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Of course there is.
And it often comes down to how old & where you were when you saw a Bondfilm that particularly resonated with you. For many people born in the late 80's Pierce Brosnan IS James Bond.
I suppose I don't rate him as much as others who perhaps never saw anyone as bond before 1995.
In which case your weren't even old enough to legally see any Brosnan movie except maybe DAD at a cinema during its first run, right? At least in Germany, no single Bond film is rated less than "12", some of them even "16".
But regardless, to each one's own. Born in 1956, Craig has been my latest Bond...and Connery the eternal one.
Born in 88 and I'd say Brosnan is my Bond as well, despite never seeing a Bond film in theatres until Casino Royale. GE was just the first Bond film that was introduced to me on VHS by my dad.
Sounds to me like my love for LALD. If I hadn't seen it (IIRC) four times at different cinemas in early 1974 when I was 17, I probably wouldn't have such fond memories marring my good judgment, which lead me to willfully ignore its shortcomings, and to make it possibly my favourite Roger Moore Bond film (although close together with MR and TSWLM...while I find the rest definitely inferior).
Just saying all this is never objective.
I’m glad you enjoy the Brozz era.
My first watch was on a plane, yes, but I saw it at least a dozen times on video during the following years. 6-10 year old me loved the spectacle, the action, the music... I am a bit more refined in my tastes now, and unlike then I can actually follow the story and dialogue... ;)
So by the time I actually did become a Bond fan, Brosnan was already on his way out with DAD (though we didn’t know at the time). When it was announced that he was out of the role, I thought it was a surprise for sure, but quickly got excited at the prospect of seeing a new Bond. Bye bye Brosnan.
Perhaps if I had seen him as Bond from the start in theaters in 1995 at the impressionable age of 8, I would have grown more fond of him. Maybe. We’ll never know.
I do know if I saw Connery Bond at age 8 I probably would have responded more to his interpretation strongly. He just fits that mold of what I considered movie heroes like Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones. By comparison, they make Brosnan look effeminate.
I *HATE* these stupid easy words generic, woke, etc....
That’s why I wish John Woo would have done TND. He would have added a lot more flair and style to the proceedings more so than the director of TURNER & HOOCH.
I'd have never looked at a shawl collared cardigan twice before Craig wore them in CR and QoS. I now own three of them....😏
Brosnan's films were plagued by generic machine gun battles (especially TND) - no other era of Bond has more of these.
Bond's movie action-sequences need to have some element of novelty - otherwise it isn't (cinematic) 'Bond'
As much of a Brosnan fanboy as I am, I could never trade Tim. Dalton in TLD is one of my favorite Bond performances, and I love both of his films.
Me too. Dalton in TLD is one of my favourite performances from any actor as Bond.
Well Dalton is just a great actor in general, probably tied with Craig as being the most talented (acting abilities wise) actor to have played Bond. I’m always impressed whenever I go back and watch any interview with Timothy Dalton at just how much he studied Fleming’s books, how he could go on and on about the character of Bond as written by Fleming, and then how it counters to the various screen portrayals. Yeah he isn’t the best with humor, and one liners, but he wasn’t going for that type of Bond, he knows his own strengths as an actor, and whether it’s the scene where Bond confronts Pushkin, or the scene in LTK where he kills Killifer in cold blood, that is Fleming’s Bond, and nobody has done, or probably will do a better job of faithfully adapting the character more than Dalton, imho.
Nope!
@chrisisall good to see you again!
Generic, maybe people use that term in the context of "generic, vanilla 90's actioners"?
Being a late 80's baby, I feel a bit dirty when criticising Brosnan. Brosnan has gone on record over having never really nailed the part. Part of that has to do with the script, the direction and Brosnan himself, unfortunately. GE gave Brosnan a good script and was helmed by Campbell, yet I think Brosnan was too nervous and came off lightweight in comparison to Connery, Moore and Dalton.
Yet when Brosnan reached DAD, he had an ownership to the role. But the general crapiness of that movie overshadowed him.
Having said all that, I really enjoy Brosnan in the role. Both contemporary and retroactively. Obviously he was having a lot of fun in the role. He seemed honoured to be put down by Q.
The Brosnan era was helmed in by the formula. Yet there was air of teenage-ization about the films, more pronounced as the series when on. EON did try to shake up the formula, giving Bond an ex flame in TND or having a female main villain in TWINE, but they never really committed.
The Brosnan era was a place holder. Fun and formulaic films, with good box office. Allowing EON to branch out with the Craig era, stretching and breaking said formula.
Completely agree! When I sat in the cinema in Summer 1987 watching TLD , and that first dramatic shot of Dalton as he turned to camera, I knew I was in for something special! Was elated coming out at the end!
He is still, ( Sorry Daniel!) James Bond to me!
One helluva PTS…. And a great intro.
I think he did nail so many parts of Bond and I still, to this day, love when he spies on Pushkin from his car, and then when he confronts him in the hotel room. Just a perfect sequence.