Controversial opinions about Bond films

1357358360362363707

Comments

  • ForYourEyesOnlyForYourEyesOnly In the untained cradle of the heavens
    Posts: 1,984
    Brosnan had his shortcomings but I think he nailed the cinematic character of Bond in a way that Lazenby and Dalton never did, so I rank him higher than them on that basis. It could just be my bias of having seen him first, but he manages the suaveness, the use of the gadgets, most of the one-liners, and the sense of overconfidence you see in all the cinematics Bonds (except, perhaps, Lazenby and Dalton again).
  • I think what Brosnan bought to the role was a real sense of woundedness and passion. He was a very vulnerable emotional Bond and with that in mind I think he could have nailed the Tracy stuff in OHMSS.

    But the rest of the film? It wouldn't work. He's too cool. Lazenby was cool too (physically he's on par with Connery imo in the way he moves and carries himself) but what makes him and OHMSS stand out is how he seems like a real human person. Compare Brosnan ever so cooly strolling towards the printing press exit in TND to Lazenby's panic and fear as he tries to lose the guards in the village in OHMSS.

    I think Lazenby could have been the best James Bond. He had Connery's presence and physical charisma, Craig's physicality in the fight scenes, he was just as cool as Brosnan and Moore (emerging through the door throwing knife in hand, sliding down the ice with a machine gun, sidestepping that bottle of acid and gunning down the scientist then looking at the burning hole in the wall where his head was and casually sauntering off) but he also felt real and human and physically vulnerable as well as emotional in a way that only Dalton matches. The only thing that lets him down is he's clearly the weakest actor of the bunch, he's so wooden at times. If he'd stayed on, grown into the role and got better at acting then he could have easily been the best Bond imo, especially with Hunt guiding him.
  • Posts: 7,507
    Please stop pretending Brosnan is a great dramatic actor. He never was, and never will be.
  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    Posts: 9,117
    jobo wrote: »
    Please stop pretending Brosnan is a great dramatic actor. He never was, and never will be.

    Hear, hear.

    I like Pierce and he does a competent job as Bond, but to pretend his acting chops are on a par with Sean, Dalts, Dan and even Rog is risible.
  • jake24jake24 Sitting at your desk, kissing your lover, eating supper with your familyModerator
    Posts: 10,591
    Definately on par with Dalton and ahead of Laz.
  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    Posts: 9,117
    jake24 wrote: »
    Definately on par with Dalton and ahead of Laz.

    What are we actually discussing here?

    Performances as Bond or career?

  • jake24jake24 Sitting at your desk, kissing your lover, eating supper with your familyModerator
    Posts: 10,591
    jake24 wrote: »
    Definately on par with Dalton and ahead of Laz.

    What are we actually discussing here?

    Performances as Bond or career?
    Not career. I don't think we need to go there.
  • edited September 2017 Posts: 12,837
    jobo wrote: »
    Please stop pretending Brosnan is a great dramatic actor. He never was, and never will be.

    Hear, hear.

    I like Pierce and he does a competent job as Bond, but to pretend his acting chops are on a par with Sean, Dalts, Dan and even Rog is risible.

    Never said he was as good an actor as any of them did I? Just said he bought a lot of passion/emotion to it and that I think he could have channeled that well into the romance stuff (something he always wanted in his films iirc, a genuine romance, I remember reading that Paris was added for this reason) and losing Tracy in OHMSS.

    Obviously he isn't as good an actor as Craig, or even Connery or Dalton, but I would say he's at least on par with Moore as a dramatic actor, if not better. The Tailor Of Panama? The Matador? Seraphim Falls? He can be very good when he has the right script. He's a solid charismatic leading man and a good character actor. And I'm not going to argue he's as good an actor as Connery but he's a lot more consistent, I've at least seen Brosnan attempt an accent a few times.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,351
    jobo wrote: »
    Please stop pretending Brosnan is a great dramatic actor. He never was, and never will be.

    Learn to accept other people's opinions.
  • PalmyraSharkRIPPalmyraSharkRIP California
    Posts: 9
    Brosnan's Bond reminds me of vanilla extract.
  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,779
    So you mean strong. Concentrated.
  • ClarkDevlinClarkDevlin Martinis, Girls and Guns
    Posts: 15,423
    Brosnan's Bond perfectly oozes how in a contemporary setting the super-spy incarnation of Ian Fleming's secret agent would have been like. Yes, super-spy, not the "gritty realistic" incarnation the current wave of audience seem to fancy. He was spectacularly great and no opinion, even the "wittiest" of all the comebacks will succeed in bullying that fact out of the picture.

    Don't like him? Fine. That's your opinion. But, to say he's bad? The box office numbers beg to differ as do the reviews of the films in his tenure. The reviews that were pinned down upon their release, not the ones implicated by the fans of today.
  • RC7RC7
    Posts: 10,512
    Birdleson wrote: »
    Brosnan has shown far greater range and skill in his post Bond performances than Timothy has; by a long measure (not that there weren't some missteps). I also consider his Bond to be the superior product; Tim did not seem very comfortable.

    People should learn their terminology, as well. Over the years, on here, I have read Timothy repeatedly referred to as a great "Classically" trained actor, and almost as many herald his "Method" acting. Those are two completely different approaches to the craft with widely differing results. So which is it?

    Completely agree with you.
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,978
    I have never seen anyone suggest that Dalton took a method approach. He soaked up the Fleming books, but he didn't go and join MI6.... not to my knowledge, anyway.

    I don't think Brosnan nailed anything, because he didn't do anything with the role. He is the most middle of the road Bond. He isn't as _______ as any of the other Bonds. I never got the impression that he was the driving force of his films.
  • edited September 2017 Posts: 12,837
    RC7 wrote: »
    Birdleson wrote: »
    Brosnan has shown far greater range and skill in his post Bond performances than Timothy has; by a long measure (not that there weren't some missteps). I also consider his Bond to be the superior product; Tim did not seem very comfortable.

    People should learn their terminology, as well. Over the years, on here, I have read Timothy repeatedly referred to as a great "Classically" trained actor, and almost as many herald his "Method" acting. Those are two completely different approaches to the craft with widely differing results. So which is it?

    Completely agree with you.

    Well now I'm torn guys. I like Brosnan, I'd go as far as to say I'm one of his biggest fans on here. Nostalgia probably does factor into it. I was a teenager in the late 90s and have fond memories of that time growing up, and seeing his Bonds at the cinema was a big part of that. Still remember how unbelieveably hyped I was for TND, I wouldn't shut up about it at school. But I also think he was genuinely really good and that GE and TWINE hold up brilliantly.

    Gone off on a bit of a tangent there but my point is I really like Brosnan. But I don't think he measures up to Dalton at all. There's stuff he does better sure, he was more suave and charismatic and I'm not going to argue that Tim was anywhere near as good as the one liners. So I get the uncomfortable comments. But I think the uncomfortableness works for Dalton's Bond. He was a man who was burnt out and on edge after years in the field. He doesn't seem at ease because he's a troubled assassin, why would he be at ease? I think a lot of the criticism for Dalton comes from comparing him to the Connery cinematic Bond template, when he wasn't trying to do that. He's his own man, so it isn't really fair to say he didn't come across as cool (in the suave charismatic sense rather than grizzled badass sense, since he nailed the latter) and comfortable enough as weaknesses when that isn't really who his Bond was or who he wanted him to be.

    And I do think Dalton is a better actor. Not a method actor no (isn't that where you stay in character the whole time?) but his classical training probably did help. He was just more convincing as a spy than any of the others for me. Part of that was his commitment to the role, getting involved with the action in a way only Craig has matched, but a lot of that is also down to his performance. I can't imagine any other Bond, Brosnan included, nailing the Pushkin scene in TLD like he does. Not just when he snaps but also the way he orders the girl to lock herself in the bathroom after. It's such a small line but with his delivery he manages to sell the idea that he's done this many, many times before. I like Brosnan a lot. But I think as Bond and as an actor, Dalton is on another level. And he's shown plenty of range outside of Bond too. Hot Fuzz anyone? A charismatic theatrical pantonmime villain. That's the complete opposite of the world weary assassin he played in his Bond films.

    I don't know if it has anything to do with his classical training or the way he approached the part (reading Fleming on set, etc). I'm just basing this off his performance. He was perfect. Love Brosnan but Tim's the better actor and the better Bond imo.

    Having said that, I think Craig is by far the most talented actor to play the role. But I prefer Tim and Pierce as Bond (I could easily see him taking second place if Bond 25 is really good though).
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    I prefer Dalton. I felt he wasn't quite up to the task when it came to delivering the one liners, but then again I think only Connery and Moore had that down to a fine art. In terms of his credibility onscreen as a hardened MI6 agent, I think he was better than Brosnan.

    I still prefer Connery, Moore & Craig in this regard though.
  • @thelivingroyale

    Tomorrow Never Dies was the first one we had on VHS in the late 90's. Maybe I over watched it or something when I was younger because recently it's sat at the bottom of my rankings comfortably.

    I still have fond memories of playing the PS1 version of TWINE to death when I was younger. I think a lot of my love for TWINE may be driven by that nostalgia, but I can't deny that Brosnan is fun to watch. He stills remains an actor I love to watch in movies and he's been awesome in a lot of non-Bond efforts (After The Sunset, Live Wire, The Matador, Shattered, The November Man, The Tailor of Panama, ...Mrs. Doubtfire lol) but I feel the actual films in his era (with the exception of GE and parts of TWINE) are rather generic, and I expect a little more from Bond.
  • edited September 2017 Posts: 684
    That Dalton...
    bondjames wrote: »
    wasn't quite up to the task when it came to delivering the one liners

    ...doesn't bother me so much as there having been one-liners for him to not be up to the task of delivering. Part of the larger issue, I think, is how his scripts juxtapose moments where the full extent of his source-material interpretation should come through (the sniper sequence in TLD or the finale of LTK) with moments of the habitual cinematic Bond, undermining the intent of his take on the character.

    Also, to say that...
    I can't imagine any other Bond, Brosnan included, nailing the Pushkin scene in TLD like he does. Not just when he snaps but also the way he orders the girl to lock herself in the bathroom after. It's such a small line but with his delivery he manages to sell the idea that he's done this many, many times before.

    ...does more to emphasize the distinct qualities Dalton sought to bring to the role rather than expressly make a point in favor of his successfully achieving those distinct qualities. In other words, (a) the Pushkin scene as written is a good one (of a scarce few) to serve Dalton's intentions with the character (and Dalton does do the scene very well), but at the same time (b) I can totally see Connery doing this scene in a Connery way, or of Moore doing this scene in a Moore way, etc. The scene itself is translatable, unlike something in the vein of the CR stairwell fight and its aftermath, which I'm unsure would have a Connery/Moore translation available to it. To fully comprehend the Dalton way, and how much of one there is, it might be more interesting to ask which scenes of Connery, Lazenby, Moore, Brosnan, or Craig that Dalton could have done in his way.

    I would probably argue that Dalton's 'way' never becomes entirely tangible by the end of his tenure (because of the hesitancy of the scripts), and that we're left to grapple with the unrealized ideal of the Dalton way (the literary character incarnate) which in these thought experiments cannot be successfully graphed onto much of the other performers' scenes — simply because those performances are themselves so much of the cinematic character. This leaves Dalton in a kind of limbo.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited September 2017 Posts: 23,883
    Strog wrote: »
    That Dalton...
    bondjames wrote: »
    wasn't quite up to the task when it came to delivering the one liners

    ...doesn't bother me so much as there having been one-liners for him to not be up to the task of delivering. Part of the larger issue, I think, is how his scripts juxtapose moments where the full extent of his source-material interpretation should come through (the sniper sequence in TLD or the finale of LTK) with moments of the habitual cinematic Bond, undermining the intent of his take on the character.
    I agree. They didn't get the balance right for him and it undermined his take on the character to a certain extent imho.

    EDIT: I have to say that the more I revisit Dalton's films the more I appreciate what he brought to the character. There is a genuine and authentic element to his portrayal. A wounded accessibility. I would argue that he was the most 'human' of the Bonds.
  • Posts: 1,917
    The thing I like about the Dalton films is he's fascinating to watch. I just checked out TLD on the big screen and his performance is full of looks and facial expressions that more than make up for the lack of zing in one-liners from a raised eyebrow (not in the Moore fashion) to a glance letting you know he was in on the joke to looks of fear even.

    Bros actually never did much with the one-liners in the way Connery or Moore did. It was one area I thought he'd be great at going in. You can chalk part of that up to the writing too I suppose.
  • Posts: 7,507
    Murdock wrote: »
    jobo wrote: »
    Please stop pretending Brosnan is a great dramatic actor. He never was, and never will be.

    Learn to accept other people's opinions.


    There are dinner jackets and dinner jackets, and there are different opinions and plain wrong opinions. You can argue that a cow is a colibri until your head pops out. It is still a cow...

    Even a Brosnan aficionado has to agree dramatic acting was never Pierce's forte. When someone even argues he is better at it than Craig, we have lost touch with reality.
  • Posts: 12,466
    Craig handled dramatic acting much better than Brosnan.
  • ClarkDevlinClarkDevlin Martinis, Girls and Guns
    Posts: 15,423
    Better, yes. Much better? Let's not exaggerate.

    I love Pierce to bits, I'll say this. But, he's no dramatic actor. He's a leading actor who makes the film he's starring in likable and watchable for the audience. But, he's no dramatist.

    Craig handles that better, sure. But, he's nowhere near the groundbreaking dramatist most of the people here are talking about. You're singing his praises like he's the messiah of the Bond films. Sure he's good, but not all that great. On that front, he's like Lazenby, but his acting range is also limited. Sometimes you'd just see him walk the scene and be done with it with little to no facial expressions. In the case of Brosnan? He overdoes it.

    But, all in all, I will also say this... Bond isn't supposed to be an artsy drama that should be played by some Academy Award winning actor to legitimize its entity. Just have a look at Connery and Moore, you'll see they were no theatrical dramatists but suited the role perfectly without overacting or showing extensive emotions to buy the liking of the audience.

    Craig is the Bond of today and earned the franchise a lot of money. But, it isn't the case that he brought it back on the larger market radar. Vice versa happened.
  • Posts: 7,415
    I have never seen anyone suggest that Dalton took a method approach. He soaked up the Fleming books, but he didn't go and join MI6.... not to my knowledge, anyway.

    I don't think Brosnan nailed anything, because he didn't do anything with the role. He is the most middle of the road Bond. He isn't as _______ as any of the other Bonds. I never got the impression that he was the driving force of his films.

    Exactly my thinking! I dont recall anyone referring Dalton to be a method actor! Truth is that there were 3 actors before him portraying Bond and he knew that he had to bring a fresh approach, so he looked at the novels where Bond started, and tried (and succeeded imo) to capture aspects not presented before. As he was quoted at the time. Bond is not a Superman, he's a tarnished man, with faults, he's human. Some have said Dalton hadnt enough screen presense. I disagree. When he's in a scene, even when he's not speaking you can see him actively listening to others! Unlike Brosnan who stares blankly (I'm thinking of the infamous "sexist..dinosaur" scene from GE. Brosnan seems not to be IN the scene at all!)
    He brought nothing new to the role. Even his more kinder critics would say Brosnan was too generic. A recent critic described his take on the role as "Roger Connery"! You cant emulate previous actors. You have to put your own stamp on the part. Dalton did. Brosnan didnt!
    Like Brossa all you want, and quote box office figures, but even the Producers felt he wasn't going anywhere with the role and dumped him!
    Blaming the writers, directors, tea lady on his poor Bond movies cant hide the fact that he was a poor choice!
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    edited September 2017 Posts: 16,351
    jobo wrote: »
    there are different opinions and plain wrong opinions. You can argue that a cow is a colibri until your head pops out. It is still a cow...

    Well I'm sorry you're wrong. You shouldn't be so hard on yourself but I'm not going to argue with that.
    kRoxI5.gif
    jobo wrote: »
    Even a Brosnan aficionado has to agree dramatic acting was never Pierce's forte. When someone even argues he is better at it than Craig, we have lost touch with reality.

    Actually I don't have to agree at all because I disagree. I never said he was a better dramatic actor than Craig, That's what you said. I think he does drama just fine. But you don't have to take my word for it. ;)
    http://picosong.com/wsrwr/
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,978
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    I have never seen anyone suggest that Dalton took a method approach. He soaked up the Fleming books, but he didn't go and join MI6.... not to my knowledge, anyway.

    I don't think Brosnan nailed anything, because he didn't do anything with the role. He is the most middle of the road Bond. He isn't as _______ as any of the other Bonds. I never got the impression that he was the driving force of his films.

    Exactly my thinking! I dont recall anyone referring Dalton to be a method actor! Truth is that there were 3 actors before him portraying Bond and he knew that he had to bring a fresh approach, so he looked at the novels where Bond started, and tried (and succeeded imo) to capture aspects not presented before. As he was quoted at the time. Bond is not a Superman, he's a tarnished man, with faults, he's human. Some have said Dalton hadnt enough screen presense. I disagree. When he's in a scene, even when he's not speaking you can see him actively listening to others! Unlike Brosnan who stares blankly (I'm thinking of the infamous "sexist..dinosaur" scene from GE. Brosnan seems not to be IN the scene at all!)
    He brought nothing new to the role. Even his more kinder critics would say Brosnan was too generic. A recent critic described his take on the role as "Roger Connery"! You cant emulate previous actors. You have to put your own stamp on the part. Dalton did. Brosnan didnt!
    Like Brossa all you want, and quote box office figures, but even the Producers felt he wasn't going anywhere with the role and dumped him!
    Blaming the writers, directors, tea lady on his poor Bond movies cant hide the fact that he was a poor choice!

    Precisely. What was it that someone else said when comparing Dalton to Brosnan? "Dalton had everything but an audience, Brosnan had an audience but nothing else."


    As for the one liners, "salt corrosion" is a brilliant line, and one that Dalton delivers perfectly. I think if given the choice, Dalton might have chosen to have done away with the one liners, but they are there, and he does a good job in saying them. I don't recall one that he does badly. They just aren't the area that he excels most at.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,351
    Precisely. What was it that someone else said when comparing Dalton to Brosnan? "Dalton had everything but an audience, Brosnan had an audience but nothing else."

    He had nerves of steel and charisma.
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,978
    Murdock wrote: »
    Precisely. What was it that someone else said when comparing Dalton to Brosnan? "Dalton had everything but an audience, Brosnan had an audience but nothing else."

    He had nerves of steel and charisma.

    You're forgetting his magnificent head of hair, and a blinding smile.
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,351
    Murdock wrote: »
    Precisely. What was it that someone else said when comparing Dalton to Brosnan? "Dalton had everything but an audience, Brosnan had an audience but nothing else."

    He had nerves of steel and charisma.

    You're forgetting his magnificent head of hair, and a blinding smile.

    But of course. :D
  • NicNacNicNac Administrator, Moderator
    Posts: 7,582
    Birdleson wrote: »
    Brosnan has shown far greater range and skill in his post Bond performances than Timothy has; by a long measure (not that there weren't some missteps). I also consider his Bond to be the superior product; Tim did not seem very comfortable.

    People should learn their terminology, as well. Over the years, on here, I have read Timothy repeatedly referred to as a great "Classically" trained actor, and almost as many herald his "Method" acting. Those are two completely different approaches to the craft with widely differing results. So which is it?

    Well, he (Dalton) quit RADA after about a term. Roger Moore stayed longer. I think the classically trained thing comes from his joining a Shakespeare rep company or something of that ilk. He isn't a good film actor though, it's a totally different discipline. It's hard to determine why some ugly, short, balding actor like Jack Nicholson is so totally dynamic on the big screen. The ones that have 'it' do tend to float to the top and become major stars.

    Brosnan does have something that makes him a proper film star. He is extremely handsome of course, and that may be the major factor (like it is Clooney and Pitt). Extreme good looks can get you where you want to be. But if that was all it was then there are a thousand equally handsome actors who can't get themselves out of the TV 'guest star' treadmill. Why not?

    Brosnan has a light voice, but then so does Clint Eastwood. So that doesn't hamper him. It must be that the big screen loves him, you do look at him, not behind him. Love him or not Brosnan is a proper, major movie star.
Sign In or Register to comment.