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It's the sort of thing that'll come with the method of taking each film at a time as was said, rather than something elaborately mapped out (I agree by the way, I don't think pre-planning everything well in advance is a particularly good method).
Craig's character arc across five films, from arrogant blunt instrument to a man burdened by duty and guilt (particularly Vesper's death) and seeking peace with himself, is very powerful and, IMO, he never puts a foot wrong in terms of his performances.
@ColonelSun — nailed it, as always.
And @j_w_pepper , I’m with you on the love for these films, especially NTTD (which crashed into my number one slot).
Well, we can imagine Craig's Bond had a mission or two in between QOS and SF. Plenty of time there -- perhaps we might read about those "missing" missions at some point?
Not really the same thing for me, I guess...
I don't think they should mine Bond falling in love again. I would like an agent who evolves and changes as he goes along but not over arching movie series.
Same with TWINE, Bond has this weak shoulder and in a manner of days it's healed. They had something and then it seems the story forgets it and we don't see Bond struggling.
I think it’s done very well in SF. We see Bond not being able to shoot straight when he’s being scrutinised by MI6 and even Silva (so essentially being watched by unfriendly eyes). It’s mainly physical (he obviously has been shot twice in the PTS and quite badly in his shoulder) but it’s also partially mental. It’s when Bond overcomes Silva’s traps/gets to Parliament in time and shoots with his father’s rifle on his home turf that he gets his aim back (ie. When he’s taking control of the situation). I think it’s a wonderful character progression.
I think what sells Bond slowly becoming physically more able is the fact that we see him doing countless pull up and press ups during his evaluation. He’s not at his best but he’s still James Bond, a man with an extraordinary level of fitness and training. He’s not a wreck as such (you can’t really have a Bond film where he’s completely physically incapacitated).
Yes indeed, I've never seen the issue with this aspect. It's all there in the film.
It works emotionally at the very least. If a film can be believable in that way it generally works for me. Ok, maybe realism isn’t exactly 100% here (Bond has after all been shot twice, but can still do countless push ups, press ups, can run, and only breaks down a bit when others leave the room). But it’s a James Bond film after all.
We are drifting off track, so I will end by saying there is a bit of Fleming that hasn't been fully explored and that is Bond being sent to Shrublands for a rehab. In TB he is there, but we never really know why he has been sent there. Perhaps a future film can show M sending him there for the rehab he needs. Course modern day Bond doesn't show as many vices as the literary Bond had.
I like TB’s rehab subplot as well, but for me what’s interesting about it is Bond’s attitude to his situation. He has quite a carefree attitude to his smoking and drinking, even if he somewhat understands it could kill him down the road. It’s slightly different to the brief existential crisis Bond goes through in SF. I’d like to see a Bond film where Bond’s lack of fitness plays into his recklessness as an agent/that being something he has to navigate a bit in the story.
But I digress, I’m probably getting a bit off topic!
If we're referring to a long dragged out Craig-style arc forget it. If you're setting up something with a knockout punch, NTTD wasn't it. The continuity can be provided through the bond theme, the name is Bond, and the MI6 crew. Casual mention of events in the previous film work, but let's not play "who's the villain behind the curtain" for four films with a dud reveal. Sometimes the old ways are the best ways.
Of course he's had some kind of career in MI6 before CR. However, he only becomes a double-O there (it takes two kills, and he had none before the pre-credits encounter in the men's room), so in that sense he is a "rookie" in CR, and consequently also in QOS...who suddenly more or less retires just one movie later, though that doesn't last.
Well, it takes him killing two specifically assigned people (so assassinations). Presumably Bond’s had to kill people before that.
I just don’t get ‘rookie’ off of him. He’s a trained professional who’s now at the top of the ladder. Certainly all the stuff he does in CR and QOS isn’t a ‘two weeks basic training’ thing. By SF he’s a Bond in his mid career (which makes sense as it’s effectively Craig’s mid point in the role anyway). He’s disillusioned because of what we’ve seen in the PTS so him going off grid makes sense.
I want lines like Moneypenny saying, "James, where is that blue shirt you wore before your last mission briefing?"
And "James, how did you get your hair cut so fast? Last time, I looked it was still 2006, not 2008!"
And "What do you mean the office looks completely different? Don't you know it's all virtual reality? Whoopsiedaisy, I really stepped in it mentioning VR. Ha ha ha!"
As I said, it’s in the realm of nonsense taking it on the basis of strict realism, but very much in line with movie and Fleming’s Bond. We see him struggle and have to overcome these issues, so emotionally it works.
In qos he's definitely not a rookie anymore. In fact, he's dedicated to the job, he's so dedicated even m doubts it is possible ('you'd have to be a real col harted b if you wouldn't want revenge for the one you loved').
My choice: jetpack
And loose continuity. For me, the films are all sagas about the same man, the same idea in different times. Id like to get back to thet, so all new films 'fall' between cr and nttd
Sir Roger recorded them for his films and many love the insights and things he shared. Sadly we didn't get one from Sir Sean. Pierce did a commentary for DAD and then did a live stream commentary for GE. The live stream had moments of awkwardness and yet was also endearing.
For the sake of discussion, I wonder the following:
Would you rather commentaries from Pierce on his films OR Daniel on his films?
Pierce would be providing commentaries on GE, TND, TWINE while Daniel would be providing commentaries on all 5 of his films. Which actor would offer better stories and insights into their films?
I just think that Daniel has a lot more stories to share than Pierce, but I would also be paying to hear Pierce discuss his Bond films too, of course.