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
I actually think so too. Brosnan built his entire pre-Bond career on Bond. When it wasn't him, it was the people promoting his movies and TV dramas milking as much as they could Bond imagery (I remember a VHS cover of Noble House with Brosnan in a tuxedo). I think quality wise it would not have been as good as Dalton's movies, but Brosnan would certainly have made the movies more popular IMO.
It would mean no Dalton as James Bond. :(
That would be a disaster as he is my favourite Bond actor. :(
#-o
[-(
"If only I could find a REAL man."
Enter Brosnan.
#CRINGE!
Brosnan enters.
Fixed it
It's not? ;)
Honestly, I think Dalton started at the right time, but should have stayed on. If Dalton had made a 3rd and 4th in 1991 and 1993 (I can't imagine Dalton staying on longer, unless EON had the right to CR, to tempt him back for a 5th), Brosnan still could have taken over in 1995. And, like Dalton, Brosnan would have had time to age a little (as opposed to Brosnan starting in 1987/Dalton starting in 1968).
Sounds like a win-win to me ;)
This followed by a Martin Campbell Licence To Kill, then in a perfect world followed by a third Dalton in 1992, followed by a hiatus to retool, then picking up with Brosnan in Goldeneye just like in reality.
But what would the third have been directed by? My vote Michael Caton Jones. Keep it British,
How would that have affected the franchise for good or for bad, both creatively & in terms of box office success?
I think EON saw saw an end to Bond's story on the horizon, and wanted to depart from it to keep it from going that way. If still faithful to the novels, they would have been basically locked into an arc that would have ended in the Seventies. Reboots were uncommon then, and I think they made a box office wise, if artistically challenged choice.
The James Bond movies had a huge impact on pop-culture and the whole movie and television industry.
To remove it would be like Gene Roddenberry had never created Star Trek. Unimaginable.
A movie/TV pop-culture world without any Trek? Without Bond?
Sure, we would all be fans of some other long-lasting franchise that might have emerged but I'd rather not know.
To the new question:
I don't see much of a difference between let's say Goldfinger and YOLT.
What I'm sure of is: had they not stopped doing low-budget cheap looking Bond movies after DAF LALD and TMWTGG the series would have been dead by 1977.
TSWLM may be the most important Bond movie of them all, because of it we still can enjoy Bond in new adventures.