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That's a good idea. Felix is still a straw-haired Texan with a hook to me, not a black guy from Milwaukee. I listened to that podcast with BB yesterday and she said "we always go back to Fleming'. I was like, 'yea, for some things. . . '
Can I ask which edition you're reading?
Seems to be the one they printed in 2012.
What I want to point right now is an opinion that can be unpopular, but here it goes: EON and Craig made what Kevin McClory and Charles K. Feldman failed to. An alternate Bond canon with a clear introduction (CR), body and ending (NTTD). A much as I enjoy them, this mini-saga has rendered CR'67 and NSNA moot forever. And now, who knows? One thing is clear: for me, the name Broccoli soars higher than ever.
Bravo, sir. Well put. Of course, both CR67 and NSNA suffered a level of Bondian competition the Craigs never had to face, but I agree with you.
5. QOS (still processing it after all these years).
4. NTTD (sometimes it gets too slow-paced for its own good, otherwise, brilliant).
3. SPECTRE (much worse than NTTD as a film, but it's a guilty pleasure. Just a fun romp).
2. CR (Campbell's 2nd Coming and Resurrection of the Bond Saga).
1. SF (I still love it like the first day).
I'd swap NTTD and SP, as well as SF and CR, but your ranking looks good.
@Revelator I meant to read this back when you posted it but I forgot about it. Thanks for writing it. It's very insightful in multiple aspects, especially in discussing how this "emotional counterweight" can nurture the fantasy, but can also weigh it down.
Great writing indeed.
Craig’s Bond is obviously keyed to an age where everyone is working through trauma and mental health issues. But his films have occasionally strained the fantasy they were ostensibly made to project. The relentless insistence on Bond being broken and neurotic, in need of healing, the ponderous approach to these issues, the bloated running times and awkward plot structures, the heaviness…
NTTD did its best to make sense of it all, which is why I think it's the second best of Craig's run.
Saying that, each film gave me much joy and had my heart pounding (earning his double O status, parkour, stairwell fight, beating Le Chiffre, Aston’s record breaking roll, the balls crunching torture, trying to save (kill?) Vesper, confronting Mr. White; being chased with White in the trunk, showdown with Mitchell, fight with Slate, “saving” Camille, Tosca, being teachers who won a lottery, escaping custody, airplane dogfight, anything with Mathis (including unceremoniously dumping him), the finale and near murder/suicide (a la Moonraker novel) in a burning building; a terrific PTS that sees Bond enter on foot, moving to SUV, motorcycle, train and shot off a bridge, resurrecting at the new HQ, Shanghai fight, Moneypenny’s shave, confronting Severine at the casino, meeting Silva, the unfortunate murder of Severine and the gunfight that follows, the chase and Tennyson and shootout at the hearing, and I loved everything at Skyfall from Kincaid to M’s death, and a terrific resolution in new M’s office; a one shot with a macabre setting, the helicopter fight and aerial stunts, the meeting with and saving/seduction of Sciarra’s wife, a Spectre meeting and escape (before getting into the Aston); I’m ashamed to admit that my last viewing of Sp with one of my daughters has made me soften on the Rome car chase— she was giggling in his chat with MP and I found myself enjoying it along with her and perhaps found that the first half of the chase was meant as light hearted because, just before Bond crashes the Aston, the chase started to get a little more serious (and Bond’s sly grin when he bbq’d Jinx’s car was a nice, dark touch), STAY!, train fight, drive into a bad guy’s lair, and; the final film I loved every scene presented. That’s off the top of my head.
But CR through to NTTD also gave me a bit of a mirror where I did see my conflicts in this Bond, but he was always slightly elevated; he could compartmentalize and get on with all of the obstacles in front of him (where I sometimes fail), and when the time came where he gave the ultimate sacrifice, for the world’s safety, but more importantly, for his family, that struck me deeply as I know, in the deepest part of my soul, that Bond and I certainly have one thing in common: take my life before my wife and kids.
I can see why some didn’t want this in their Bond films. But for others, people like me, we did get something more from this era exactly because they leaned into revealing the man’s psyche. And considering the worldwide reception of these five films, the general audience by and large also got something out of the Craig adventures (the box office would indicate repeat viewings).
It was a special era and I think it’s a catalyst that proved to the producers that they can experiment and stretch the character (as long as it stays within a sandbox clearly identified as James Bond, 007). I don’t expect Craig 2.0 for the next 007. But I wholly do expect that no matter what tone they take, they will continue to explore aspects of the character we haven’t seen before on film (although, in my opinion, Craig covered most beautifully). I trust in EoN (and, as some know, I even trusted them when I was a very despondent viewer from ‘95- ‘02 (but I went to each of the films and they belong in my collection (rarely watched unless I do a Bond-a-thon) because I knew in my heart that, although Brozz definitely wasn’t a Bond I enjoyed, EoN made the correct choice in casting— Brozz was one of the top three reasons why Bond could resurrect after a six year absence….
On a related note, I was especially intrigued by Revelator's comment of how NTTD treats having a conventional family life as something more desirable for Bond than a life of adventure, one which allows him to escape boring everyday reality. We have seen Craig's Bond enjoy himself at work, but it is true that to a substantial extent, his films have treated his line of work as something to be escaped from. They still indulge in the fantasy of it to a good extent, but the dark side is never too far away, to the point that Bond has been referred, by himself or others, as someone who "kills people" (Spectre) and "a killer" (NTTD), emphasizing that particular aspect of his job rather than his overall intelligence or counter-intelligence work, which often results in bad people being stopped from doing bad things. This darkness and semi-rejection of Bond's line of work is probably the key difference between the Craig era and everything that came before it, with perhaps the partial exception of OHMSS. I say partial because in that film, while Bond leaves the service out of love, his work isn't strongly portrayed as something that he wants to get away from, as far as I can remember.
DALTON's BOND IS BEST.
Thank you. B-)
That said, the films have always leaned harder on that aspect of Bond ever since Bond shot Professor Dent in cold blood. Fleming’s Bond would have never been so casual. He also probably would have never had Bond smiling at the bomber blowing himself up in CR (I imagine Fleming Bond would have looked away in disgust “what a mess”).
There is a rather similar scene in the book, where a couple of bomb assassins get blown up themselves and Bond narrowly escapes. Fleming s Bond doesn t feel any glee, but admiration for their plot.
I don’t think any of the Bonds sugarcoat their profession as a killer.They all have their ruthless and cold blooded moments,even Roger Moore.Just ask Stromberg and Locque.
We can't ask them, they're dead. Also, they're fictional characters. But, hey, what if we're all characters in a fictional story?
THE END
Take that, Descartes! ;)
I haven't seen this show, only the films, but Daniel Davis, who plays Moriarty, is a really good actor.