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I mean how many allies die throughout the films: Bond's reaction is very different. In the earlier films, he just seems unaffected by it whereas especially in the Glen films he seem to care more about them and is emotionally affected by it. However only in LTK and QOS he behaves as a totally revenge driven man who completely loses the focus of his mission.
Personally, I prefered a different take on DAF showing that Bond - like in Skyfall - has some personal problems and M not being clear wheather Bond is actually still ready for the next mission. Then throughout the film there might be another encounter with Blofeld where Bond finally manages to kill him and find its revenge but I would not have wanted this to be the main focus of the film.
@DaltonCraig007, I'd like to watch DAF again soon as well. It's one of my least watched Bond films since I neglected it for so many years before finally learning to appreciate its many fine qualities, not least the fabulous score, great lines and effortless Connery.
It also explains the underwhelming impact of Pleasance's 'Blofeld', which is more palatable if one considers him just another minion as you suggest rather than the real head honcho, who continues to remain unseen until finally revealing himself in OHMSS.
LALD and TSWLM.
Absolutely stellar 4 hours with Sir Roger Moore. He is a god amongst men. Both films contain 2 of my favorite non-Barry soundtracks (love that funky score for LALD). Solitaire one of the most sexyful Bond girls, the action is top notch (the boat chase, the ski chase, the Lotus chase, the battle onboard the Liparus). Moore is just the king of cool, and that 10 seconds moment when he is standing in the shadows in Cairo with that ominous cue from Hamlish is one of my favorite moment from the entire 24 films. It's crazy how rewatchable Moore's outings are. Just 2 hours of pure entertainment.
I agree. Truly great work by both Martin and Hamlisch.
I've always loved that moment too, since I first saw the film many years back. Spine chillingly suspenseful, and made even more so by the morning Muslim prayer which precedes it. The Karnak temple sequence, & the Jaws Aziz Fekesh pyramids & Max Kalba phone booth kill sequences are also top notch in the suspense dept.
You've made me see the light.
The way he was portrayed in MR is a different story entirely.
TSWLM suffers in some circles as a result of the similarities in premise to MR and due to Jaws being in both. However, I find the film to be tonally quite different, and that's apparent on a back to back viewing. Yin and yang.
So overall I belong to the small minority who actually prefer YOLT over TSWLM, even though I like Roger a litlle bit more than Sean :-)
It's not only "thereafter" - the era of the comedy Bond started with DAF.
But I agree with you up to a point. The campy "NBDIB" that ends the film, or the silly cue as Bond and Anya are driving through the desert and the moment when the henchman's car crash through the roof and subsequent look form that guy.
Yet despite all of this, Spy is a top ten Bond film for me.
Great review and it echoes the fondness I have for this particular outing. In Campbell we trust. I might just have to put this on tonight after I get through Return Of The King (EE).
Yes I prefer YOLT as well.
DAF is quite camp at times but there's no overt winks to the audience that this isn't a serious spy adventure, as there were in nearly every Moore. I think Moore basically refused to play the character so they had to change the intention of the films. I'm not a complete Moore basher & he had several fine moments. Perhaps my favourite is the MR grouse shooting scene because his line delivery is perfection. It's makes it more frustrating that he wanted to fool around a lot of the time & even didn't like kicking Loque's car off the cliff! In real life he seems a very nice gentle man but he should have realised he was an actor.
Moore is very smooth here, but there's also an air of unpredictability to him. What a great cast of characters, with Clifton James easily giving the standout performance of the bunch. Just kidding. After the success of GF, Hamilton really upped the ante with the comedy/camp elements in DAF and LALD, didn't he?
My only real complaint is that the boat chase stretches on for a bit too long. Q's absence is also a little disappointing, but it's such a treat to see M and Moneypenny visiting Bond's home unannounced. I don't see this leaving my top ten anytime soon.
In a bit of Bond trivia, years later Martin Campbell would film a great deal of the Green Lantern at the same lakefront airport where Bond commandeered the plane.
This is also the first Bond film that I saw, at the age of 10, in a theater, so it does hold a special place with me.
Watching GE and DAF back to back (within two days) was a great experience.
GE is one of the perfect Bond movies. No doubt about that.
Best ensemble cast of the series. Only rivalled by Casino Royale I would think.
GE is pure fun and a new Bond that is already established by the end of the PTS.
It has so many classic Bond treats:
Bond on a train
Bond on a plane (twice)
Bond in a Bond car
A fabulous villainous Bond girl
A fabulous strong Bond girl
A brilliant villain and side villain
Great, great Bond side-kicks, Jack Wade and Zukovsky
A truly great villain's lair that is very Ken Adam-esque.
One of the best, if not the best chase sequences ever in St. Petersburg
and much more
DAF is certainly not perfect, nowhere near it, but it is together with QOS the one Bond movie with the highest re-watchability value, if for totally different reasons than QOS.
The dialogue is priceless, every word of it.
The score! A dream.
Tiffany Case
Even Plenty O'Toole can't hurt the movie, even if she tries.
And the best hand-to-hand fight ever in a Bond movie. YES BETTER THAN THE TRAIN FIGHT IN FRWL.
imho
DAF has been at the bottom for a long time. But since a couple of years with the arrival of High Definition (2012) I have learned to love it and it has climbed up my ranking continuously.
Someday it'll crash into my Top 10. It's not far away from it anymore.
Roger Moore never looked better as Bond than he does here. I am also starting to recognize this as one of his better performances in the role. He's still very confident and charming (when he wants/has to be) but there's also a mean streak and some vulnerability portrayed. It was a nice touch to see him with a bloody lip after the dressing room fight.
The Barry score is also growing on me. Not that I ever disliked it. The Asian settings were enjoyable this time around as well. Hell, I even got a kick out of the fun house, which I've always found to be quite tacky. One can definitely feel the enthusiasm that Nick Nack exudes. It goes without saying how great Christopher Lee is as Scaramanga.
This one will definitely be moving up a few spots in the old rankings. There's still some really frustrating parts that will keep it from going too high though. Still, as annoying as Sheriff Pepper was, I will admit that I did chuckle a time or two at some of his lines.
Unfortunately TMWTGG seems to slide lower in my opinion every time I watch it. Hoping that turns around at some point! I will agree of course Christopher Lee as Scaramanga is a big highlight; he makes the movie.
Perhaps because it has some very blunt, Fleming-esque scenes as well:
--> The magnificent sneek-in of Bond in Andrea's hotelroom at the Peninsula
--> A very effective 'blunt' Roger Moore slapping Andrea in her face wonderfully
--> A wonderful villain who uses his Golden Gun as an erotic device on Andrea
--> Andrea herself, who is in many ways similar to the wonderful Severine (SF)
--> Bond visiting Lazar in Macau and threatening to shoot his crotch
--> Bond's visit to Scaramanga's island, the dinner scene (DN?), the cowboy duel
TMWTGG has a lot to admire. It's just at times uneven....when suddenly NickNack or Sherrif J.W. Pepper show up.