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Comments
This.
And this.
It's very easy these days for us all to slate GF for its lack of grit and character arcs but try and remember the first time you ever saw it and how it simply enthralled you with iconic moments piling up on each other relentlessly without a homage in sight.
Perhaps Terence Young started the formula but Guy polished it to within an inch of its life and laid down a marker that set up the next 50 years of sheer entertainment.
Thank you Sir.
Actually, 'twas FUNERAL IN BERLIN that was Guy's.
Nonetheless G.H. has a pretty good filmography outside of Bond -- certainly better than Young's. 'Bye, Guy.
In any case, the Bond franchise without Guy Hamilton is unthinkable.
I believe it would have been spring 1966, after the release of THUNDERBALL, although if memory serves, I saw a pairing of DN & GF on two different occasions, the latter of which I can't place. I seem to recall that there was a double-bill of DN and FRWL (the first pairing of Bond I was aware of, but didn't attend) shortly before TB was issued, late '65. Does that sound right?
These weren't intended as a tribute but I feel they are fitting.
Thanks Guy for my first fascinating contact with Bond !
When my wife started her contractions I contemplated which film would be the last I ever watched before becoming a father. It seemed there could only really be one. I took the above photo about six hours before we went to the hospital. Within the next 24 hours she gave birth and when I returned from the hospital I watched it again. I will now forever associate this gem with my daughter. A titanic film, which is sorely underrated by many. Guy Hamilton is in that strata of very few individuals who can claim to be a 'father' of the cinematic Bond. RIP.
DAF was a bit poo but I still think Guy Hamilton rates pretty highly amongst the Bond directors.
R.I.P. Guy Hamilton.
I'm grateful for all four of his movies, and how frankly bizarre they all were. Blofeld in drag, weird gay assassins, cars crushed with men in them, Baron Samedi, Nick Nack, the fun house, the magic coffin that picks up bodies off the ground, the moon buggy....his movies were full of outlandish but genuinue novel and interesting things that I'd never trade even for more gritty, serious Bond films. We have plenty of those now, and I like having a bit of whimsy in the occasional film as well. I'd love to see another movie as bonkers as TMWTGG again.
It also mentions the big budgets, but none of Hamilton's Bonds' budgets were that big, which would have made his version of TSWLM interesting had he stayed with it just to see what he could do with it that type of epic.
Having said that, DAF and TMWTGG are still very enjoyable. LALD is probably my least favourite of his films, despite its iconic status.