Last Bond Movie You Watched

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  • ClarkDevlinClarkDevlin Martinis, Girls and Guns
    Posts: 15,423
    The fight scene with Lippe is taken directly from The Man from UNCLE episode, "Alexander The Greater - Part 2". Directly the same choreography where Napoleon Solo (Robert Vaughn) fights a giant henchman.
  • Posts: 16,154
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I think of them as about equal.

    Me, too. I always rank them side by side. When I was a kid just developing my interest in Bond that summer of 1983, it was a thrilling prospect for me to find out Sean was coming out with his own rival Bond later that year. It made me want to seek out the other Connery films, read up on Bond film history and eventually see all the films.
    I owe my Bond fandom to OP and NSNA.
    I'm probably due to watch them again soon. Maybe I'll do a double feature?
  • Posts: 17,753
    It's been so long since I saw NSNA the last time, that I still only own it on VHS! Will have to get it on DVD/Blu-ray/digital download soon.
  • Posts: 19,339
    I cant believe some of you rank NSNA as equal to OP......you must give me the name of your oculists.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    I don t have an occulist, but I really should get one.
  • mattjoesmattjoes Julie T. and the M.G.'s
    Posts: 7,021
    OP is likely my favorite Bond film, so I definitely rank it above NSNA. The Germany scenes are magnificent. AVTAK's climactic scene is conceptually very interesting --I mean, fight atop the Golden Gate Bridge-- but the fight itself could've been a bit better. It's not engaging enough; there are too many wide shots where closer, more intense ones would've been preferrable, and the scene feels like a "trailer" of itself.

    Regarding NSNA, I wanted to add the film could've used a bit more music. Some scenes lack enough energy without the support of a musical score to propel them.

    It's also interesting to see Edward Fox and Ronald Pickup reunited after The Day of the Jackal, and playing completely different roles-- in a way, they're almost playing each other's role from the previous film.
  • Posts: 7,415
    For Your Eyes Only
    Another enjoyable watch for Moores fifth outing! The thing about this film is that it's never boring....but it's never really thrilling either. Two scenes remain top notch for me, Bonds chase and killing of Locque and the keel hauling sequence, which as we know is from LALD novel! The opening of the pts was set up in case a new actor was cast and I've often imagined, as the camera pans left from the priest, we see someone like Dalton, who was considered at the time! Moore though is great, particularly his first scene with Topol, who is set up as the villain but the twist turns out to be Kristatos (Topol actually would have been an interesting bad guy. I find Julian Glover a bit bland throughout!)

    SPECTRE
    It was on ITV2 last night and I just came on it right at the start so I decided to watch despite the bloody ad breaks and cuts!
    Sorry to the naysayers but I still get loads of enjoyment from this. Pts is still thrilling, I was critical of Kleinman titles lately but I enjoyed them this time...and title song!!! The entire section in Rome is superb to me,the car, the funeral, seduction of Lucia, board meet (great use of silence!) including the car chase!!. The 9 eyes stuff and C are annoying, but those scenes are brief (and should have been briefer!!)
    Love Madeleine and her first encounter with Bond is great. Plane chase is enjoyable...Just think someone like Dan Bradley would have done a better job!
    L'Americain is another fine segment and the train fight is a cracker and the scene of them waiting in the desert is definitely something you would read in Fleming , particular when the rolls comes out of nowhere!
    First encounter with Blofeld in the meteor room is memorable (again, good use of silence) and I love Bonds retort to "an unstoppable force!"..."except it DID stop!"
    After this things go awry, (Only interest is the Hildebrand reference and I like the final shot of Bond on the bridge with the downed helicopter) but enjoyed it immensely still up to this point...more than I ever get from SF!
  • Posts: 7,415
    Birdleson wrote: »
    No reason to be sorry to anyone if you enjoy not.

    Very true. But there seems to be a strong backlash against SP lately! I know you place it last yourself, but each to his own! I can't fathom anyone who has anything positive to say about DAD, but even though viewing lists, it appears to be at bottom of majority, it appears higher up in some! I do enjoy SP until it's last section, if it had taken a different route for the ending (i.e. not have Bond and Blofeld return to London and dropped the stepbrother angle!)........
  • Posts: 230
    barryt007 wrote: »
    STLCards3 wrote: »
    LTK. I always had it in my bottom 3rd until last night. For some reason, it clicked. I finally saw and felt all the things LTK fanboys have been saying for years.

    Where is it now in your rankings ?

    7th.
  • Posts: 230
    Mathis1 wrote: »
    STLCards3 wrote: »
    LTK. I always had it in my bottom 3rd until last night. For some reason, it clicked. I finally saw and felt all the things LTK fanboys have been saying for years.

    Good for you! Brilliant Bond movie. Loved it from the first time I saw and still do! Dalton IS Bond!!
    Watched LALD last night as it was on ITV4.
    Good viewing despite the channels many ad breaks (shoved in at annoying moments as usual!!)
    I never liked the pts. Always thought they should of had those killings of the agents after the titles. And Moore should of had an intro as Bond as an opener!
    Do love his scene with M though in his apartment! Lee is particularly good, though Bond is a bit sloppy with his coffee!

    My hangup had always been how the production quality seemed a bit subpar and it looked very dated. I tuned that out and felt a level of suspense and tension I hadn't with the first 10-15 viewings.
  • GBFGBF
    Posts: 3,197
    Thunderball:

    still a mixed bag for me. Some great scenes, especially the SPECTRE meeting, the death of Fiona Volpe,... actually all parts with Fiona Volpe are great. I also like the score, the titles and the title song, as well as the spy work Bond does in the Bahamas.

    I am not a big fan of the Scrublands scenes: I just can't believe the coincidence that Bond and the SPECTRE agents are there at the same time. Everything that happens around the health spa is also not really plausible and could have been easily improved by a better script.

    I also think that there is a missed opportunity by not making use of any of the other 00 agents, especially since the film is named after the operation. It is also a bit sad that we know everything already so that there is little suspense when Bond is investigating.

    The underwater battle is admirable from a technical point of view but also a bit tedious. The editing in the end also ruins an otherwise good fight scene.
  • Posts: 12,466
    Just watched TB and loved it. It’s #9 on my list.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited April 2018 Posts: 23,883
    #2 for me. I realize it's paced a bit slow, but the film is all about atmosphere (including cinematography & score), dialogue and performances for me, and on that note it is top notch. SF is similar to me in this respect and I think it's telling that these are the two series top grossers.
  • GBFGBF
    Posts: 3,197
    I also like it. I agree that TB has a specific atmosphere. Largo and Fiona are memorable villains, too. I especially like the scene when Fiona meets him in Palmyra (Is it the only time we see them together?). On the other side, Vargas could have been a bit stronger.
  • GBFGBF
    Posts: 3,197
    TB is somewhere between #8 and #20 for me. In this area, I find it very difficult to find a persistent ranking.
  • Posts: 16,154
    SPECTRE

    Just watched this one again today. It's my least watched 007 film including the 67 CR and 54 CR.

    I kept thinking, it needed tighter editing. Cut down to, say 130 minutes, perhaps insert decent music where needed, and it could have been quite solid. The L'Americain sequence drags on as does the torture bit.

    I understand that many might not want to go backwards in their career, but I think it might have been interesting had Mickey G watched the final print of SP, realized it's shortcomings and given John Glen a call to re-edit.

    Someone like Glen probably would have fixed the gunbarrel, removing the pretentious "Dead are alive" bulls**t and opened on the skull eye socket as per the script. I have no doubt he would have cut the brothergate dialogue out altogether therefore making it an interesting trivia on an idiotic idea that may have occurred (a'la the DR. NO monkey) had good sense not prevailed.
    I also think Glen would have inserted a pigeon somewhere. But, hey, I'll take that over brothergate any day.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited April 2018 Posts: 23,883
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    SPECTRE

    The L'Americain sequence drags on as does the torture bit.
    It's true that L'Americain drags, but I think it's one of the better scenes in the film. I have mentioned this before, but in the theatre on my second viewing the phones lit up like crazy during this sequence, indicating that audiences were tuning out in a big way.

    The torture certainly drags on and was quite gratuitous in my view.
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    Someone like Glen probably would have fixed the gunbarrel, removing the pretentious "Dead are alive" bulls**t and opened on the skull eye socket as per the script. I have no doubt he would have cut the brothergate dialogue out altogether therefore making it an interesting trivia on an idiotic idea that may have occurred (a'la the DR. NO monkey) had good sense not prevailed.
    I also think Glen would have inserted a pigeon somewhere. But, hey, I'll take that over brothergate any day.
    Glen would have certainly cleaned it up quite a bit.

    Mendes did do the 'bird tribute' at White's home though.
  • Posts: 16,154
    bondjames wrote: »
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    SPECTRE

    The L'Americain sequence drags on as does the torture bit.
    It's true that L'Americain drags, but I think it's one of the better scenes in the film. I have mentioned this before, but in the theatre on my second viewing the phones lit up like crazy during this sequence, indicating that audiences were tuning out in a big way.

    The torture certainly drags on and was quite gratuitous in my view.
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    Someone like Glen probably would have fixed the gunbarrel, removing the pretentious "Dead are alive" bulls**t and opened on the skull eye socket as per the script. I have no doubt he would have cut the brothergate dialogue out altogether therefore making it an interesting trivia on an idiotic idea that may have occurred (a'la the DR. NO monkey) had good sense not prevailed.
    I also think Glen would have inserted a pigeon somewhere. But, hey, I'll take that over brothergate any day.
    Glen would have certainly cleaned it up quite a bit.

    Mendes did do the 'bird tribute' at White's home though.

    That's right!! Good catch on the pigeon. I think the audiences had their phones out during "L'Americain" when I saw it as well.
  • JamesBondKenyaJamesBondKenya Danny Boyle laughs to himself
    edited April 2018 Posts: 2,730
    I think the main reason that spectre doesn’t work is that among other things, there is no reason to have a mission, there is no plot, there is no story. It’s more of a film that exists solely to explain continuity to an audience that has no interest in that. Hence it only gets worse every rewatch for me.

    For example,
    Casino Royale exists to test bonds masculinity and prove that Bond is the ultimate agent
    QOS exists to wrap up the broken character of CR

    SF exists to test bonds relevancy in the modern world against a cyber threat

    But SP exists, why?- to prove that BROfeld was the author of his pain or some nonsense. Not nearly good enough
  • RemingtonRemington I'll do anything for a woman with a knife.
    Posts: 1,534
    Well, me and my friend FINALLY resumed our Bondathon the other day. FRWL. A true, effing classic. My bud loved it and gave it a 9 out of 10. He preferred it to Dr. No. I enjoyed it even more than usual. True perfection.

    Tonight I watched CR followed by QOS with my aunt. She really liked both. Perfect double feature. Feeling good tonight.
  • Posts: 17,753
    Birdleson wrote: »
    To me, the problem is that there is nothing, or little, to salvage. There are several, if not most, scenes in the first half that would be fine if they were intercut with greatness, but on their own they are just passable at best. Even the highlights (Mr. White, the SPECTRE meeting) leave me waiting for those better moments. It's in the second half we realize that they aren't coming. So, in my mind, SP is unlike all of my other lesser loved entries in the franchise in that, with all of those, I can visualize editing them down to greatness. With SP the best I could do is edit it down to a fairly dull, passable, 40 minute trip to nowhere.

    This is one of the main reasons why it's all down at the very bottom for me. We'll need an even worse film for it not to stay there. It still surprises me that this entry even got released the way it was. There's nothing there, it's just scenes that drifts along, reaching the runtime of an already too long film.
  • Posts: 9,846
    Casino Royale it is still the best bond movie
  • RemingtonRemington I'll do anything for a woman with a knife.
    Posts: 1,534
    Risico007 wrote: »
    Casino Royale it is still the best bond movie

    If it wasn't for that pesky GE, I'd agree.
  • Posts: 7,653
    Risico007 wrote: »
    Casino Royale it is still the best bond movie

    If DN, FRWIL, GF, TB, OHMSS, FYEO, OP, GE were never made I might almost take your word for it. ;)
  • talos7talos7 New Orleans
    Posts: 8,205
    Risico007 wrote: »
    Casino Royale it is still the best bond movie

    You are correct.
  • goldenswissroyalegoldenswissroyale Switzerland
    Posts: 4,483
    GBF wrote: »
    Thunderball:

    still a mixed bag for me. Some great scenes, especially the SPECTRE meeting, the death of Fiona Volpe,... actually all parts with Fiona Volpe are great. I also like the score, the titles and the title song, as well as the spy work Bond does in the Bahamas.

    I am not a big fan of the Scrublands scenes: I just can't believe the coincidence that Bond and the SPECTRE agents are there at the same time. Everything that happens around the health spa is also not really plausible and could have been easily improved by a better script.

    I also think that there is a missed opportunity by not making use of any of the other 00 agents, especially since the film is named after the operation. It is also a bit sad that we know everything already so that there is little suspense when Bond is investigating.

    The underwater battle is admirable from a technical point of view but also a bit tedious. The editing in the end also ruins an otherwise good fight scene.

    Watched Thunderball last night.
    Can agree with everything GBF is writing.
    Fiona is the best part! The SPECTRE Meeting is great, too.

    In my opinion, there is missing a really great action piece in this movie. The best action piece is even the fight in the beginning (yes, I'm not a big fan of the underwater scenes).
  • edited April 2018 Posts: 12,466
    talos7 wrote: »
    Risico007 wrote: »
    Casino Royale it is still the best bond movie

    You are correct.

    Thirded. Many great Bond films have come, but CR is the best of them all!!!

  • Posts: 3,336
    FoxRox wrote: »
    talos7 wrote: »
    Risico007 wrote: »
    Casino Royale it is still the best bond movie

    You are correct.

    Thirded. Many great Bond films have come, but CR is the best of them all!!!

    Agree.
  • Lancaster007Lancaster007 Shrublands Health Clinic, England
    Posts: 1,874
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    SPECTRE

    The L'Americain sequence drags on as does the torture bit.
    It's true that L'Americain drags, but I think it's one of the better scenes in the film. I have mentioned this before, but in the theatre on my second viewing the phones lit up like crazy during this sequence, indicating that audiences were tuning out in a big way.

    The torture certainly drags on and was quite gratuitous in my view.
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    Someone like Glen probably would have fixed the gunbarrel, removing the pretentious "Dead are alive" bulls**t and opened on the skull eye socket as per the script. I have no doubt he would have cut the brothergate dialogue out altogether therefore making it an interesting trivia on an idiotic idea that may have occurred (a'la the DR. NO monkey) had good sense not prevailed.
    I also think Glen would have inserted a pigeon somewhere. But, hey, I'll take that over brothergate any day.
    Glen would have certainly cleaned it up quite a bit.

    Mendes did do the 'bird tribute' at White's home though.

    That's right!! Good catch on the pigeon. I think the audiences had their phones out during "L'Americain" when I saw it as well.

    Seriously? WTF is wrong with people. Not only can they not sit down for 2 or so hours without stuffing their faces with god-awful popcorn, they can't leave their precious smartphone alone while watching a film! Jesus-H-Christ. I love going to the cinema, but viewing at home is a lot less stressful!
  • Posts: 16,154
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    SPECTRE

    The L'Americain sequence drags on as does the torture bit.
    It's true that L'Americain drags, but I think it's one of the better scenes in the film. I have mentioned this before, but in the theatre on my second viewing the phones lit up like crazy during this sequence, indicating that audiences were tuning out in a big way.

    The torture certainly drags on and was quite gratuitous in my view.
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    Someone like Glen probably would have fixed the gunbarrel, removing the pretentious "Dead are alive" bulls**t and opened on the skull eye socket as per the script. I have no doubt he would have cut the brothergate dialogue out altogether therefore making it an interesting trivia on an idiotic idea that may have occurred (a'la the DR. NO monkey) had good sense not prevailed.
    I also think Glen would have inserted a pigeon somewhere. But, hey, I'll take that over brothergate any day.
    Glen would have certainly cleaned it up quite a bit.

    Mendes did do the 'bird tribute' at White's home though.

    That's right!! Good catch on the pigeon. I think the audiences had their phones out during "L'Americain" when I saw it as well.

    Seriously? WTF is wrong with people. Not only can they not sit down for 2 or so hours without stuffing their faces with god-awful popcorn, they can't leave their precious smartphone alone while watching a film! Jesus-H-Christ. I love going to the cinema, but viewing at home is a lot less stressful!

    I agree. It's obnoxious to see the lit up smart phones in the cinema after the lights go down. I always envision Clint Eastwood snatching one from someone, grabbing them and doing his "Listen, punk. To me you're nothing but dogs**t" speech from Sudden Impact.
    I pretty stopped going to the movies some time back. It's just fun fun anymore.
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