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Comments
THESIS 190 and 192 are basically the same question. I think the old Norman theme was excellent and fit just fine for me, a dramatic action scene such as this only benefited from stirring music.
THESIS 191- QUANTUM definitely needs to be revisited, too much potential and too much left unresolved to just throw it away.
THESIS 193- The series seems to benefit from a periodic changing of the actor and it most certainly did for me in 1987 and 2006 so I'll agree.
@JBFan626, Barry himself wasn't too pleased with this editing choice. Either they left the sequence unscored, or he would have scored extra material, possibly re-orchestrating the Bond Theme. He wasn't pleased with Hunt mixing that old DN recording in with Little Nellie's sequence either.
Maybe someone out there with better editing skills than me could make that happen!
No I don't think that's so. If Bond is still plausible enough and capable, he may continue in the part for long as he can. Craig will be 46 or 47 for the next release, and still very able in what will be his fourth appearance, and you can guess it'll be another full house at theaters. As long as he's still able, and may well go into his 50's ?, audiences will come and pay their money to watch
On the other hand, thesis does make sense in that suppose Connery was the same age as he started out in 1962, all the way through to the 1980s and kept playing Bond. I'm guessing people would soon get tired of seeing the same face year after year, and the same could go for Dalton from 1987 to the present day if it were possible. Not so easy to answer as I first thought, but I'm going with initial thoughts, and will disagree with latest thesis. But this could go either way depending on people's perspectives
<font color=blue size=7><b>None of the Bond films' scripts, as written, could have worked in a different decade.</b></font>
A few wouldn't work in another decade (like GE for example), but lots of them could easily be switched around.
And I could be wrong, but GoldenEye could have been a late 80's movie and felt very high tech, as opposed to a little high tech as a mid 90's movie. The same could be said for AVTAK: it could have been a late 70's movie rather than a mid 80's one
So I will disagree with Thesis 194- some of them could have worked
<font color=blue size=7><b>Roger Deakins' cinematography could have helped QOS be a stronger film.</b></font>
The film had many problems. No matter how good the cinematography is, the editor can still ruin it. And it won't help the plot problems and writing.
Roger Deakins style in some scene's of Skyfall remember me to DAD but then with a inprovement whyle other scene's i wish there ask Robert Elwit. With this in mind The Spy Who Loved style QOS sometimes remember too iam afraid those parts with Deakins it have mist the glamor it have now. Mabey Roger Deakins can have been intresting to have for the airport scene of Casino Royale or parts of Die Another Day.
Disagree. There was nothing wrong with it, just certain editing elements were the issue.
http://toddmthatcher.wordpress.com/2013/01/04/the-007-files-the-man-with-the-golden-gun/
Disagree with premise and agree that the editing (and incomplete script) were the real issues.
No, the cinematography was one of the best things with this brilliant piece of film!