the final shoot-out begins in TND on the stealth boat,i usually just fast forward through parts of it.
By the end of the Moore era the car chases/sight gags were feeling pretty old and tired. I think the tank chase is fun and a good spin on the old formula.
What I don't get about Brosnan bashing is that some people seem to think that he was too similar and too different to Connery and Moore. The machine gun is an example of this actually.
"Brosnan bought nothing new, he was just a piss poor retread of Connery and Moore!"
"Well for one thing he was more of an action hero than any of the other-"
"A MACHINE GUN? What is this Rambo?!?!?! (a member on here actually said that once, because of course, Rambo is the only action film to ever feature a machine gun), they may as well just piss on Fleming's grave and be done with it!"
True. And the best script cannot help a bad actor, so the Brosnan era is screwed either way.
At least in the TND shootouts he is killing Carvers evil henchmen.
The Russian soldiers were still ordered to kill Bond by Oromov so I don't suppose Bond had all that much choice, especially with so many men.
I suppose they could have just cut down on the number of people.
With Dies we get a car chase, a bike chase, a martial arts fight and a big shootout on a boat all in the space of an hour.
Oh yes, far too many!
That's why it doesn't bother me too much, it was him or them. It's not like he could have stopped and say: "This is all a bit misunderstanding, I did not kill anyone... without good reasons. Anyway, I didn't murder your minister and your General is a traitor. Sure, he is!"
That said, I do see the point of Getafix concerning the whole St Petersburg's action sequence.
I'll let you know when I'm finished with DAD.
So far they're enjoyable. Pierce is a likable fellow.
Yes, I forgive it too, for the same reason. I certainly cannot fault him for killing Russian soldiers, given the circumstances. They were, after all, obeying an order to kill him.
I dont remember an order to kill him.All Orumov said was '' GUARDS ! '' ....then Bond started shooting everyone in sight!
I can just see the headlines the next day... BRITISH SPY MASSACRES RUSSIAN SOLDIERS IN THE KREMLIN! MOSCOW IN RUINS!
You say that as if it were a bad thing.
I guess the soldiers knew what he meant. Orumov didn't seem to be the kind of man who'd want to keep prisoners for questioning. In any case, I would not have risked it. Bond was de facto in enemy territory.
"Defence Minister...Dimitri Mishkin...murdered by British agent...James Bond" (tosses Bond the gun). Himself shot while trying..to..escape...GUARDS!!!
Somehow I don't think the idea was for the guards to take Bond and question him about the incident any further.
Me neither. I certainly would not have taken the chance...