Unrealistic response from Bond to Severine's death

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  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    edited August 2014 Posts: 4,399
    timmer wrote: »
    If I was consulting these guys, I would insist that we all sit down and watch the first 6 films together and simply bring that tone forward into each film. Seems simple, but with Cubby dead, the last link with the golden era, maybe those days are truly gone. LTK might have been the end of that era. The new breed of Bond filmmakers might continue to insist on doing Bond differently. C'est la vie. Life changes.


    I get what your saying - but you're dealing with different filmmakers, different actors, different writers and a vastly different time period - with a different audience who have a different level of expectations when it comes to film... doing something like what you suggest, sends the message (at least it would to me as a filmmaker) of "see that there? Just duplicate that." - i wouldn't feel like I had the freedom to tackle the project and put my own creative touches on it - its like instead of being handed a blank canvas and being told "paint a picture of a dog", you'd be handed a coloring book and be told "here's a dog, now color him in, but color him in how we tell you to." ....... by that time, what is the point?....

    I personally like the dark scenes in Craig films - because it adds a bit of an edge that had been lacking since Dalton....... Craig's portrayal of Bond brings out more of his duality as a character. It's always been there in small doses, but they've really expanded on it from CR on - he does do heroic things - but he also (as you've said) is a bit anti-hero as well.... i really like that. It makes the character not so 2 dimensional and cookie cutter.... thats what makes Craig such a joy to watch in Skyfall - he can be charming one minute, then on a dime flip to being cold and callus, punctuated with a bit of dry humor.... that is Bond..... i think often times we get too wrapped up in the heroic side of the character, that we often forget - this man is a government licensed assassin, he kills people for a living.... as Vesper asked him in CR, "Doesn't it bother you killing those people?", Bond coldly replied with "I wouldn't be very good at my job if it did."
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    HASEROT wrote: »
    we often forget - this man is a government licensed assassin, he kills people for a living.... as Vesper asked him in CR, "Doesn't it bother you killing those people?", Bond coldly replied with "I wouldn't be very good at my job if it did."
    Nice reminder @haserot.
  • edited August 2014 Posts: 5,745
    I'm just gonna say it. The scene where Ethan Hunt is tied down in front of his wife as Phillip Seymour Hoffman's character counts down to murdering her is very similar in MI:3, and done far better.

    His emotion, her fear, the villainy. You knew what was coming, and while Severine wasn't Bonds wife, I think it could have been worked better.
  • Posts: 4,622
    @haserot and I can see why you might like the darker side of Bond, even if I don't have much use for it, because I don't consider him to be a dark character, neither in book nor in movies. But playing with that darker aspect can be interesting, I admit, although I am very happy to do without it entirely.
    But still even if that is a direction, the portrayal can be done more like Campbell did in CR or even QoS, but suddenly we have scenes in SF that IMO don't fit, that are off-putting. Darker doesn't have to be so off-putting. But I do realize the "off-putting" is a very subjective determination, but the three scenes in question, Severine's death, Severine's seduction and the art-dealer killing have all prompted a lot of complaining, unlike anything we saw in CR or QoS. QoS gets ripped for other reasons.
    Meanwhile SF had some great Bond moments such as the Casino fight with the komodo dragons and Silva thugs, and other moments. The final battle at the Manor was good Bond being Bond IMO. Same with the pts.
    SF though, I find to be a very uneven film in terms of tone and the lead character's portrayal.
    Personally I don't think Mendes is a good choice to be directing Bond films. I don't think he quite gets Bond. He pretends he does, but I think he overextends himself.
    Even though I never would have picked Craig to play Bond because of his look, that aside, he is a good actor, and with a director like Terrence Young or even continued work with Martin Campbell, might have really eased nicely into the Bond role.
    Instead he's been saddled with drama direcors such as Forster and Mendes.
  • HASEROTHASEROT has returned like the tedious inevitability of an unloved season---
    edited August 2014 Posts: 4,399
    timmer wrote: »
    Personally I don't think Mendes is a good choice to be directing Bond films. I don't think he quite gets Bond. He pretends he does, but I think he overextends himself.

    But again, thats all personal preference.... I really like Mendes direction on SF, and i think for not typically being an action director, he handled the action very well - and in some cases very artistically.... I think he gets Bond. I think he understands the character.. but he is making the Bond movie he wants, and that he envisions - and in filmmaking, you aren't going to please everyone - it's an impossible task, so there is no point in even trying... i think SF hit all the right notes.. it very much tip toes the line between the dark and the light without going full one way or the other IMO..... the three scenes you mentioned...

    Patrice killing the art collector... It is a bit off putting, as we all know Patrice is assembling a rifle to execute someone in the next building.. and Bond does nothing to prevent this........... but, on the other hand - Bond is sneaking through glass rooms, trying to stay as stealthy as possible until he gets to Patrice - who, had he seen Bond, had a clear line of sight with no obstructions and could've easily had shot him.. so Bond has to take his time getting to him... but who is this art guy?... if he is getting set up to be killed, it can't be anyone worth saving either - if he is dealing with the likes of Severine and Silva... so what does Bond care... his mission was to find Patrice, find out who he works for and kill him.

    Severine being seduced in the shower.... i really got nothing on this one - it does feel a bit shoehorned in and dirty.... but the sexual tension between them could be felt during their repartee in the casino, at least to me it could...... but i think Bond's seduction of Pussy Galore and Octopussy are far worse..

    and I've waxed poetic on the William Tell scene enough - not going to beat that dead horse again. lol
  • Posts: 1,631
    HASEROT wrote: »
    Patrice killing the art collector... It is a bit off putting, as we all know Patrice is assembling a rifle to execute someone in the next building.. and Bond does nothing to prevent this........... but, on the other hand - Bond is sneaking through glass rooms, trying to stay as stealthy as possible until he gets to Patrice - who, had he seen Bond, had a clear line of sight with no obstructions and could've easily had shot him.. so Bond has to take his time getting to him... but who is this art guy?... if he is getting set up to be killed, it can't be anyone worth saving either - if he is dealing with the likes of Severine and Silva... so what does Bond care... his mission was to find Patrice, find out who he works for and kill him.

    Exactly.

    Bond's mission was to track down Patrice. As you said, if he made any sudden moves to try to save the art dealer, then that's the end of Bond. He's in a glass room, with the only cover being the neon light show that provides him with some semblance of cover. Any sudden moves, Patrice sees him, and that's the end of Bond.
  • edited August 2014 Posts: 4,622
    dalton wrote: »
    Bond's mission was to track down Patrice. As you said, if he made any sudden moves to try to save the art dealer, then that's the end of Bond. He's in a glass room, with the only cover being the neon light show that provides him with some semblance of cover. Any sudden moves, Patrice sees him, and that's the end of Bond.
    Well yes, the scene can be explained. None of the three scenes are implausible. The complaints are that they were designed in the first place. That Bond is being presented in such scenarios.
    It comes down I think, to how we want Bond presented in the films. Clearly there is no consensus.
    Me? Again, I think they went too far, much as Rog, Jaws and pyramid van-fight went too far in the other direction.
    I would like to see them work with the tone of the first six films. Dangerous and exciting. Dark villains, but not a dark Bond. Rather a pragmatic Bond, who has to blunt-instrument deal with the menace these villains present, so he can get back to the golf course, card table or lunch with Sylvia Trench, or the Ocean Club Receptionist from CR. Sorry, most of Craig's girlfriends are dead, and he didn't really have much of a thing with the living one (Camille).
    The original film's tone isn't dated. It pretty much stretched right through the Brozzer era too.
    The real tonal shift has come with the Craig era. I know. Bitch, bitch, bitch. :\">
    I don't know where the dark Bond comes from. I've read all the Flemings several times over. I don't see it. Bond was blunt instrument but with style and loads of charm. Generally very honorable,loyal and loathe to kill in cold blood, but able to when duty rquired. This characteristic was Fleming's need to humanize Bond, to distinguish him from the amoral types that he battled. Fleming portrayed Bond as having killer eyes. Vivienne Michel instinctively saw how dangerous he was in TSWLM, but he was still a swell guy, if not a bit on the dangerous side. She at first thought he was another hoodlum.
    Fleming said that one of the reasons he wrote TSWLM the way that he did, was so that young women wouldn't romanticize the James Bonds of the world. He wanted them to know that they were dangerous dudes, better not to get mixed up with, but I don't think he ever intended Bond as dark -but instead as very dangerous, lethal and maybe a little cold sometimes.


    To be fair the "liberties" taken in SF with Bond's "dark side" ( which again doesn't interest me because I don't think its actually there) aren't so grevious, that they fundamentally changed the character. Rog, Anya, Jaws and the pyramids didn't change Bond either. When all was said and done, he was still quite recognizable as Bond, even if Rog didn't move that well.

    It's just that some of scenarios we were presented with in SF were somewhat off-putting. This long time Bond fan can do without them. Other Bond scenarios were really good, especially the happenings at the Macau casino. My 2 cents.

  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    timmer wrote: »
    I don't know where the dark Bond comes from. I've read all the Flemings several times over. I don't see it. Bond was blunt instrument but with style and loads of charm. Generally very honorable,loyal and loathe to kill in cold blood, but able to when duty required.
    One of my favourite scenes when Bond kills Dent shows it, ruthless, but with an afterthought of some hint of revulsion...
  • Posts: 12,514
    chrisisall wrote: »
    timmer wrote: »
    I don't know where the dark Bond comes from. I've read all the Flemings several times over. I don't see it. Bond was blunt instrument but with style and loads of charm. Generally very honorable,loyal and loathe to kill in cold blood, but able to when duty required.
    One of my favourite scenes when Bond kills Dent shows it, ruthless, but with an afterthought of some hint of revulsion...

    I agree; that was an excellent scene, and one of the best parts from Dr. No. It is completely cold and ruthless, but you can tell Bond took no real pleasure in it.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    FoxRox wrote: »
    you can tell Bond took no real pleasure in it.
    That's the brilliance of how it was filmed- some part of him seemed to, briefly.

  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    edited August 2014 Posts: 28,694
    chrisisall wrote: »
    FoxRox wrote: »
    you can tell Bond took no real pleasure in it.
    That's the brilliance of how it was filmed- some part of him seemed to, briefly.

    I don't see why it's viewed as such a giant revelation that Bond doesn't find pleasure in it. I mean, he's just an agent who knows that sometimes things have to be done, not a psychopath, after all.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    I don't see why it's viewed as such a giant revelation that Bond doesn't find pleasure in it. I mean, he's just an agent who knows that sometimes things have to be done, not a psychopath, after all.
    There's a small part in us all that's a killer, and every one of us would take a momentary animalistic joy in dispatching a threat to those we care for or our way of life. But that momentary joy would be balanced by deep regret at what we did or HAD to do. Some folks would suffer from a sort of PTS, others might mitigate it with Martinis. REALLY troubled sorts would fully embrace it as a path.
    Killing is never a healthy way of existing.
  • Posts: 3,333
    Great post @timmer. I think you've pretty much expressed my own feelings and misgivings that I share with you on SF and the direction Mendes has taken Bond. For the first time in my life I have to admit that I'm neither excited nor intrigued by the prospect of Bond 24. I'm just hoping that Mendes can reignite my 40-odd year fire of curiosity when the trailers come out.
  • edited August 2014 Posts: 11,189
    @timmer

    Fleming said that one of the reasons he wrote TSWLM the way that he did, was so that young women wouldn't romanticize the James Bonds of the world.

    I'd say for the most part I'd agree with you regarding Bond's depiction as being ruthless rather than romantic (the adventures he went on were romantic rather than Bond himself). Fleming does often talk about how "cold" Bond is but I wonder whether (occasionally) he too was capable of unintentionally romanticising the character a bit. I vaguely remember a passage in FRWL when Tanya first see's Bond in his hotel room. The passage goes something like this:

    "This would be a dangerous mission but he made it easy...made it fun with a spice of danger. He was devilishly handsome and he looked very clean".
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    edited August 2014 Posts: 28,694
    chrisisall wrote: »
    I don't see why it's viewed as such a giant revelation that Bond doesn't find pleasure in it. I mean, he's just an agent who knows that sometimes things have to be done, not a psychopath, after all.
    There's a small part in us all that's a killer, and every one of us would take a momentary animalistic joy in dispatching a threat to those we care for or our way of life. But that momentary joy would be balanced by deep regret at what we did or HAD to do. Some folks would suffer from a sort of PTS, others might mitigate it with Martinis. REALLY troubled sorts would fully embrace it as a path.
    Killing is never a healthy way of existing.

    Oh man, I hate it when I suffer from Pre-Title Sequence syndrome. I thought I was the only one... ;)
  • edited August 2014 Posts: 18
    Forget about the PTSD inflicted on Bond, what about survivor's guilt after seeing Severine and way too many other young get killed in front of him?

    That is why Bond is practically a comic book character.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,823
    Oh man, I hate it when I suffer from Pre-Title Sequence syndrome. I thought I was the only one... ;)

    :)) :)>-
  • Posts: 1,394
    I found this scene in Skyfall utterly repugnant not because of how Severine was killed but Bonds reaction.I mean really, to utter a one liner when a terrified woman is killed....i couldnt beleive they did this and make Craigs Bond even more of a complete unlikeable low life thug than he already is.I didnt expect him to start crying or anything but SOME remorse over this lady being killed in such a brutal fashion would have been expected?

    And before anyone says '' Oh Bond is fooling Silva and his goons here '' sorry i just dont buy it and you are giving Craig way too much credit.Just look at Goldfinger in the scene where Bond is giving his report to M after Jill Masterson was killed.Bond is clearly angry due to her death at the orders of Goldfinger but is barely keeping it contained.Craigs Bond is just a remorseless thug, hammered home by his non reaction to Severines death and his complete indifference to Patrice killing several guards in Shangai while he just sits on his ass and lets it happen.
  • MooseWithFleasMooseWithFleas Philadelphia
    Posts: 3,370
    I saw this completely different, maybe I am the only one. I saw this as one of Bonds most emotional moments and a great defining moment of his character.

    When Silva asks him what he thinks about that, Craig let's out a sigh that is almost like a whimper. When I first watched this, it felt to me like Bond was shocked and emotionally drained at what just transpired. After that quick moment of a sigh, Bond puts his wall up as it is the only way he knows how to react anymore and is what makes him good at his job. The ability to shut out the emotional torture he is going through. The quip is his way of deflecting and removing any humanity he is feeling so he can muster up the energy needed to neutralize his enemy.

    The key to the whole scene and how it works for me is that sigh right before he responds. For a quick moment his guard was taken down by the emotional damage of what was done in front of his eyes. One more atrocity that Bond has experienced for which he feels partially responsible. Its only his training and ability to put up an emotional wall at a moments notice that allows him to escape both the situation and his emotional torture.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,384
    Bond is surrounded by gunmen and talking to a psycho. I'd say
    He's covering his emotions, and planning how to escape.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2014 Posts: 23,883
    There was something definitely 'off' about this scene. I can't quite put my finger on it but it did not go down too well with me in the theatre.

    I'm not sure if it's because I was interested in Severine's character and wanted to see more of her (rather than geriatric M or MP) in the film. I have to strip out that possible bias first.

    I think they could have handled it better. I think Craig as an actor was too nonchalant in his reaction and I don't know what the script called for.

    I could see that he tried to show some concern/worry just before she was killed. It's almost like he was computing what to do and decided to stay pat....perhaps a bad call and as I've said on another thread, I think Craig underacted a little too much here. If he'd expressed a little more concern in his expressions or in his eyes (it's there but it's too subtle) before she was shot, then the quip afterwards (to hide his disappointment) would still have worked.

    In the grand scheme of things, I don't have a problem with Bond letting Severine die however, or letting the art dealer die. He is a paid assassin/spy and not a cop. He should not care as long as he is getting closer to his objective. Perhaps they should have not shown him to be a Rambo shortly thereafter, taking down all the goons. That part also grates (if he could do it then, why not do it earlier when she was still alive?)
  • bondjames wrote: »
    .

    In the grand scheme of things, I don't have a problem with Bond letting Severine die however, or letting the art dealer die. He is a paid assassin/spy and not a cop. He should not care as long as he is getting closer to his objective. Perhaps they should have not shown him to be a Rambo shortly thereafter, taking down all the goons. That part also grates (if he could do it then, why not do it earlier when she was still alive?)

    Problem is,that while his remark after Severignes dead was just as tasteless as possible (and as unfleming you can get) his acting in the art collector scene was simply a most unprofessional (and of course again very,very unfleming) behaviour (and one of the many sociopathic traits Bond showed during the movie).
  • Some comments; all this can be put down to the 'character arc' of Bond, ie he is a bit sick and removed and needs to see the light before he can be the Bond we know. This is the way it is these days: a fella can have a movie based all around him, so long as we know the fella in question is a bit 'interesting' ie unhinged. The modern Sherlock is a good case in point. Great as he is, you don't want to be him, whereas you might want to be the Basil Rathbone character. Likewise, with Bond, you wanted to be Connery as Bond but not sure we are meant to want to be Craig's Bond.

    It is a step away from the male narcissism of the action lead that reached its zenith in the 1960s with the end of national service/contraception thing, eroded a bit with the Rambo/Lethal Weapon/Die Hard of the 1980s (you can be a hero, but you must be a bit screwed up or a reluctant hero) and now is seen in The Avengers and X-Men franchises (you can be a hero but you must be unhinged or alienated or part of a team - it isn't all about you y'know).

    Dalton's Bond missed a trick in this arc, as he would have fitted in with the late 80s thing if they'd proactively played up his drinking and his damned side.
  • Posts: 11,425
    Yes, I know Craig's Bond is cool, realistic, and ever since Vesper died he's quite indifferent about girls being killed. But would a spy really react this way? In OHMS bond was heartbroken. Even in FYEO Bond showed at least his empathic, mourning side.

    I think Bond could have been slightly more angry towards Silva about Severine's. Death. What's so unrealistic about a guy saying: "You sick psychopath!" and then Bond struggling to get loose when held by the henchmen.It could have added even more "human realism" if you ask me.

    This scene did not ring true for me when I first saw it and stil bothers me now. I like the whole set up but Bonds Reaction or non reaction is just weird.

    I'm not joking when I say the shades don't help. If we could see his eyes we might get some sense of what MENDES AND CRAIG really intended, but as it is we can all only speculate. A poorly executed scene that could have been a classic.
  • SarkSark Guangdong, PRC
    Posts: 1,138
    I thought it was one of the best scenes and it seems pretty daft not to think that Bond's line was meant to show Silva that he hasn't shaken him (which was clearly the intention).
  • Walecs wrote: »
    I had assumed that he wanted to hide his emotions, in that scene. He didn't want to show himself to be weak.

    First reply nailed it.

    /thread

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