Controversial opinions about Bond films

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  • GoldenGunGoldenGun Per ora e per il momento che verrà
    edited October 2020 Posts: 7,114
    QOS indeed has a lot going for it. It has great locations, thrilling action, arguably Arnold's best Bond score, excellent acting + dialogue, a relevant plot and it has a subtlety to its subject matter that we have rarely seen in the other films.

    Where it does fall a bit short is on the villain front and a rushed pace.

    Comparing it to CR is a tough one, but I do think it's the best post-1990 non-Martin Campbell Bond film. At least until NTTD come along.
  • suavejmfsuavejmf Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England
    Posts: 5,131
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    QOS indeed has a lot going for it. It has great locations, thrilling action, arguably Arnold's best Bond score, excellent acting + dialogue, a relevant plot and it has a subtlety to its subject matter that we have rarely seen in the other films.

    Where it does fall a bit short is on the villain front and a rushed pace.

    Comparing it to CR is a tough one, but I do think it's the best post-1990 non-Martin Campbell Bond film. At least until NTTD come along.

    Agreed. I also prefer it to GE.

    The Fleming novels have reference to Vesper in DAF (as sequel 4th book). So I see the ‘heart’ of the film as very Bondian indeed.

  • FatherValentineFatherValentine England
    Posts: 737
    suavejmf wrote: »
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    QOS indeed has a lot going for it. It has great locations, thrilling action, arguably Arnold's best Bond score, excellent acting + dialogue, a relevant plot and it has a subtlety to its subject matter that we have rarely seen in the other films.

    Where it does fall a bit short is on the villain front and a rushed pace.

    Comparing it to CR is a tough one, but I do think it's the best post-1990 non-Martin Campbell Bond film. At least until NTTD come along.

    Agreed. I also prefer it to GE.

    The Fleming novels have reference to Vesper in DAF (as sequel 4th book). So I see the ‘heart’ of the film as very Bondian indeed.

    You can have references to Vesper without it being a core feature of the film. You could ask why would Mi6 send an agent so personally involved in the events he is investigating?

    Anyway, I prefer watching it to GE because GE is the most overrated one of all. Both bottom 5 for me, though.
  • suavejmfsuavejmf Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England
    Posts: 5,131
    suavejmf wrote: »
    GoldenGun wrote: »
    QOS indeed has a lot going for it. It has great locations, thrilling action, arguably Arnold's best Bond score, excellent acting + dialogue, a relevant plot and it has a subtlety to its subject matter that we have rarely seen in the other films.

    Where it does fall a bit short is on the villain front and a rushed pace.

    Comparing it to CR is a tough one, but I do think it's the best post-1990 non-Martin Campbell Bond film. At least until NTTD come along.

    Agreed. I also prefer it to GE.

    The Fleming novels have reference to Vesper in DAF (as sequel 4th book). So I see the ‘heart’ of the film as very Bondian indeed.

    You can have references to Vesper without it being a core feature of the film. You could ask why would Mi6 send an agent so personally involved in the events he is investigating?

    Anyway, I prefer watching it to GE because GE is the most overrated one of all. Both bottom 5 for me, though.

    But M believes that Bond is cold and doesn’t care about Vesper (at first).

    Also, he’s still on a mission (it’s just connected to his vendetta).

    GE is overrated though. It’s solid mediocrity.
  • Posts: 1,630
    GE is held in high regard for a few reasons, methinks. Pierce Brosnan. Superb opening, -- especially the jump stunt -- though the "last call, mate" stuff felt very non-Bond to me. (I realize it made the point that they were friends and colleagues, setting up the later events more dramatically.) And, of course -- the fact that years had passed without a Bond film. I agree that it is more highly regarded than it really "deserved." TND and aspects, at least, of TWINE and DAD were superior. It seemed -- and I've no real idea or confirmation -- that there was less money put into GE, and that the subsequent films got bigger budgets thanks to the financial success of GE.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    suavejmf wrote: »
    Controversial opinion.

    I much prefer QoS to SF and SP. The tone, score, stunts and Craig’s performance is much better.

    The Craig era film order mirrors the film quality. From the amazing Casino Royale, to the great QoS, to the overrated SF and finishing with the disappointing SP.

    Will NTTD change this.....

    Off of this, to make it even more controversial: QoS is the best of the Craig era (for me, at least, and I suspect I'm likely alone in that assessment).

    I too rank QOS top of the Craig era.
  • FatherValentineFatherValentine England
    Posts: 737
    Since62 wrote: »
    GE is held in high regard for a few reasons, methinks. Pierce Brosnan. Superb opening, -- especially the jump stunt -- though the "last call, mate" stuff felt very non-Bond to me. (I realize it made the point that they were friends and colleagues, setting up the later events more dramatically.) And, of course -- the fact that years had passed without a Bond film. I agree that it is more highly regarded than it really "deserved." TND and aspects, at least, of TWINE and DAD were superior. It seemed -- and I've no real idea or confirmation -- that there was less money put into GE, and that the subsequent films got bigger budgets thanks to the financial success of GE.

    It really is after the tank chase that it goes completely downhill. And all that Boris stuff is embarrassing.

    In fairness to Brosnan, he kept the series going and they are mostly entertaining enough. And each of them has some fantastic scenes - the PTS of all four are great, for example, especially TWINE. But they are a victim of their era I think.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,546
    That’s valid if you’re embarrassed about the Boris stuff, and that sucks. GoldenEye is so fun.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,546
    Controversial Opinion/Question: Bond is commonly said to not have much of an effect in the plot of Goldfinger, but isn’t what he does peak espionage? Embed yourself in the enemy organization by any means possible, and get a message out to your allies at a critical time to foil the plot?
  • Last_Rat_StandingLast_Rat_Standing Long Neck Ice Cold Beer Never Broke My Heart
    Posts: 4,584
    Controversial Opinion/Question: Bond is commonly said to not have much of an effect in the plot of Goldfinger, but isn’t what he does peak espionage? Embed yourself in the enemy organization by any means possible, and get a message out to your allies at a critical time to foil the plot?

    I mean he didn't mean to get captured or embedded. Only because he crashed the DB5 is why he became a prisoner
  • Posts: 7,507
    Since62 wrote: »
    GE is held in high regard for a few reasons, methinks. Pierce Brosnan. Superb opening, -- especially the jump stunt -- though the "last call, mate" stuff felt very non-Bond to me. (I realize it made the point that they were friends and colleagues, setting up the later events more dramatically.) And, of course -- the fact that years had passed without a Bond film. I agree that it is more highly regarded than it really "deserved." TND and aspects, at least, of TWINE and DAD were superior. It seemed -- and I've no real idea or confirmation -- that there was less money put into GE, and that the subsequent films got bigger budgets thanks to the financial success of GE.


    Considering all the flack Skyfall gets for having a villain's plan that doesn't make sense, I wonder what people think of the pts in Goldeneye... ;))
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,546
    Controversial Opinion/Question: Bond is commonly said to not have much of an effect in the plot of Goldfinger, but isn’t what he does peak espionage? Embed yourself in the enemy organization by any means possible, and get a message out to your allies at a critical time to foil the plot?

    I mean he didn't mean to get captured or embedded. Only because he crashed the DB5 is why he became a prisoner

    True, but he did get himself off the table.

    ... Not that I *really* understand why Goldfinger didn't just kill him, but still... ;)
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited October 2020 Posts: 7,546
    jobo wrote: »
    Since62 wrote: »
    GE is held in high regard for a few reasons, methinks. Pierce Brosnan. Superb opening, -- especially the jump stunt -- though the "last call, mate" stuff felt very non-Bond to me. (I realize it made the point that they were friends and colleagues, setting up the later events more dramatically.) And, of course -- the fact that years had passed without a Bond film. I agree that it is more highly regarded than it really "deserved." TND and aspects, at least, of TWINE and DAD were superior. It seemed -- and I've no real idea or confirmation -- that there was less money put into GE, and that the subsequent films got bigger budgets thanks to the financial success of GE.


    Considering all the flack Skyfall gets for having a villain's plan that doesn't make sense, I wonder what people think of the pts in Goldeneye... ;))

    I just chalk it up to Alec and Arkady waiting for the right time/mission to enact their plan. That may be being to generous, but it's enough for me to enjoy what I'm watching.

    One thing I thought was really funny that I saw in Cinemasins "Everything Wrong with GoldenEye" was that starting from the very beginning of the PTS, Bond and then later Alec only ever travel downwards, and then suddenly end up on the runway on the top of a mountain :)) Bizarre stuff.

    With regards to Skyfall, I sort of figure that Silva learns about the NATO list and decides it would be a great opportunity to humiliate M, so he steals it and attacks MI6, knows there will definitely be a parliamentary hearing about it, and sort of improvises from there. I'm not smart enough to keep track of the timing of everything, let alone let it take me out of the story. I don't think it would be hard for him to figure out that they'd move into Churchill's bunker/isolation and stuff.
    Q getting "hacked" when they plug in SIlva's computer and the like is honestly just stuff you have to gloss over I feel. It's not great but it doesn't have a huge affect on my enjoyment of the film. The bit of the film between Q and Bond going through SIlva's computer, then the chase, leading up to the parliamentary attack is the worst part of the film for sure. The Parliamentary attack is great, and I like everything else afterwards (even if it drags a bit towards the end).
    Similarly with the Skyfall finale, they could have brought an army of commandos to meet Silva and end it there, but M specifically said she didn't want anyone else to die because of her. I really have no problem with a majority of Skyfall.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,290
    Only thing that protects DAD from that charge is if casual fans catch it on the TV they don't have to know the preceding film, and it makes sense because it sticks within its own parameters. Regardless of its drawbacks. It's just a crap Bond film, not one that destabilises the series.

    QoS isn't a blight on the franchise because it is badly made, but because it made little sense in terms of the evolution of the character.

    Had they removed most of the Vesper references, and completely gotten rid of the Corinne ending etc, and just stuck to Bond hunting down Quantum it might have worked. They could have kept the tone and everything else.

    As it stands it is a stop gap Bond film. It resembles episode 2 of a TV series. Not important enough to stand on its own. As a sequel to CR is is rubbish because it is smaller in scale, and as a lead in to SF it is rubbish because all the story threads were subsequently dropped.

    Good post. Bond was already Bond by the end of CR. QoS is superfluous. And while I like Forster's dramatic scenes (particularly the one with Mathis on the plane), Forster failed to ask himself a primary dramatic question, which was: how has the main character changed from the end of CR to the beginning of QoS?
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,183
    I agree that QOS should have been more of a standalone adventure, yet still a continuation of what CR started. After all, that's what Fleming's LALD essentially was. In that it wasn't about Bond trying to reconcile his feelings about Vesper, it was about Bond getting a chance to get even at those that harmed him (SMERSH).

    At the end of CR, you could leave the film confident that not only did Bond get to recover the money that Mr. White stole, but that he's fully formed into the Bond we've known before. But then along comes CR, and Bond is still conflicted over his feelings, and worse, he never actually recovered the money from Mr. White as it ended up being spent hence the tracked bills.
  • w2bondw2bond is indeed a very rare breed
    Posts: 2,252
    Since62 wrote: »
    GE is held in high regard for a few reasons, methinks. Pierce Brosnan. Superb opening, -- especially the jump stunt -- though the "last call, mate" stuff felt very non-Bond to me. (I realize it made the point that they were friends and colleagues, setting up the later events more dramatically.) And, of course -- the fact that years had passed without a Bond film. I agree that it is more highly regarded than it really "deserved." TND and aspects, at least, of TWINE and DAD were superior. It seemed -- and I've no real idea or confirmation -- that there was less money put into GE, and that the subsequent films got bigger budgets thanks to the financial success of GE.

    I would add the characters and direction. Campbell knows (cinematic) Bond and how to tell a great story. And all characters, major or minor, feel like they are part of the world rather than simply filling in a background
  • FatherValentineFatherValentine England
    Posts: 737
    I agree that QOS should have been more of a standalone adventure, yet still a continuation of what CR started. After all, that's what Fleming's LALD essentially was. In that it wasn't about Bond trying to reconcile his feelings about Vesper, it was about Bond getting a chance to get even at those that harmed him (SMERSH).

    At the end of CR, you could leave the film confident that not only did Bond get to recover the money that Mr. White stole, but that he's fully formed into the Bond we've known before. But then along comes CR, and Bond is still conflicted over his feelings, and worse, he never actually recovered the money from Mr. White as it ended up being spent hence the tracked bills.

    Agreed. They didn't have to remove all traces of Vesper.

    Also, and this is my important point. DC could have played it the same, and we would have known he was mourning Vesper without any of the explicit, awkward references to her. His performance could have carried that.

  • 007InAction007InAction Australia
    edited October 2020 Posts: 2,526
    Most controversial product placement: Smith and Wesson ?

    5c-5c-20james-5_9035511.png?width=1280&name=5c-5c-20james-5_9035511.png
  • QBranchQBranch Always have an escape plan. Mine is watching James Bond films.
    edited October 2020 Posts: 14,570
    Hardly a 'definitive' timeline of products. That's a controversial opinion right there. For example, where's BOAC from the first four Connery films and TSWLM?

    They're implying Gillette products featured in Spectre, but I'm not aware of any. I have the Flexball razor promo, yet it's not seen in the film.
  • suavejmfsuavejmf Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England
    Posts: 5,131
    Where the heck is Bollinger??? A very prominent brand in many Bond films.
  • Mrzstardust789Mrzstardust789 England
    Posts: 4
    The posters for Daniel Craig films are bloody awful! I'd love a LALD style poster for NTTD
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    Posts: 4,626
    The posters for Daniel Craig films are bloody awful! I'd love a LALD style poster for NTTD

    100% agreed. That’s another thing to change when DC leaves: bring back montage posters!
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,183
    Judo throwing Pussfeller and Quarrel into a pile of empty Red Stripe boxes was the most strangest and amusing use of product placement.
  • CommanderRossCommanderRoss The bottom of a pitch lake in Eastern Trinidad, place called La Brea
    Posts: 8,253
    I agree that QOS should have been more of a standalone adventure, yet still a continuation of what CR started. After all, that's what Fleming's LALD essentially was. In that it wasn't about Bond trying to reconcile his feelings about Vesper, it was about Bond getting a chance to get even at those that harmed him (SMERSH).

    At the end of CR, you could leave the film confident that not only did Bond get to recover the money that Mr. White stole, but that he's fully formed into the Bond we've known before. But then along comes CR, and Bond is still conflicted over his feelings, and worse, he never actually recovered the money from Mr. White as it ended up being spent hence the tracked bills.

    Agreed. They didn't have to remove all traces of Vesper.

    Also, and this is my important point. DC could have played it the same, and we would have known he was mourning Vesper without any of the explicit, awkward references to her. His performance could have carried that.

    The references are necessary to help those who didn't see CR undrstand what's going on. So it's either going for a full stand-alone film, which would dissapoint fans (like DAF following OHMSS) or reference enough so casual viewers understand it too. I disagree with your assessment that Bond is suddenly all soppy, whilst he didn't give a rat's bottom about what (just) happened and was full blown Bond as we know him.
    Yes, he looks cool as a cucumber standing there, and the BOnd, James Bond line is uttered, but you can't expect him to be all happy and cool hours after the love of his life killed herself (for him).
    QoS picks up hours, minutes (?) after CR. Either that or Bond has been driving around with White in his trunk for a couple of years. So yes, it makes sense that he's still shaken. And yes, it makes perfect sense she's referenced to. Even more so as M clearly states she has her doubts as to Bond can keep beeing a professional (as she states directly after the titles) but she has no grounds to stop him from doing his work. He's not asking for leave days. But she's confirmed in her suspicions (unfounded, as we learn) by his killing off of 'every lead' to the point the CIA tries to interfere. That's why she cancels all his cards, and wants him send back home.
    It's only in the hotel she realises Bond has been on track, not on a revenge mission.

    So yes, Bond is still very much Bond, it's M who has her doubts.

    As has been stated earlier, Dench's M, especially in the Craig era, has been, let's say unlucky in her assessments of situations. It get's worse with SF though.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,183
    Here's a controversial opinion for you all:

    John Terry should have come back for LTK. At least he would have had something more substantial to do in his second appearance as opposed to what he was given in the first.
  • edited November 2020 Posts: 2,917
    I would have been fine with Terry returning. He would have had much better material to work with in LTK and the continuity would have been appreciated by fans.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,216
    I agree, re: John Terry.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,290
    That would be interesting. I like Hedison but he's not a very good actor and he's too old to be Dalton's contemporary.
  • Posts: 16,162
    Enjoying the love for John Terry! I never felt he was a bad Felix, just one with minimal screen time. I love Hedison in LTK but would have also been happy with Terry.
  • Posts: 1,394
    Big NO from me for Terry returning for LTK.He was way too wooden and Hedison was by far the best Felix Leiter of the entire series.
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