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If I had to wager a guess, I'd say the recurring pieces of furniture etc. in the early Bonds can be attributed to the combined efforts of Freda Pearson and Dickie Bamber, who were both responsible for set dressing and between the two of them worked on the first five films.
The similarities in interior decorating we see in OHMSS and DAF can then easily be explained by the presence of Peter Lamont, who was the set decorator on those films, before moving up to art director and leaving the set decorating to others.
Good point, I forgot to mention Freda Pearson and Dickie Bamber in my previous post.
Edit: just noticed Bamber worked on The Ipcress File and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang too.
Skyfall is riddled with such nonsensical moments.
Hmm, now there I have to disagree.
Bond meeting Patrice at the airport and following him straight to an assassination happened because that's what the scriptwriters needed to happen. That it makes no sense is a moot point.
Q plugging Silva's laptop straight into the MI6 mainframe makes no sense but the screenwriters need a character to do something really stupid to allow Silva to escape from his 'Hannibal Lecter' cell.
There is no logical reason why British agents would be in Istanbul with a list of undercover agents on a Laptop but it's what the screenwriters need for the list to be stolen.
Why does Patrice hang around after stealing the list until Moneypenny shows up in a jeep to collect Bond?
Did Silva know a train was due when he activated the explosion? And who planted it there? How did they know a randomn chase would end up there? Did Silva have a cell of men just waiting in Police uniforms and a police car for him to escape? And did his entire plan to escape hinge on Q doing something anyone with half a brain wouldn't do?
Just some of the nonsensical moments purely designed to move the plot forward.
Switch the names and you can say this stuff about any film ever made. Without conveniences (N.B. not plot-holes) there would be no film.
The only thing from your list that is questionable is Silva predicting that an agent would stop him in the tunnel and also that there'd be a train arriving.
This is true. At least SP was able to make Silva's - years in the making - quite unbelievable plan at least a bit more, well, believable.
Hey i like SF (its in my top ten) i like the dialogue but the plot is contrived and full of discrepencies more than most of the Bond films.
But its entertaining and well made.
And that's enough from me because this is off topic from the original post.
I think the other passenger was meant to be cut from the film and it was thought that audiences wouldn't notice him.
Don't forget, GF was made before the advent of video home entertainment with access to multiple viewing and the slow motion button.
I doubt if cinema goers at the time noticed.
So what? Does anyone know what he would have done in case of a delay? Maybe he had a backup plan. Besides, as the story was told he didn't need one. Maybe Chinese airlines are more punctual than "Western" ones?
Maybe he picked a flight that was supposed to arrive an hour early but it got delayed for an hour. Hard to tell isn't it? :))
And Bond stood there for the whole time, that's why he looked so tired and annoyed thinking to himself "damn, i could have stayed in the pool for another hour."
I watched DN this weekend and wanted to check something completely different with TMWTGG afterwards. Found those lamps in TMWTGG to be vaguely familiar, and when I went back to check, I noticed that the lamp bases (maybe) are the same type.
The same lamp can be seen at the Government House in DN and in M's office in FRWL.
I have another lamp discovery coming up when I've had the chance to take screenshots.
It's an interesting point. OHMSS with the poison-dispensing atomizers is *completely* ridiculous, yet the film owns its ludicrousness much better than the recent films.
at 1:12...
The desk in FRWL and YOLT:
This desk was designed by Danish designer Bodil Kjær in 1959. You can read more about it here.
Yeah, I doubt it's an accident. Why was the camera down there?
And besides, big budget films don't have a hundred extras running down surfaces that are actually slippery. That would be expensive.