Controversial opinions about Bond films

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  • LeonardPineLeonardPine The Bar on the Beach
    Posts: 3,996
    pachazo wrote: »
    I think it would've been much more interesting to see a new head villain than to lazily rehash Blofeld and SPECTRE.
    I quite agree with you on this point. While I don't really like QoS, the germs left for Quantum was, at this time, a prospect far more interesting than the return of Blofeld. I'm not necessarily against the idea of bringing back SPECTRE, but, when Quantum was already established, there was no need to do so.

    I wish EON had never acquired the rights to SPECTRE and Blofeld. He was the most boring villain in the books anyway!
  • QOS, while it has grown in my estimation a bit in the last couple years, doesn't do enough to justify its existence imo. And obviously you could apply that logic to literally any film ever made, but what I mean is, it doesn't do much to add to the Vesper/Bond story. By the end of CR we as an audience know the arc Bond is going through. QOS just doesn't advance that thematic thread in any interesting ways.

    Instead we get some compelling aesthetic choices, some botched editing, and a production rife with struggles due to the writer strike.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,290
    QOS, while it has grown in my estimation a bit in the last couple years, doesn't do enough to justify its existence imo. And obviously you could apply that logic to literally any film ever made, but what I mean is, it doesn't do much to add to the Vesper/Bond story. By the end of CR we as an audience know the arc Bond is going through. QOS just doesn't advance that thematic thread in any interesting ways.

    Instead we get some compelling aesthetic choices, some botched editing, and a production rife with struggles due to the writer strike.

    I agree with you. We know by the end of CR that Bond has hardened/is less vulnerable and has become the agent we know and love. We also know from M that she made a deal to spare Bond life.

    I'm not sure what, emotionally, QoS adds to all of that, other than confusing trust/non-trust issues. And then we could have had two standalones in the Craig era.
  • JamesBondKenyaJamesBondKenya Danny Boyle laughs to himself
    Posts: 2,730
    QOS adds an arc about dealing with trauma. Sure he has learned not to trust anyone but he has not learned how to channel his frustrations. This is shown through his general disregard of anything in QOS. But by the end he actually leaves both Greene and Kabira alive, which shows he can now logically think through when to use violence and when not to.
  • Posts: 12,466
    QOS adds an arc about dealing with trauma. Sure he has learned not to trust anyone but he has not learned how to channel his frustrations. This is shown through his general disregard of anything in QOS. But by the end he actually leaves both Greene and Kabira alive, which shows he can now logically think through when to use violence and when not to.

    I don't know if it was an intentional move, but Bond sparing Blofeld at the end of SP could be traced back to this QOS arc.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,290
    QOS adds an arc about dealing with trauma. Sure he has learned not to trust anyone but he has not learned how to channel his frustrations. This is shown through his general disregard of anything in QOS. But by the end he actually leaves both Greene and Kabira alive, which shows he can now logically think through when to use violence and when not to.

    I'm pretty sure he knows he's consigning Greene to death.

    The Bond standing over White at the end of CR does not emotionally match the Bond at the beginning of QoS. It's jarring.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    edited September 2020 Posts: 8,182
    Let’s be honest, Quantum was basically SPECTRE in all but name. You could have had QOS cut out the two brief instances of the name being mentioned and it wouldn’t make a difference. So in that sense SP was a continuation anyway. Yet so many fans react like they functioned as completely different organizations.
    echo wrote: »
    QOS adds an arc about dealing with trauma. Sure he has learned not to trust anyone but he has not learned how to channel his frustrations. This is shown through his general disregard of anything in QOS. But by the end he actually leaves both Greene and Kabira alive, which shows he can now logically think through when to use violence and when not to.

    I'm pretty sure he knows he's consigning Greene to death.

    The Bond standing over White at the end of CR does not emotionally match the Bond at the beginning of QoS. It's jarring.

    I think he was referring to Yusef, who Bond decided to let authorities take over rather than just kill him.
  • Posts: 12,466
    Let’s be honest, Quantum was basically SPECTRE in all but name. You could have had QOS cut out the two brief instances of the name being mentioned and it wouldn’t make a difference. So in that sense SP was a continuation anyway. Yet so many fans react like they functioned as completely different organizations.

    Yes. Quantum was made because of the lack of rights to SPECTRE at the time. It was pretty awkward how they tried to kind of sort of explain it in SP, but yes. That's why I was cool with Quantum being part of SPECTRE. I also thought about how it would have been interesting if they had been two separate organizations that had a war and SPECTRE won + took them over, but it seems we might get a similar idea play out in NTTD with Safin and his forces vs. SPECTRE.
  • pachazopachazo Make Your Choice
    Posts: 7,314
    Let’s be honest, Quantum was basically SPECTRE in all but name. You could have had QOS cut out the two brief instances of the name being mentioned and it wouldn’t make a difference. So in that sense SP was a continuation anyway. Yet so many fans react like they functioned as completely different organizations.

    It makes all the difference though when you consider the Blofled brother angle could've been completely avoided. Quantum had potential. Whether or not it would've been fully realized is up for debate, but at least they had the chance to do something different once Bond made his way to the top.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,182
    pachazo wrote: »
    Let’s be honest, Quantum was basically SPECTRE in all but name. You could have had QOS cut out the two brief instances of the name being mentioned and it wouldn’t make a difference. So in that sense SP was a continuation anyway. Yet so many fans react like they functioned as completely different organizations.

    It makes all the difference though when you consider the Blofled brother angle could've been completely avoided. Quantum had potential. Whether or not it would've been fully realized is up for debate, but at least they had the chance to do something different once Bond made his way to the top.

    The brother stuff was dumb, but in the end they’re both secret organizations trying to gain control of multiple governments via access to information and make a profit out of them. Spectre could have still been named “Quantum” and it wouldn’t make a difference.

    Besides, “Quantum” is just an utterly dumb name to use and confuses with the title of Craig’s second film.
  • CommanderRossCommanderRoss The bottom of a pitch lake in Eastern Trinidad, place called La Brea
    Posts: 8,253
    echo wrote: »
    QOS adds an arc about dealing with trauma. Sure he has learned not to trust anyone but he has not learned how to channel his frustrations. This is shown through his general disregard of anything in QOS. But by the end he actually leaves both Greene and Kabira alive, which shows he can now logically think through when to use violence and when not to.

    I'm pretty sure he knows he's consigning Greene to death.

    The Bond standing over White at the end of CR does not emotionally match the Bond at the beginning of QoS. It's jarring.

    Yes, he knows he's consigning Greene to his death, but he doesn't kill him. QoS is all about showing the public (and M) that Bond isn't just some hard case set on revenge, but a scarred man actually capable of putting his profession at the forefront, instead of his personal feelings. As Fleming wrote 'two different compartments, with no connection' (LALD). It explores this, and the difficulty for others to understand this. Hence the discussions between Bond and Camille, who's dead set on her revenge.

    Further more, QoS, like DN, introduces some proper spying 'Bond style' (Tosca scene) to actually start to understand what's going on, instead of having MI6 spell it all out for us and just sending Bond in 'for the kill'. I like the fact that Greene isn't that obvious a villain. It makes him all the more creepier when you start to understand what he's actually doing.

    Same goes for Quantum. QoS actually set us up for a few films to come with an organisation which has 'people everywhere' (even to the level of special envoys to the Ministries in the UK). Sadly, SF nor SP used this basis.

    I disagree on the notion that QoS is stylistically too different from CR. I think it shows us the opposite: what you can do with a fairly straight foreward setup as CR and give it more dimensions. QoS for me is somewhere near the top of my non-existent favorites list.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,182
    And again, he has Yusef arrested rather than exercise his license to kill on him.
  • Posts: 1,917
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    1983 was the most controversial year for bond films with these 2 being released at the same time.
    EhWHVmfXsAAdEVE?format=jpg&name=large

    Both are among my favourites, making 1983 a magical Bond year for me.
    Yeah, I don't get why this is controversial, unless you felt you could only choose one film or the other. I agree, with you it was probably the most fun year to be a Bond fan, especially if you throw in Lazenby's appearance as JB in that same year's Return of the Man from UNCLE. It wasn't one and done, it was one and then another. I couldn't imagine having that good fortune today, especially when they we can't get a single Bond film but every 3-5 years and even longer due to he pandemic.

    One of my biggest thrills during in 1983 was getting Starlog Magazine's Double Bond issue in February or March that had Connery and Moore on the cover and articles on visits to the sets of OP and NSNA with lots of great photos and no spoilers. Younger fans won't get it, but that was huge to get that type of access unless you were in a fan club in those pre-Internet day.

    007inAction also mistakenly makes it sound as if they were out at the same time. OP and NSNA were originally supposed to come out within weeks of each other in the summer of '83 and only OP did. NSNA was moved back to fall in the U.S. and I understand it didn't come out in many other countries until December and early '84.

    It was the press that tried to make it into a battle of the Bonds, with the fans and moviegoers being the winners. I admit NSNA was a disappointment when I finally saw it, but the excitement of having Connery back for one more go as 007 was great at the time was enough to get it hyped more and I actually thought it would be the one to beat.

  • GoldenGunGoldenGun Per ora e per il momento che verrà
    Posts: 7,114
    I rewatched CR yesterday and I must say I absolutely loved it. The Miami stuff will never be my favourite part, but it didn't bother me as it used too. The rest of the film is amazing. That being said, David Arnold can be really chaotic with the action music. His QOS score is much better.
  • Personally I would have been happier if SPECTRE had been part of Quantum rather than the other way around. SPECTRE would have been Quantum’s “special executive” of heavies, then SPECTRE stages an internal coup, shoots a lot of Quantum’s top guys, and takes over the whole organisation.
  • edited September 2020 Posts: 2,917
    I would be interested to know the ratio of bond fans that think Never say never again is "okay or great" as compared to bond fans who think it's garbage. Objectively of course, not just out of hatred for old Kevin.

    I hate McClory but don't hate NSNA (which McClory ultimately didn't have much creative input in). And I have never understood the loathing the film has attracted. It doesn't have the gloss of the EON entries, but it's got a mostly great cast, a witty script, and several standout sequences. Some of the EON films have none of those.

  • Posts: 2,163
    Quantum should have just been ignored in Spectre. General audience doesn't care and a good portion of Bond fans probably don't either (I didnt).

    My other issue is that SPECTRE as an organisation is so poorly defined in the film, I dont know why they bothered really.
  • WillyGalore_ReduxWillyGalore_Redux I like my beer cold, my TV loud and my homosexuals flaaaaaaming
    Posts: 294
    Quantum is just an awful name for an organisation, especially when it was shoehorned in as a way of linking it to the title of the film
  • 007InAction007InAction Australia
    Posts: 2,526
    Revelator wrote: »
    I would be interested to know the ratio of bond fans that think Never say never again is "okay or great" as compared to bond fans who think it's garbage. Objectively of course, not just out of hatred for old Kevin.

    I hate McClory but don't hate NSNA (which McClory ultimately didn't have much creative input in). And I have never understood the loathing the film has attracted. It doesn't have the gloss of the EON entries, but it's got a mostly great cast, a witty script, and several standout sequences. Some of the EON films have none of those.

    Why do you hate McClory ?
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,182
    Quantum is just an awful name for an organisation, especially when it was shoehorned in as a way of linking it to the title of the film

    TERRORIST ORGANIZATION OF COMFORT

    It's as nonsensical as turning TOMORROW NEVER LIES into TOMORROW NEVER DIES.
  • pachazopachazo Make Your Choice
    Posts: 7,314
    I like that the name is discreet and boring. No one gives it a second thought, which is exactly what they would want. It doesn't make a whole lot of sense in relation to the title though, I'll give you that.
  • It was shoehorned in as a way of linking it to the title of the film
    This is probably one of my biggest issues with this film: not only does it use a very beautiful title from Fleming's corpus without adapting anything from the as beautiful short story, but it also links it to the antagonists... Without doing anything neither.

    It is all the more curious that the Fleming's title came very late in the production process and the first drafts were titled "Sleep of the Dead". I wonder if the organization had another name in these early versions.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,182
    It was shoehorned in as a way of linking it to the title of the film
    This is probably one of my biggest issues with this film: not only does it use a very beautiful title from Fleming's corpus without adapting anything from the as beautiful short story, but it also links it to the antagonists... Without doing anything neither.

    It is all the more curious that the Fleming's title came very late in the production process and the first drafts were titled "Sleep of the Dead". I wonder if the organization had another name in these early versions.

    It's likely it didn't even have a name in earlier versions, much like how they were nameless in CR. I wish they had remained nameless, at least that would have made SP more seamless. I think QOS is actually a good title given the context of the film is Bond looking for solace in understanding what made Vesper do what she did, and by the end he found it.

    Before the film came out, I assumed Mathis would be the character to coin phrase "Quantum of Solace" like the nameless Governor did in the short story. It could have easily happened during the scene where they're on the plane together where Mathis finds Bond not being able to sleep. In the end I was surprised that never came up.
  • FatherValentineFatherValentine England
    Posts: 737
    It was shoehorned in as a way of linking it to the title of the film
    This is probably one of my biggest issues with this film: not only does it use a very beautiful title from Fleming's corpus without adapting anything from the as beautiful short story, but it also links it to the antagonists... Without doing anything neither.

    It is all the more curious that the Fleming's title came very late in the production process and the first drafts were titled "Sleep of the Dead". I wonder if the organization had another name in these early versions.

    It's likely it didn't even have a name in earlier versions, much like how they were nameless in CR. I wish they had remained nameless, at least that would have made SP more seamless. I think QOS is actually a good title given the context of the film is Bond looking for solace in understanding what made Vesper do what she did, and by the end he found it.

    Before the film came out, I assumed Mathis would be the character to coin phrase "Quantum of Solace" like the nameless Governor did in the short story. It could have easily happened during the scene where they're on the plane together where Mathis finds Bond not being able to sleep. In the end I was surprised that never came up.

    This was exactly my thought too at the time. It was one of the reasons I rated it so poorly. It was just a mess and seemed willing to throw out too much of what people wanted from a Bond film. And to think they could have so easily included this piece of Fleming too (they wouldn't even have had to have Mathis say the title either, that bit could have been left unsaid).
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,182
    It's understandable that the short story would not work in any way for a Bond film, but it would have been nice if they at least tried to incorporate an idea or two from that short story onto a film that's using the same title. I mean, it's coming off the heels of CR, the first Bond film to be specifically based off a Fleming book. OCTOPUSSY is pretty much an original adventure, but it found a way to incorporate the short story by revealing that Octopussy was the daughter of Major Dexter Smythe.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,216
    It's understandable that the short story would not work in any way for a Bond film, but it would have been nice if they at least tried to incorporate an idea or two from that short story onto a film that's using the same title. I mean, it's coming off the heels of CR, the first Bond film to be specifically based off a Fleming book. OCTOPUSSY is pretty much an original adventure, but it found a way to incorporate the short story by revealing that Octopussy was the daughter of Major Dexter Smythe.

    Same goes for THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    edited September 2020 Posts: 8,182
    True, though I think of THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS as more of an actual adaptation, much like how FOR YOUR EYES ONLY and RISICO were closely adapted. The OCTOPUSSY short story wouldn't have worked the same way as those because Bond was only just a side character, much like in QUANTUM OF SOLACE, which was why I brought up the OP film incorporating the short story in a different manner. QOS could have tried something similar.

    The real mystery for me is why the short story FROM A VIEW TO A KILL wasn't adapted. That could have easily been adapted much like how FYEO and TLD were. Kind of an oddity given how the 80s tried to return to Fleming for the most part.
  • Posts: 16,154
    True, though I think of THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS as more of an actual adaptation, much like how FOR YOUR EYES ONLY and RISICO were closely adapted. The OCTOPUSSY short story wouldn't have worked the same way as those because Bond was only just a side character, much like in QUANTUM OF SOLACE, which was why I brought up the OP film incorporating the short story in a different manner. QOS could have tried something similar.

    The real mystery for me is why the short story FROM A VIEW TO A KILL wasn't adapted. That could have easily been adapted much like how FYEO and TLD were. Kind of an oddity given how the 80s tried to return to Fleming for the most part.

    I imagine Mickey G had difficulty seamlessly connecting an assassinated motorcycle dispatch rider plot with Haley's Comet. Then later with microchips and Silicon Valley.
    Still, I'd love for the FAVTAK plot to one day be adapted for the screen. That was one of my favorite short stories in that collection.
  • CommanderRossCommanderRoss The bottom of a pitch lake in Eastern Trinidad, place called La Brea
    Posts: 8,253
    It's understandable that the short story would not work in any way for a Bond film, but it would have been nice if they at least tried to incorporate an idea or two from that short story onto a film that's using the same title. I mean, it's coming off the heels of CR, the first Bond film to be specifically based off a Fleming book. OCTOPUSSY is pretty much an original adventure, but it found a way to incorporate the short story by revealing that Octopussy was the daughter of Major Dexter Smythe.
    I agree. It's a pity they didn't do it and leave it at that. As has been said before, in the film Bond actually finds a quantum of solace in Vespers actions. Connecting the title to the organisation is just a distraction. Still, it doesn't take away the quality of the film.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,290
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    True, though I think of THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS as more of an actual adaptation, much like how FOR YOUR EYES ONLY and RISICO were closely adapted. The OCTOPUSSY short story wouldn't have worked the same way as those because Bond was only just a side character, much like in QUANTUM OF SOLACE, which was why I brought up the OP film incorporating the short story in a different manner. QOS could have tried something similar.

    The real mystery for me is why the short story FROM A VIEW TO A KILL wasn't adapted. That could have easily been adapted much like how FYEO and TLD were. Kind of an oddity given how the 80s tried to return to Fleming for the most part.

    I imagine Mickey G had difficulty seamlessly connecting an assassinated motorcycle dispatch rider plot with Haley's Comet. Then later with microchips and Silicon Valley.
    Still, I'd love for the FAVTAK plot to one day be adapted for the screen. That was one of my favorite short stories in that collection.

    LOL! Post of the day.
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