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Comments
I'm curious to know what "this day and age" have got to do with it. Just different tastes. Are we supposed to like everything from the sixties because of nostalgia or something? Not quite sure if it's ok to ask since this would just get off topic...
And Lazenby was the last Bond of the Sixties, therefore you must love his Bond.
:))
Got me :)
Good sport here! :)>-
Gotcha. ;)
[-(
I despise Laz as Bond. I think he's awful. Pity because the film around him is great.
I thought was was kind of okay.
:D
Astonishing that people can admit to loving OHMSS but claim Laz was awful in the role... His performance is epic as Bond and central to the success of OHMSS. He runs a close 4th to Dalton in my rankings. OHMSS would not have bene the classic movie it is with any other Bond actor IMO - Laz is the only actor who ever brought the necessary vulnerability to the role. And I don't care what Rigg thought of him off-screen - they are dynamite on screen together.
Brosnan was never 'bad' as 007, the adjectives that spring to mind when I think back to Pierce's time as Bond are:
Entertaining
Suave
but also...
Mediocre
Tepid
Benign
By-the-numbers
Forgettable
He wanted to be ‘all-Bonds to all-people’, if that makes any sense. He was so eager to please - so eager to play the role that he couldn’t get past the pre-conceived images of Connery & Moore he had had permanently engraved onto his sub-consciousness.
Brosnan was a great bloke – smooth as silk, charismatic and ridiculously handsome. He would have made the world’s very best car-salesman – sadly he was only the fourth or fifth best James Bond.
It's just coincidence that Laz did one classic and Bros gave us a string of stinkers.
TND was a frustrating film because it did so much right. It was seriously one re-write away from being a terrific Bond film. Like everyone else I loved the first hour, and could see so much in the second hour that could have made this a modern Bond classic.
And Spottiswood did a great job in creating some fine Bond moments. He seriously did as much as he could with the script.
So while GE was a functional and enjoyable film, TWINE tried (and mostly failed) to be dramatic and suspenseful and DAD tried to be all things to all people, TND quietly got on with being a true 90s Bond film. I always enjoy watching this one.
As for Brosnan, he was the people's Bond. Just as Dalton appeals to some hardcore fans Brozzer appealed to the masses. And it's the masses that count if we are brutally honest about it.
It's just that Moore and Brosnan are the more entertaining, more charismatic stars.
Pretty much agree with everything here. Like so many Bond movies, TND trails off badly towards the end. A lot of things were right about it and with a bit of tweaking it could have been a lot better. Having kd lang for the opening titles would have been amazing - would be nice to see a version where they play 'Surrender' over the titles.
hit the nail on the Head
The PTS is superb. I can pretty much pin point the point at which the wheels come off in Brosnans films. TND is when Bond is handcuffed to Wai lin in the Helicopter and we get a series of clunky one liners and blatant plot exposition
Die another Day - its the crash zoom as the helicoper is flying over Iceland
Goldeneye is solid throughout.
TWINE - probably the moment Denise Richards arrives.