Last Bond Movie You Watched

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  • Posts: 12,526
    Skyfall. Enjoyed it even more than i did the first time!
  • From Russia With Love on the BBC Network.
  • Watched Dr. No just an hour ago. It's definitely getting worse every time I see it. It's just so slow, and not good slow either.
  • Last night, I wanted to do something nice for myself and watched "The Living Daylights".
    TLD is my 3rd favorite Bond film (next to OHMSS and CR) and it's with renewed pleasure that I watched it for the 12th time.

    Timothy Dalton was still awesome, after all this time I could still enjoy his performance.
    The whole "sniper was a woman", the "you should have brought Lilies" scenes and the scene where Saunders is killed and Bond went after a kid with balloons had me on the edge, once more.

    I watched TLD with my 19 year old son, and he like it. Next time, I'll show him License to Kill.
  • Last night, I wanted to do something nice for myself and watched "The Living Daylights".
    TLD is my 3rd favorite Bond film (next to OHMSS and CR) and it's with renewed pleasure that I watched it for the 12th time.

    Timothy Dalton was still awesome, after all this time I could still enjoy his performance.
    The whole "sniper was a woman", the "you should have brought Lilies" scenes and the scene where Saunders is killed and Bond went after a kid with balloons had me on the edge, once more.

    I watched TLD with my 19 year old son, and he like it. Next time, I'll show him License to Kill.

    It's funny, because I'm 19, and am currently showing my mum all of the Bond movies. We watched Skyfall in the cinema, and that's her first one. She loved it, so I decided to buy the bluray set and just show her all of them. We've only watched Dr. No so far, but she absolutely loved it.
  • Last night, I wanted to do something nice for myself and watched "The Living Daylights".
    TLD is my 3rd favorite Bond film (next to OHMSS and CR) and it's with renewed pleasure that I watched it for the 12th time.

    Timothy Dalton was still awesome, after all this time I could still enjoy his performance.
    The whole "sniper was a woman", the "you should have brought Lilies" scenes and the scene where Saunders is killed and Bond went after a kid with balloons had me on the edge, once more.

    I watched TLD with my 19 year old son, and he like it. Next time, I'll show him License to Kill.

    It's funny, because I'm 19, and am currently showing my mum all of the Bond movies. We watched Skyfall in the cinema, and that's her first one. She loved it, so I decided to buy the bluray set and just show her all of them. We've only watched Dr. No so far, but she absolutely loved it.

    Bravo! Well done! I can almost envy your mom, there's a whole new world of adventures in front of her, a world she'll love and cherish and she'll have you to thank. Lucky mom, she still has 21 more brand new Bond films to go!
  • I'm actually watching "From Russia with Love" now. Watched Skyfall two days ago and loved it.
  • Posts: 8
    Goldfinger... try to remember some parts I forgot... Because first time I watched it 3 years ago... So Long time...
  • Last night, I wanted to do something nice for myself and watched "The Living Daylights".
    TLD is my 3rd favorite Bond film (next to OHMSS and CR) and it's with renewed pleasure that I watched it for the 12th time.
    Timothy Dalton was still awesome, after all this time I could still enjoy his performance.
    The whole "sniper was a woman", the "you should have brought Lilies" scenes and the scene where Saunders is killed and Bond went after a kid with balloons had me on the edge, once more.
    I watched TLD with my 19 year old son, and he like it. Next time, I'll show him License to Kill.
    It's funny, bcause I'm 19, and am currently showing my mum all of the Bond movies. We watched Skyfall in the cinema, and that's her first one. She loved it, so I decided to buy the bluray set and just show her all of them. We've only watched Dr. No so far, but she absolutely loved it.
    That's a cool mom you've got there! My mom was never into Bond, like at all. She said once that one of the first dates with my dad was to see OHMSS in the theatre and I was SUPER jealous. But then she added '....I couldn't wait for that damn movie to be over' =))

    But there's hope for her yet- I was visiting last Thanksgiving and they were showing CR & QOS on tv and she watched and enjoyed both!
  • Posts: 469
    Watched never say never again yesterday - YES I know un-offical Bond but still killed two hours on a cold friday evening I-)
  • quantumofsolacequantumofsolace England
    Posts: 279
    OHMSS - The best Bond EVER, of course. I'm working my way through the Blu-Ray box set. I don't even want to think of the horrors I'll be suffering for the next eight discs! Roll on TLD!
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    OHMSS - The best Bond EVER, of course. I'm working my way through the Blu-Ray box set. I don't even want to think of the horrors I'll be suffering for the next eight discs! Roll on TLD!

    Have strength, I know it's hard. :))
  • Posts: 4,622
    I've been watching the Tiff Bell Lightbox big-screen Bond screenings which are running concurrent with the Barbican Designing Bond show.
    I am pleased to say that the first 7 films at least are being shown in pristeen digital restored versions. They look and sound spectacular, especially TB, OHMSS and DAF, none of which I had seen previously at other post Lowry-treatment big-screen festivals. Still waiting on YOLT. Will catch that in Jan. The digitally restored version should be spectacular.
    Everything from TMWTGG to LTK, although quite watchable, have been grainier prints, not perfectly restored versions. Not sure what LALD looks like. Still waiting on that one.
  • Last one I watched was...From Russia With Love, which was today (or yesterday). Definitely one of the more grittier films in the series on par with Casino Royale.
  • OHMSS - The best Bond EVER, of course. I'm working my way through the Blu-Ray box set. I don't even want to think of the horrors I'll be suffering for the next eight discs! Roll on TLD!

    Have strength, I know it's hard. :))

    I feared the same thing, so I watched them in a much more random order...sadly it didn't help. Be strong and Tim will be along to save the day in more ways than one.

  • Posts: 40
    I've watched 2 Bond movies recently On her majestys secret service and Thunderball.
  • Going through the Brosnan era this weekend. Just finished Goldeneye. Enjoyed it so much, that I watched the commentary the next morning... I appreciate it so much more now than I did when I was younger. It's so easy to see why the film renewed the franchise. Everything about it feels fresh and smart.


    Pros:
    - Brosnan’s fresh take on Bond.
    - Sassy, independent, well acted Bond girl.
    - Xenia Onatopp. Nuff said.
    - Alex Trevelyan, a personal, dangerous, smart Bond villain, played by the wonderful Sean Bean.
    - One of the coolest titles. Seriously though. When someone asks you what you’re watching, it’s really fun to say “Goldeneye!”
    - One of the best Bond title songs. Haunting and catchy. Perfectly sets the mood for the film. When you hear it, you’re hooked.
    - Title sequence! Not one of the best, the best! Who knew the fall of the Soviet Union could look so beautiful. And there’s a girl breathing fire!
    - The stunts. Namely, the bungee jump and the tank chase.
    - The witty script.

    Cons:
    - The score. Although, only in some parts. But the parts where it doesn't work, it REALLY doesn't work. Let's not beat a dead horse though.
    - Alan Cumming as Boris. Irritating beyond belief. His outfits and outbursts were jarring in a Bond film.
    - Bond and Xenia never seal the deal.
  • AliAli
    edited January 2013 Posts: 319
    Well, last weekend we watched TSWLM with the kids (8 and 11yo), and this weekend we watched Moonraker and, though this will not be popular, we all preferred Moonraker! Spy had it's moments, the PTS, the Lotus and Jaws, but the ending is still tremendously weak for me. A real anticlimax after the tanker shootout, and a lot of the movie falls flat, especially Egypt. On the other hand, if you can lose yourself in its daftness, Moonraker is entertaining and a true rollercoaster blockbuster from one end to the other. Yes, the St. Marks square sequence is still ridiculous, especially the pigeon, the Jaws love story utterly daft and the Star Wars comparisons still inevitable, but it's properly FUN and Michael Lonsdale is simply brilliant as the uber genius snob. Spy was only fun for around half the running time, the rest was a bit dull and Curd Jürgens gave the impression of being thoroughly bored for most of it.

    i have to admit to having a soft spot for MR though. It was my first ever cinema Bond at the tender age of 8. Still love it despite the sheer stupidity of it all, but my wife (first cinema Bond was TLD) and kids have no such nostalgia and still preferred MR.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    THUNDERBALL

    Still holds up, and I think it is here that Sean is in his overall prime. He seems more physically impressive and his overall Bond persona is more effortless. The Bond girls are bloody gorgeous, the film really makes you feel the risk of Bond's mission, the locations are great and the underwater fights are still the best of the best. This film also has my favorite Adam set: The impressively vast MI6 conference room where Bond actually sits with his fellow 00s. It is at this moment where the danger of the mission is most apparent, and that tension carries throughout the film. I also love seeing more of Bond caring about his allies, something Connery's Bond always had. In the fantastic PTS Bond is killing as vengeance for his lost colleagues, and later he doesn't seem pleased to learn that Pam took her cyanide.

    Barry's score is amazing, and really amps up the otherwise mostly silent underwater scenes. The music gives the action a great pulse and amps up tension like it should very effectively.

    I love the interaction with Bond and Largo as well, continuing the gentlemanly relationship Bond always had in the 60s with his enemies instead of the bitter fight to the death that it can be in other films like it. That is one of my favorite things about the Connery era in fact. TB also has some of the best one liners in Bond, and the dialogue between characters is very good.

    Some gripes: The editing is a little off putting at parts either when shots are cut too soon (see opening PTS fight) or shots are sped up for effect. There are some moments that leave me scratching my head and those I have posted in the Bond questions thread on here. The plot seems to be all about luck. Bond just so happens to be at the same clinic that Lippe and Angelo's imposter are at. Bond just so happens to run up the bank to get a ride from a passing Fiona, and he just so happens to be in the same hotel that she is in. Bond just so happens to spin Fiona around in perfect timing so that she is shot instead of him. To top it all off, for head scratchers Bond punches Felix for basically no reason and I am pretty sure Bond's bullet wound in his left ankle is just scrapped and forgotten after the parade chase. Or maybe it was only a grazer? And just how many sharks were hurt in the making of this film? At times it feels like they are actually being shot at with harpoons. But any issues I have are only minor blemishes on this beautiful films' body. Overall, the film is another great romp as expected from the early Connery years. It isn't as polished as FRWL or as iconic as DN and GF, but the sheer ambition of the plot for its time, the big action pieces and effects that are truly jaw dropping for its time all culminate into why it is easy to see Bondmania really hit when this film released in theaters.

    This is the last really classic Connery where he is commanding and his comfort in the role really shows through. I think that is why he wanted out not long after. Maybe it got too same old same old and he was too use to the role by now? I understand that, and I would rather have TB be his last. A great one to go out on, making his entire era star studded.
  • Posts: 4,762
    Strictly for fun, I am starting a new Bond Marathon! This time I shall be watching the movies in the order of the novels, so that will include all except LTK, the Brosnan era, and SF, sadly, but I will include them after going through novel order! Obviously, my first watch was none other than.....


    Casino Royale

    I hadn't watched it all the way through since late May, and I forgot just how spectacular CR really is. I was really amazed by the locations this time around; they added a lot of dazzle to the movie and made it very vibrant and loud, which is always a necessary Bond quality. Also, the action took me in, once again, with its sheer size and magnitude, as well as its ability to snag the viewer and pull them on a roller coaster ride, particularly the Madagascar foot chase, the Miami airport tanker truck fight, and the stairwell fight with Obanno. On a more subtle level, I thought the "dialogue scenes" were very well handled. Some Bond movies do not handle their dialogue scenes very well, which makes the movie only entertaining in the action-packed scenes. However, CR doesn't have this problem, which I really enjoyed. Good examples of this point include the scene at M's house with her and Bond, the small scene outside of the casino with Bond and Vesper after he lost the crucial round to Le Chiffre, the torture scene, and M's speech to Bond about Vesper after her death. Also, I thought David Arnold contributed a great deal to the movie with his very classy soundtrack. The whole thing sounds so polished and slick; it really fits the tone well! Overall, CR is a great asset to the Bond series and is top ten material, although I'll have to do some adjusting to the ol' ranking to try and include it!

    2013 Bond Marathon by Novels Ranking

    1. Casino Royale
  • pachazopachazo Make Your Choice
    Posts: 7,314
    00Beast wrote:
    Strictly for fun, I am starting a new Bond Marathon! This time I shall be watching the movies in the order of the novels
    Very interesting. I've always thought of doing that but never have. Some of the transitions between movies will be very interesting to say the least!

  • BennyBenny Shaken not stirredAdministrator, Moderator
    Posts: 15,169
    Octopussy

    In the rush to proclaim Skyfall a classic and one of the best Bond films, let's not forget past diamond's and other claimants to the title of best Bond.

    Aside from TSWLM, Octopussy is the best James Bond film of all time without exception. It has everything and so much more. The Tarzan yell aside, this film is amazing and is memorable for a great number of reasons. Great song, Great gunbarrel, Great PTS, Great Villain, Great Bond Girl, Great 007 performance, Great locations, Great action sequences, Great chases, Great tense moments, Great dialogue, Great one liners, Great supporting cast. It really is that good.

    A man after my own heart. It's widely known I place OP as my number one Bond film, for all the reasons you have stated, and then some. Often overlooked for the silliness, and Moores age, OP is the Bond film that truly has something for everyone. Louis Jourdan and Steven Berkoff are two of the finest villains to grace a Bond film, Maud Adams, Kristina Wayborn and the Octopussy girls are a feast for our eyes (The males amongst us anyway) The action is still impressive thirty years on. The story although complex is never imo confusing. I've read reviews in various books before where the author has a hard time following the story of OP. To this I say, why? Concentrate and it's really quite easy to follow. The dialogue and tension are above par, and on the whole the film is an improvement on Glens directorial debut in FYEO.
    Several standout scenes for me. The wonderful PTs, the Sothebys auction, the back gammmon game. The best game in a Bond film. At least an equal to the golf match in GF. The way Magda seduces Bond, and Bonds capture. The dinner at the Monsoon palace. Bond infiltrates Octopussy's island. The entire German portion of the film. From M's briefing at Checkpoint Charlie, Bonds face off with Orlov (My favourite scene) the race to stop the bomb, and the incredibly tense moment where Bond dressed as a clown has to convince the authorities he is who he says he is, as the bomb ticks down to destruction. If you're not on the edge of your seat at this point, there really is something wrong with you.
    Then as if that wasn't enough, Bond has to confront Kamal Khan for his wrong doing and of course rescue Octopussy, whilst hanging on to the exterior of Khans airborne plane! As with all the Bond films of the 80's and before, all the stuntwork is done for real. And it shows. OP is filled with exciting and original action sequences, that have rarely been bettered. As @Signed_By_RogerMoore says, it really is that good.

  • I remember going to see it on release and it's hard to believe that nearly 30 years have passed now. It's hardly the best Bond film ever made, but it's nowhere near the worst. I watched some of it the other day when I had time, and while Moore was around 54 or 55 during production, he does a far better job of things than the embarrassment that was View to a Kill. If he couldn't finish with For Your Eyes Only, then this would of been good enough without that awful swansong appearance that came after it

    I also saw some of Casino Royale a day or two ago, but had to leave it, as the DVD player 'became belligerent' and I was forced to abandon viewing, but will endeavor to get back when able and see the rest of it out
  • hoppimikehoppimike Kent, UK
    edited February 2013 Posts: 290
    I'm currently watching The World is Not Enough, because it's the only Brosnan Bond film I haven't seen and I saw the rest of them back in the 90s. I also was keen to revisit them now I'm older and rewatched GoldenEye, and to compare them to the Daniel Craig Bonds.

    So far I'm enjoying it, but find the constant sex references a bit tedious.

    The storyline also doesn't seem as captivating as GoldenEye, but I don't remember the storylines from TND or DAD being as captivating as GE either...
  • There wasn't a storyline in Tomorrow Never Dies. 'Media Mogul wants to start World War III in order to boost his ratings'. Outstanding.

    Die Another Day wasn't up to much either in terms of plot, but TWINE is as always, my favorite Brosnan adventure, but the sexual references are indeed too much sometimes as you stated
  • hoppimikehoppimike Kent, UK
    edited February 2013 Posts: 290
    There wasn't a storyline in Tomorrow Never Dies. 'Media Mogul wants to start World War III in order to boost his ratings'. Outstanding.

    Die Another Day wasn't up to much either in terms of plot, but TWINE is as always, my favorite Brosnan adventure, but the sexual references are indeed too much sometimes as you stated

    Yeah even as a teenager who barely understood the storyline in GoldenEye, I was underwhelmed and disappointed by the one in TND. DAD just struck me as over-produced and cheesy. I don't hate them - not at all - they just felt a bit... lazy. I wasn't sure why they kept missing the mark despite getting it (to my eyes) so RIGHT in GoldenEye.

    Looking forward to watching the rest of TWINE tomorrow ^^
  • AliAli
    Posts: 319
    Quantum...again. The more I watch it, the more I see what they were aiming for. Bond finding his peace in helping Chamille find hers. It really needed more exposition and exploration of their emotions in quieter scenes, between the relentless action though. I may have watched the PTS more times than even The Empire Strikes Back, though. VROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM brap VROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM
  • edited February 2013 Posts: 11,189
    Watched the Blu Ray of Goldeneye last night on my new 40' HD TV :D

    Fantastic picture quality (especially during some of the early scenes in Monte Carlo, M's office and the statue park sequence).

    An excellent movie with teriffic action and memorable characters but the flaws are clearer now (the production at times is a bit iffy and Brosnan isn't as comfortable as he would be - but has some fine moments).

    8/10
  • Posts: 4,762
    pachazo wrote:
    00Beast wrote:
    Strictly for fun, I am starting a new Bond Marathon! This time I shall be watching the movies in the order of the novels
    Very interesting. I've always thought of doing that but never have. Some of the transitions between movies will be very interesting to say the least!

    I have been watching LALD in portions today (due to time today), and I must say, the transition between Casino Royale and Live and Let Die is, obviously, illogical! I mean I suppose we could just say that MI6 took care of Mr. White and somehow wrapped up the Quantum issue, and Bond found Miss Caruso as a suitable replacement for Vesper, hahaha! The thing is though, I'll eventually get around to Quantum of Solace, which will make no sense to any continuity! I suppose if I were to take out CR and QoS, and possibly DN and FRWL also (since they have some slight continuity), then the transitions could be made logical and reasonable.
  • jka12002jka12002 Banned
    Posts: 188
    Watched FYEO again on blu ray last night. Still not fond of the bond girl in this one.....yuck.
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