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As a compromise, I'd've had Bond put the gun to Blofeld's remaining good eye, knowingly pull the trigger on an empty magazine and then shrug and say 'Out of bullets'.
He double tapped Safin and then blew himself up with him. How times have changed?
Yet Bond executed Stromberg with several shots to the body and face in years past. That's way more "brutal" than a shot to the head, on top of all the other gory instances of death and destruction throughout the series. What an odd comment.
The suits being suits. Probably also skipped TND with Bond grinding up Carver, setting Sanchez on fire and the deaths of countless henchmen and the blunt instrument application.
Talk about perfect casting. Love her.
And of course all the great dialogue between her and Bond. I really wish we had had another Maibaum/Raven script collaboration in the '70s.
I wouldn't consider those examples as Bond killing in cold blood. Carver and Sanchez were both actively trying to kill Bond, and about to do it. Bond shooting Blofeld on the bridge would have been killing in cold blood; Blofeld was beat.
I always think back to the end of the TMWTGG novel, when Bond is ruminating on his difficulty with killing in cold blood. He can't do in Scaramanga when he's lying on the ground, it's only when Scaramanga asks to pray, and pulls a derringer on Bond that Bond is finally able to do the deed.
I know the films in many previous instances show Bond killing in cold blood, but I never complain when he *doesn't* do it, because there's a touch of novel-Bond in there.
Probably not if it was off screen.
I know they couldn’t name him for legal reasons,but as far as I’m concerned,Moore is the Bond to have finally dispatched Blofeld once and for all in the pre Craig continuity.
I agree. When I was a kid I didn't much like it. As I got older I realized Blofeld was just suffering dementia & poverty... ;)
What a sad state of affairs. All James Bond films used to be about the same character. Now we have different characters called James Bond, different timelines, universes, and the Connery to Brosnan Bonds are now thought of as 'pre Craig continuity'.
What a mess they've made of it all.
Just EON doing what they've done best since after Connery: following trends (with a brief pause in the late 80's & 90's).
;)
https://variety.com/2022/film/news/ben-whishaw-james-bond-gay-character-unsatisfied-1235167497/
Bond is above him. Stands on his wrist. Stockmann looks up in anguish as Bond towers over him.
BOND
By the way, it wasn't a pair of threes...it was a pair of twos.
He aims the gun at Stockmann's head.
BOND
Sorry chum. You lose again.
STOCKMAN
But...you're my little brother.
Bond doesn't blink.
BOND
I never had a family.
Bond pumps a single slug into Stockmann's forehead, killing him instantly.
He takes a handkerchief from his other pocket, removes his jacket and staunches the blood from his shoulder.
Dead eyes stare up at Bond, the rain, the dark clouds above.
I could have dealt with that.
How do you feel about NSNA?
This just reiterates to me that we got a better movie than any of these drafts. And it really surprises me that Purvis & Wade signed off on those two drafts of Bond killing Blofeld. Nothing about them sounds like Bond.
I was specifically comparing it with the quite long a drawn-out climaxes to FYEO and DAF, which for my money outstay their welcome.
It functions effectively enough, and the choice for Bond to give up his life as a spy is a big part of the story too at that point.
Yes the OHMSS one is pretty much inexplicable. Bond isn't in the middle of nowhere and horribly injured or anything. He's on a bobsleigh track (which are never exactly inaccessible) and quite near a nice little, quite busy town. Quite why he presumably has a look at Blofeld hanging in his tree and thinks 'ah sod it, I'm going to the casino' and wanders off is not really understandable! :)
I don't think it's quite the same. Stromberg was on his own territory and trying to kill Bond; Blofeld was in the middle of London with no way out- there was no need to kill him.
I think it's the bit where Madeline seems to want to kiss Bond having witnessed him just ruthlessly and slowly strangle a man to death which puzzles me the most! :)
Strictly speaking of course, everyone that Bond kills at the end of SF and SP he should really be arrested for: he doesn't have any sort of jurisdiction to be operating in the UK! :D
The OHMSS novel is worse on that regard because Blofeld clearly escapes and Bond’s response to that is “oh well it doesn’t matter, I blew up his whole operation so I pretty much beat him, I’m gonna get married now”.
Good post. The ending we have in Spectre — Bond throwing down the weapon for the girl, is the obvious one inherent in that story. With the stuff it brings up about shadows of the past and choice. Big theme across the Craig movies is choice. I'm a little surprised it took them that many drafts to figure it out!