Top 3 Favourite Scenes of a Bond Movie: Final Results

1222325272835

Comments

  • edited March 2016 Posts: 1,970
    Omg this is gonna be very hard as this is my favorite Bond movie of all time.

    Ok
    1. Bond confronts Renard in the bunker. (Just love the chemistry between Brosnan and Carlye. Great scene between hero and villain)
    2. The Boat Chase. (Probably the best boat chase in cinema history. The score and the stunts were A+)
    3. The touture chocking scene. (One again more great chemistry between 2 great actors. Love the story telling right there and why Elektra did what she did. Add in the Zukosky part and it's a really great scene)

    Honorable mentions
    Bond kills Elektra
    The pipeline chase
    Renard & M scene in the jail cell.
    Sir Roberts death
    Escaping from the Bank
    M tells Bond her history with Elektra & Sir Robert
    Ski chase



    Ughh just so many great scenes in this movie I just can't get enough of it. Best Bond film of all time.
  • Posts: 7,407
    1. Title Sequence (apart from the use of oil pumping machinery which didn't work!)
    2. Elektra King. Sophie Marceau, quite wonderful!
    3. Q exit. Chillingly prophetic!
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    Bilbao bank scene, before the rest of the rubbish pts
    Denise Richards in a pair of shorts and a tight t-shirt
    Main title sequence
  • 00Agent00Agent Any man who drinks Dom Perignon '52 can't be all bad.
    Posts: 5,185
    1. Bilbao Meeting
    2. River Thames chase
    3. Final confrontation of Elektra and Bond

    Honorable Mentions:
    Q's final scene
    Torture chair scene
    Reactor fight between Bond and Renard.
  • JohnHammond73JohnHammond73 Lancashire, UK
    edited March 2016 Posts: 4,151
    1. Bond kills Elektra (only up until he shot her - after that it's seems more like a soap opera, along with other parts of this movie)
    2. Pts bank scene
    3. Goodbye Q

    A movie at the bottom of my ranking but these scenes stand out.
  • royale65royale65 Caustic misanthrope reporting for duty.
    edited March 2016 Posts: 4,423
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I do notice that much of the things I dislike most about the Brosnan Era, the loud explosive bits (tank chase, parking garage chase, caviar plant battle), are what many others love the most.

    I used to love the loud bits when I was a nipper, but now a-days, I prefer the more quiet, character driven moments, which there is too few of in the Brozz era.

  • M_BaljeM_Balje Amsterdam, Netherlands
    edited March 2016 Posts: 4,509
    1. Pts (+ mainititle)
    2. Last scene with Desmond LLewelyn
    3. Airplane/Factory scene (So it start with bond meeting Davidov, replacing picture on the toilet whyle flying to the factory, intro of Denise Richards and end with Bond James Bond/explosion.)

    Twine is my second, sometimes third favorite Bond movie. Best SE dvd menu and my favorite title song. The last moost stable Bond movie in my opnion.
  • Posts: 4,044
    1. Bond kills Elektra
    2. Goodbye Q
    3. Hello Cigar Girl
  • SzonanaSzonana Mexico
    Posts: 1,130
    Ok the most difficult for me since its my favorite

    Pre Tittles sequence
    Elektra and Bon's love scene
    Bond kills Elektra
    Bond Meets Renard

    Honorable mentions :

    Love scene with Dr Molly warmflash( too bad Michael Apted caught off of the part after that scene where Bond says the things i do for england )
    Seing Moneypenny Jealous after M sees the results of Bond's recovery og his shoulder and MoneyPenny replies im sure it was her delicate touc. both leave the room( The doctor and MoneyPenny) and Bond smiles
    The Casino scene
    The scene where M slaps elektra and realizes Bond was right about her
    The scene with M and Bond and he asks what happened with her kidnapping
    The escape from the Bunker with Christmas and his introduction when she aks him his name.
    The last fight of Bond with Renard
    The Torture scene and we knownwhy elektra turned on the bad side.





  • Mark_HazzardMark_Hazzard Classified
    edited March 2016 Posts: 127
    1. Bilbao bank scene, "If you can't trust a Swiss banker, what has the world come to?"
    2. Thames Chase, accompanied by more Bond theme music by Arnold
    3. All of the Maiden Tower conclusion: Bond being tortured by Elektra, Zukovsky shooting Bond, Bond killing Elektra, "I never miss"

    Honourable mention: Desmond Llewelyn's departure from the series
  • It may be a bit liberal to call the eighteen-minute PTS of TWINE a scene people.

    1. Escape from torture and final confrontation with Elektra
    2. Boat chase
    3. Renard and Elektra unite at Maiden's Tower
  • 1. Q's farewell
    2. Bond kills Elektra
    3. Bond in the banker's office
  • Posts: 1,631
    1. Bond kills Elektra
    2. Q's exit
    3. Bilbao - Banker's office
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,789
    1. Q's farewell
    2. Bond kills Elektra
    3. Bond in the banker's office
    This is pretty much it for me as well. But I like the whole movie.
  • Posts: 832
    1.Caviar shootout- Easily one of the best scenes in the entire series, I really can't get enough of this sequence
    2. Bond and electra (pleasure, in great beauty)
    3. Q's goodbye

  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    Posts: 4,399
    1. Thames boat chase
    2. Bond sneaking around - killing Davadov - taking his place to meet the men at the plane.
    3. Bond kills Elektra
  • JohnHammond73JohnHammond73 Lancashire, UK
    edited March 2016 Posts: 4,151
    It may be a bit liberal to call the eighteen-minute PTS of TWINE a scene people.

    Fair comment - my votes amended

  • GBFGBF
    Posts: 3,197
    1. Goodbye to Q
    2. Bond kills Elektra
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Honorable mentions:
    4. Caviar factory
    5. The pipe sequence (just ignore Jones there)
    6. Bilbao
    7. Boat chase
    8. Bond/Elektra love scene
    9. Submarine scene
    10. Renard's introduction
  • edited March 2016 Posts: 1,817
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I do notice that much of the things I dislike most about the Brosnan Era, the loud explosive bits (tank chase, parking garage chase, caviar plant battle), are what many others love the most.

    Well, people are Bond fans for all sorts of reasons! I quite like good action myself as long as there's good character interaction and suspense to go along with it.
  • w2bondw2bond is indeed a very rare breed
    Posts: 2,252
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I do notice that much of the things I dislike most about the Brosnan Era, the loud explosive bits (tank chase, parking garage chase, caviar plant battle), are what many others love the most.

    It's a hark back to some of the more OTT moments in the old films...the Lotus chase for example. The level of ridiculousness is stretched too much (Bond destroying city with Tank) but as a 5 year old scenes like that get you hooked! And even now they are still fun to watch

    If my first experience of Bond was FRWL or OHMSS as a 5 year old I doubt I would have been immediately enamoured by our fav secret agent.
  • w2bondw2bond is indeed a very rare breed
    Posts: 2,252
    Birdleson wrote: »
    My first experiences were the Connery films as a young lad, and that hooked me (though the two samples you mention I didn't manage to see until my mid-teens).

    Different era...I'm afraid this generation's attention span is shorter than a goldfish's memory. I'm guilty of this too, TB is easily a top 5 if many of its scenes were trimmed down
  • Posts: 3,336
    I've counted all the other pts's as one scene, but I can agree that this one might be a bit long to count for a scene. After all it was intended that only the Bilbao bank scene would be the pts. But they later added the boat chase for some more action.
    When I think of it, all of the Brosnan pts's are pretty action heavy.
  • w2bondw2bond is indeed a very rare breed
    edited March 2016 Posts: 2,252
    GBF wrote: »
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Huh?!! That's one of the scenes I use to highlight why TWINE is so dreary!
  • GBFGBF
    Posts: 3,197
    w2bond wrote: »
    GBF wrote: »
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Huh?!! That's one of the scenes I use to highlight why TWINE is so dreary!

    I honestly like the atmosphere of that sequence and it is an interesting insight into the local industry of a country we all probably know very little about. I agree that the sequnece is dreary but these helicopters are interesting since they are later used as a weapon (I think their use was creative and a good idea). That is why I like their introduction earlier in that film.

    I also think that especially the Brosnan films require some slower paced sequences like this to compensate for all the explosions and action sequences. And I probably think that TWINE delivers that better than the other Brosnan films.
  • w2bondw2bond is indeed a very rare breed
    Posts: 2,252
    GBF wrote: »
    w2bond wrote: »
    GBF wrote: »
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Huh?!! That's one of the scenes I use to highlight why TWINE is so dreary!

    I honestly like the atmosphere of that sequence and it is an interesting insight into the local industry of a country we all probably know very little about. I agree that the sequnece is dreary but these helicopters are interesting since they are later used as a weapon (I think their use was creative and a good idea). That is why I like their introduction earlier in that film.

    I also think that especially the Brosnan films require some slower paced sequences like this to compensate for all the explosions and action sequences. And I probably think that TWINE delivers that better than the other Brosnan films.

    I don't mind the scene in itself but Bond films are supposed to be about exotic locations. I do not want to visit Azerbaijan, or Turkey, after watching TWINE. I get a different feeling after watching Turkey in FRWL or SF
  • w2bond wrote: »
    GBF wrote: »
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Huh?!! That's one of the scenes I use to highlight why TWINE is so dreary!

    I would agree with you. Azerbaijan was in general a dreary location.
  • GBFGBF
    Posts: 3,197
    w2bond wrote: »
    GBF wrote: »
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Huh?!! That's one of the scenes I use to highlight why TWINE is so dreary!

    I would agree with you. Azerbaijan was in general a dreary location.

    True but I don't think that dreary is always bad. I mean how realistic and how interesting is an international super spy who only operates in exotic holiday locations?

    Bond films should also always catch the atmospere of a certain time. Golden Eye and TWINE really manage to give us an insight into the post cold war era by showing us locations such as Russia and Azerbaijan in the 1990s. I personaly always regret that Bond didn't operate more often behind the iron curtain during the cold war era.
  • edited March 2016 Posts: 1,817
    GBF wrote: »
    w2bond wrote: »
    GBF wrote: »
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Huh?!! That's one of the scenes I use to highlight why TWINE is so dreary!

    I would agree with you. Azerbaijan was in general a dreary location.

    True but I don't think that dreary is always bad. I mean how realistic and how interesting is an international super spy who only operates in exotic holiday locations?

    Bond films should also always catch the atmospere of a certain time. Golden Eye and TWINE really manage to give us an insight into the post cold war era by showing us locations such as Russia and Azerbaijan in the 1990s. I personaly always regret that Bond didn't operate more often behind the iron curtain during the cold war era.

    Well, I must say I do quite like my exotic holiday locations in my Bond flicks! Hee hee hee. But you are quite right about catching the atmosphere of a certain time period. That is important.
  • w2bondw2bond is indeed a very rare breed
    Posts: 2,252
    GBF wrote: »
    w2bond wrote: »
    GBF wrote: »
    3. Bond driving on the roads of Azerbaijan watching the helicopters cutting the trees

    Huh?!! That's one of the scenes I use to highlight why TWINE is so dreary!

    I would agree with you. Azerbaijan was in general a dreary location.

    True but I don't think that dreary is always bad. I mean how realistic and how interesting is an international super spy who only operates in exotic holiday locations?

    Bond films should also always catch the atmospere of a certain time. Golden Eye and TWINE really manage to give us an insight into the post cold war era by showing us locations such as Russia and Azerbaijan in the 1990s. I personaly always regret that Bond didn't operate more often behind the iron curtain during the cold war era.

    Not realistic but very interesting. It's also not very realistic for an international super spy to use his real name when introducing himself to the enemy.

    I feel Bond should be fantasy based on reality. Your atmosphere comment is true, but I would've also liked some good shots of Azerbaijan.

  • GBFGBF
    Posts: 3,197
    I also like the beautifull locations and of course you are right that Bond films do not intend to be realistic. But if Bond e.g. only travels to the Caribean islands it also becomes a little boring over time (at least imo). I very much like the contrast between dark and authentic, even dreary locations on the one and exotic, warm and beautifull regions.
Sign In or Register to comment.