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Glen to me is simply adequate. He’s not rocking the boat, but he gets the job done on decent installments which is more than I can say for some of his successors like Spottiswoode, Apted, Tamahori, and Forster.
But surely, most, if not all of that was in the script? So we can thank Maibuam for that, not Guy..
I would agree on this. As Apted, Tamahori and Forster showed.
I realise that 'The Spy Who Loved Me' is a film that many Bond fans cherish and may have been their initial contact with the Bond universe. I fully respect that point of view but having watched the film last night I honestly feel this is a a weak doodoo entry in the series. On the positive side, the pre-credit sequence is spectacular and a great opening. The Hamlish/Bayer Sager song, Nobody Does It Better' is one of the best Bond songs and Jaws is less annoying than I recall.
However, this is Bond by numbers, the plot is basically a rerun of You Only Live Twice, submarines instead of space casules, underwater city instead of volcano, Yet again a treacherous underling is thrown to a shark. Barbara Bach is less than convincing as a Russian agent. So convenient of Naomi played by Caroline Munro to position her helicopter over the underwater Lotus and hold it there so that Bond can destroy it with some kind of missile.
The early Bond movies were groundbreaking and trendsetting. Bond was a new kind of cinematic hero. By the mid 70s the series had declined into formulaic recycling.
By the mid 70s, the best book plots had been used. Writers were faced with a large pile of blank paper to fill and there was clearly a lack of ideas. It seemed to me that Roger Moore did very little action work. Even the most basic and simple stunts had doubles. I won't even start to go on about the racism and sexism.
I am so glad that John Barry didn't score this one. Still unable to work in UK because of tax liabilities. Marvin Hamlisch took on scoring duties and earned an Oscar nomination for the song. Had he scored TSWLM, Barry would have been unable to score The Deep, which may not be the best film ever made but John gives it a superb score. Dark and tense but with a disco style song...... It would imho have been a real pity to have lost The Deep for another Bond score. By 1971 Barry had completed his best Bond work His final five all have some great cues but he never included them in his concert Bond suite though he did conduct All Time High as a stand alone concert piece.
I enjoyed this film when I saw in 1977 but it appears very clunky today.....imo.
It's my all time favourite Bond film! I absolutely adore it. If I could find a small criticism, Stromberg is a fairly weak villain, and it does copy a few of the beats of YOLT. Also, although the score is perfectly serviceable, John Barry would have undoubtedly made it stronger.
Other than that, it's nigh on perfect. No Bond film has done it better, if you will pardon the pun.
It's such a gem of a film, and this little moment alone is almost enough to place TSWLM in my top ten* :))
(*which it is, by the way)
I agree. I understand why TSWLM was popular in its time, I understand that casual viewers love it, but I'm always very surprised that so many Bond fans love it so much. It has a few good elements, but it's far too cartoonish and is maybe the most recycled Bond movie.
It's the ultimate 'epic' Bond film, for me. My favourite of the whole series. I could literally watch it once a week, and not grow tired of it.
TLD is one of the very best Bond movies. The only thing that holds it back from the absolute top tier is a relatively weak roster of villains.
DAD, whist by no means a great movie, is a much more enjoyable film than TND and TWINE. Most significantly for me, Brosnan gives a fantastic performance as Bond in that movie
TND on the other hand is the least enjoyable of all the EON movies. It’s the only one I can’t think of anything positive to say about it.
You have a good point here. A majority of it is Pinewood-bound, which isn't a bad thing as the Fort Knox set is a knockout in any era and if you can use the studio buildings to stand in for Goldfinger's Swiss factory, great idea and it makes the accountants happy.
But the locations are among the weakest in any of the films. They seemed to be really excited to have a KFC restaurant to make the Kentucky scenes more authentic? It was a different time.
I will say that while the locations aren't great, to the creative team's credit, gold becomes a character, much like the water in TB, snow in OHMSS and Japan in YOLT do. Those early films really took such things and ran with them.
I'll argue against the pacing in GF. The Swiss scenes seem to drag a lot until Bond gets to the factory at night. Then the scenes at the stud farm do too. It's escapes and recaptures, fake gangster accents and very little suspense in will Bond get word out about the raid. The car-crushing scene also seems unnecessary.
The GF daytime sequence with Tilly, on the other hand, really gives me a 'Switzerland feeling', and I like the sunny Kentucky atmosphere. While admitting that Fort Knox isn't all that good as a setting for the finale.
I agree, btw, that gold is like a character in GF and used in a good way.
I think GOLDFINGER is not only one of the best Bond films, but one of the greatest movies ever made in cinema history.
Not really controversial, here anyway. It does have one of the great villains, henchmen and leading ladies in cinema history. I wouldn’t be surprised if all three came back in a EON film at some point. Anthony Horowitz and Greg Pak have already done it for all three of them.
All of this 100%
Though I’d put TWINE on the bottom for being a very limp attempt at OHMSS.
Agree with all this.TSWLM is far and away my favourite Bond film and never gets old for me!
And i dont get this racism complaint that petergreenhill mentions.How is it racist?
As for the sexism,if that troubles you,its hard to believe you enjoy ANY Bond film! The sexism is,if all us heterosexual guys admit it,part of the fun of watching these movies.ESPECIALLY now where PC has gone to ridiculous levels in the movie and tv industry.
Me neither! It's a go-to Bond film for me, even though it's not my favourite – or my favourite Moore Bond film either.
Of the top of my head, I imagine it's the "Egyptian builders" line, @petergreenhill5 refers to? As for sexism, TSWLM is hardly the worst entry, IMO.
TSWLM is one of the best Bond films as far as feminism goes.
The only bit that doesn’t play well is that Anya gets reduced to a damsel in distress at the end. Even Bond ladies showed more self reliance in Fleming’s novels. Another reason why I think MR is the better film: Holly Goodhead doesn’t become a damsel in distress, she’s up to the end pretty vital to helping Bond stop Drax’s plot.
I think it's more controversial to prefer YOLT and/or MR to TSWLM(which I do although I love all 3 Lewis Gilbert-directed Bond films)
Love that moment too. In fact I love all of Caroline's moments as Naomi in TSWLM and wish her role was larger.
Certainly. I love the moment we first see Anya, and where she's introduced as Agent Triple X. I have to agree with @MakeshiftPython point about her being reduced to a damsel in distress, though.
I struggle with YOLT and MR personally (it's the only entries featuring Connery and Moore I've never really enjoyed that much), but Lewis Gilbert makes up for that with TSWLM, which has always been in my top ten.
It's one of few niggles I have with TSWLM; I wish Caroline Munro could have had a bigger role. A 70's Xenia Onatopp or something like that.