It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
^ Back to Top
The MI6 Community is unofficial and in no way associated or linked with EON Productions, MGM, Sony Pictures, Activision or Ian Fleming Publications. Any views expressed on this website are of the individual members and do not necessarily reflect those of the Community owners. Any video or images displayed in topics on MI6 Community are embedded by users from third party sites and as such MI6 Community and its owners take no responsibility for this material.
James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
Comments
The chief of staff at my dad's work is exactly like Roy Kinnear's Tanner. Of course, he doesn't work in intelligence and it's probably just a coincidence, but still :)
I agree. He is supposed to be Bonds friend and confidant......not M's gimp/ slightly wimpy lap dog like Kinnears Tanner.
Couldn't agree more. Kitchen's Tanner is the closest we've ever seen of the character being properly portrayed.
Kinnear's Tanner is the human equivalent of watching paint dry. Remember if M has the flu or something (kidnapped by a Chinese mentalist, the actor portraying him dies and they don't want to recast out of respect) Tanner is in charge!!
Now if I worked for MI6 and was sitting around doing bugger all I can imagine Kitchen giving me a bollocking but if Kinnear tried it I'd just say 'piss off Rory I'm on YouTube' and you get the impression he'd meekly skulk back to his office.
Yes, it's a character they've rarely got right in the films and I heartily agree that Michael Kitchen is by far the best Tanner of the lot so far.
Rory certainly the epitome of Fleming's 'man who is a silhouette'. Should he be playing Bond instead?
The guy is so anonymous he could just walk into the Kremlin and rifle through all their secret files in broad daylight and no one would notice.
To be Bond's Friend.
That said, do we think that there is hope that in SPECTRE and going forward Tanner changes slightly as a result of Fiennes M?
Also who can we imagine would be the best casting of Tanner instead of Kinnear?
Or that bottle of Heineken! I do actually like his portrayal, but I see where people want him to be more of a buddy with Bond.
That's fine and me too, but this can develop with the actor we have. One of the issues with Felix Leiter, why he never made a true impact or lasting impression among casual fans was because he was recast to death. From one movie to another, he was such a different character that by the time they did LTK, nobody cared that he lost his leg but Bond fans.
Agreed
Q and Moneypenny are also just civil servants but there is also a character there for the audience to hang on to. Ask the average cinemagoer after watching SF do they remember the character of Tanner and they seriously wouldn't have a clue who you are talking about. When you explained the very faintest vague recognition might spread across their face as they said 'oh you mean that bloke who was basically M's dogsbody?'
This guy's job title is Chief of Staff - that basically means he's M's number 2 and can order Bond, Q and Moneypenny about but as written (and portrayed) he's just a featureless nobody that blends into the wallpaper. If M was assassinated would anyone out there seriously be confident with the nation's security falling into the hands of dear old Rory? Nice enough bloke and all I'm sure but really he's just the same character as Villiers (who was just a male Moneypenny) but far less interesting.
We spend way too much screentime with MI6 crew and their office tribulations as it is so why not just put Rory out of my misery and let him go?
Just a quick flirt with MP, mission briefing from M and a gadget scene with Q will do. The screen Tanner (and the literary one for that matter) adds very little to the oeuvre as a whole except a bit of blatant exposition. We managed to get through 46 years fine without him (TMWTGG & FYEO notwithstanding) so I don't really see why he is suddenly so indispensable. His appearances in the novels were sporadic at best anyway so there really is no need for him to make anything more than the occasional appearance is there?
Well, I for one am happy we do use MI6 and more than the M-Q-Moneypenny trinity and the odd station agent. Not overuse them of course, but Bond works for an organization, not as a single entity. I said it in another thread: in DN, FRWL and to a lesser extend TB, MI6 is featured extensively and nobody complains. In DN, it takes a while before Bond to show up, the focus is on the whole network set in motion by the murders on the other side of the world. Why can't Tanner be featured among MI6 civil servants I simply don't understand.
And I know he was used sporadically in Ian Fleming's novels... But he was still used in the original novels, and is a character from the source material. That is good enough for me to have him featured. I want more Fleming in the movies, not less. And Moneypenny was far more sporadically used in the novels, so was Boothroyd.
I think his character isn't supposed to be a charisma magnet but I also agree he is a bit dull but I don't think that is Rory's fault, the character of Tanner in QOS and SF isn't actually teeming with much more than an assistant that is used to relate info to Bond from M, maybe he'll get more to chew over in SP.
I don't like the PB era and wasn't blown away by Kitchen's portrayal, not his fault he's a talented actor he's just unfortunate to be attached to the most redundant era of the series.
To be honest I didn't think it would be mine but it's co written by Graham Lineham (Father Ted, IT Crowd) so I had to give it a go. It is quite old school sit com based but I got caught up with it and while the title character could annoy some it became quite endearing and the double act between Steve Delaney (CAS) and Rory offer some quite priceless quality moments. The 2nd series offered a hilarious comic riff on Misery.
It's not going to be everyone's taste but it's streets above Mrs Brown's Boys or Miranda as what British and Irish comedy has had to offer of recent.