Supporting roles that were miscast

2

Comments

  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,288
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I wouldn't say she was particularly 'miscast' but Terri Hatcher in TND. As rumoured, i think Monica Bellucci would have been much more suited to the Paris Carver role.

    Absolutely! And I think Anthony Hopkins would have made a more imposing, less campy Carver

    I can't see him as Paris Carver at all ;)
    Gary Oldman could have been an excellent Renard.

    Can't argue with that, nice one.

    I doubt anyone could have been excellent as Renard, at least the way the character was written. It's a pretty weak character overall in my book. We're pulled into some kind of myth early on, with a lot of exposition -- where he's been hanging out, his awkward condition, and so on -- but the film only serves us an easily startled slave to a woman's sex. The fact that he hardly feels any pain, or none at all, never truly factors in except when he confronts Davidov with the hot rock. Also, he talks too much for a man of his alleged brutality. And when Elektra is with him, she is in complete control. The only sign of Renard's menace is what we're told about him, not what we're seeing. I actually want to give Carlyle a compliment. Given how awkward a role he has to play, he at least commits to it.

    I would love to see Gary Oldman in a Bond film too, but not even he could have made Renard interesting, I think.

    To be fair we have the 'devil's breath' scene and him proceeding to take control of the bomb with his team. I agree maybe a bit more brutality could have been seen before we see him subservient to Elektra (which as I see it is quite tragic and indicative of how far the character's illness/bullet in his brain has gone in terms of making him want to go through with this death wish). I personally would have loved to have seen Bond use his lack of pain against him in the final fight (it feels like there's half an idea in the script with Bond taunting him about Elektra's death and getting him into a frenzy, but without a proper payoff).

    I genuinely think Renard is such an interesting character on paper, and yet something about him in the film never quite clicks. For me it feels like Silva is a revised version of that half-tragic half-horrific character but done so much better (and again, with Bardem in the role, who I think would have made a fabulous Renard).

    Well, yes, indeed, and that's my point as well, although you phrased it a whole lot better. ;-) The payoff isn't there, yet the way the character is set up, I always spend nearly two hours waiting for some kind of payoff. I rarely read novelizations, but I have in fact made an exception for TWINE simply because I wanted to find out if Benson could do Renard some favours. And he did, although I still wasn't entirely on board. Silva, while not my favourite villain at all, was pretty menacing. Renard didn't do the same thing for me.

    You mention the Devil's Breath scene. I find that scene a bit too dramatic, to be honest, and an early example of P&W (or others) flirting with amateurishness. It's the moustache-twirling-villain scene, meant to set up a major threat for Bond. Here's another villain who might defeat Bond in a close confrontation. He might even give Bond a tougher time in a fight than Alec in GE because this one doesn't feel any pain. So where is the moment in the film that puts Bond in such a predicament, forcing him to find a clever solution? Why are we left with two blokes slapping each other around a bit like kids in the playground? Upon repeat viewing, the Devil's Breath scene plays like a bit of a joke because we know that, ultimately, Renard's brutality matters little.

    Stealing the bomb is a pretty okay action scene, I'll concede that much. Then of course, Renard brings a small group of thugs, and Bond and Christmas still manage to escape. Also, Bond pretty much had Renard on his knees. Luck is what set Renard free, not his sinister talents or severe menace.

    I think the character of Renard was well-conceived but poorly fleshed out. He's probably the second best villain of the Brosnan years, but only because the competition was fairly weak. And if we include right-hand-men, I'd still rank Zao higher because that dude had some cojones and a cool car, regardless of the film that features him. I remember being truly thrilled when I found out about the new villain back in 1999. Cool idea, and played by Robert Carlyle from Trainspotting! I was ready for a big blast! I left the theatre pretty disappointed. Things just didn't congeal. A lot of talent in the film, including Carlyle and Marceau, and somehow the magic wasn't there.
  • Posts: 16,228
    I have difficulty considering Eva Green, Lois Chiles or Lea Seydoux as having played support role parts. Those were certainly leads.
    I agree that Paris Carver probably should've been played by Monica Bellucci.
    I usually feel the supporting roles in the Bonds were well cast for the most part. I love Anthony Starke as Truman-Lodge for instance and Pedro Armendariz as Kerim Bey.
    I like the idea of Gary Oldman as Renard. I wonder what he would've been like as Mallory, had we not gotten Fiennes. I think he might've made an interesting M.


  • Jill St John, Tanya Roberts, Charles Grey in Diamonds are Forever.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,663
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    I have difficulty considering Eva Green, Lois Chiles or Lea Seydoux as having played support role parts. Those were certainly leads.

    Fair point.
  • Posts: 6,027
    Jill St John, Tanya Roberts, Charles Grey in Diamonds are Forever.

    You mean Lana Wood, I guess. If so, I agree with you.
  • edited December 1 Posts: 1,475
    Diana Rigg. She is a good actress but I don't believe she wants to commit suicide.

    Catherine Deneuve is my alternative.
  • M_BaljeM_Balje Amsterdam, Netherlands
    Posts: 4,538
    Two people in Die Another Day. The movie can easily without them. Madonna chacter and Falco.

    3th chacter is not supporting role in my opinion and switch from villian in original idea to ally to let Halle Barry saying yes to a role in the movie.
  • edited December 1 Posts: 4,325
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I wouldn't say she was particularly 'miscast' but Terri Hatcher in TND. As rumoured, i think Monica Bellucci would have been much more suited to the Paris Carver role.

    Absolutely! And I think Anthony Hopkins would have made a more imposing, less campy Carver

    I can't see him as Paris Carver at all ;)
    Gary Oldman could have been an excellent Renard.

    Can't argue with that, nice one.

    I doubt anyone could have been excellent as Renard, at least the way the character was written. It's a pretty weak character overall in my book. We're pulled into some kind of myth early on, with a lot of exposition -- where he's been hanging out, his awkward condition, and so on -- but the film only serves us an easily startled slave to a woman's sex. The fact that he hardly feels any pain, or none at all, never truly factors in except when he confronts Davidov with the hot rock. Also, he talks too much for a man of his alleged brutality. And when Elektra is with him, she is in complete control. The only sign of Renard's menace is what we're told about him, not what we're seeing. I actually want to give Carlyle a compliment. Given how awkward a role he has to play, he at least commits to it.

    I would love to see Gary Oldman in a Bond film too, but not even he could have made Renard interesting, I think.

    To be fair we have the 'devil's breath' scene and him proceeding to take control of the bomb with his team. I agree maybe a bit more brutality could have been seen before we see him subservient to Elektra (which as I see it is quite tragic and indicative of how far the character's illness/bullet in his brain has gone in terms of making him want to go through with this death wish). I personally would have loved to have seen Bond use his lack of pain against him in the final fight (it feels like there's half an idea in the script with Bond taunting him about Elektra's death and getting him into a frenzy, but without a proper payoff).

    I genuinely think Renard is such an interesting character on paper, and yet something about him in the film never quite clicks. For me it feels like Silva is a revised version of that half-tragic half-horrific character but done so much better (and again, with Bardem in the role, who I think would have made a fabulous Renard).

    Well, yes, indeed, and that's my point as well, although you phrased it a whole lot better. ;-) The payoff isn't there, yet the way the character is set up, I always spend nearly two hours waiting for some kind of payoff. I rarely read novelizations, but I have in fact made an exception for TWINE simply because I wanted to find out if Benson could do Renard some favours. And he did, although I still wasn't entirely on board. Silva, while not my favourite villain at all, was pretty menacing. Renard didn't do the same thing for me.

    You mention the Devil's Breath scene. I find that scene a bit too dramatic, to be honest, and an early example of P&W (or others) flirting with amateurishness. It's the moustache-twirling-villain scene, meant to set up a major threat for Bond. Here's another villain who might defeat Bond in a close confrontation. He might even give Bond a tougher time in a fight than Alec in GE because this one doesn't feel any pain. So where is the moment in the film that puts Bond in such a predicament, forcing him to find a clever solution? Why are we left with two blokes slapping each other around a bit like kids in the playground? Upon repeat viewing, the Devil's Breath scene plays like a bit of a joke because we know that, ultimately, Renard's brutality matters little.

    Stealing the bomb is a pretty okay action scene, I'll concede that much. Then of course, Renard brings a small group of thugs, and Bond and Christmas still manage to escape. Also, Bond pretty much had Renard on his knees. Luck is what set Renard free, not his sinister talents or severe menace.

    I think the character of Renard was well-conceived but poorly fleshed out. He's probably the second best villain of the Brosnan years, but only because the competition was fairly weak. And if we include right-hand-men, I'd still rank Zao higher because that dude had some cojones and a cool car, regardless of the film that features him. I remember being truly thrilled when I found out about the new villain back in 1999. Cool idea, and played by Robert Carlyle from Trainspotting! I was ready for a big blast! I left the theatre pretty disappointed. Things just didn't congeal. A lot of talent in the film, including Carlyle and Marceau, and somehow the magic wasn't there.

    I always feel the final Renard/Bond fight should have looked more like the Stamper/Bond one in TND. In fact there’s much more an indication of Stamper being an unfeeling force of nature with him flinging Bond around, taking hits such as a knife to his arm without stopping etc. There’s even a sense of Stamper unleashing himself on Bond due to Kauffman’s death, punching him continuously in the face etc (which again is what we’d expect from Renard after Elektra’s death). Bond even manages to exploit his lack of pain by using the knife sticking out of his arm to tear off his vest. In fact I think Renard’s lack of pain was originally intended for Stamper which makes so much sense.
  • LeonardPineLeonardPine The Bar on the Beach
    Posts: 4,118
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I wouldn't say she was particularly 'miscast' but Terri Hatcher in TND. As rumoured, i think Monica Bellucci would have been much more suited to the Paris Carver role.

    Absolutely! And I think Anthony Hopkins would have made a more imposing, less campy Carver

    I can't see him as Paris Carver at all ;)
    Gary Oldman could have been an excellent Renard.

    Can't argue with that, nice one.

    I doubt anyone could have been excellent as Renard, at least the way the character was written. It's a pretty weak character overall in my book. We're pulled into some kind of myth early on, with a lot of exposition -- where he's been hanging out, his awkward condition, and so on -- but the film only serves us an easily startled slave to a woman's sex. The fact that he hardly feels any pain, or none at all, never truly factors in except when he confronts Davidov with the hot rock. Also, he talks too much for a man of his alleged brutality. And when Elektra is with him, she is in complete control. The only sign of Renard's menace is what we're told about him, not what we're seeing. I actually want to give Carlyle a compliment. Given how awkward a role he has to play, he at least commits to it.

    I would love to see Gary Oldman in a Bond film too, but not even he could have made Renard interesting, I think.

    To be fair we have the 'devil's breath' scene and him proceeding to take control of the bomb with his team. I agree maybe a bit more brutality could have been seen before we see him subservient to Elektra (which as I see it is quite tragic and indicative of how far the character's illness/bullet in his brain has gone in terms of making him want to go through with this death wish). I personally would have loved to have seen Bond use his lack of pain against him in the final fight (it feels like there's half an idea in the script with Bond taunting him about Elektra's death and getting him into a frenzy, but without a proper payoff).

    I genuinely think Renard is such an interesting character on paper, and yet something about him in the film never quite clicks. For me it feels like Silva is a revised version of that half-tragic half-horrific character but done so much better (and again, with Bardem in the role, who I think would have made a fabulous Renard).

    Well, yes, indeed, and that's my point as well, although you phrased it a whole lot better. ;-) The payoff isn't there, yet the way the character is set up, I always spend nearly two hours waiting for some kind of payoff. I rarely read novelizations, but I have in fact made an exception for TWINE simply because I wanted to find out if Benson could do Renard some favours. And he did, although I still wasn't entirely on board. Silva, while not my favourite villain at all, was pretty menacing. Renard didn't do the same thing for me.

    You mention the Devil's Breath scene. I find that scene a bit too dramatic, to be honest, and an early example of P&W (or others) flirting with amateurishness. It's the moustache-twirling-villain scene, meant to set up a major threat for Bond. Here's another villain who might defeat Bond in a close confrontation. He might even give Bond a tougher time in a fight than Alec in GE because this one doesn't feel any pain. So where is the moment in the film that puts Bond in such a predicament, forcing him to find a clever solution? Why are we left with two blokes slapping each other around a bit like kids in the playground? Upon repeat viewing, the Devil's Breath scene plays like a bit of a joke because we know that, ultimately, Renard's brutality matters little.

    Stealing the bomb is a pretty okay action scene, I'll concede that much. Then of course, Renard brings a small group of thugs, and Bond and Christmas still manage to escape. Also, Bond pretty much had Renard on his knees. Luck is what set Renard free, not his sinister talents or severe menace.

    I think the character of Renard was well-conceived but poorly fleshed out. He's probably the second best villain of the Brosnan years, but only because the competition was fairly weak. And if we include right-hand-men, I'd still rank Zao higher because that dude had some cojones and a cool car, regardless of the film that features him. I remember being truly thrilled when I found out about the new villain back in 1999. Cool idea, and played by Robert Carlyle from Trainspotting! I was ready for a big blast! I left the theatre pretty disappointed. Things just didn't congeal. A lot of talent in the film, including Carlyle and Marceau, and somehow the magic wasn't there.

    I always feel the final Renard/Bond fight should have looked more like the Stamper/Bond one in TND. In fact there’s much more an indication of Stamper being an unfeeling force of nature with him flinging Bond around, taking hits such as a knife to his arm without stopping etc. There’s even a sense of Stamper unleashing himself on Bond due to Kauffman’s death, punching him continuously in the face etc (which again is what we’d expect from Renard after Elektra’s death). Bond even manages to exploit his lack of pain by using the knife sticking out of his arm to tear off his vest. In fact I think Renard’s lack of pain was originally intended for Stamper which makes so much sense.

    That certainly makes more sense regarding Stamper. The Renard feeling no pain comes to absolutely nothing. His final fight with Bond is pretty lame.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited December 1 Posts: 16,663
    M_Balje wrote: »
    Two people in Die Another Day. The movie can easily without them. Madonna chacter and Falco.

    Yeah, Michael Madsen should be good but he feels like he's in a different movie to everyone else somehow.

    I might go for another unpopular one: I'm not sure Colin Salmon is very good. I just don't think he's a very natural actor, and the posh accent makes him sort of over-pronounce each word. Give me Kitchen's Tanner any day of the week.
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I wouldn't say she was particularly 'miscast' but Terri Hatcher in TND. As rumoured, i think Monica Bellucci would have been much more suited to the Paris Carver role.

    Absolutely! And I think Anthony Hopkins would have made a more imposing, less campy Carver

    I can't see him as Paris Carver at all ;)
    Gary Oldman could have been an excellent Renard.

    Can't argue with that, nice one.

    I doubt anyone could have been excellent as Renard, at least the way the character was written. It's a pretty weak character overall in my book. We're pulled into some kind of myth early on, with a lot of exposition -- where he's been hanging out, his awkward condition, and so on -- but the film only serves us an easily startled slave to a woman's sex. The fact that he hardly feels any pain, or none at all, never truly factors in except when he confronts Davidov with the hot rock. Also, he talks too much for a man of his alleged brutality. And when Elektra is with him, she is in complete control. The only sign of Renard's menace is what we're told about him, not what we're seeing. I actually want to give Carlyle a compliment. Given how awkward a role he has to play, he at least commits to it.

    I would love to see Gary Oldman in a Bond film too, but not even he could have made Renard interesting, I think.

    To be fair we have the 'devil's breath' scene and him proceeding to take control of the bomb with his team. I agree maybe a bit more brutality could have been seen before we see him subservient to Elektra (which as I see it is quite tragic and indicative of how far the character's illness/bullet in his brain has gone in terms of making him want to go through with this death wish). I personally would have loved to have seen Bond use his lack of pain against him in the final fight (it feels like there's half an idea in the script with Bond taunting him about Elektra's death and getting him into a frenzy, but without a proper payoff).

    I genuinely think Renard is such an interesting character on paper, and yet something about him in the film never quite clicks. For me it feels like Silva is a revised version of that half-tragic half-horrific character but done so much better (and again, with Bardem in the role, who I think would have made a fabulous Renard).

    Well, yes, indeed, and that's my point as well, although you phrased it a whole lot better. ;-) The payoff isn't there, yet the way the character is set up, I always spend nearly two hours waiting for some kind of payoff. I rarely read novelizations, but I have in fact made an exception for TWINE simply because I wanted to find out if Benson could do Renard some favours. And he did, although I still wasn't entirely on board. Silva, while not my favourite villain at all, was pretty menacing. Renard didn't do the same thing for me.

    You mention the Devil's Breath scene. I find that scene a bit too dramatic, to be honest, and an early example of P&W (or others) flirting with amateurishness. It's the moustache-twirling-villain scene, meant to set up a major threat for Bond. Here's another villain who might defeat Bond in a close confrontation. He might even give Bond a tougher time in a fight than Alec in GE because this one doesn't feel any pain. So where is the moment in the film that puts Bond in such a predicament, forcing him to find a clever solution? Why are we left with two blokes slapping each other around a bit like kids in the playground? Upon repeat viewing, the Devil's Breath scene plays like a bit of a joke because we know that, ultimately, Renard's brutality matters little.

    Stealing the bomb is a pretty okay action scene, I'll concede that much. Then of course, Renard brings a small group of thugs, and Bond and Christmas still manage to escape. Also, Bond pretty much had Renard on his knees. Luck is what set Renard free, not his sinister talents or severe menace.

    I think the character of Renard was well-conceived but poorly fleshed out. He's probably the second best villain of the Brosnan years, but only because the competition was fairly weak. And if we include right-hand-men, I'd still rank Zao higher because that dude had some cojones and a cool car, regardless of the film that features him. I remember being truly thrilled when I found out about the new villain back in 1999. Cool idea, and played by Robert Carlyle from Trainspotting! I was ready for a big blast! I left the theatre pretty disappointed. Things just didn't congeal. A lot of talent in the film, including Carlyle and Marceau, and somehow the magic wasn't there.

    I always feel the final Renard/Bond fight should have looked more like the Stamper/Bond one in TND. In fact there’s much more an indication of Stamper being an unfeeling force of nature with him flinging Bond around, taking hits such as a knife to his arm without stopping etc. There’s even a sense of Stamper unleashing himself on Bond due to Kauffman’s death, punching him continuously in the face etc (which again is what we’d expect from Renard after Elektra’s death). Bond even manages to exploit his lack of pain by using the knife sticking out of his arm to tear off his vest. In fact I think Renard’s lack of pain was originally intended for Stamper which makes so much sense.

    That certainly makes more sense regarding Stamper. The Renard feeling no pain comes to absolutely nothing. His final fight with Bond is pretty lame.

    It doesn't really help that Brosnan absolutely dwarfs him. Visually it looks quite strange.
  • Was Colin Salmon not elevated to the Tanner role in Tomorrow never dies because Michael Kitchen was unavailable?

    I do enjoy his "evil queen of numbers" line in Goldeneye.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,663
    I believe that's right, yes.
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 18,355
    Was Colin Salmon not elevated to the Tanner role in Tomorrow never dies because Michael Kitchen was unavailable?

    I do enjoy his "evil queen of numbers" line in Goldeneye.

    It meant that they ended up having two "Tanner" type characters in TWINE when Michael Kitchen was available again. That was a bit odd. Colin Salmon's featuring in EastEnders these days.
  • Gerard wrote: »
    Jill St John, Tanya Roberts, Charles Grey in Diamonds are Forever.

    You mean Lana Wood, I guess. If so, I agree with you.[/quot

    I meant Jill St John. I quite like Lana Wood in Diamonds.


  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,403
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I wouldn't say she was particularly 'miscast' but Terri Hatcher in TND. As rumoured, i think Monica Bellucci would have been much more suited to the Paris Carver role.

    Absolutely! And I think Anthony Hopkins would have made a more imposing, less campy Carver

    I can't see him as Paris Carver at all ;)
    Gary Oldman could have been an excellent Renard.

    Can't argue with that, nice one.

    I doubt anyone could have been excellent as Renard, at least the way the character was written. It's a pretty weak character overall in my book. We're pulled into some kind of myth early on, with a lot of exposition -- where he's been hanging out, his awkward condition, and so on -- but the film only serves us an easily startled slave to a woman's sex. The fact that he hardly feels any pain, or none at all, never truly factors in except when he confronts Davidov with the hot rock. Also, he talks too much for a man of his alleged brutality. And when Elektra is with him, she is in complete control. The only sign of Renard's menace is what we're told about him, not what we're seeing. I actually want to give Carlyle a compliment. Given how awkward a role he has to play, he at least commits to it.

    I would love to see Gary Oldman in a Bond film too, but not even he could have made Renard interesting, I think.

    To be fair we have the 'devil's breath' scene and him proceeding to take control of the bomb with his team. I agree maybe a bit more brutality could have been seen before we see him subservient to Elektra (which as I see it is quite tragic and indicative of how far the character's illness/bullet in his brain has gone in terms of making him want to go through with this death wish). I personally would have loved to have seen Bond use his lack of pain against him in the final fight (it feels like there's half an idea in the script with Bond taunting him about Elektra's death and getting him into a frenzy, but without a proper payoff).

    I genuinely think Renard is such an interesting character on paper, and yet something about him in the film never quite clicks. For me it feels like Silva is a revised version of that half-tragic half-horrific character but done so much better (and again, with Bardem in the role, who I think would have made a fabulous Renard).

    Well, yes, indeed, and that's my point as well, although you phrased it a whole lot better. ;-) The payoff isn't there, yet the way the character is set up, I always spend nearly two hours waiting for some kind of payoff. I rarely read novelizations, but I have in fact made an exception for TWINE simply because I wanted to find out if Benson could do Renard some favours. And he did, although I still wasn't entirely on board. Silva, while not my favourite villain at all, was pretty menacing. Renard didn't do the same thing for me.

    You mention the Devil's Breath scene. I find that scene a bit too dramatic, to be honest, and an early example of P&W (or others) flirting with amateurishness. It's the moustache-twirling-villain scene, meant to set up a major threat for Bond. Here's another villain who might defeat Bond in a close confrontation. He might even give Bond a tougher time in a fight than Alec in GE because this one doesn't feel any pain. So where is the moment in the film that puts Bond in such a predicament, forcing him to find a clever solution? Why are we left with two blokes slapping each other around a bit like kids in the playground? Upon repeat viewing, the Devil's Breath scene plays like a bit of a joke because we know that, ultimately, Renard's brutality matters little.

    Stealing the bomb is a pretty okay action scene, I'll concede that much. Then of course, Renard brings a small group of thugs, and Bond and Christmas still manage to escape. Also, Bond pretty much had Renard on his knees. Luck is what set Renard free, not his sinister talents or severe menace.

    I think the character of Renard was well-conceived but poorly fleshed out. He's probably the second best villain of the Brosnan years, but only because the competition was fairly weak. And if we include right-hand-men, I'd still rank Zao higher because that dude had some cojones and a cool car, regardless of the film that features him. I remember being truly thrilled when I found out about the new villain back in 1999. Cool idea, and played by Robert Carlyle from Trainspotting! I was ready for a big blast! I left the theatre pretty disappointed. Things just didn't congeal. A lot of talent in the film, including Carlyle and Marceau, and somehow the magic wasn't there.

    To be fair to P&W, I think it was Dana Stevens, the director's wife, who messed up the shooting script of TWINE with rewrites.

    The only actor who rose above the material was Marceau, who manages to be believable and heartbreaking in an otherwise very silly film. She deserved a lot better.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,288
    echo wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    I wouldn't say she was particularly 'miscast' but Terri Hatcher in TND. As rumoured, i think Monica Bellucci would have been much more suited to the Paris Carver role.

    Absolutely! And I think Anthony Hopkins would have made a more imposing, less campy Carver

    I can't see him as Paris Carver at all ;)
    Gary Oldman could have been an excellent Renard.

    Can't argue with that, nice one.

    I doubt anyone could have been excellent as Renard, at least the way the character was written. It's a pretty weak character overall in my book. We're pulled into some kind of myth early on, with a lot of exposition -- where he's been hanging out, his awkward condition, and so on -- but the film only serves us an easily startled slave to a woman's sex. The fact that he hardly feels any pain, or none at all, never truly factors in except when he confronts Davidov with the hot rock. Also, he talks too much for a man of his alleged brutality. And when Elektra is with him, she is in complete control. The only sign of Renard's menace is what we're told about him, not what we're seeing. I actually want to give Carlyle a compliment. Given how awkward a role he has to play, he at least commits to it.

    I would love to see Gary Oldman in a Bond film too, but not even he could have made Renard interesting, I think.

    To be fair we have the 'devil's breath' scene and him proceeding to take control of the bomb with his team. I agree maybe a bit more brutality could have been seen before we see him subservient to Elektra (which as I see it is quite tragic and indicative of how far the character's illness/bullet in his brain has gone in terms of making him want to go through with this death wish). I personally would have loved to have seen Bond use his lack of pain against him in the final fight (it feels like there's half an idea in the script with Bond taunting him about Elektra's death and getting him into a frenzy, but without a proper payoff).

    I genuinely think Renard is such an interesting character on paper, and yet something about him in the film never quite clicks. For me it feels like Silva is a revised version of that half-tragic half-horrific character but done so much better (and again, with Bardem in the role, who I think would have made a fabulous Renard).

    Well, yes, indeed, and that's my point as well, although you phrased it a whole lot better. ;-) The payoff isn't there, yet the way the character is set up, I always spend nearly two hours waiting for some kind of payoff. I rarely read novelizations, but I have in fact made an exception for TWINE simply because I wanted to find out if Benson could do Renard some favours. And he did, although I still wasn't entirely on board. Silva, while not my favourite villain at all, was pretty menacing. Renard didn't do the same thing for me.

    You mention the Devil's Breath scene. I find that scene a bit too dramatic, to be honest, and an early example of P&W (or others) flirting with amateurishness. It's the moustache-twirling-villain scene, meant to set up a major threat for Bond. Here's another villain who might defeat Bond in a close confrontation. He might even give Bond a tougher time in a fight than Alec in GE because this one doesn't feel any pain. So where is the moment in the film that puts Bond in such a predicament, forcing him to find a clever solution? Why are we left with two blokes slapping each other around a bit like kids in the playground? Upon repeat viewing, the Devil's Breath scene plays like a bit of a joke because we know that, ultimately, Renard's brutality matters little.

    Stealing the bomb is a pretty okay action scene, I'll concede that much. Then of course, Renard brings a small group of thugs, and Bond and Christmas still manage to escape. Also, Bond pretty much had Renard on his knees. Luck is what set Renard free, not his sinister talents or severe menace.

    I think the character of Renard was well-conceived but poorly fleshed out. He's probably the second best villain of the Brosnan years, but only because the competition was fairly weak. And if we include right-hand-men, I'd still rank Zao higher because that dude had some cojones and a cool car, regardless of the film that features him. I remember being truly thrilled when I found out about the new villain back in 1999. Cool idea, and played by Robert Carlyle from Trainspotting! I was ready for a big blast! I left the theatre pretty disappointed. Things just didn't congeal. A lot of talent in the film, including Carlyle and Marceau, and somehow the magic wasn't there.

    To be fair to P&W, I think it was Dana Stevens, the director's wife, who messed up the shooting script of TWINE with rewrites.

    The only actor who rose above the material was Marceau, who manages to be believable and heartbreaking in an otherwise very silly film. She deserved a lot better.

    Probably, although her daddy issues seemed to have Shakespearean ambitions but somehow never grabbed me the way they were probably meant to. Sophie did what she could with what she was given, of course. Nothing is her fault.

    Regarding the writing, I agree that it's rarely one person's fault. A big film like this usually isn't birthed by one 'auteur'; it's the result of a process to which many people are committed. There are writers and shadow-writers, a director, a cinematographer, a cast... Then an editor has to somehow distil a film from the raw material he's given, and a composer has to add flavour to the whole thing. Where in this chain TWINE dropped the ball, I'm not sure, but I bet it's not in merely one place. Singling out P&W is probably unfair of me.
  • SIS_HQSIS_HQ At the Vauxhall Headquarters
    Posts: 3,800
    Diana Rigg. She is a good actress but I don't believe she wants to commit suicide.

    Catherine Deneuve is my alternative.

    Actually, it's an improvement they've made upon the book that she's not that much troubled, while she had problems in the film and considered drowning, it's not that she's acting all of her scandals out, making her a much more classy and matured character, I think Diana played it brilliantly, she added a maturity and class in the role and her not being much troubled made the romance all the more believable (when it's hard to buy in the book because the story appeared that Bond only tried to fix her, not actually to fall in love, and she's very much a troubled one to believe her commitment to Bond, she's an unpredictable character).

    And again, Bond Girls were leads as @ToTheRight said, Bond Girls, Villains and Bond himself are the main elements of what makes a Bond film, and hence, they're all leads.


    ToTheRight wrote: »
    I have difficulty considering Eva Green, Lois Chiles or Lea Seydoux as having played support role parts. Those were certainly leads.

    You have a point, yep, they're leading ladies and one of the main ones, not supporting, probably the same for the villains, as they're also the main ones, a Bond film cannot be a Bond film without those, they're the main elements, I agree.

    If considering supporting roles, then I guess Stephen Berkoff as General Orlov in Octopussy, he's quite comical to play such a role of a menacing and power hungry Russian General, he's not threatening or menacing enough, I think the character, on paper, was great, Berkoff failed to bring out the best in that character.

    He was more of a buffoon than Joe Don Baker as Brad Whittaker, Octopussy may have been lighthearted at parts, but doesn't mean it needs to be all out comical and gentle for kids like how Berkoff played the role, that instead of me being intimidated by his presence, he brought nothing, and at times, funny, his accent was beyond ridiculous, it's pretty bad, pretty bad at all angles, he's not believable, that's why I consider Louis Jourdan as Kamal Khan the real villain there because he's much more convincing as the sophisticated and dangerous villain.
  • QBranchQBranch Always have an escape plan. Mine is watching James Bond films.
    Posts: 14,703
    Hoverbroom guy from QOS. They should've cast someone shorter.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,403
    Caroline Bliss.
  • George_KaplanGeorge_Kaplan Being chauffeured by Tibbett
    edited December 2 Posts: 701
    echo wrote: »
    Caroline Bliss.

    I have to agree. It makes me wonder what jobbing British actresses from that time could've made a stronger impression. Apparently, the newsreader Selina Scott met with Broccoli and Wilson about the part. While she certainly had the looks, it would've been rather ridiculous and gimmicky.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,236
    echo wrote: »
    Caroline Bliss.

    Great shout this. Cue the Manilow.
  • Posts: 28
    echo wrote: »
    Caroline Bliss.

    Great shout this. Cue the Manilow.

    I like Caroline Bliss as Moneypenny. It might be a cartoonish take but she's much needed comic relief in the dark Dalton films.
    Well, she basically has a cameo in Licence to Kill and does nothing, but my point stands. (It wouldve been fun to have her at the party at the end of the movie.)
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited December 2 Posts: 16,663
    Bless her, she does nothing wrong, but she's just not got a strong enough screen personality to play 'penny. It's such a brief role you've got to get a strong actor to play her. The other ones have all been excellent - I even quite like Pamela Salem in NSNA, although she's maybe made to play it a bit too simperingly, which isn't her usual style.
  • M_BaljeM_Balje Amsterdam, Netherlands
    edited December 2 Posts: 4,538
    Whyle a go thinking mabey intresting to ask Caroline Bliss back as Moneypenny. Funny is that she is from same birth year as Samantha Bond who playing MP after her, but Bliss playing the role 9 years earlier / 9 years younger Moneypenny (if i count filming start in 1986) and Goldeneye making 9 years time jump after titles. Moost already imagine that PTS of Goldeneye playing in 1986.

    Asking Bliss back will be easier then Samantha Bond. Whyle some mabey remember i try to think about some various Moneypenny Familytree with Samantha Bond & Naomi Harris MP, both Tanners, Charles and new actress.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,663
    Is that right? I did not know that.
    Mind you I guess Brosnan is only 7 years younger than Dalton.
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,710
    Molly Peters (namely her dubbing voice actress, Barbara Jefford). That reading of "James, James, where are you going?" makes me cringe, even as I'm writing it.

    Most of the others that I think have been said. I just in general wish that Felix Leiter wasn't turned into Jack Wade, above all. Also, most of the time, the actors are fine, it's the writing that hurts them: Christoph Waltz, any Guy Hamilton and Tom Mankiewicz Bond Woman, and even (shocker) both Tanya Roberts and Denise Richards.
  • edited December 2 Posts: 4,325
    I suppose you could argue a handful of the Felix Letters are in some way miscast.

    John Terry, Norman Burton, even Rick Van Nutter or Ced Linder. It's interesting thinking about what a different actor would bring to that role in those movies.

    It's a bit of a thankless role to be fair, but Jack Lord, David Hedison, Jeffery Wright and Bernie Casey all did great with it. In my opinion of course.
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,710
    007HallY wrote: »
    I suppose you could argue a handful of the Felix Letters are in some way miscast.

    John Terry, Norman Burton, even Rick Van Nutter or Ced Linder. It's interesting thinking about what a different actor would bring to that role in those movies.

    It's a bit of a thankless role to be fair, but Jack Lord, David Hedison, Jeffery Wright and Bernie Casey all did great with it. In my opinion of course.

    Your favorite Felix's are my favorites too! I'd take Jack Lord for DN, GF and TB. David Hedison for DAF, LALD and LTK. Controversial opinion: Michael Madsen for GE and DAD. Keep Jeffery Wright as is for DC's movies. Plus, while I don't approve of NSNA, Bernie Casey deserved a role in Bond. For Felix and Wade's scenes in TLD and TND, simply have Q take his part instead.
  • Why did Brosnan not have a Felix?
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,403
    John Cleese also comes to mind.
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