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Comments
You're right about that indefensible line being in the screenplay, as is the other one: "I've really put you through a lot, haven't I? Well, that's brothers for you: they always know which buttons to press!". This is also where Waltz channels Hans Landa with that laugh of his, making it doubly annoying.
=))
That was great...
Oh well.
The Bond brand name is completely bullet proof. It's the 'idea of Bond' that is untouchable. 'Nobody does it better' and all that jazz. The respective film just needs to capture the essence of that (which is primarily 'excellence' in all things relating to this genre, including screenplay, song, music, acting, stunts, action, tone etc. etc.), and some do it better than others.
1. SPECTRE
2. Goldfinger
3. On Her Majesty's Secret Service
4. Diamonds Are Forever
5. Octopussy
What is wrong with act 3
I'm just having a bit of fun, btw. I'm glad you love it. Nothing wrong with that.
However, I 100% agree with you on Newman's score at the end. I referred to that in my recent review of the film post-Blu ray watch. I think he did a decent enough job (brilliant in some areas) until that ending sequence, but that part does indeed grate and becomes very distracting.
I wanna' listen to both of his scores back to back some day while I'm out driving or something to finally assess which one I think is better. I'm guessing SF just off what I remember, but the two do both feel similar in many ways altough the latter is a bit more electronic and has more ambiance and the newest one seems more classical and orchestral.
Yes, I agree that QoS somehow always gets better with every viewing for some reason. Perhaps it's because it's so short, so there's no time to get bored.
Also, I feel nearly the opposite about QoS except it no longer gets worse it just stays the same. And I also think there's plenty of time to get bored, as I certainly do now and then.
I'm actually praying to any God that will listen for Martin Campbell to return for one last hurrah.
What about Bond's walk across the buildings to the Bond theme, I love that bit. :x B-)
Do people know that the elevator was the exact same one as in LTK (I read that somewhere)?
He's so much better just with the cool stare, like he does in L'Americaine to Madeline when she's going to sleep, at the rat, and in SF when he's looking around before Silva's big entrance. That's Craig at his coolest imho.
It's funny I am not a fan of CR or QOS and yet I find myself defending SP. I just think it's Craig's best and he is better for having had time to grow into the role. He has slowly come out of his Bond shell, so to speak. :)>-
The PTS is all in all pretty awesome (minus some of the CGI building stuff, although I do love the couch gag). I also don;t like the filter the cinematography has. Wish the colors popped more.
Oh, found a really, really cool review of Thunderball on the internet that I'd love to post up here as I think it captures why I love that movie so much for perfectly capturing Bond's danger, darkness, and lethal nature as well as being epic, grand, and cinematic. I'll try to find it. Saw it last night so it should be on my history.
Never matched.
Here's that TB quote I mentioned:
"Young's Bond is no such thing. He's a dark cloud, sweeping over the tropical landscape, foretelling ruin.
There's an element of mechanism in Young's take, a cold, remorseless calculation in everything he does. Other people don't quite register with him, they're just not equally important. Allies get thumped. Love interests are used up and manipulated, 007 employing sex as a kind of bullying coercion. In Goldfinger Hamilton's Bond was having fun, tripping his enemies up and thwarting their plots. It was all a game to him. Young's version wants, needs, to win. He's a shark. Even his kiss-off lines are delivered with spite, a victor pouring hate on top of murder instead of the usual levity."
There's a bit more also that is interesting as well. Mash all that with this cinematic, grandiose epic and I think it's the pinnacle of "film Bond" - warts and all (editing problems, etc). Perfection is overrated.