Where does Bond go after Craig?

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  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    Do you think Bond is idiotic enough to dismiss what Safin told him and take a risk that would result in the deaths of his child and the love of his life? I wouldn’t take that chance and hope luck is involved.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    And he also saw the poison work at the Bunga Bunga party… and when Blofeld dropped dead in front of him.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    edited April 2023 Posts: 24,257
    I don't get what's wrong with dramatic angles. We've been having them since, well, '69, I presume. Keeping Bond as the one-dimensional you-win-em-all type would have been the end of him decades ago. Today's audiences simply seem more interested in multi-layered heroes. Rather than blaming the Bonds for going after Batman, Bauer and Bourne, understand instead that none of these guys can escape the modern requirements of more fleshed-out characterizations. I was going to argue that the superficial ones live on in video games only, but even in games, more 'substantial' characters are offered these days.

    A guy like Bond could still just walk in, receive the mission briefing, run the villain's meticuously engineered obstacle course in his sleep, save the world, kiss the babe, and throw us a goodbye joke. In 2023, that means you've made a pastiche version of Bond, something closer to In Like Flint than to From Russia With Love, something that I sincerely doubt has a future.

    I have just given NTTD another watch. The film makes sense to me. If I didn't know any better, I'd say that they set us up for this conclusion with CR. The Craig films are interconnected like no Bonds were ever before, and I like the entire construct, even if they made it up as they went. All the nagging about NTTD being nothing like what we deserve, not a true Bond film, something that Barbara Broccoli should be fired over, and so on, has become empty sentiment to me. This has been a very good era, despite some obvious setbacks, most of which the producers had nothing to do with.

    The next era will be different, I guess. And it'll come when it comes. I am not hooked on more product fast; I just want a great film when they're ready to deliver. I have 25 awesome films to enjoy in the meantime -- what film series can say that?
  • BennyBenny Shaken not stirredAdministrator, Moderator
    Posts: 15,170
    =D>
  • timdalton007timdalton007 North Alabama
    Posts: 155
    WhyBond wrote: »
    I have no problems with them killing Bond if they say this is it. Stop the rumors of Bond #7. The franchise is finished. You have 25+ movies to enjoy. James Bond will not return.

    But no they say he will return. Bond is not that sci fi nor he is a religious leader able to comeback from the dead.

    By that logic, there wouldn’t be any more Sherlock Holmes or Dracula after someone played the part. Or, more recently, Batman films after Nolan made The Dark Knight Rises with its ending. Which, like Bond, would be a crying shame.

    I’d understand this sentiment more if the Craig films weren’t their own thing, which it’s been clear from when CR was announced as the next movie in 2005 was the case. Though, in the years that have followed, a number of people (including at least one column writer for The Guardian) had forgotten that was the case.
  • One sentiment I take slight issue with are people proclaiming killing Craig’s Bond means no more James Bond movies. The problem is people have been over-analyzing Craig’s Bond and his place in the timeline since the announcement of CR being a reboot. Craig’s Bond dying doesn’t turn the franchise into some kind of “sci-fi” property; it doesn’t mean EON is playing around with the multiverse concept or any nonsense like that; it merely just means we’re getting another reboot.
  • DenbighDenbigh UK
    edited April 2023 Posts: 5,970
    And by accepting what @timdalton007 and @007ClassicBondFan are saying, it doesn't mean you have accept No Time To Die. If you don't like what it did and how it ended, that's fine. I don't like what Die Another Day did and how that ended, doesn't mean I felt like the franchise was doomed and what we got was a complete return to form. Whatever you may think of it, Craig's Bond was incredibly popular and defined a generation. Now lets see what they do next... in their own time. I'm not in any rush and I love James Bond. It's the franchise I'll always stick by because whether great, good, mediocre or bad, I still enjoy it.
  • DwayneDwayne New York City
    edited April 2023 Posts: 2,865
    I saw this tweet tonight and immediately thought about your NTTD post @DarthDimi.
    :D
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,454
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    A guy like Bond could still just walk in, receive the mission briefing, run the villain's meticuously engineered obstacle course in his sleep, save the world, kiss the babe, and throw us a goodbye joke. In 2023, that means you've made a pastiche version of Bond, something closer to In Like Flint than to From Russia With Love, something that I sincerely doubt has a future.

    For me making bond and the villain brothers is closer to a bond pastiche, since that's what they did in the real bond pastiche. That's the stuff that's dated, and doesn't have a future. Bond going rogue everytime, getting wasted on a beach before eventually emerging from the shadows, and everyone around him saying he's too washed up to come back. That's the stuff which reeks of early 00's grittiness which the rest of cinema has moved on from, but bond seems stuck to like a limpet for some reason.

    I've never understood this idea that audiences suddenly don't like playfulness, don't like the typical set ups and payoffs of Bond films, instead of tank chases and volcano battles, they much prefer two cars driving through empty streets at night, and bond alone walking through a cavernous lair with his walther. I'd love to know where this idea comes from, as often it's not stated with any supporting evidence but just thrown out there as fact. As far as I can see, fans are really hoping that there's more humour and escapism in the next one, that seems to be the element that's been missing lately.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    It’s funny how you bring up JOHN WICK as something Bond should strive for, even though JOHN WICK actually does a lot of the things you claim to not like seeing in recent Bond films. The entire thrust of the character of John Wick is that he’s a GRIEVING WIDOWER. High emotions! Personal agendas! Imagine if we got a follow up to OHMSS with Bond going out for revenge, except it spanned four films. That’s what the JOHN WICK series is. And that’s great for that series!
  • timdalton007timdalton007 North Alabama
    Posts: 155
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    A guy like Bond could still just walk in, receive the mission briefing, run the villain's meticuously engineered obstacle course in his sleep, save the world, kiss the babe, and throw us a goodbye joke. In 2023, that means you've made a pastiche version of Bond, something closer to In Like Flint than to From Russia With Love, something that I sincerely doubt has a future.

    For me making bond and the villain brothers is closer to a bond pastiche, since that's what they did in the real bond pastiche. That's the stuff that's dated, and doesn't have a future. Bond going rogue everytime, getting wasted on a beach before eventually emerging from the shadows, and everyone around him saying he's too washed up to come back. That's the stuff which reeks of early 00's grittiness which the rest of cinema has moved on from, but bond seems stuck to like a limpet for some reason.

    I've never understood this idea that audiences suddenly don't like playfulness, don't like the typical set ups and payoffs of Bond films, instead of tank chases and volcano battles, they much prefer two cars driving through empty streets at night, and bond alone walking through a cavernous lair with his walther. I'd love to know where this idea comes from, as often it's not stated with any supporting evidence but just thrown out there as fact. As far as I can see, fans are really hoping that there's more humour and escapism in the next one, that seems to be the element that's been missing lately.

    Forgetting, of course, the reasons why they stopped doing those things in the first place. Because as much as people cite Bourne and Dark Knight as influences on the Craig films, they often forget the other thing that also helped lead to the rest: Austin Powers.

    For example, when Die Another Day came out, BBC Radio 4's Back Row assembled a panel consisting of the likes of Mark Gatiss and former KGB spy Oleg Gordievsky to pitch ideas for Bond 21. It's archived on a portion of the BBC site and it makes fascinating listening because Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson respond to a number of suggestions by effectively saying, "We have to watch what we do now because Austin Powers has spoofed up big time."

    Being on this forum's predecessor at the time, I can vouch for the feeling being expressed that there was a sense that Austin Powers had put a spotlight onto how the old Bond film formula didn't work anymore. The Brosnan films were expressing that as well in big and small ways, including M's cut line from both TND and TWINE that the world wasn't full of madmen hollowing volcanoes, etc. so Eon was clearly aware of the fact, even then. Austin Powers put a major nail in that coffin, as did Bourne and eventually Nolan's Batman films. It's no wonder Eon went back to basics and took things more down to Earth because, frankly, there was nowhere else for them to go.

    As for going back to that, the problem is that the franchise moved so far away from it, I'm not sure it can. I'd also point to last year's cinema re-release box-office numbers. The top ten is dominated by Craig films, established classics, and the Dalton films. Most of the lighter touch Bonds are toward the bottom of the list. If that is any indicator of what the general audience, not fans, are looking for, then turning the clock back to 2002 (or whenever) isn't what they're looking for, either.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,454
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    A guy like Bond could still just walk in, receive the mission briefing, run the villain's meticuously engineered obstacle course in his sleep, save the world, kiss the babe, and throw us a goodbye joke. In 2023, that means you've made a pastiche version of Bond, something closer to In Like Flint than to From Russia With Love, something that I sincerely doubt has a future.

    For me making bond and the villain brothers is closer to a bond pastiche, since that's what they did in the real bond pastiche. That's the stuff that's dated, and doesn't have a future. Bond going rogue everytime, getting wasted on a beach before eventually emerging from the shadows, and everyone around him saying he's too washed up to come back. That's the stuff which reeks of early 00's grittiness which the rest of cinema has moved on from, but bond seems stuck to like a limpet for some reason.

    I've never understood this idea that audiences suddenly don't like playfulness, don't like the typical set ups and payoffs of Bond films, instead of tank chases and volcano battles, they much prefer two cars driving through empty streets at night, and bond alone walking through a cavernous lair with his walther. I'd love to know where this idea comes from, as often it's not stated with any supporting evidence but just thrown out there as fact. As far as I can see, fans are really hoping that there's more humour and escapism in the next one, that seems to be the element that's been missing lately.

    Forgetting, of course, the reasons why they stopped doing those things in the first place. Because as much as people cite Bourne and Dark Knight as influences on the Craig films, they often forget the other thing that also helped lead to the rest: Austin Powers.

    For example, when Die Another Day came out, BBC Radio 4's Back Row assembled a panel consisting of the likes of Mark Gatiss and former KGB spy Oleg Gordievsky to pitch ideas for Bond 21. It's archived on a portion of the BBC site and it makes fascinating listening because Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson respond to a number of suggestions by effectively saying, "We have to watch what we do now because Austin Powers has spoofed up big time."

    Being on this forum's predecessor at the time, I can vouch for the feeling being expressed that there was a sense that Austin Powers had put a spotlight onto how the old Bond film formula didn't work anymore. The Brosnan films were expressing that as well in big and small ways, including M's cut line from both TND and TWINE that the world wasn't full of madmen hollowing volcanoes, etc. so Eon was clearly aware of the fact, even then. Austin Powers put a major nail in that coffin, as did Bourne and eventually Nolan's Batman films. It's no wonder Eon went back to basics and took things more down to Earth because, frankly, there was nowhere else for them to go.

    I understand your point, but that was 20+ years ago. The austin powers films are as much artifacts now as the bond films they were spoofing were at the time. I understand the need for early 00's grittiness IN the early 00's when that was what the moment called for, I just don't see the point in persisting with it 20 years later, when most of cinema has already moved on. Are we supposed to believe that because of Austin Powers, Batman and Bourne films that Bond can never take a lighthearted tone ever again? These things are supposed to go in cycles, they fall in and out of favour. There's probably a generation now that barely even know what Austin powers is, and even if they do, so what? I really don't think it matters.
  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    edited April 2023 Posts: 3,800
    Aside from Bond, I think we need to also consider the other characters around Bond (particularly the Bond Girls).

    Could we please have a Bond Girl who's as fun as Paloma, or a Bond Girl that has no emotional baggage or personal problems, mind them, I liked Tracy, Melina and the likes.

    But this damaged, sad Bond Girl trope were overplayed too much in the Craig Era, where all of the Bond Girls were either depressed or traumatized, and it's consistent throughout his run consecutively.

    * Camille - traumatized and depressed
    * Severine - traumatized
    * Lucia Sciarra - Depressed
    * Madeleine - Traumatized and Depressed

    The only problem free Bond Girls that Craig's Bond had encountered so far other than Paloma was Strawberry Fields or maybe Solange.

    But all of his main Bond Girls were all plagued by blues, as much as they're interesting, they've been overplayed to death and it's been tiring, they're all damaged.

    I think we need to have a fun Bond Girl again, not bimbo or helpless damsel, they could still be interesting even without emotional baggage or traumas, not damaged.

    Think of the Classic Era Bond Girls, they're interesting, but not in a sense that they're moping in the whole film's runtime.

    So, it's not just Bond who needs to change, but also the characters around him.

    If Bond was changed and fun again, but the characters around him didn't changed, and they're all still acting like in the Craig Era, it wouldn't makes sense either.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,220
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    A guy like Bond could still just walk in, receive the mission briefing, run the villain's meticuously engineered obstacle course in his sleep, save the world, kiss the babe, and throw us a goodbye joke. In 2023, that means you've made a pastiche version of Bond, something closer to In Like Flint than to From Russia With Love, something that I sincerely doubt has a future.

    For me making bond and the villain brothers is closer to a bond pastiche, since that's what they did in the real bond pastiche. That's the stuff that's dated, and doesn't have a future. Bond going rogue everytime, getting wasted on a beach before eventually emerging from the shadows, and everyone around him saying he's too washed up to come back. That's the stuff which reeks of early 00's grittiness which the rest of cinema has moved on from, but bond seems stuck to like a limpet for some reason.

    I've never understood this idea that audiences suddenly don't like playfulness, don't like the typical set ups and payoffs of Bond films, instead of tank chases and volcano battles, they much prefer two cars driving through empty streets at night, and bond alone walking through a cavernous lair with his walther. I'd love to know where this idea comes from, as often it's not stated with any supporting evidence but just thrown out there as fact. As far as I can see, fans are really hoping that there's more humour and escapism in the next one, that seems to be the element that's been missing lately.

    Forgetting, of course, the reasons why they stopped doing those things in the first place. Because as much as people cite Bourne and Dark Knight as influences on the Craig films, they often forget the other thing that also helped lead to the rest: Austin Powers.

    For example, when Die Another Day came out, BBC Radio 4's Back Row assembled a panel consisting of the likes of Mark Gatiss and former KGB spy Oleg Gordievsky to pitch ideas for Bond 21. It's archived on a portion of the BBC site and it makes fascinating listening because Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson respond to a number of suggestions by effectively saying, "We have to watch what we do now because Austin Powers has spoofed up big time."

    Being on this forum's predecessor at the time, I can vouch for the feeling being expressed that there was a sense that Austin Powers had put a spotlight onto how the old Bond film formula didn't work anymore. The Brosnan films were expressing that as well in big and small ways, including M's cut line from both TND and TWINE that the world wasn't full of madmen hollowing volcanoes, etc. so Eon was clearly aware of the fact, even then. Austin Powers put a major nail in that coffin, as did Bourne and eventually Nolan's Batman films. It's no wonder Eon went back to basics and took things more down to Earth because, frankly, there was nowhere else for them to go.

    As for going back to that, the problem is that the franchise moved so far away from it, I'm not sure it can. I'd also point to last year's cinema re-release box-office numbers. The top ten is dominated by Craig films, established classics, and the Dalton films. Most of the lighter touch Bonds are toward the bottom of the list. If that is any indicator of what the general audience, not fans, are looking for, then turning the clock back to 2002 (or whenever) isn't what they're looking for, either.

    Right. Here’s how the films turned up during the re-release last year:

    Casino Royale - £21,441
    Skyfall - £20,361
    No Time to Die - £17,780
    GoldenEye - £16,800
    Goldfinger- £13,960
    The Spy Who Loved Me - £12,844
    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service - £11,114
    Live and Let Die - £10,767
    The Living Daylights - £10,707
    Licence to Kill - £9,667
    Quantum of Solace - £9,404
    Spectre - £8,992
    From Russia with Love - £8,806
    Moonraker- £8,494
    Dr. No - £8,349
    A View to a Kill - £8,065
    You Only Live Twice - £8,030
    The Man with the Golden Gun - £8,001
    Thunderball - £7,907
    Tomorrow Never Dies - £7,825
    For Your Eyes Only - £7,631
    The World is Not Enough - £6,933
    Diamonds Are Forever - £6,638
    Octopussy - £6,449
    Die Another Day - £6,225

    If I were a major studio, I’d interpret these numbers to mean that audiences crave more films like Craig’s than Brosnan’s. Even GE has a lot of elements that would carry over onto the Craig films like the twist of the villain being someone Bond thought was his friend.

    “For England, James?”
    “No. For me.”

    PERSONAL GRIEVANCES!
  • timdalton007timdalton007 North Alabama
    edited April 2023 Posts: 155
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    A guy like Bond could still just walk in, receive the mission briefing, run the villain's meticuously engineered obstacle course in his sleep, save the world, kiss the babe, and throw us a goodbye joke. In 2023, that means you've made a pastiche version of Bond, something closer to In Like Flint than to From Russia With Love, something that I sincerely doubt has a future.

    For me making bond and the villain brothers is closer to a bond pastiche, since that's what they did in the real bond pastiche. That's the stuff that's dated, and doesn't have a future. Bond going rogue everytime, getting wasted on a beach before eventually emerging from the shadows, and everyone around him saying he's too washed up to come back. That's the stuff which reeks of early 00's grittiness which the rest of cinema has moved on from, but bond seems stuck to like a limpet for some reason.

    I've never understood this idea that audiences suddenly don't like playfulness, don't like the typical set ups and payoffs of Bond films, instead of tank chases and volcano battles, they much prefer two cars driving through empty streets at night, and bond alone walking through a cavernous lair with his walther. I'd love to know where this idea comes from, as often it's not stated with any supporting evidence but just thrown out there as fact. As far as I can see, fans are really hoping that there's more humour and escapism in the next one, that seems to be the element that's been missing lately.

    Forgetting, of course, the reasons why they stopped doing those things in the first place. Because as much as people cite Bourne and Dark Knight as influences on the Craig films, they often forget the other thing that also helped lead to the rest: Austin Powers.

    For example, when Die Another Day came out, BBC Radio 4's Back Row assembled a panel consisting of the likes of Mark Gatiss and former KGB spy Oleg Gordievsky to pitch ideas for Bond 21. It's archived on a portion of the BBC site and it makes fascinating listening because Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson respond to a number of suggestions by effectively saying, "We have to watch what we do now because Austin Powers has spoofed up big time."

    Being on this forum's predecessor at the time, I can vouch for the feeling being expressed that there was a sense that Austin Powers had put a spotlight onto how the old Bond film formula didn't work anymore. The Brosnan films were expressing that as well in big and small ways, including M's cut line from both TND and TWINE that the world wasn't full of madmen hollowing volcanoes, etc. so Eon was clearly aware of the fact, even then. Austin Powers put a major nail in that coffin, as did Bourne and eventually Nolan's Batman films. It's no wonder Eon went back to basics and took things more down to Earth because, frankly, there was nowhere else for them to go.

    I understand your point, but that was 20+ years ago. The austin powers films are as much artifacts now as the bond films they were spoofing were at the time. I understand the need for early 00's grittiness IN the early 00's when that was what the moment called for, I just don't see the point in persisting with it 20 years later, when most of cinema has already moved on. Are we supposed to believe that because of Austin Powers, Batman and Bourne films that Bond can never take a lighthearted tone ever again? These things are supposed to go in cycles, they fall in and out of favour. There's probably a generation now that barely even know what Austin powers is, and even if they do, so what? I really don't think it matters.

    You’re right about cycles, to an extent. But, again, look at last year's cinema re-release box-office numbers (which I see @MakeshiftPython kindly dropped in as I typed this). The top ten is dominated by Craig films, established classics, and the Dalton films. Most of the lighter touch Bonds are toward the bottom of the list. If that is any indicator of what the general audience, not fans, are looking for, then a return to the Bond formula of old isn’t they’re looking for, either.

    FWIW, before last year (and as much as I enjoyed the Craig era, even NTTD) I would have said “We need to go back to something more classic Bond influenced” and cited something like TND or TWINE as an example of classic and modern tropes. But the re-releases strongly suggest that’s not on the cards, especially given how well Dalton and Craig’s era did. Whether that’s for better or worse is, of course, another matter…
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    The fact that OHMSS and Dalton’s films made it in the top ten really shows how they stood the test of time. Whereas Brosnan’s latter three films, despite having a more popular Bond actor, didn’t do as well, with each entry doing lower until DAD reached the very bottom.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,454
    It just seems bizarre to me when people say a larger than life bond "won't work" in the modern day. According to what, exactly? Let's assume the TSWLM PTS never happened, and for Bond 26 there's was a similar sequence of Bond skiing of a cliff into the abyss and the bond theme blarring as his parachute opens, are you saying that the audience would have no response to that - just crickets? Or perhaps booing at the screen, since y'know a crazy stunt like that is just so unfashionable with modern audiences? I dunno, the idea just sounds so ridiculous to me, that people's notion of what they find exhilarating got permenatly recalibrated because of Batman Begins and Austin Powers, or whatever... if we are still taking cues from those 20 year old movies then we really are losing track with what's current and relatable to the "modern audience". As far as I can see, gen z loves wacky, over the top stuff in their media. The much fabled "zoomer humour" is far more off the wall and esoteric than anything I knew growing up. With all the crazy stuff that happens in marvel films these days, never once do I hear anyone say they need to tone things down and make them more grounded or they'll lose the audience. The Mission Impossible films didn't suddenly take off once they rejected the globetrotting, breezy adventuring style of old bond, on the contrary, they only started gathering stream once they embraced those aspects.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    Because the Craig films were popular and redefined what audiences want and expect from Bond films. Until Eon starts seeing a notable decline on the same trajectory as the box office showed in the 80s, they have no reason to jump back into the more cartoonish TSWLM films.

    If there’s any past Bond films Eon will likely take cues from on how to successfully relaunch with a new Bond, they’re more likely to look at the two most recent debuts like GE and CR.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,454
    I don't have any ill will for people who enjoy the Craig films, I'm glad the series is dexterous enough to support all different tastes and I hope they continue to appreciate his films for the years to come. But his era is over, the book is closed, its in the past now and its time to move on. Expecting the next guy to carry on the torch of Craigs Bond is a bit like the people who said that Casino Royale would have worked better with a Q scene and more gadgets, It just kinda misses the point...
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    Let audiences decide with their wallets.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,511
    @Mendes4Lyfe , you say Craig's era is done, yet you're the one who keeps bringing it up, Lol!
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,454
    Let audiences decide with their wallets.

    It appears they already have. Top Gun: Maverick absolutely crushed boxoffice expectations to become the biggest hit of the summer BY FAR. Mission Impossible and JOHN WICK continue to set franchise highs with each new installment, and that trend looks set to continue this summer with DEAD RECKONING PART 1. Meanwhile bond is perhaps the only franchise which has been in decline since 2012, despite gargantuan marketing budgets in excess of 100 million dollars. It seems the punters have already spoken.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,220
    Let audiences decide with their wallets.

    It appears they already have. Top Gun: Maverick absolutely crushed boxoffice expectations to become the biggest hit of the summer BY FAR. Mission Impossible and JOHN WICK continue to set franchise highs with each new installment, and that trend looks set to continue this summer with DEAD RECKONING PART 1. Meanwhile bond is perhaps the only franchise which has been in decline since 2012, despite gargantuan marketing budgets in excess of 100 million dollars. It seems the punters have already spoken.

    Apples and oranges. Just because a non-Bond film makes more money at the box office doesn’t make Craig’s run a failure. That’s an extremely weak argument. Is SKYFALL a failure because it didn’t please as many audiences as AVATAR? Is TOP GUN: MAVERICK now a failure because AVATAR 2 surpassed it at the box office?

    When I say let audiences vote with their wallet, I’m speaking of Bond 26. Whatever direction Eon takes with the new Bond will be determined by how Bond 26 performs.
  • timdalton007timdalton007 North Alabama
    Posts: 155
    That depends on how you define “decline” @Mendes4Lyfe as the only way I think you can justify that is by suggesting that Craig’s latter films not making SF’s billion plus box-office means that. The best grossing John Wick has done half what Craig’s later films have done and, despite Cruise’s presence, none of the M:I films have done SF money, either. And if Maverick being carried along on nostalgia and its leading man is supposed to be an indicator, then Eon ought to find a former Bond to bring back to the role!

    On a wider point, spy films in general haven’t seen great box-office numbers outside of Bond and M:I for awhile now. There’s been a number of high-profile flops (including UNCLE and The 355) that left potential franchises dead in the water. Bourne and Kingsman have fizzled out (the latter with a retro-based film whose fate ought to be a warning for those wanting a Cold War Bond). Jack Ryan went from one cinema reboot to another before landing on streaming. From where I’m sitting, and looking at the number of spy films going straight to streaming, I’d say Bond is SF’s proverbial last rat standing, particularly with the next two M:I films being the apparent last ones.
  • edited April 2023 Posts: 1,087
    You’re not the first person to claim this was some “sci-fi” conceit. Where the hell is that coming from?

    It's quite simple. The James Bond books and movies have always operated as dramas that work within the realms of real-world science. Yes, I know they're outlandish, but they're not fantasy films like Star Wars, Lord of the Rings or super-hero movies. There's no science defying 'magic' in the world of 007. He doesn't teleport, travel through time, or magically come back from the dead. That sort of thing only happens in science fiction films, which is why they're called science fiction. So to kill him off and say he'll return at the end, is science fiction.
    It's one of the reasons why the death of Bond simply doesn't work at the end of No Time to Die. It's ludicrous. You're left sat there thinking "well is he supposed to be dead, or not?"
    And the answer to whether the James Bond character is dead, according to people on here, is "well Craig Bond is dead, but there'll be another James Bond that's a different character in a different timeline/universe".
    And you say it's not gone sci-fi?
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,614
    You’re not the first person to claim this was some “sci-fi” conceit. Where the hell is that coming from?

    It's quite simple. The James Bond books and movies have always operated as dramas that work within the realms of real-world science. Yes, I know they're outlandish, but they're not fantasy films like Star Wars, Lord of the Rings or super-hero movies. There's no science defying 'magic' in the world of 007. He doesn't teleport, travel through time, or magically come back from the dead. That sort of thing only happens in science fiction films, which is why they're called science fiction. So to kill him off and say he'll return at the end, is science fiction.

    It's not though, is it. No more than when Poirot died on telly and then John Malkovich and Ken Branagh started playing him. Maybe you do think Poirot is sci-fi, I guess it's a free country.
  • timdalton007timdalton007 North Alabama
    Posts: 155
    You’re not the first person to claim this was some “sci-fi” conceit. Where the hell is that coming from?

    It's quite simple. The James Bond books and movies have always operated as dramas that work within the realms of real-world science. Yes, I know they're outlandish, but they're not fantasy films like Star Wars, Lord of the Rings or super-hero movies. There's no science defying 'magic' in the world of 007. He doesn't teleport, travel through time, or magically come back from the dead. That sort of thing only happens in science fiction films, which is why they're called science fiction. So to kill him off and say he'll return at the end, is science fiction.
    It's one of the reasons why the death of Bond simply doesn't work at the end of No Time to Die. It's ludicrous. You're left sat there thinking "well is he supposed to be dead, or not?"
    And the answer to whether the James Bond character is dead, according to people on here, is "well Craig Bond is dead, but there'll be another James Bond that's a different character in a different timeline/universe".
    And you say it's not gone sci-fi?

    By that logic, Bond went sci-fi when he stopped being a purely literary character. Which would have been… 1954 when the TV Casino Royale was made?

    If multiple iterations of a character is all it takes, then Sherlock Holmes is sci-fi, too.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,220
    You’re not the first person to claim this was some “sci-fi” conceit. Where the hell is that coming from?

    It's quite simple. The James Bond books and movies have always operated as dramas that work within the realms of real-world science. Yes, I know they're outlandish, but they're not fantasy films like Star Wars, Lord of the Rings or super-hero movies. There's no science defying 'magic' in the world of 007. He doesn't teleport, travel through time, or magically come back from the dead. That sort of thing only happens in science fiction films, which is why they're called science fiction. So to kill him off and say he'll return at the end, is science fiction.

    That would only be true if Bond came back from the dead within the narrative of the Craig films. That’s not how it’s gonna happen. Stop reading tabloids.
    And the answer to whether the bond character is dead, according to people on here, is "Craig Bond is dead, but there'll be another James Bond that's in a different timeline/universe".
    And you say it's not gone sci-fi?

    That’s not how science fiction works. If the films actually acknowledge the presence of a multi-verse where different realities exists as a way to explain all the different Bonds, THEN it would constitute as science fiction.

    Otherwise, what does that make of the books? The films and books have always been separate. Does that mean they’re science fiction because they have different continuities? Does James Bond meeting Felix Leiter in DN for the first time do that because it contradicts what Fleming established in the books? Does all the different interpretations of Sherlock Holmes make them science fiction because they’re not unified within a single universe?

    Of course not. It’s ALL fiction.
  • Posts: 1,087
    I don't think there's ever been a none sci-fi movie based in real world science that's killed off a character, only to say the character isn't really dead in the end credits.
    I'm actually jealous of you guys that can look past all that daftness.

    It'd never happen in literature. A good novelist wouldn't expect their readers to accept this ridiculous notion of a separate universe for a different character that's the same character.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    edited April 2023 Posts: 8,454
    I think its interesting how the one sequence in Bond 25 which recieves near universal praise is the part with paloma. I think that's because it was the one place where bond seems to be having fun and the whole tone changes briefly and he's back to his old self, the score gets all vibrant and the dialogue between bond and paloma is very classic bond feeling. It is, dare I say, breezy? I think the reason people love this sequence so much, in spite of how they may feel about the rest of the movie, is because it gives them a little tastes of what they've been starved of for the past 2 decades. Bond having fun being a super spy, and the film playing to that. No cynicism, no navalgazing , no vendettas, or settling of scores, just a bit knock about escapism. reminds me alot of the opening of Die Another Day, and how just like the Paloma sequence it seemed to strike a chord with people. The brosnan films began strong, but started to feel increasingly like candyfloss as time went on. Sweet, but no calories. And that part in Korea where Bond is tortured gave them a glimpse of what they've been missing. I think we could be in a similar situation today, where that short paloma section ends up being the basis and the platform for whatever shape the next series of films take. Just like in DAD, it's the one sequence that feels genuinely fresh and "modern" in a film filled with the same recycled tropes we've seen played out over and over. I can understand at the time of Craig why they needed to avoid anything remotely that could be compared to autin powers, it's makes sense, but by the time Bond 26 is released the first austin powers movie will be 30 years old! They don't exactly have the biggest cultural relevance anymore, I think we can say the coast is clear on that one. After a certain point the bond films have to put forth a show of strength, and that means bond having his full swagger and confidence back. They just about managed to stretch the "bruised, emotional wreck" bond to a full era, but you can't keep repurposing that forever. I think if that paloma scene proves anything, it's that audiences are hungry to see bond be "bond" again, and have his familiar theme blaring throughout the soundtrack, not just as the credits roll...
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