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Yes, I think Brosnan would have gladly made some contributions, however small, to see stronger Bond films, or at least films more in sync with his talents, produced. Brosnan was suckered out of creative imput--imput, not control--as well as the opportunity to bring more 'Fleming' to the agenda.
Regarding Craig, if he hadn't been so willing to deliver quality films to us, QOS might've been a disaster, never seen the light or day, or been delayed beyond measure. Furthermore, he wasn't going to settle for rote product, for formulaic or generic by-the-book Bond films. People can lament certain decisions all they want, but I am glad that we were given interesting, if not innovative Bond films.
That might be more in line with what they are thinking when they are approaching Denis for Bond.
He wouldn't have done it convincingly. There would be lots of squinting and wiping his hand across his lips, some staring off into the middle distance. He's a great star but not a great actor.
I'd prefer someone else rather than Zimmer, his new version of the Bond theme in NTTD was great but some of the action sequences felt generic
Also, Zimmer's heart was entirely in Dune, that's why he got an Oscar for it, that's why he turned Christopher Nolan's Tenet down. I think if he came into Bond early, he would have done much better, but I still like the score though.
Yes agreed, I think it was a bit of a rush job and he didn't work on it much. It was fine for what it was, I'm not a huge fan of his but I wouldn't mind him having another go where he was able to spend more time on it.
Not saying he'd be a bad choice mind you. Maybe his more character focused, cerebral tendencies will be balanced with a script that knows how to use his strengths while still being a Bond adventure. I'd take him any day over Christopher Nolan.
I remember years ago, coming away from Blade Runner thinking Ana would be a fantastic Bond girl and thinking after seeing Dune recently, Zimmer needed more time to score NTTD and put his own stamp on it.
I think Zimmer's factory worked on NTTD more than Zimmer himself.
I like the NTTD score much better than SP, but a large chunk of it feels like pastiche from the other Craig films, and somewhat surprisingly, Craig-era trailers like CR. At times the score feels like the score equivalent of a cover band.
I realize that there was a time crunch but...
...compare NTTD to something like Inception. Inception feels complete, like the singular work of one composer; NTTD feels more like score-by-committee.
I would actually take the Sp score over NTTD, it's just a more interesting sound to me.
Doesn’t surprise me. They’ve been looking for a personal angle with Bond ever since Dalton, so it was unlikely they’d ever get away from that approach.
I hope they aren't as rigid in their thinking about what the baddie is after as they describe, as you wouldn't get to CR that way. Hopefully they're thinking up some new situations.
Spectre has some beautiful tracks, notably Los Muertos Vivos Estan, The Eternal City, Secret Room. It only really falls short when it's a direct rehash of Skyfall.
Yes, the rehashing is a shame, but that doesn't stop it from sounding good.
And to be fair, most sequels you see do use a lot of a tunes from the first one to tie them together.
I just hope, in this next era, that they don't allow it to be so convoluted. To be sure, there have always been convoluted Bond films, but when each one was a fresh mission, it wasn't as confusing as what they were trying to do across Craig's five.
No offence to Zimmer here, I love a few of the tracks for NTTD, but I do feel Arnold would have composed something a bit more original in some places. I doubt he would have reused OHMSS theme for instances, we know he insisted on not reusing YOLT, for DAD for example
Were you really confused though?
I kind of wonder if Arnold might not say no, to be honest. He's said that his lack of film scores recently isn't through lack of offers, he's doing what he wants to do now. And maybe big blockbusters are a bit too stressful.
I agree that Newman came with Mendes as a 'by default'. I am, however, unsure about the producers' relationship with Arnold independent of that. Frankly, I know little about what he is doing right now. That said, I don't think a film composer's talent can just corrode away when it isn't actively used; if anything, he may as well be refuelling his arsenal of themes, cues and orchestral tricks during such a long break. So if they decide to invite him back in, and he agrees, we might as well see the best of the man. I may just be projecting personal hope, however, formed after the release of his score for QOS, which I think is his best Bond work to date.
Octopussy is by far the most convoluted confusing Bond film. None of it makes any damn sense (IMO).
But it compensates with charm. 😉
Well he's curating the official Eon 60th anniversary show at the Albert Hall week after next, so I assume they're still vaguely friendly.