NO TIME TO DIE (2021) - First Reactions vs. Current Reactions

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  • Posts: 1,078
    slide_99 wrote: »
    Except Craig's. Because he's special. Or something.

    I think he's said before how he enjoyed subverting the character. I wish he'd have gone and subverted a different one to be honest, The Lone Ranger or something. Have him riding off into the sunset with an arrow in his back from Tonto...
    "Hi ho Silver....argh!"
    Thud.

  • JamesKJamesK Canada
    edited October 2021 Posts: 35
    slide_99 wrote: »
    Except Craig's. Because he's special. Or something.

    I think he's said before how he enjoyed subverting the character. I wish he'd have gone and subverted a different one to be honest, The Lone Ranger or something. Have him riding off into the sunset with an arrow in his back from Tonto...
    "Hi ho Silver....argh!"
    Thud.

    Laughed at that. And sure, but I did love much of what he did through all 5 movies - I've had him ranked 2nd behind Connery. Subvert away, just leave him breathing, or at least maybe breathing, when you're finished with him.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 9,509
    slide_99 wrote: »
    RC7 wrote: »
    JamesK wrote: »
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I could do without closure.

    Yes. We've never really had it in a Bond story before and that formula is obviously working. Why do we have to start now...

    Because it makes sense? Doesn’t mean it’s going to happen every other film.

    But by doing it, they've created a world of different 'Bonds' relative to the actor. It doesn't make sense to me, as someone who was bought up with Cubby's idea of 'no actor is bigger than James Bond'.
    Killing him off then saying he'll be back in the credits doesn't make any sense at all. And the only argument I can see for it making sense on here is - "oh, it's a reboot, like Batman/Superman/Captain Caveman or whatever, so there'll be another reboot'.
    It's all daft.

    Agreed. I read an IMDB review that said that the psychological effect of seeing Craig's Bond die has repercussions for the series as a whole. I'd agree with that, too. Craig's movies being a self-contained timeline isn't really the point. The point is that having any incarnation of Bond being killed off fundamentally damages the character. Each Bond actor survives to pass the baton to the next. Except Craig's. Because he's special. Or something.

    Yes… Craig’s interpretation was indeed very special. It went to deeper places the films hadn’t explored before… (and that’s not taking anything away from the other Bond actors; in the end, if NTTD isn’t your cup of tea, then it isn’t your cup of tea (start drinking coffee, very black). However, in a few years time, there will be a new Bond and a new adventure, and you can just leave this time line to someone like me!)
  • Posts: 2,402
    For anyone struggling with how they continue on with another actor after this, Corridor Crew have hilariously (and in an EXCEPTIONALLY violent way!) solved your problems :))
  • Posts: 1,078
    Very clever stuff.

    It's not a different actor that's the problem though. The problem is, they've killed off the character.

  • edited October 2021 Posts: 49
    What Fleming touched upon and indeed explored toward the end of the cycle, is that someone who kills people and sees people killed they are attached to; it begins to affect them and in very profound ways and most interestingly it takes them to a place others do not inhabit.

    Craig's Bond has taken that journey seriously and a good deal of distance, we have seen a man who fell in love and lost that love. We have seen him taken down in the name of king and country and to lose a surrogate parent amongst the place where his parents are buried.

    In Spectre we glimpse at a home half finished incomplete a comment on his lack of domesticity and normality and then he meets someone who challenges him to find his way out who themselves lives in the same world of death and it turns out near death.

    In NTTD for a few vital seconds he actually gives up and Madeleine who knows she maybe pregnant pleads with him not to not be overwhelmed at that moment.

    He has his glimpse of paradise and then leaves for one final denouement. He has always been denied any kind of normality the loss of parents, his work, the hatred of his surrogate brother the loss of his surrogate mother of the love of his life and then Safin offers the final denial. His life is an epic tragedy but it is given reason in his death. His chance to save his child.

    Now people may say that is not what I have signed up for but for Craig Bond to live and be replaced by another actor after all that makes no sense to me at all.

    If Bond returns then it absolutely needs to be a complete rethink a slate wiped clean. In the meantime with some flaws I have in my lifetime had the Bond journey I now realise I had always craved.





  • MinionMinion Don't Hassle the Bond
    edited October 2021 Posts: 1,165
    Very clever stuff.

    It's not a different actor that's the problem though. The problem is, they've killed off the character.
    People keep saying that's a problem, but no one can offer any solid reasoning to back that up. It's James Bond, not a documentary. James Bond can return in the same way Batman can. It's no different. You might not like it, but the best thing Babs and MGW did after taking the reins of the franchise was stopping to adhere to the status quo.
  • slide_99slide_99 USA
    edited October 2021 Posts: 693
    In NTTD for a few vital seconds he actually gives up and Madeleine who knows she maybe pregnant pleads with him not to not be overwhelmed at that moment.

    He has his glimpse of paradise and then leaves for one final denouement. He has always been denied any kind of normality the loss of parents, his work, the hatred of his surrogate brother the loss of his surrogate mother of the love of his life and then Safin offers the final denial. His life is an epic tragedy but it is given reason in his death. His chance to save his child.

    Now people may say that is not what I have signed up for but for Craig Bond to live and be replaced by another actor after all that makes no sense to me at all.

    People have overcome insurmountable tragedies in their lives. Normal people, not heroes. If there's one movie hero could do it, it's Bond, the guy who always overcomes, "always has an escape plan." His last film could have ended on a positive note with him living with his family. The "continuity" could have been closed by having the final scene have an elderly Craig-Bond watching his kid grow up. He could have both closed his tenure and passed the torch to the next actor. Instead, according to a lot of reviews on IMDB and YT, we have kids crying in theaters and people leaving depressed after watching this. What kind of note is that to end any series on?
  • 00Heaven00Heaven Home
    Posts: 575
    Bloody hell. Can someone shoot me, please? Thanks.
  • 9IW9IW
    Posts: 59
    00Heaven wrote: »
    Bloody hell. Can someone shoot me, please? Thanks.

    Well, that depends. Is your story arc complete?
  • 9IW wrote: »
    00Heaven wrote: »
    Bloody hell. Can someone shoot me, please? Thanks.

    Well, that depends. Is your story arc complete?

    I laughed.
  • TripAcesTripAces Universal Exports
    Posts: 4,585
    RC7 wrote: »
    JamesK wrote: »
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I could do without closure.

    Yes. We've never really had it in a Bond story before and that formula is obviously working. Why do we have to start now...

    Because it makes sense? Doesn’t mean it’s going to happen every other film.

    I don't think it will ever happen again, which is what will ultimately make NTTD a classic.
  • Posts: 3,327
    9IW wrote: »
    00Heaven wrote: »
    Bloody hell. Can someone shoot me, please? Thanks.

    Well, that depends. Is your story arc complete?

    :))
  • edited October 2021 Posts: 49
    slide_99 wrote: »
    In NTTD for a few vital seconds he actually gives up and Madeleine who knows she maybe pregnant pleads with him not to not be overwhelmed at that moment.

    He has his glimpse of paradise and then leaves for one final denouement. He has always been denied any kind of normality the loss of parents, his work, the hatred of his surrogate brother the loss of his surrogate mother of the love of his life and then Safin offers the final denial. His life is an epic tragedy but it is given reason in his death. His chance to save his child.

    Now people may say that is not what I have signed up for but for Craig Bond to live and be replaced by another actor after all that makes no sense to me at all.

    People have overcome insurmountable tragedies in their lives. Normal people, not heroes. If there's one movie hero could do it, it's Bond, the guy who always overcomes, "always has an escape plan." His last film could have ended on a positive note with him living with his family. The "continuity" could have been closed by having the final scene have an elderly Craig-Bond watching his kid grow up. He could have both closed his tenure and passed the torch to the next actor. Instead, according to a lot of reviews on IMDB and YT, we have kids crying in theaters and people leaving depressed after watching this. What kind of note is that to end any series on?

    I am well aware of that and I did not say it. We are talking about someone who kills people for a living. Based on my experience of people who do that it it places them in a different place which you can see the effects of but not empathise with.

    I was profoundly up set both times I watched it but the release of such emotions is cathartic and enriching and means I understand the experience of being a human being a little better.

    If people come out of the cinema miserable (not depressed thats a prescribed mental state) then they need to man up and begin to learn to live with the reality of the human experience which is we all die and what makes NTTD elevating and enriching is what he did in life and thats a beautiful positive message.
  • Posts: 3,327
    He has his glimpse of paradise and then leaves for one final denouement. He has always been denied any kind of normality the loss of parents, his work, the hatred of his surrogate brother the loss of his surrogate mother of the love of his life and then Safin offers the final denial. His life is an epic tragedy but it is given reason in his death. His chance to save his child.
    All of the things you highlighted there is where the Craig era went wrong for me. CR was a 5 star, outright classic. You knew it as soon as you saw it. Ticked all the boxes, then explored new ones and pushed new boundaries too. Went back to Fleming (properly), while modernising it too. Those who said it couldn't be done were proved wrong. You can use material written in 1952 and still make it relevant to today.

    QoS dropped off because of a writers strike, but still pushed the envelope, and wrapped up the revenge angle. But from SF onwards, all the bits you mentioned above is where they pushed Bond into the wrong direction. starting subtly with Bond's loss of his parents, seeing his family home, but then going too far - reinventing things that Fleming never explored, and for good reason. Fleming never saw sense in going there.

    Bond and Blofeld being brothers (utter trash), Bond saving his child, Bond being outright killed (no cliffhanger deaths that Fleming occasionally flirted with).

  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts: 7,554
    The more I read about people complain and complain and complain about Brothergate, the more I’m coming around to it.
  • Posts: 3,327
    The more I read about people complain and complain and complain about Brothergate, the more I’m coming around to it.

    At least that's one positive then for all our bitching and moaning. :D
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    For anyone struggling with how they continue on with another actor after this, Corridor Crew have hilariously (and in an EXCEPTIONALLY violent way!) solved your problems :))

    That was fantastic.
  • I’ve seen the movie now twice and loved it but what amazes me is that it flows so well! Never do I feel like it’s dragging. Hard to believe that it’s the longest Bond movie. CR, OHMSS, SF all seem MUCH longer! This one feels fast paced like QOS but it’s nearly AN HOUR LONGER 😳
  • 4EverBonded4EverBonded the Ballrooms of Mars
    Posts: 12,480
    NTTD is very well paced, directed, edited. It never lagged for me either.
  • MinionMinion Don't Hassle the Bond
    edited October 2021 Posts: 1,165
    TripAces wrote: »
    RC7 wrote: »
    JamesK wrote: »
    Birdleson wrote: »
    I could do without closure.

    Yes. We've never really had it in a Bond story before and that formula is obviously working. Why do we have to start now...

    Because it makes sense? Doesn’t mean it’s going to happen every other film.

    I don't think it will ever happen again, which is what will ultimately make NTTD a classic.

    Precisely. People standing on principle that a fictional character should never die should consider expanding their literary and film horizons to include classics in which the main character, gasp, dies at the end to fulfill a thematic point. We should all encourage this franchise to be taken seriously for a change after years and years of being perceived as a thing only midlife-crisis guys really get into. That doesn’t mean it can’t still be popcorn entertainment, but that shouldn’t be all it is.
  • Posts: 526
    They should not have killed Bond. It was a shock value stunt designed to create a “buzz.” That worked out really well in the states: costing them $100-$200 million. DUMB decision. The end.
  • RC7RC7
    edited October 2021 Posts: 10,512
    ‘James Bond will return’, features at the end because it is a) tradition and b) true. What do you think Amazon bought MGM for, to get their hands on Sherlock Gnomes?
    They should not have killed Bond. It was a shock value stunt designed to create a “buzz.” That worked out really well in the states: costing them $100-$200 million. DUMB decision. The end.

    Maybe the States has moved on to more cerebral fair like Venom.
  • edited October 2021 Posts: 389
    Sherlock Holmes died, remember. Then he returned. Why not Bond?

    I doubt the ending as any effect on NTTD box office US takings. It's the pandemic.

    Plus: the movie dangerously flirt with viruses, which may not be what people want to see on screen at this moment. They may just want pure escapism ala Venom, ie leave your brain at the door, as well as any character arc and fleshing out.
  • Posts: 1,078
    Minion wrote: »
    People keep saying that's a problem, but no one can offer any solid reasoning to back that up. It's James Bond, not a documentary. James Bond can return in the same way Batman can. It's no different. You might not like it, but the best thing Babs and MGW did after taking the reins of the franchise was stopping to adhere to the status quo.

    You say that like killing off a beloved screen character of sixty years is somehow brave and revolutionary. I don't think it is - It's a cheap, easy moment that's compromised the narrative flow of the series. I get it that some people are thinking it's a perfect 'end to Craig's arc'. But it's the whole 'this actor gets his arc' daftness that people like me are moaning about. What makes Craig so special that they're re-writing Fleming and killing him off? It's obviously only been done because these daft 'reboots' are a cinematic trend. It's like they thought "oh, we can kill him off now, because they do that with the comic book stuff".
    And again, the "it's good for Batman, it's good for Bond" argument. Can I remind everyone that Bond is supposed to be a drama, based in the real (albeit fantastic) world? He's not Luke Skywalker, Batman or Captain Kirk.
    These movies aren't supposed to be fantasy movies, (despite Moonraker).
    If the next Bond movie has Bond being raised from the dead by witchcraft, are people going to be saying "well that's okay because it worked in Game of Thrones".
  • matt_umatt_u better known as Mr. Roark
    edited October 2021 Posts: 4,343
    They should not have killed Bond. It was a shock value stunt designed to create a “buzz.” That worked out really well in the states: costing them $100-$200 million. DUMB decision. The end.

    Haha. Bond’s death is not a factor in the US performance.
    I must say I'm surprised how many people on here don't see killing off Bond as a massive problem. I can only assume that because I'm not a superhero or sci-fi fan, that I'm somehow out of the loop in how acceptable it is these days to just ignore the plot of a previous film in a series. I always approached the Bond films as a series of movies about the same person, who was portrayed by different actors. But now I'm being asked to accept that Daniel Craig was somehow in a different reality. It's all a bit Star Trek for me I'm afraid.
    And yes, I know it's also impossible that Bond was in his fifties in 2021 and his thirties in 1962, but that stretch wasn't nearly as problematic as blowing him to smithereens on screen and then saying "it's okay, he'll be back".
    Eh? So he didn't die?
    As I've said before, how can we invest any emotion in the death scene when they'll just bring him back for the next film anyway. Is he like Wile E Coyote where he can get blown up but still survive or something?
    Beep beep!
    What bollocks!

    I really have a problem following the logic behind this hate towards this creative decision. Perhaps because there isn’t.
    Bond will come back, yes, but with another iteration of the character. A new Bond. Craig’s Bond death is emotional because his Bond, his arc, his stories are over.

    Plus, let’s now pretend for a minute Bond isn’t dead and NTTD ends with him driving happy into the sunset. If you approach this films like a perpetual continuation and if you think about Bond being always the same person portrayed by different actors, how about Bond being Blofeld’s foster brother, how about Bond being a father? The point is, and lot of people seem to never been able to accept that, the Craig films have always been their own thing. From DN to DAD the saga worked in a way, the way that you describe, but CR was a total schism from the very beginning (just think about the black and white PTS and the “apocryphal” gun barrel) and the Craig era even before NTTD established itself as an independent self contained connected story that explicitly aimed to deconstruct a 40 years old character, with an unrepeatable beginning and now an unrepeatable ending.
    To sum up, like it or not, accepting it or not, the Craig era has always been its own separate thing from the previous adventures.
  • 4EverBonded4EverBonded the Ballrooms of Mars
    Posts: 12,480
    I don't think any explanation will help, any time soon, for people who are terribly upset about Bond dying in this film. Trying to explain why others, like me, have no big problem with it also is fruitless. We just feel and experience the film differently. And I have no angst or worries about the next Bond film. Bond will return. I hope they do not try to connect anything major to Craig's era. But others hope so. And so it goes ... each feeling and perspective is valid for each individual. I love the film, and I value it, and I am eager for the next film. I don't need to explain why I feel this way, in detail, because really no explanation I give will help people who are strongly opposed to the film or at least to Bond's death in it.

    I think trying to explain things to make the other person see things more clearly (meaning the perspective we have) is just repetitive knocking heads against walls. Same as it ever was, yes.
  • Posts: 389
    I think people should not miss the point. The point being that now, in the series, anything can happen. Previously, Bond escaped (in the old series) the most incredible situations intact. It came to a point that no one believed him to be human.

    That was disconnected from where cinema was going, so CR bought it all back to earth, and NTTD enforces the point. Hard.
  • Posts: 1,078
    There's always been a slack chronology, (Blofeld not recognising Bond in OHMSS for example). We've always let that slide because it's quite easy to get over it. Same with the changes in actors over the years.
    But blowing Bond to smithereens, and then saying 'he'll be back' isn't a 'slack chronology'. It's just daft. And no matter how many times people say "it's a timeline/reboot/character arc/alternate universe blah blah - they've killed off the character of James Bond after sixty years, and for me and others, it's a shitty thing to do.
  • 4EverBonded4EverBonded the Ballrooms of Mars
    Posts: 12,480
    That is a good point, @Stamper. Others awhile back have mentioned it, I think. Yes, it shakes the complacency out of Bond, even if just subconsciously. That in itself is not a bad thing, in my opinion.
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