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I also believe that a person may not have the intuition or skill to be a good actor on their own but that a good director can help draw a good performance out of them. If someone can't speak lines in a naturalistic manner or doesn't have a lot of presence that's pretty hard to overcome, but a lot of other things can be molded through direction.
I think its interesting that, out of all the actors, Lazenby is probably the least successful however. You're probably right flasheart about the director drawing a good performance out of them. I remember seeing an interview with Hunt where, prior to shooting the last scene of OHMSS, he left George waiting around for a long time.
George himself also apparently had the book on his lap in the scene, hence one of the most poweful scenes in the whole series was created.
Having said that George was never really an actor. If he was he would surely have been more successful in other projects as well as Bond. I know that he was about to start a film with Bruce Lee just before Lee died but if he was THAT good, surely some other big wig in Hollywood would have picked him up.
He just quite never had the charisma that the others seemed to have. His arrogance probably didn't help either.
@BAIN123: Of course Lazenby wasn't an actor--that's not really a debate. And Kung Fu movies don't exactly give him the chance to show off his range. The reason he wasn't picked up by some other Hollywood big wig because he burned his bridges, he snuffed his lucky break. He was perceived as the guy who failed at Bond at the time. It's his cross to bear of course, but just because he went on to do Kung Fu movies, is not testament to his performance as Bond. Had he stayed on there is every bit of a chance that he could have blossomed into a fine Bond and a good actor while at it. As good as Connery? Impossible to tell--I don't think Lazenby's potential films would have ever been as big as Connery's films commercially. But I do think it is very possible that Lazenby films could have been as good as Connery's if not better.
I accept my (moral) (intellectual) (physical) inferiority.
I'm sure he could have been a more appreciated Bond had he stayed on and been allowed to grow into the role. However, the general consensus between the general public, the majority of hard-core Bond fans and critics is that Connery would always have made the better 007 even if Laz had stayed. I do enjoy Lazenby in OHMSS and think he did he did a fine effort but ultimately Connery does hold himself better. He's just more entertaining in general IMO (plus he isn't dubbed).
I've seen a few internet reviews from fans and they are divided. As I said before some say Laz was great and others say he was "dull and wooden". Based on this I'm not sure he would have been overall "better" than Connery.
I don't know, its another "what if" question :-S
(Does anyone have that link?)
That I would LOVE to see.
What strikes me is that the Producers, despite the problems Lazzer had with Ms Rigg and Mr Hunt, saw enough in this 'non-actor' to offer a 7 film contract!
Holy gay innuendo *chuckles*
Imagine if Lazenby had done a string of Bond films all directed by Hunt, and all of them as true to the books as OHMSS. I think Connery would still be seen as the ultimate Bond, but no doubt Lazenby s star would have shone infinitely brighter.
To me, what sort of tips the scale the other way is the fact that Lazenby did continue to act, not as Bond of course, but he never really got any better. Actually, his best work was OHMSS and it was his first role! Granted he had tons of help in the form of a great director and supporting actor/actress... Lazenby as Bond is an interesting case indeed.
You can only daydream the potentially awesome revenge movie that is Lazenby's Diamonds Are Forever and sigh 8->
It is a good bet (a damned good one) that he would have been accepted and eventually loved as James Bond in the 1970's. (Just imagine him in LALD minus the humor elements ie, the chase at the airfield, and Kanaga's OTT death)
Would EON have taken the path to "lighten up the films" with the tongue in cheek humor had they had Laz on board?
That is another discussion. We all know that DAF would have been a serious revenge flick and follow up to OHMSS but when EON have kept the dark formula or would they gone the way they went after 1971?
You've disproven your own point: 'Look at him in the early films.'
Yes the Connery of DN and FRWL in OHMSS would have been superb. But the disenchanted, bored and phoned in efforts of half of TB, YOLT and DAF? No thanks. I'll take Laz every time.
I'd go as far to say it would have ruined the film we got as starting in GF and proceeding through TB to YOLT Connery stopped playing Fleming's character and just played partly himself and partly the cinematic Bond of Rog and Broz - the wisecracking superman. This portrayal for OHMSS would have been awful.
Tim of TLD and Dan of CR would have been perfect in OHMSS as would early Sean, but Sean with where he was with the character in 1969 would have been detrimental to the masterpiece we ended up with.
The very best case scenario would be being able to challenge Brosnan for that #5 spot.
Connery set the standard but that sense of "making it look easy" is exactly why I'm glad he wasn't in OHMSS. When Lazenby escapes from Piz Gloria, I get the sense that be actually fears for his life in a way that wouldn't have worked with Connery's larger than life portrayal imo. And there's no guarantee he would have put the effort in anyway given how bored he was. As powerful as it would have been to see Connery's Bond finally fall in love then have it taken away, I just can't see it working.
Moore's Bond is pretty much a cartoon character. I love him, he's very entertaining, but I'm sure even he'd agree that he'd be the wrong Bond for this film.
Dalton is my favourite Bond. And he showed with his scenes in TLD with Kara that he could have sold the romantic side of the film. And while he's great in the action scenes I also think he could have sold the physical vulnerability well. But I think he's a little too intense. He's very Flemingesque but it's the Bond of the TLD short story, the world weary burnt out assassin, that he excelled at. I think he comes across as a little too cold and detached to surprass Lazenby.
Brosnan could have sold the emotional side really well and given how much he wanted to explore the idea of Bond actually having feelings for someone (Paris was put into the TND script because of this) I think he deserved a film on par with OHMSS. He could have sold the emotionally vulnerable side really well but as much as I love him (my second favourite after Dalton), he does have a tendancy to overact sometimes and like Connery, I think he comes across as a bit too superhuman to fit the Bond of OHMSS. I think that he would have been good, he's probably the second most suitable imo, but still not as suitable as Lazenby.
Craig is a fantastic actor and he can sell the emotional stuff really well. However like Dalton he can sometimes come across as a bit too cold and detached and while that's fine and actually quite Flemingesque, I'm not sure it'd fit OHMSS. But he's the best actor to have ever played the role so I have no doubt he could have altered this accordingly. But there's another problem, the main problem, and that's the physical side. Lazenby appears constantly human. His escape down the mountain is tense because he actually seems to struggle and fear for his life. Craig is a wrecking ball. The only time he's ever really seemed in real peril is the stairwell fight in CR (and even then he battered him and didn't seem at all affected by the cuts from the machete) and the train fight in SP (which doesn't really count, even Connery seemed vulnerable when pitted against an immortal henchman).
One of the reasons OHMSS as a film is so special to me is that despite the Connery hangovers (the awkward cringe inducing one liners) James Bond is Fleming's Bond. Lazenby seems like a real human being in a way that none of the others do. I can actually imagine him lounging around the office fulfilling the role of a bored civil servant and despite his lack of acting experience, and a couple of wooden moments, he really pulled it through.
So I'd argue that Lazenby already was a better Bond than Connery in a way: he was better at being Fleming's Bond. Yeah a lot of that is probably down to the script and direction but I also can't imagine any other Bond fitting it as well as he does, he definitely deserves credit. I think in an ideal world, Connery would have quit while he was ahead (DN, FRWL, GF, then a different film for his fourth) and Lazenby would have got the role sooner and done the entire Blofeld trilogy (properly, in order).
A post of a quality that is rarely seen on here (unless I have written it). I salute you Sir.
There's a case to made that Laz is the best Bond of all because he is the most everyman and that is how Fleming's Bond comes across; he's not spectacularly witty, he's not a superman, he gets hurt, he gets frightened.
Quite frankly, it would have been difficult for any actor to screw up OHMSS. I think many of the other actors would have been grateful for an opportunity to showcase their skills on a film such as this.
Lazenby is extremely 'cool' in the film, and very confident when he needs to be, and has been mentioned, genuinely vulnerable in key moments. However, he doesn't, in my view, transcend the film like Connery, Moore and Craig have done in their best outings. This is despite his appearing in probably the best story. All three of the others are actors first and foremost, and the requirements of Bond in OHMSS are not necessarily Oscar or thespian worthy.
Therefore, I don't personally see how he could have been better than either of these three, who I think could have nailed the part in this film.
Sorry but good though Laz is in OHMSS, the answer for me to the OP's question is a resounding 'no'.