DIE ANOTHER DAY: First 30 minutes perfect?

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Comments

  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    edited April 2020 Posts: 8,231
    At least we got Craig and Casino Royale as a result of this Batman And Robin level failure.

    Something that can be as much attributed to Bourne, Batman etc.
  • DrClatterhandDrClatterhand United Kingdom
    Posts: 349
    mtm wrote: »
    It's Bond for little boys.

    Isn't that... Bond?

    rt26101_corgi-261-aston-martin-db5_1.jpg

    Not little boys only, no.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,606
    mtm wrote: »
    It's Bond for little boys.

    Isn't that... Bond?

    rt26101_corgi-261-aston-martin-db5_1.jpg

    Not little boys only, no.

    It kind of all is, don't kid yourself it's a grown-up pursuit! :)
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    EON marketing towards little boys with Bond always seemed weird to me. Of course I grew up at a time when EON had already stopped doing that for a while, which made Bond feel like it was something more geared towards grown ups which made it seem more enticing to me as a kid.
  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,926
    D.B.5
  • DoctorKaufmannDoctorKaufmann Can shoot you from Stuttgart and still make it look like suicide.
    edited April 2020 Posts: 1,261
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    A great deal of Non-Bond fans, find DAD to be the Best Bond film till date....I wonder what the Franchise would have looked like today, if DAD was a Critical Success. Maybe CR would have been a Very Different Bond film.....probably not as grounded as we know it Today.

    How they can say, that DAD was the best Bond up to 2020, is beyond me. But then, taste is an individual thing. But without DAD, we would not have got CR the way it is. And box office-wise, it was a great success. But luckily BB and MGW realized, that the franchise was heading into a disastrous direction, and they made the right decision.
  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    Posts: 4,399
    is the first 30 minutes of DAD perfect?.. No, but its good.. i've always maintained that everything in DAD from the start of the movie right up until the gene therapy clinic is actually some good stuff.. but when Halle Berry shows up it pretty much signals the downward spiral this movie will be going down the rest of the way.. aside from the fencing fight between Graves and Bond - that was the lone blip of awesomeness in a sea of grey water..
  • FatherValentineFatherValentine England
    Posts: 737
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    A James Bond film has more than enough going for it, that it can't be disliked completely....that's what makes it different from other films. A Gunbarrel Sequence, A PTS, A Title Sequence, A Song, A Distinctive Score, Creative Action Scenes, Gadgets, Beautiful Women, Exotic Locales,etc. One of these will definitely get one to like a Bond film....even if it's not a favourite.

    This comment sums it up perfectly for me. This is why I love every Bond film in their own way - even if it has elements that I would change in an ideal world.

    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.
  • Posts: 3,327
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.



  • Posts: 4,045
    mtm wrote: »
    I often think it has a weirdly cheap feel, with lots of it appearing to have been shot on the backlot.
    Is it the only Bond film where the main cast don't appear in any of the locations the film is set in (apart from the country the studio is in of course!)?

    Wasn’t that due to the crisis following 9/11?
  • OctopussyOctopussy Piz Gloria, Schilthorn, Switzerland.
    Posts: 1,081
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.



    Agree. I've always felt that the film falls apart after the SPECTRE meeting.
  • FatherValentineFatherValentine England
    Posts: 737
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.




    I don't think the PTS in SP is anything special at all. It is the best bit of the film, though, I grant you. (Maybe that one shot of Bellucci on the bed, come to think of it).

    The train fight doesn't do much for me, either. I don't find either scenes are as good as the PTS of DAD or the fencing scene. And I would say that the crass awfulness of DAD's third act can only really be rivalled by the mind-numbing stupidity of introducing a personal connection between Bond and Blofeld that extends back to childhood. I don't care how well it is shot. That plot point alone makes it the worst Bond film of all, DAD notwithstanding.

    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.
  • GadgetManGadgetMan Lagos, Nigeria
    edited May 2020 Posts: 4,247
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.




    I don't think the PTS in SP is anything special at all. It is the best bit of the film, though, I grant you. (Maybe that one shot of Bellucci on the bed, come to think of it).

    The train fight doesn't do much for me, either. I don't find either scenes are as good as the PTS of DAD or the fencing scene. And I would say that the crass awfulness of DAD's third act can only really be rivalled by the mind-numbing stupidity of introducing a personal connection between Bond and Blofeld that extends back to childhood. I don't care how well it is shot. That plot point alone makes it the worst Bond film of all, DAD notwithstanding.

    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.

    Yeah, I think even with DAD's problems, it's way better than SP, Coz DAD is watchable than SP....and Bond & Graves aren't Brothers.
  • Posts: 7,616
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.




    I don't think the PTS in SP is anything special at all. It is the best bit of the film, though, I grant you. (Maybe that one shot of Bellucci on the bed, come to think of it).

    The train fight doesn't do much for me, either. I don't find either scenes are as good as the PTS of DAD or the fencing scene. And I would say that the crass awfulness of DAD's third act can only really be rivalled by the mind-numbing stupidity of introducing a personal connection between Bond and Blofeld that extends back to childhood. I don't care how well it is shot. That plot point alone makes it the worst Bond film of all, DAD notwithstanding.

    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.

    Yeah, I think even with DAD's problems, it's way better than SP, Coz DAD is watchable than SP....and Bond & Graves aren't Brothers.

    I would say the other way round! No matter what issues there are with SP, it nothing compared to ths travesty that is DAD!
    The pts of SP is spectacular and the fight on the helicopter is thrilling compared to DADs dull hovercraft chase. I would also put the Hinx train punch up on a par with the one from FRWL, whereas the fencing scene from DAD, though a great idea, is botched with silliness like Bond somersaulting and slicing newspapers!
  • GadgetManGadgetMan Lagos, Nigeria
    edited May 2020 Posts: 4,247
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.




    I don't think the PTS in SP is anything special at all. It is the best bit of the film, though, I grant you. (Maybe that one shot of Bellucci on the bed, come to think of it).

    The train fight doesn't do much for me, either. I don't find either scenes are as good as the PTS of DAD or the fencing scene. And I would say that the crass awfulness of DAD's third act can only really be rivalled by the mind-numbing stupidity of introducing a personal connection between Bond and Blofeld that extends back to childhood. I don't care how well it is shot. That plot point alone makes it the worst Bond film of all, DAD notwithstanding.

    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.

    Yeah, I think even with DAD's problems, it's way better than SP, Coz DAD is watchable than SP....and Bond & Graves aren't Brothers.

    I would say the other way round! No matter what issues there are with SP, it nothing compared to ths travesty that is DAD!
    The pts of SP is spectacular and the fight on the helicopter is thrilling compared to DADs dull hovercraft chase. I would also put the Hinx train punch up on a par with the one from FRWL, whereas the fencing scene from DAD, though a great idea, is botched with silliness like Bond somersaulting and slicing newspapers!

    Yeah, the two films aren't great. But I did a rewatch of the Bond films lately....and I discovered I had a more seamless watch with DAD than SP. And the two films have Similar car chase styles, with quick cuts to another scene and back, but I think DAD's car chase is superior. And coupled with SP's problems....the score has never helped me. I honestly do think a David Arnold Score would have helped SP, even with it's problems.....am one of those who strongly believes a very good score, can lift even a bad film.

    I know it's hard to believe, But Newman's Score is 70% of SP's Problems. I think late last year or so, One of us re-scored SP's car chase with Zimmer's Molossus from Batman Begins & without Moneypenny's Dialogue....it felt like a different film entirely. I think Newman's score was really in line with the Dull Nature of SP, so it couldn't lift the film.
  • FatherValentineFatherValentine England
    Posts: 737
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.




    I don't think the PTS in SP is anything special at all. It is the best bit of the film, though, I grant you. (Maybe that one shot of Bellucci on the bed, come to think of it).

    The train fight doesn't do much for me, either. I don't find either scenes are as good as the PTS of DAD or the fencing scene. And I would say that the crass awfulness of DAD's third act can only really be rivalled by the mind-numbing stupidity of introducing a personal connection between Bond and Blofeld that extends back to childhood. I don't care how well it is shot. That plot point alone makes it the worst Bond film of all, DAD notwithstanding.

    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.

    Yeah, I think even with DAD's problems, it's way better than SP, Coz DAD is watchable than SP....and Bond & Graves aren't Brothers.

    I would say the other way round! No matter what issues there are with SP, it nothing compared to ths travesty that is DAD!
    The pts of SP is spectacular and the fight on the helicopter is thrilling compared to DADs dull hovercraft chase. I would also put the Hinx train punch up on a par with the one from FRWL, whereas the fencing scene from DAD, though a great idea, is botched with silliness like Bond somersaulting and slicing newspapers!

    Yeah, absolutely nothing stupid happens in Spectre at all, does it?
  • thedovethedove hiding in the Greek underworld
    Posts: 5,482
    The film really rises and falls on two things for me. Director and screen writers. Both let the film down. I find the use of slow motion, and jump cuts or whatever those cuts are in the car chase on ice is. I think Tamamori was a bold choice at the time but something happened to him with the larger budget. Or was the fault in a script that collapses under it's own weight. Too bad the DAD process didn't get leaked like SP. Cause we would discover who thought the invisible car was needed. Or some of the other odd choices this movie takes. In fact I wonder if this was meant to be a send off of Bond on screen?

    This movie isn't bad and can be entertaining if one overlooks certain aspects. Not as bad would paint it. I don't know that I would say perfection in describing the first 30 minutes. But it's not a bad start. As the movie goes along the pacing falls off. Especially Iceland. The whole rescue of Jinx then sending her back to the room and then Bond getting upped by Miranda. Tell me how Bond doesn't know his gun hasn't been loaded. It's something that an agent of his caliber wouldn't get caught up with.

    Too bad this is Pierce's finale as he deserved a better fate!
  • GadgetManGadgetMan Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 4,247
    I know DAD wasn't great, but I still wanted a 5th Brosnan Bond film, coz I felt he still had a 'Goldeneye' in him. After DAD's harsh reception, am sure Brosnan would have returned with a dynamic performance, coz DAD was his only Bond film that Critics really Lambasted. Critics weren't that harsh on TND & TWINE.
  • thedovethedove hiding in the Greek underworld
    Posts: 5,482
    The critics may have lambasted him but it was his highest grossing Bond film. It was the highest grossing film in a number of years. Don't believe the revisionist history that it was a bomb. It was a HUGE success.

    One could argue without DAD there is no CR has that gave the producers the reason to ground Bond again and keep it from getting fantastical. Something that has happened through out the series.

    YOLT---OHMSSS
    MR---FYEO
    AVTAK---TLD
    DAD---CR

    Notably in 3 of the four situations the actor of the series changed with the tone.
  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    edited May 2020 Posts: 4,399
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Yeah, the two films aren't great. But I did a rewatch of the Bond films lately....and I discovered I had a more seamless watch with DAD than SP. And the two films have Similar car chase styles, with quick cuts to another scene and back, but I think DAD's car chase is superior. And coupled with SP's problems....the score has never helped me. I honestly do think a David Arnold Score would have helped SP, even with it's problems.....am one of those who strongly believes a very good score, can lift even a bad film.

    I know it's hard to believe, But Newman's Score is 70% of SP's Problems. I think late last year or so, One of us re-scored SP's car chase with Zimmer's Molossus from Batman Begins & without Moneypenny's Dialogue....it felt like a different film entirely. I think Newman's score was really in line with the Dull Nature of SP, so it couldn't lift the film.

    the problem i have with Thomas Newman, is that i generally like his stuff outside of Bond.. i thought his score for 1917 was absolutely beautiful.. but when it comes to a Bond score, i think in all - both SF and SP, my overall feelings are that it was a bit humdrum... nothing is going to ever usurp Barry - so i wont even cite him as an example.. but even if you go back and look at Arnold's work - each of his scores felt like they gave that film it's own identity - there was something unique to the sound, and the way he would often times weave a musical theme throughout his work aided in that - 'Paris & Bond' in TND, 'Elektra's Theme' in TWINE, 'Vesper' and 'City of Lovers' in CR, 'Night at the Opera' in QOS... Newman's work, while fine - lacks that personal identity that makes it stand out, i think it lacks an overall cohesion of themes.. the score for SF and SP sound largely indistinguishable... i am no music major, i dont pretend to be - i just go by what i hear..

    ... BUT... i will add - Mendes shares in that blame also - not one piece of music goes into a film without Director approval.. so, he either sat back and just let Newman do his thing and was comfortable with whatever he presented - or - Newman just gave Mendes exactly what he wanted.. i mean, either way the buck stops with Mendes.. so if one is unhappy on score, first person to blame is the director - because if he doesn't like the music, he can easily sack the composer and start over with a new one (its happened before)..

    besides, maybe it's just me - but i want the cliche' back.. IMO, it's really been since DAD that we've had a very fun Bond score that embraces the brassy and brashness of classic 007 - and also really embraces the JAMES BOND THEME itself!.. i understand why Arnold left it out or sparingly used it in CR and QOS - it was an artistic choice to reflect Bond's growth into becoming 007 in those films.. but Newman continued that trend, and even went as far as to not record a version of the Bond theme himself, instead the powers that be just shoved Arnold's from CR into both films.. as a Bond fan, that annoys me.. in a Bond movie, i wanna hear the damn theme!... here is a re-edit i made of the helicopter chase down the Thames in SP.. IMO, it works so much better than the dull crap they used..

  • OctopussyOctopussy Piz Gloria, Schilthorn, Switzerland.
    Posts: 1,081
    Both Newman and Arnold (with the exception of Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace for the exact reason you've mentioned regarding the Bond theme) are underwhelming in what they delivered to the Bond franchise, IMO. I much prefer the Die Another Day score to Tomorrow Never Dies and The World Is Not Enough personally.
    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.

    Daniel Craig is the most stylish Bond to date in terms of his clothing, IMO. Followed closely by Connery. The clothing of Skyfall and Spectre are impeccable. You can't go wrong with Tom Ford, Crockett & Jones and Brunello Cucinelli. ;)

  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    Posts: 4,399
    Octopussy wrote: »
    Both Newman and Arnold (with the exception of Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace for the exact reason you've mentioned regarding the Bond theme) are underwhelming in what they delivered to the Bond franchise, IMO. I much prefer the Die Another Day score to Tomorrow Never Dies and The World Is Not Enough personally.

    really?... see i never felt Arnold was underwhelming at all.. i mean, when all the franchise has known is John Barry (for the most part) for 35 years - a legendary composer - i think no matter who jumped in, they were going to be automatically inferior.. and i'll be honest, i love Arnold, but even him at his best never reached the mastery of Barry's work.. but i felt like Arnold was the perfect steward or custodian to carry on that sound that Barry created, that "Bond" sound.. Newman's scores just aren't "Bond" scores to me and i would take any of Arnold's scores over both SF and SP.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    Arnold had five chances and never really made a score that made me want to listen to it over and over. So I was pretty relieved when other composers were brought in to have a crack at Bond rather than Arnold just doing his usual bag of tricks that got stale. For what it’s worth, he did leave the franchise with his strongest effort in QOS.

    As for the DAD score, I do like that the best of the Brosnan era scores (even over CR). I like it because it’s Arnold swinging for the fences in a way not too dissimilar to what Madonna did.
  • edited May 2020 Posts: 3,327
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.




    I don't think the PTS in SP is anything special at all. It is the best bit of the film, though, I grant you. (Maybe that one shot of Bellucci on the bed, come to think of it).

    The train fight doesn't do much for me, either. I don't find either scenes are as good as the PTS of DAD or the fencing scene. And I would say that the crass awfulness of DAD's third act can only really be rivalled by the mind-numbing stupidity of introducing a personal connection between Bond and Blofeld that extends back to childhood. I don't care how well it is shot. That plot point alone makes it the worst Bond film of all, DAD notwithstanding.

    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.

    Yeah, I think even with DAD's problems, it's way better than SP, Coz DAD is watchable than SP....and Bond & Graves aren't Brothers.

    I would say the other way round! No matter what issues there are with SP, it nothing compared to ths travesty that is DAD!
    The pts of SP is spectacular and the fight on the helicopter is thrilling compared to DADs dull hovercraft chase. I would also put the Hinx train punch up on a par with the one from FRWL, whereas the fencing scene from DAD, though a great idea, is botched with silliness like Bond somersaulting and slicing newspapers!

    I agree. I honestly cannot understand anyone who thinks DAD is watchable. SP has its faults, but they fail in comparison to DAD.

    I would go as far as saying DAD is probably one of the worst films ever made, not just the worst Bond film ever made.
  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    Posts: 4,399
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Saying that, SP is the only one I can't find anything to enjoy.

    And I agree with the topic of the thread, and argue that it is a very, very good Bond film up until he lands in Iceland.

    If you think DAD is a very, VERY good film up until Iceland then you have a very different idea to me on what makes a very good Bond film. DAD starts bad, and gets worse.

    As for SP and nothing to enjoy - you don't like the PTS? Or the train fight?

    I'd say those 2 scenes alone piss all over anything from DAD.




    I don't think the PTS in SP is anything special at all. It is the best bit of the film, though, I grant you. (Maybe that one shot of Bellucci on the bed, come to think of it).

    The train fight doesn't do much for me, either. I don't find either scenes are as good as the PTS of DAD or the fencing scene. And I would say that the crass awfulness of DAD's third act can only really be rivalled by the mind-numbing stupidity of introducing a personal connection between Bond and Blofeld that extends back to childhood. I don't care how well it is shot. That plot point alone makes it the worst Bond film of all, DAD notwithstanding.

    One thing I will say in defence of SP is that Craig looks great in it and his clothes are magnificent.

    Yeah, I think even with DAD's problems, it's way better than SP, Coz DAD is watchable than SP....and Bond & Graves aren't Brothers.

    I would say the other way round! No matter what issues there are with SP, it nothing compared to ths travesty that is DAD!
    The pts of SP is spectacular and the fight on the helicopter is thrilling compared to DADs dull hovercraft chase. I would also put the Hinx train punch up on a par with the one from FRWL, whereas the fencing scene from DAD, though a great idea, is botched with silliness like Bond somersaulting and slicing newspapers!

    I agree. I honestly cannot understand anyone who thinks DAD is watchable. SP has its faults, but they fail in comparison to DAD.

    I would go as far as saying DAD is probably one of the worst films ever made, not just the worst Bond film ever made.

    the only real problem i have with SP is the Blofeld / Bond foster brother crap.. to me, thats the only thing really sticks out as being really bad... there is other stuff too that i dont care for, but it doesn't make the movie unwatchable... DAD i feel has way more faults to it than SP.
  • GadgetManGadgetMan Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 4,247
    HASEROT wrote: »
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Yeah, the two films aren't great. But I did a rewatch of the Bond films lately....and I discovered I had a more seamless watch with DAD than SP. And the two films have Similar car chase styles, with quick cuts to another scene and back, but I think DAD's car chase is superior. And coupled with SP's problems....the score has never helped me. I honestly do think a David Arnold Score would have helped SP, even with it's problems.....am one of those who strongly believes a very good score, can lift even a bad film.

    I know it's hard to believe, But Newman's Score is 70% of SP's Problems. I think late last year or so, One of us re-scored SP's car chase with Zimmer's Molossus from Batman Begins & without Moneypenny's Dialogue....it felt like a different film entirely. I think Newman's score was really in line with the Dull Nature of SP, so it couldn't lift the film.

    the problem i have with Thomas Newman, is that i generally like his stuff outside of Bond.. i thought his score for 1917 was absolutely beautiful.. but when it comes to a Bond score, i think in all - both SF and SP, my overall feelings are that it was a bit humdrum... nothing is going to ever usurp Barry - so i wont even cite him as an example.. but even if you go back and look at Arnold's work - each of his scores felt like they gave that film it's own identity - there was something unique to the sound, and the way he would often times weave a musical theme throughout his work aided in that - 'Paris & Bond' in TND, 'Elektra's Theme' in TWINE, 'Vesper' and 'City of Lovers' in CR, 'Night at the Opera' in QOS... Newman's work, while fine - lacks that personal identity that makes it stand out, i think it lacks an overall cohesion of themes.. the score for SF and SP sound largely indistinguishable... i am no music major, i dont pretend to be - i just go by what i hear..

    ... BUT... i will add - Mendes shares in that blame also - not one piece of music goes into a film without Director approval.. so, he either sat back and just let Newman do his thing and was comfortable with whatever he presented - or - Newman just gave Mendes exactly what he wanted.. i mean, either way the buck stops with Mendes.. so if one is unhappy on score, first person to blame is the director - because if he doesn't like the music, he can easily sack the composer and start over with a new one (its happened before)..

    besides, maybe it's just me - but i want the cliche' back.. IMO, it's really been since DAD that we've had a very fun Bond score that embraces the brassy and brashness of classic 007 - and also really embraces the JAMES BOND THEME itself!.. i understand why Arnold left it out or sparingly used it in CR and QOS - it was an artistic choice to reflect Bond's growth into becoming 007 in those films.. but Newman continued that trend, and even went as far as to not record a version of the Bond theme himself, instead the powers that be just shoved Arnold's from CR into both films.. as a Bond fan, that annoys me.. in a Bond movie, i wanna hear the damn theme!... here is a re-edit i made of the helicopter chase down the Thames in SP.. IMO, it works so much better than the dull crap they used..


    Great Work.....I had Goosebumps with the Bond theme blasting with the Speed of that Boat. This further proves that David Arnold would have saved SP....maybe not the Narrative, but would have made it a guilty pleasure like he did DAD.

    I too like Newman's Work outside of Bond, I own a lot of his scores and the latest 1917, which is sublime. It's natural as a Composer to excel outside of Bond, coz most movies won't be 50+yrs franchises, so more room to create new sounds without worrying about the past.

    Although, Newman's score for SF wasn't all that bad, coz those sounds were new & inventive....but once the sounds were repeated in SP, they somehow weren't all that original anymore. SP too had some inventive tracks too, but the bad tracks overshadowed the good ones.

    I discovered the Good in Newman's Bond scores are the Romantic & Emotive moments. Why? Coz Newman is very good at scoring Drama.....not action. And a Bond film can't be Romantic & Emotional all through...the action parts always lets him down. But Arnold did Both successfully in DAD, just like his other Bond Scores.

    DAD isn't perfect, but Arnold's score keeps the film alive....I think it's fair to say DAD with a Newman's Score would have further diminished the film.

    Whether it's Old age or fear of losing Mendes or coz Newman is a more established composer with great scores, I don't understand why Michael & Barbara would recognize Serra's work as bad when he's better than Newman at being inventive towards Bond....but can't see Newman's problems. So it means if Dan Romer was an established Composer, EON would have accepted whatever he came up with.

    A lot of scenes in SP, needed more Bondian sounds or the Bond theme like The helicopter Fight, the plane chase, the car chase, etc. That's why DAD is better than SP, coz even if it doesn't have a great plot, it's fun to watch. Oh, and DAD has a Plethora of Beautiful women to look at, whenever the film is going off-key.
  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    Posts: 4,399
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Great Work.....I had Goosebumps with the Bond theme blasting with the Speed of that Boat. This further proves that David Arnold would have saved SP....maybe not the Narrative, but would have made it a guilty pleasure like he did DAD.

    I too like Newman's Work outside of Bond, I own a lot of his scores and the latest 1917, which is sublime. It's natural as a Composer to excel outside of Bond, coz most movies won't be 50+yrs franchises, so more room to create new sounds without worrying about the past.

    Although, Newman's score for SF wasn't all that bad, coz those sounds were new & inventive....but once the sounds were repeated in SP, they somehow weren't all that original anymore. SP too had some inventive tracks too, but the bad tracks overshadowed the good ones.

    I discovered the Good in Newman's Bond scores are the Romantic & Emotive moments. Why? Coz Newman is very good at scoring Drama.....not action. And a Bond film can't be Romantic & Emotional all through...the action parts always lets him down. But Arnold did Both successfully in DAD, just like his other Bond Scores.

    DAD isn't perfect, but Arnold's score keeps the film alive....I think it's fair to say DAD with a Newman's Score would have further diminished the film.

    Whether it's Old age or fear of losing Mendes or coz Newman is a more established composer with great scores, I don't understand why Michael & Barbara would recognize Serra's work as bad when he's better than Newman at being inventive towards Bond....but can't see Newman's problems. So it means if Dan Romer was an established Composer, EON would have accepted whatever he came up with.

    A lot of scenes in SP, needed more Bondian sounds or the Bond theme like The helicopter Fight, the plane chase, the car chase, etc. That's why DAD is better than SP, coz even if it doesn't have a great plot, it's fun to watch. Oh, and DAD has a Plethora of Beautiful women to look at, whenever the film is going off-key.

    in terms of EON / Newman... i really think Michael and Barbara just simply wanted to not rock the boat coming off the huge success of SF.. and i can't blame them - if it all worked, why not bring the same people back and see if you can do it again (i'm sure Cubby felt the same between TSWLM and MR) sometimes it can work, other times it doesn't.. i personally feel they didn't reel Mendes back enough on creative decisions with the story - and to add on to that, i also feel like they've given a little too much creative license to their directors from CR on..

    i agree with your overall thoughts on Newman and his strengths - i love the Donna Lucia track from SP - and i wish more of that would've been woven into the the rest of the score.. but it comes and goes, and doesnt return until the credits, which is a shame..
  • GadgetManGadgetMan Lagos, Nigeria
    edited May 2020 Posts: 4,247
    HASEROT wrote: »
    GadgetMan wrote: »
    Great Work.....I had Goosebumps with the Bond theme blasting with the Speed of that Boat. This further proves that David Arnold would have saved SP....maybe not the Narrative, but would have made it a guilty pleasure like he did DAD.

    I too like Newman's Work outside of Bond, I own a lot of his scores and the latest 1917, which is sublime. It's natural as a Composer to excel outside of Bond, coz most movies won't be 50+yrs franchises, so more room to create new sounds without worrying about the past.

    Although, Newman's score for SF wasn't all that bad, coz those sounds were new & inventive....but once the sounds were repeated in SP, they somehow weren't all that original anymore. SP too had some inventive tracks too, but the bad tracks overshadowed the good ones.

    I discovered the Good in Newman's Bond scores are the Romantic & Emotive moments. Why? Coz Newman is very good at scoring Drama.....not action. And a Bond film can't be Romantic & Emotional all through...the action parts always lets him down. But Arnold did Both successfully in DAD, just like his other Bond Scores.

    DAD isn't perfect, but Arnold's score keeps the film alive....I think it's fair to say DAD with a Newman's Score would have further diminished the film.

    Whether it's Old age or fear of losing Mendes or coz Newman is a more established composer with great scores, I don't understand why Michael & Barbara would recognize Serra's work as bad when he's better than Newman at being inventive towards Bond....but can't see Newman's problems. So it means if Dan Romer was an established Composer, EON would have accepted whatever he came up with.

    A lot of scenes in SP, needed more Bondian sounds or the Bond theme like The helicopter Fight, the plane chase, the car chase, etc. That's why DAD is better than SP, coz even if it doesn't have a great plot, it's fun to watch. Oh, and DAD has a Plethora of Beautiful women to look at, whenever the film is going off-key.

    in terms of EON / Newman... i really think Michael and Barbara just simply wanted to not rock the boat coming off the huge success of SF.. and i can't blame them - if it all worked, why not bring the same people back and see if you can do it again (i'm sure Cubby felt the same between TSWLM and MR) sometimes it can work, other times it doesn't.. i personally feel they didn't reel Mendes back enough on creative decisions with the story - and to add on to that, i also feel like they've given a little too much creative license to their directors from CR on..

    i agree with your overall thoughts on Newman and his strengths - i love the Donna Lucia track from SP - and i wish more of that would've been woven into the the rest of the score.. but it comes and goes, and doesnt return until the credits, which is a shame..

    All True, Donna Lucia Brings back a bit of Severine from SF....a missed opportunity indeed. Arnold can't miss that opportunity to keep recurring a very good track/ tracks of his.....even if he's not using the theme song. Arnold doesn't even need the theme song to perfect his score.
  • OctopussyOctopussy Piz Gloria, Schilthorn, Switzerland.
    Posts: 1,081
    HASEROT wrote: »
    Octopussy wrote: »
    Both Newman and Arnold (with the exception of Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace for the exact reason you've mentioned regarding the Bond theme) are underwhelming in what they delivered to the Bond franchise, IMO. I much prefer the Die Another Day score to Tomorrow Never Dies and The World Is Not Enough personally.

    really?... see i never felt Arnold was underwhelming at all.. i mean, when all the franchise has known is John Barry (for the most part) for 35 years - a legendary composer - i think no matter who jumped in, they were going to be automatically inferior.. and i'll be honest, i love Arnold, but even him at his best never reached the mastery of Barry's work.. but i felt like Arnold was the perfect steward or custodian to carry on that sound that Barry created, that "Bond" sound.. Newman's scores just aren't "Bond" scores to me and i would take any of Arnold's scores over both SF and SP.

    I find his scores repetitive and too reliant on the Bond theme. Barry was masterful in creating action cues and weaving the theme song into the soundtrack. If you use the Bond theme all the time it loses it's novelty, IMO. It should be only reserved for moments that deserve the use of the theme, which I feel is something that Barry did superbly.
    Arnold had five chances and never really made a score that made me want to listen to it over and over. So I was pretty relieved when other composers were brought in to have a crack at Bond rather than Arnold just doing his usual bag of tricks that got stale. For what it’s worth, he did leave the franchise with his strongest effort in QOS.

    As for the DAD score, I do like that the best of the Brosnan era scores (even over CR). I like it because it’s Arnold swinging for the fences in a way not too dissimilar to what Madonna did.

    I agree with your point around Arnold swinging for the fences with the Die Another Day soundtrack. I actually like the brass accompanied by techno that he introduced to the score, at least it's something different from him. Certainly gets the heart pumping in the action sequences.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    The reason Newman's score for SP does sound more like SF is precisely because of Mendes. He not only wanted to continue the same musical aesthetics of SF but all the reused cues are actually from the SF recording sessions simply remixed. This came about because when Mendes and Lee Smith were editing a workprint, they had the SF cues used a temp music and thought the music worked so well with the scenes that they decided to keep some of them for the final cut, rather than have Newman do a completely new score. Even early in development Mendes talked about how SP was going to serve as a continuation for SF, and I suspect keeping the music with the same tone as SF was in his mind serving musical continuity.

    I think some of the reused cues work in context for certain moments like "Mother" reprising for Judi Dench, however other reuses like "Someone Usually Dies" for the 9 Eyes doesn't seem necessary. It's too bad though, I would have liked Newman to have a chance to do a completely new score. I like a lot of the new material he made for SP.
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