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But I'd have to go with Dalton and LTK. The way he plays the character in this film totally embodies the Fleming character, helped on by a brilliant script which is the closest we have got to an original script feeling like it was based on a Fleming book.
Had this film given us John Barry, and some of the upper class refinement and style of Terence Young too, like the early Connery films did, instead of feeling more like a Lethal Weapon 80's movie, I think the film would be a lot more appreciated with the fanbase.
Me personally, LTK sits in my top 5, and it has done so ever since 1989.
Dalton's largest drawback was that he couldn't fully express Bond's bon vivant side, his relish of the finer things in the face of death, and his occasional moments of lightness. This is what Connery did so well. When he moves through a casino or seduces a women he purrs with satisfaction, like a cat eyeing a mouse. And though Fleming's Bond is not a quip machine like film Bond, he does have a sense of humor. I can imagine Connery saying "I didn't notice you about. Do you live up a tree?" to Honey, but not Dalton.
Combine Connery--as seen in DN, FRWL, GF, and TB--with Dalton and you have Fleming's Bond.
Accuracy to Fleming is not just about Bond himself but his surrounding world as well. As much as I like Dalton in LTK, Brosnan in TWINE, and Craig in CR, the world of today is vastly different from what it was in the 50s in terms of the way people speak, dress, and carry themselves overall. You can't have a totally Fleming-faithful Bond outside of the post-WW2 context in which Fleming was writing anymore than you can have a faithfully-rendered Achilles outside of Ancient Greece.
Yes and no. I think CR is a very good film and Craig is very good in it, but I have various issues with its adaptation choices. Some of them, as played by Craig, don't chime with Fleming's version of the character. Playing Bond as someone with a chip on his shoulder for example. And "does it look like I give a damn?" isn't in character--if Bond was stressed and didn't care what his drink would be like he'd have ordered a simpler one in the first place. And whereas Fleming's Bond couldn't bring himself to believe the worst about Vesper until it was too late, Craig's threatens to kill her. I know Fleming described Bond as a "blunt instrument," but the Craig films sometimes went overboard on this.
Nice observations. Especially with Bond's reaction to Vesper's betrayal, Craig vs. Fleming.
You might have a point there, yes. He probably does fit the at-ease Fleming Bond most in that film. Dalton’s a bit too highly strung to be Fleming’s Bond to me, and Craig is playing a much less verbose and possibly fairly different (although probably more interesting) character.
I think Lazenby actually feels the most like book Bond to me: it helps that we see him at leisure, but also he doesn’t bring much extra personality to the part, which means he’s just really playing the part in the script rather than adding any different flavours.
Really you don’t have to look further than Connery 1963. Though Dalton came close at times.
Regarding Connery, I always had the feeling he was Fleming's character in apparence only: FRWL is narrative-wise a perfect adaptation of the novel, but Bond as a character seems non-existent and it's all the more true in DN where he is devoid of his literary doubts and anger (all the beginning of the story with Bond hating, for the first time of his life, M). He's nothing more than a shadow, a blank figure called to be filled by the audience as opposed to Fleming's Bond.
There was a discussion at some point about how Bond is seemingly a lot more tense and angry than those around him, illustrated most clearly probably in the restaurant with "freelance".
Yeah good point, he's especially mad in that bit.
Dalton bond and Saunders is great - captures the book Bond’s dislike for capt Sender well.
I think CR captures a good mix of danger, brutality but also class and sophistication.
He’s such a bastard in that film. Remember when he tells Quarrel to “fetch his shoes”?
Fleming never intended Bond to be likeable and the Connery of those early films got that unsympathetic aspect of the character and ran with it.
Agreed there, Connery in those first two films perfectly nails Fleming’s description of “a blunt instrument”, and I love that aspect of his original take in Dr. No, in a way, it’s like how some noir films have protagonists whose moral values are quite ambiguous, and could seem generally unlikeable at times.
Yes, Dr. No and FRWL are Connery's most Fleming performances. Lazenby gives one too, but this was more down to the script than Lazenby's strengths as an actor. Without disrespecting Lazenby too much, he was the luckiest man on earth to land that film.
Pretty much any actor that looked the part could have appeared in OHMSS, and it would still have stood the test of time. Lazenby doesn't make that film great. The script and production does. The film works despite Lazenby, not because of him. If ever there was a case for a walking clothes peg succeeding on film, OHMSS is it.
After that you have to wait until Dalton's reign, and I would say out of all the actors, he nailed the literary character more than anyone else. That's because he loved the Fleming books, and read them for inspiration (something Connery was not bothered about doing).
I get the impression Craig is not a big fan of the Fleming books either. I recall reading somewhere that he read CR the day before his audition, and tossed it aside afterwards, not thinking much to the book itself.
The influence Craig has had on the character was to make the character more human and grounded, but this was done by bringing in family backstories and connections, which was not part of Fleming. There were parts in NTTD when I felt we were seeing Craig the actor, and not Fleming Bond.
In certain moments Craig captures Fleming Bond in NTTD, but there are also other moments when I felt we were seeing Craig the actor playing Craig, and not Fleming Bond. It didn't feel a consistent performance for me, which is odd, because Craig gives consistency throughout all his other films.
The standout scenes when I felt we were taken out of the Fleming character were the confrontation with Blofeld, which felt totally out of character, Bond's pleading with Safin, and also Bond's final moments. This was Craig wanting to exercise his thespian muscles as an actor, but had nothing to do with the literary character.
Well he’s an antihero at times but I think you’re supposed to find him sympathetic at least. We’re inside his head in the books, whereas in DN Connery is very distant and we don’t really know what he’s doing or why, or why he’s so grumpy the whole time. And then at one point in the water on the island he seems to murder one of the guards for the hell of it, which isn’t very bookBond.
I’m not sure he’s intended to be unlikeable in the books, I don’t think I ever got that impression.
Like you said, we get inside Bond's head in the books, read his thoughts, his justifications, etc. which prevents him being unlikeable.