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I had such high hopes when I first saw it on it's original release, a very entertaining teaser, Sheryl Crow does an outstanding tune, but it's all downhill thereafter and merely degenerates into a long and rather mundane hour and three quarters, Brosnan's second worst of his tenure he was involved in I truly feel. Michelle Yeoh is quite good though, but I always hate that stupid scene when they jump off shackled together in Saigon off the top of the Carver building, that was almost of Moonraker proportions for unmitigated nonsense
Half way down (Brosnan) - 'ooh, wee, woo, ooh, argh, ooh, woo, next time I'll take the elevator', was he trying to emulate Moore at his pinnacle of Bond nonsense, It wasn't really the kind of thing you'd expect to see in a Brosnan Bond release :-<
As flawed as it is, TWINE is more ambitious and therefore better in my book.
I quite like TND. From the top-notch PTS to Carver's party and the intro of Paris ("Tell me, James -- do you still sleep with a gun underneath your pillow?") ...from the confrontation with Kaufman to the garage scene with the remote controlled car... from Wei Lin's climbing the walls in Carver's printing plant to the motorcycle jump over the helicopter...and finally, yes, ending with the pair of agents vs. the stealth boat...I found this an enjoyable outing from start to finish. Jonathan Pryce as Carver was a unique villain with a motivation I found all too believable....a William Randolph Hearst for the cable television era. The one flaw I can find with this movie is the underuse of Ricky Jay as Gupta; I've seen some out-takes with him doing some potentially-deadly card tricks that might have put him in the league of GE's ever-so-invincible Boris.
Overall, I think this is a very helpful question to address. TND is nowhere NEAR as bad to my eyes as some fans claim it to be. Perhaps another appropriate topic along these lines might be: Why does Pierce Brosnan get so little respect?
A big brassy bold Bond movie!
As far as I can tell, the biggest thing wrong with the film is Bond smiling during the car chase just after the super-serious "Me too" moment. Reminded me of the "Jovial Felix" bit at the end of LTK. Ah well, you film stuff out of sequence, the continuity girl is off flirting, s**t happens. ;)
It's possible that the film as a whole might play a tiny bit better if some of the action in the last half had been trimmed a little, but then I imagine Barbra & Michael saying to Roger Spottiswoode "Are you crazy? It all looks beautiful, it all works, use it ALL!"
Well to be fair, if my tires had the ability to re-inflate after being popped, I'd be giggling with joy too. ;)
I still think the HALO jump is a rather underrated stunt sequence though.
If you come off a film with a good feeling from a fine time, that's really all that matters. More Bond films than not do that for me, TND included.
Ever.
I was constantly watching TND and TWINE consecutively to see which one I liked better of the two. GoldenEye was always king of the mountain and always will be.
;)
That being said, I've always had a soft spot for Tomorrow Never Dies, and despite its obvious shallowness, I've found it a fair bit of fun. (It also helps that it was the second Bond film I remember seeing!) I also think TND has - far and away - Brosnan's best performance as Bond.
My main problem with him in that film is his hair. It's always perfect, even after he's presumably shagged Paris senseless.
Even so id take Brosnan in TND anyday over some of the lesser performances by Connery and Moore.
But I'm with you.
*ducks*
It quietens down a bit come the HALO jump (which, as mentioned, is a great underrated stunt), but it also has a decent bike chase (rare in the series) with a neat jump over the helicopter. And (to build my case) let's not forget that one second shot of Gerard Butler.
These days, I cannot decide whether I like TND or TWINE better, but TND definitely has the better Brosnan performance of the two.
Brosnan - i love how he moves in this film - so cool, effortless and above all Bond.