Controversial opinions about Bond films

1688689691693694707

Comments

  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 16,312
    Yeah, of course she needs Bond to enter it, but why would he not? So yeah, he has to live. If Mr White wants the money, Vesper doesn't have to persuade him to not to kill Bond.

    Sure, but as you say, she's already made the deal with White before the game so it doesn't really matter. I don't think the film says she got White to spare him does it?
    As for the password, I think it's only for Mendels encryptor. It's not a password for an account. There wasnt a passwordless bank account out there until Bond typed a number into the encryptor!

    Yeah, maybe. Le Chiff isn't beyond a bit of rough stuff so he may just kill Mendel and steal the encoder to enter the details or force him to do it at gunpoint, it would still work.
  • ProfJoeButcherProfJoeButcher Bless your heart
    Posts: 1,711
    mtm wrote: »
    Yeah, of course she needs Bond to enter it, but why would he not? So yeah, he has to live. If Mr White wants the money, Vesper doesn't have to persuade him to not to kill Bond.

    Sure, but as you say, she's already made the deal with White before the game so it doesn't really matter. I don't think the film says she got White to spare him does it?

    Yeah, maybe. Le Chiff isn't beyond a bit of rough stuff so he may just kill Mendel and steal the encoder to enter the details or force him to do it at gunpoint, it would still work.

    Well, M says Vesper made a deal to save Bond. Of course, she has no way of knowing this and it doesn't really make sense, but I guess the writers wanted to put something together to give an idea what going on...

    And if Le Chiffre's plan involves basically robbing a Swiss bank, well... :)) We're back to why is he bothering with Bond at all.

    To be clear, I'm not saying Vesper had a deal with White beforehand. I guess she did? The movie says she made a deal later, but who knows. I have the impression that when she typed the account number I to Mendels encryptor, it could have been anything.

  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 16,312
    mtm wrote: »
    Yeah, of course she needs Bond to enter it, but why would he not? So yeah, he has to live. If Mr White wants the money, Vesper doesn't have to persuade him to not to kill Bond.

    Sure, but as you say, she's already made the deal with White before the game so it doesn't really matter. I don't think the film says she got White to spare him does it?

    Yeah, maybe. Le Chiff isn't beyond a bit of rough stuff so he may just kill Mendel and steal the encoder to enter the details or force him to do it at gunpoint, it would still work.

    Well, M says Vesper made a deal to save Bond. Of course, she has no way of knowing this and it doesn't really make sense, but I guess the writers wanted to put something together to give an idea what going on...

    Ah, does she? Okay. Hmm, that is troublesome.
    And if Le Chiffre's plan involves basically robbing a Swiss bank, well... :)) We're back to why is he bothering with Bond at all.

    Well I guess having the account number and password is a bit easier than robbing a Swiss bank though. Mendel is hardly invulnerable.
    To be clear, I'm not saying Vesper had a deal with White beforehand. I guess she did? The movie says she made a deal later, but who knows. I have the impression that when she typed the account number I to Mendels encryptor, it could have been anything.

    Right, I guess. I suppose it may have been some sort of intermediary account for the Treasury she entered to protect the Treasury's accounts.

    Maybe she did only tell White she'd get him the money on the barge then: White said it wasn't about the money so may well have been about to kill Bond as he didn't care either way (Obanno is dead, after all) but she persuaded him that he could have it (plus I guess potentially he's now got an MI6 agent who he can exploit through threatening his girlfriend). I think that works?

  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,273
    Is it possible Vesper made the deal with White on the boat just before Le Chiffre dies? I'm always thought her scream then was fake.

  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,171
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.
  • MinionMinion Don't Hassle the Bond
    Posts: 1,165
    Now that you mention it, what would stop Vesper from simply sending the money to Le Chiffre’s account after Bond won anyway? It’s not as though he’s going to say, “I’m going to enter the password and then watch over your shoulder to make sure you don’t do anything funny.”
  • Posts: 1,394
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.

    I’d say he was fairly confidant that bashing Bonds balls would get him to give up the password.He was desperate yes,but it’s only when Bond makes it clear he wasn’t going to give up the password that Lechiffre realised he was out of options and was going to castrate Bond out of spite.

  • Posts: 15,098
    mtm wrote: »
    Telly Savalas does come off as just playing himself rather than feeling like Blofeld. He’s not exactly a versatile actor but he does have presence.

    That's a fair point too. I think he's an excellent villain but you're probably right that he's not much like the Blofeld from the books or the one we know so far. I don't mind though.

    We never had the Blofeld from the books. I hope we'll get him in the reboot.
  • ProfJoeButcherProfJoeButcher Bless your heart
    Posts: 1,711
    AstonLotus wrote: »
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.

    I’d say he was fairly confidant that bashing Bonds balls would get him to give up the password.He was desperate yes,but it’s only when Bond makes it clear he wasn’t going to give up the password that Lechiffre realised he was out of options and was going to castrate Bond out of spite.

    Shame he didn't realize the password was a waste of time!

    But @MakeshiftPython, you're right of course. Whether or not CR makes sense in its plot mechanics, and it doesn't, it does make sense in its story/character beats. It obviously connects with the vast majority of Bond fans.

    I'm actually willing to go to the mats to defend Purvis & Wade, who I think have done a fine job, but there seems to be something about their films where they occasionally get their point across with something slightly too complicated that doesn't bear scrutiny, with Safin's motivation and methods being the most recent example.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,312
    AstonLotus wrote: »
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.

    I’d say he was fairly confidant that bashing Bonds balls would get him to give up the password.He was desperate yes,but it’s only when Bond makes it clear he wasn’t going to give up the password that Lechiffre realised he was out of options and was going to castrate Bond out of spite.

    Shame he didn't realize the password was a waste of time!

    Not from his point of view though?
  • ProfJoeButcherProfJoeButcher Bless your heart
    Posts: 1,711
    mtm wrote: »
    AstonLotus wrote: »
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.

    I’d say he was fairly confidant that bashing Bonds balls would get him to give up the password.He was desperate yes,but it’s only when Bond makes it clear he wasn’t going to give up the password that Lechiffre realised he was out of options and was going to castrate Bond out of spite.

    Shame he didn't realize the password was a waste of time!

    Not from his point of view though?

    Well again, there's the more cooperative lady next door who he knows is in charge of the vastly more important/useful account number situation...!
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 16,312
    mtm wrote: »
    AstonLotus wrote: »
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.

    I’d say he was fairly confidant that bashing Bonds balls would get him to give up the password.He was desperate yes,but it’s only when Bond makes it clear he wasn’t going to give up the password that Lechiffre realised he was out of options and was going to castrate Bond out of spite.

    Shame he didn't realize the password was a waste of time!

    Not from his point of view though?

    Well again, there's the more cooperative lady next door who he knows is in charge of the vastly more important/useful account number situation...!

    I'm not sure what you're saying: we're told that the password is required to release the funds into the account which she designated. Are you saying the account number is enough on its own? Mendel is holding the money in escrow until the password is entered into his machine- what's the point in Le Chiffre knowing the account number of an empty account?
  • ProfJoeButcherProfJoeButcher Bless your heart
    Posts: 1,711
    mtm wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    AstonLotus wrote: »
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.

    I’d say he was fairly confidant that bashing Bonds balls would get him to give up the password.He was desperate yes,but it’s only when Bond makes it clear he wasn’t going to give up the password that Lechiffre realised he was out of options and was going to castrate Bond out of spite.

    Shame he didn't realize the password was a waste of time!

    Not from his point of view though?

    Well again, there's the more cooperative lady next door who he knows is in charge of the vastly more important/useful account number situation...!

    I'm not sure what you're saying: we're told that the password is required to release the funds into the account which she designated. Are you saying the account number is enough on its own? Mendel is holding the money in escrow until the password is entered into his machine- what's the point in Le Chiffre knowing the account number of an empty account?

    She doesnt designate any account as far as I know until after the Le Chiffre scenes. He can get her to designate a different account. Just like she did in the movie for the cleverer character.

    We haven't even got into the fact that Le Chiffre has no way whatsoever to check that a password Bond gives him is correct.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 16,312
    mtm wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    AstonLotus wrote: »
    Le Chiffre torturing Bond was less of a solid plan and more of an act of desperation. He never had a chance and he knew it, but he had no other options and very scant time. Death was coming for him and he was willing to do ANYTHING to save himself even if it was in vain.

    I’d say he was fairly confidant that bashing Bonds balls would get him to give up the password.He was desperate yes,but it’s only when Bond makes it clear he wasn’t going to give up the password that Lechiffre realised he was out of options and was going to castrate Bond out of spite.

    Shame he didn't realize the password was a waste of time!

    Not from his point of view though?

    Well again, there's the more cooperative lady next door who he knows is in charge of the vastly more important/useful account number situation...!

    I'm not sure what you're saying: we're told that the password is required to release the funds into the account which she designated. Are you saying the account number is enough on its own? Mendel is holding the money in escrow until the password is entered into his machine- what's the point in Le Chiffre knowing the account number of an empty account?

    She doesnt designate any account as far as I know until after the Le Chiffre scenes. He can get her to designate a different account. Just like she did in the movie for the cleverer character.

    But without the password it won't go into any account. So he needs the password.

    So in fact it's the reverse to what you said: he doesn't need Vesper at all, any account number she has is useless. She's only really useful (in the barge) as leverage to get Bond to give the password to him.
    Why do you think the account number is vastly more useful?
    We haven't even got into the fact that Le Chiffre has no way whatsoever to check that a password Bond gives him is correct.

    I guess he just keeps him alive until he tries it.
  • ProfJoeButcherProfJoeButcher Bless your heart
    edited October 2021 Posts: 1,711
    mtm wrote: »

    But without the password it won't go into any account. So he needs the password.

    So in fact it's the reverse to what you said: he doesn't need Vesper at all, any account number she has is useless. She's only really useful (in the barge) as leverage to get Bond to give the password to him.
    Why do you think the account number is vastly more useful?

    But we went over this. Bond enters the password. Vesper enters a different account number. Exactly like what happened in the movie.

    Of course Le Chiffre doesn't need her account number for anything (in contrast to what he says in the movie!). He would have her enter a different account number. The way Mr White did.

    There's no reason for Le Chiffre to even speak with Bond once the game is over.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 16,312
    I'm really having trouble understanding what you're saying: if you could explain what you mean fully it would be easier. You're saying that he should force Vesper to enter his account number into the machine after Bond has entered the password of his own free will? But he's got nothing over her to make her do that, and Bond would need to be free and not suspicious to enter the password.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,171
    I’m having trouble understanding how some can’t understand the whole predicament of the plot. It’s pretty cut and dry.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,312
    It’s obviously not.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,171
    I can’t see how it’s not.
  • Posts: 1,394
    It makes a lot more sense than Silvas escape/assassination plan in SF that’s for sure!
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,171
    Silva’s made sense. But then again, genius always baffled the ordinary.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited October 2021 Posts: 7,546
    I think I'm coming into this late, but Bond and Vesper have the same idea of where the money is going, some treasury account with the account number Vesper has, and the password Bond has. As I'm typting this, no Vesper is putting the money into a non-Treasury account (a Quantum account for all intents and purposes), from which she withdraws the money to give to Gettler.
    Vesper was a double agent the entire time, as she was responsible for telling Le Chiffre about his tell. Vesper, I think, was Quantum's insurance plan in case Le Chiffre lost the Poker game, and was injected into the plot when they found out the British government was putting Bond in the game. They likely knew Le Chiffre gambles with it, but either way would have been extremely unhappy with him for losing it in the stock market because Quantum was responsible for setting him up with the client. I think it's possible Le Chiffre needed the account number and password so he could "log in" to her account in a matter of speaking, and make the transfer to his own account. He wouldn't need to rob any banks.
    "A lovely man from the treasury wondering if you're ever going to deposit the money" indicates the account number Vesper used was for this "Quantum" account. So I think Le Chiffre did need the account # and password.
    I tend to think Vesper's scream in the torture place was indeed fake (But then there was the Vesper Interrogation videotape in Spectre, so that complicates things... I'm typing things as I think them lol). Anyways with regards to Casino, the deal she made with White to spare Bond's life would be "listen, only I know the account number and I'm meant to withdraw the cash to give to Gettler to get it back to Quantum. I won't do that unless you promise to let Bond live".
    EDIT: Maybe she says something to this effect, they hit her or something and the scream is real.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,312
    I can’t see how it’s not.

    You’d need to read the discussion.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,171
    I have. People seem to be overthinking.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,546
    She doesnt designate any account as far as I know until after the Le Chiffre scenes. He can get her to designate a different account. Just like she did in the movie for the cleverer character.

    I think the fact that Le Chiffre requires the account number (I believe we sort of have to trust that they're telling us the story the way they want to tell it) indicates to us that Vesper did nominate the account # previously in the story, but off screen. ie, she didn't nominate it with Bond and Mendel in the courtyard by Lake Como (on screen), but much earlier.

  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,546
    I have. People seem to be overthinking.

    There's that too. The story is basic enough that it doesn't take a viewer out when they're watching it; it does become more complicated the more you think about it, but I think all the answers are there.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 16,312
    I think I'm coming into this late, but Bond and Vesper have the same idea of where the money is going, some treasury account with the account number Vesper has, and the password Bond has. As I'm typting this, no Vesper is putting the money into a non-Treasury account (a Quantum account for all intents and purposes), from which she withdraws the money to give to Gettler.
    Vesper was a double agent the entire time, as she was responsible for telling Le Chiffre about his tell. Vesper, I think, was Quantum's insurance plan in case Le Chiffre lost the Poker game, and was injected into the plot when they found out the British government was putting Bond in the game. They likely knew Le Chiffre gambles with it, but either way would have been extremely unhappy with him for losing it in the stock market because Quantum was responsible for setting him up with the client. I think it's possible Le Chiffre needed the account number and password so he could "log in" to her account in a matter of speaking, and make the transfer to his own account. He wouldn't need to rob any banks.
    "A lovely man from the treasury wondering if you're ever going to deposit the money" indicates the account number Vesper used was for this "Quantum" account. So I think Le Chiffre did need the account # and password.
    I tend to think Vesper's scream in the torture place was indeed fake (But then there was the Vesper Interrogation videotape in Spectre, so that complicates things... I'm typing things as I think them lol). Anyways with regards to Casino, the deal she made with White to spare Bond's life would be "listen, only I know the account number and I'm meant to withdraw the cash to give to Gettler to get it back to Quantum. I won't do that unless you promise to let Bond live".
    EDIT: Maybe she says something to this effect, they hit her or something and the scream is real.

    Yes good point about Vesper telling Le Chiffre (LC) about Bond’s tell. If that was true it means she was working with him, which means almost nothing that happens next makes sense. LC would indeed have no reason to torture Bond; it wouldn’t even matter which of them won the game as with Vesper on his side, LC would get the cash no matter what.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited October 2021 Posts: 7,546
    No, I think if LC had won the game, Quantum would be satisfied enough that their client's money would have ended up where it belonged, and then Obanno would be able to withdraw it (RIP). Quantum's reputation is intact ("money's not as important to us as knowing who to trust"). If Bond had won the game, the money would be entirely out of their hands and in the hands of MI6 (and LC would be compromised) which would be significantly worse for Quantum.
    I think logically you have to take LC and Quantum as separate entities (another point which Spectre destroys lol); in the beginning, Mr. White says "all we guarantee is the introduction" which to me indicates Le Chiffre doesn't actually work directly for Quantum, but is a criminal-banker-associate, a person they use from time to time.

    Think of it this way, Quantum's
    Plan A: Have our agent Vesper help Le Chiffre win the game. Everything's back to normal.
    Plan B: If he still can't win the game, the hopeless tosser, we'll cut off Le Chiffre and get the money back ourselves, again through Vesper and her Quantum bank account.
    Plan C: Kill them. Kill them all. Get the money back as well.

    EDIT: Sorry, the character above's name is Obanno.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited October 2021 Posts: 16,312
    Well that’s my point; the film as we know it hinges on LC and White acting separately, with LC having (apparently) Mathis on his side, and ultimately White having Vesper on his side. If LC and Vesper had worked together (and they both want to give the money to White ultimately so why not) then LC would have got the money no matter whether he wins or Bond does: Vesper would have just keyed his account number in and that’s that.
    No, I think if LC had won the game, Quantum would be satisfied enough that their client's money would have ended up where it belonged, and then Obanno would be able to withdraw it (RIP). Quantum's reputation is intact ("money's not as important to us as knowing who to trust"). If Bond had won the game, the money would be entirely out of their hands and in the hands of MI6 (and LC would be compromised) which would be significantly worse for Quantum.

    Not with Vesper on their side: she just puts their account number in and that’s that.
    But LC and her don’t seem to be working together. Is it her that reveals the tell?
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited October 2021 Posts: 7,546
    mtm wrote: »
    Well that’s my point; the film as we know it hinges on LC and White acting separately, with LC having (apparently) Mathis on his side, and ultimately White having Vesper on his side. If LC and Vesper had worked together (and they both want to give the money to White ultimately so why not) then LC would have got the money no matter whether he wins or Bond does: Vesper would have just keyed his account number in and that’s that.

    I don't think LC wants to give the money to White. And LC indicating he has Mathis on his side was just fiction, I think it was in there to throw Bond off. Perhaps Le Chiffre deduced correctly that Bond was too naive to suspect Vesper, and that by process of elimination, Bond would suspect Mathis, and his comment there was to double-down on that suspicion.

    Again, Quantum's Plan A was to have the money end up with, and remain with, Le Chiffre.

    If he messed that up, their Plan B was to take the money themselves to restore their reputation as a reputable crime organization to deal with.
Sign In or Register to comment.