New thoughts on Connery's last four Bond movies...

124

Comments

  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited November 19 Posts: 16,428
    Yes that is true, Bond stays present onscreen which is wise. Agree with GE too.
    I don't mind the bomb theft bit in NSNA, as I remember it's pretty brief, especially compared to TB which goes on forever. And as you say, Bond doesn't disappear offscreen.

    One thing AVTAK should have lifted from NSNA (aside from stealing Largo to become Max Zorin!) is that NSNA sort of gives our quite-old Bond an ending: it seems like he's perhaps retiring at the end of it without saying that explicitly. I tend to think it wouldn't have harmed AVTAK or TLD to have done something similar at the end for Roger.
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    edited November 19 Posts: 2,067
    I was actually surprised as to how a director like Terence Young allowed some of those underwater scenes to drag. But me thinks maybe Cubby & Saltzman wanted to show their achievement of filming underwater, because Thunderball is the first underwater Bond film and possibly among the first films to achieve that in film history or maybe back in 1965, some of those underwater equipments were new and they were taking their time to show them off. I don't know just a thought.
  • edited November 19 Posts: 4,170
    I don’t think Bond being onscreen or the film ‘changing gears’ makes or breaks part of the film. The GE section works for me better than TB or NSNA as it’s more compelling and dramatic. Bond’s offscreen for just as much of NSNA so I don’t see the issue.

    To be honest, the stealing of the bombs is a surprisingly dull part of the story. It’s all very routine and inevitable. It was even in Fleming’s novel. It’s just mercifully tighter and better integrated in NSNA.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited November 19 Posts: 16,428
    And the cruise missile stuff, slightly dated though the effects look now, is still quite exciting to watch.
    You're right though, GE is a more interesting story, despite really just being a variation of the same thing. Evil baddie team steal some military weaponry.
    I'd love to know how faithful to Thunderball they had to be with NSNA. Could you have done the plot of GE and said it's a loose TB remake? Just call the satellites Thunderball, makes as much sense (more, probably), hold the world to ransom. If Broccoli had the brass balls to put 'Ian Fleming's Moonraker' on the posters to that film then you'd think McClory could've gone wild with it, really.
  • edited November 19 Posts: 1,371
    GE has another issue, they also steal a helicopter. I mean, two robberies in the same movie!
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,306
    mtm wrote: »
    And the cruise missile stuff, slightly dated though the effects look now, is still quite exciting to watch.
    You're right though, GE is a more interesting story, despite really just being a variation of the same thing. Evil baddie team steal some military weaponry.
    I'd love to know how faithful to Thunderball they had to be with NSNA. Could you have done the plot of GE and said it's a loose TB remake? Just call the satellites Thunderball, makes as much sense (more, probably), hold the world to ransom. If Broccoli had the brass balls to put 'Ian Fleming's Moonraker' on the posters to that film then you'd think McClory could've gone wild with it, really.

    Seriously, "Ian Fleming's MR" is better placed on a couple other Eon films. They keep trying. No doubt they will try again.
  • Posts: 4,170
    mtm wrote: »
    And the cruise missile stuff, slightly dated though the effects look now, is still quite exciting to watch.
    You're right though, GE is a more interesting story, despite really just being a variation of the same thing. Evil baddie team steal some military weaponry.
    I'd love to know how faithful to Thunderball they had to be with NSNA. Could you have done the plot of GE and said it's a loose TB remake? Just call the satellites Thunderball, makes as much sense (more, probably), hold the world to ransom. If Broccoli had the brass balls to put 'Ian Fleming's Moonraker' on the posters to that film then you'd think McClory could've gone wild with it, really.

    Yeah, I'm really not sure what the extent was to what they could or couldn't use, especially when it intersected with EON. I find it surprising they got away with using the white cat for example.
  • Posts: 1,371
    A white cat is just a white cat, I guess.
  • edited November 19 Posts: 4,170
    A white cat is just a white cat, I guess.

    Yeah but it's pretty on the nose and it definitely comes from EON's films. It's kinda weird NSNA even felt the need to use it. It tries so hard to do something different with Q, M and even Blofeld (although von Sydow is exceptionally unexceptional in the part, and perhaps to a large extent using the cat was meant to associate his character more directly with Blofeld. Lazy but makes sense).

    EDIT: Apparently McClory argued that since it was a part of the film Blofeld it was part of his creation. But I've got no more information on it. Still quite surprised he got away with that one.

    https://jamesbond.fandom.com/wiki/Blofeld's_cat#Blofeld's_cat_and_the_Thunderball_controversy
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,428
    007HallY wrote: »
    EDIT: Apparently McClory argued that since it was a part of the film Blofeld it was part of his creation. But I've got no more information on it. Still quite surprised he got away with that one.

    https://jamesbond.fandom.com/wiki/Blofeld's_cat#Blofeld's_cat_and_the_Thunderball_controversy

    Cor, that sounds pretty questionable logic to me! :)

    Good bit of trivia there I hadn't thought of though: NTTD is the first time Blofeld has appeared sans cat.
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    edited November 19 Posts: 2,067
    Maybe we need another unofficial Bond film as we wait for EON?

    Title: A World Without Wants.

    CAST
    1. Martin Mcreadie as James Bond.
    2. Ciaran Hinds as Blofeld.
    3. Wagner Moura as his second-in-command.
    5. Alia Bhatt as the main Bond girl.
    6. Adrianne Palicki as a femme fatale.
    7. Lucy Griffiths as Moneypenny.
    8. Robert Amarayo as Q.
    9. Gwendoline Christie as a Henchwoman.
    10. Thandiwe Newton as M.
    11. Bad guys.
    12. Others.

    Director: Alfonso Cuaron
    Title Song and Score: Goldfrapp
    Other crew members.
  • edited November 19 Posts: 4,170
    mtm wrote: »
    007HallY wrote: »
    EDIT: Apparently McClory argued that since it was a part of the film Blofeld it was part of his creation. But I've got no more information on it. Still quite surprised he got away with that one.

    https://jamesbond.fandom.com/wiki/Blofeld's_cat#Blofeld's_cat_and_the_Thunderball_controversy

    Cor, that sounds pretty questionable logic to me! :)

    Good bit of trivia there I hadn't thought of though: NTTD is the first time Blofeld has appeared sans cat.

    I know! Not sure what case the lawyers put forward to make that one work. But McClory seemingly felt strongly about including the cat.

    I need to give the book The Battle for Bond a read as I've heard that goes through a lot of this. The entire thing seems like a mess though, and from what I know about McClory's later life/everything about the later case it actually comes off as kinda sad (not that any other party involved including Fleming are angels in all this).

    Never thought about that with NTTD, but true.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    edited November 19 Posts: 16,428
    007HallY wrote: »
    I need to give the book The Battle for Bond a read as I've heard that goes through a lot of this.

    Yeah I keep meaning to have a look at that.
    007HallY wrote: »
    The entire thing seems like a mess though, and from what I know about McClory's later life/everything about the later case it actually comes off as kinda sad (not that any other party involved including Fleming are angels in all this).

    Including Brosnan! When he missed out on Bond in '86 he contacted McClory and tried to get his own rival Bond series started; after all the chat of 'the Bond family' I'm kind of amazed Broccoli gave him the time of day after that but I guess it's all just down to money in the end.

    Maybe we need another unofficial Bond film as we wait for EON?

    Title: A World Without Wants.

    CAST
    1. Martin Mcreadie as James Bond.
    2. Ciaran Hinds as Blofeld.
    3. Wagner Moura as his second-in-command.
    5. Alia Bhatt as the main Bond girl.
    6. Adrianne Palicki as a femme fatale.
    7. Lucy Griffiths as Moneypenny.
    8. Robert Amarayo as Q.
    9. Gwendoline Christie as a Henchwoman.
    10. Thandiwe Newton as M.
    11. Bad guys.
    12. Others.

    Director: Alfonso Cuaron
    Title Song and Score: Goldfrapp
    Other crew members.

    Heh! Nice. Sometimes I like to imagine how another TB remake could have been.
    I reckon Sean could have done one instead of The Rock in the mid-nineties; with Bond (like his Rock character) having been imprisoned in HMS Shrublands for the last 25 years, alongside a suspicious inmate named Count Lippe, but when the new M realises he needs the knowledge of the only man to ever defeat SPECTRE, he drags the ex-007 out of prison...

    sddefault.jpg
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 2,067
    Oh, that's a nice one @mtm
  • thedovethedove hiding in the Greek underworld
    Posts: 5,436
    I was told that the underwater aspect of the story came from Kevin McClory and that he was an avid diver. Not sure how true that is. I wonder how much of TB was him making calls and decisions and how much was Cubby and Harry?

    As I understand it, EON saw this as a chance to get one of the novels they didn't have rights to under the EON banner. Kevin was smart to approach them at the time he did. After GF the follow up was going to be huge.

    Overall I like TB better. However I do think NSNA has some merits and doesn't deserve all the kicks it takes. Sure it's not as slick at TB, and it's score is lacking, but there are some merits.

    One of the best exchanges.

    Fatima "I'm sorry for making you all wet."

    Bond "But my martini is still dry."

  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 2,067
    Yeah, that's one of the very, very, very best lines in Bond history...and it so happens to appear in an unofficial Bond film.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,978
    Funny, I'm watching NSNA right now and just enjoyed that exchange barely 20 minutes ago. Bond has a lot of witty comebacks and zingers in this one, I love it.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,428
    Yeah, that's one of the very, very, very best lines in Bond history...and it so happens to appear in an unofficial Bond film.

    I also think this bit is up there as one of the coolest little Bond moves :)

    giphy.webp
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 2,067
    mtm wrote: »
    Yeah, that's one of the very, very, very best lines in Bond history...and it so happens to appear in an unofficial Bond film.

    I also think this bit is up there as one of the coolest little Bond moves :)

    giphy.webp

    Exactly! Very stylish and Bondian move. I think if NSNA was official, and had the Gunbarrel sequence, Title sequence and a John Barry score, the film would have been widely accepted, for what it is.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,804
    mtm wrote: »
    Yeah, that's one of the very, very, very best lines in Bond history...and it so happens to appear in an unofficial Bond film.

    I also think this bit is up there as one of the coolest little Bond moves :)

    giphy.webp

    Exactly! Very stylish and Bondian move. I think if NSNA was official, and had the Gunbarrel sequence, Title sequence and a John Barry score, the film would have been widely accepted, for what it is.

    Agreed. Even with dopey 4th wall breaking wink at the end.
  • SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷SecretAgentMan⁰⁰⁷ Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria
    Posts: 2,067
    chrisisall wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    Yeah, that's one of the very, very, very best lines in Bond history...and it so happens to appear in an unofficial Bond film.

    I also think this bit is up there as one of the coolest little Bond moves :)

    giphy.webp

    Exactly! Very stylish and Bondian move. I think if NSNA was official, and had the Gunbarrel sequence, Title sequence and a John Barry score, the film would have been widely accepted, for what it is.

    Agreed. Even with dopey 4th wall breaking wink at the end.

    Exactly. That wink! Wink that came back in Skyfall...but this time to Mallory.
  • talos7talos7 New Orleans
    Posts: 8,217
    And, unlike for Diamonds are Forever, Connery came in fit and well groomed for NSNA. It's often said that Connery was showing his age in DaF; I think it was more of a matter of not caring about staying in shape, enjoying the finer things in life and not paying attention to the finer details of getting ready to play the role. And yes, as much as some may snicker, that includes taming his brows and having a well fitting hairpiece

    DaF was produced in an awkward time period that bridged the 60's and 70's, and it shows ,in tone and fashion choices.

    Compare Connery in DaF and 7 years later in A Bridge Too Far. Age was not what had caught up with Sean when he returned the first time to Bond

    FOW8j6Q.jpg

    vxmhc1I.jpg
  • Posts: 1,999
    Unless Connery wrote or spoke somewhere, "I didn't care about staying in shape, because I was enjoying the finer things in life and not paying attention to the finer details of getting ready to play the role," I don't see how such assumptions are fair speculation.
  • talos7talos7 New Orleans
    Posts: 8,217
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Unless Connery wrote or spoke somewhere, "I didn't care about staying in shape, because I was enjoying the finer things in life and not paying attention to the finer details of getting ready to play the role," I don't see how such assumptions are fair speculation.

    How he looks in the film absolutely make it fair speculation; I'm not stating it as a fact. Also, decades later he showed that he could show up in peak form if he care to.
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,306
    chrisisall wrote: »
    mtm wrote: »
    Yeah, that's one of the very, very, very best lines in Bond history...and it so happens to appear in an unofficial Bond film.

    I also think this bit is up there as one of the coolest little Bond moves :)

    giphy.webp

    Exactly! Very stylish and Bondian move. I think if NSNA was official, and had the Gunbarrel sequence, Title sequence and a John Barry score, the film would have been widely accepted, for what it is.

    Agreed. Even with dopey 4th wall breaking wink at the end.

    That was a better end than Roger's, even if Connery's Bond melded with Roger's Bond in the end.
  • George_KaplanGeorge_Kaplan Being chauffeured by Tibbett
    edited November 20 Posts: 686
    According to Terence Young, he was already telling Connery to suck in his gut during FRWL. "Sean loves to eat" he said.
  • thedovethedove hiding in the Greek underworld
    Posts: 5,436
    talos7 wrote: »
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Unless Connery wrote or spoke somewhere, "I didn't care about staying in shape, because I was enjoying the finer things in life and not paying attention to the finer details of getting ready to play the role," I don't see how such assumptions are fair speculation.

    How he looks in the film absolutely make it fair speculation; I'm not stating it as a fact. Also, decades later he showed that he could show up in peak form if he care to.

    Let us not forget that he was brought in very last minute. Cubby and Harry had already signed John Gavin to the role before David Picker from UA stepped in. I doubt he had any time to get into shape or do much in the way of preparing. Also I believe I heard in an interview that Connery chose the hairpiece because he wanted to show Bond ageing.

    DAF was a change of pace for Connery and he clearly enjoyed the script. I think he plays it the right way and his performance is not terrible by any stretch.
  • edited November 20 Posts: 1,371
    talos7 wrote: »
    CrabKey wrote: »
    Unless Connery wrote or spoke somewhere, "I didn't care about staying in shape, because I was enjoying the finer things in life and not paying attention to the finer details of getting ready to play the role," I don't see how such assumptions are fair speculation.

    How he looks in the film absolutely make it fair speculation; I'm not stating it as a fact. Also, decades later he showed that he could show up in peak form if he care to.

    They hired him at the last minute, that could be a possible explanation.

    Anyway, I think it's the eyebrows that really make him look different.

    He looked fine IMO. Best toupee since GF and he looked darker, like a shark.

    Yes, he was overweight but still looked strong.
  • GoldenGunGoldenGun Per ora e per il momento che verrà
    Posts: 7,138
    I quite like Connery in both DAF and NSNA. Sure he's not the same Bond as in DN-TB, but he has a great time playing a more jovial 007.
  • edited November 20 Posts: 4,170
    According to Terence Young, he was already telling Connery to suck in his gut during FRWL. "Sean loves to eat" he said.

    Yeah, I know when Michael Gambon was approached about playing Bond he told producers he probably wasn’t a good fit as he was overweight and balding… of course you can guess the reply (apparently a trick they used with Connery was to put an ice pack on his stomach before love scenes).

    Probably not fair on Connery though. He was a big guy and even in DAF I don’t think he comes off as too heavy. I think it’s more the fact that he aged and we’re comparing his physique to 10 years prior. I’m sure a lot of 41 year olds would love to have Connery’s body in that film. He wasn’t even the heaviest Bond to appear onscreen (that’s Brosnan in DAD who was around 95 kilos, which for him was probably overweight but isn’t something immediately obvious in the film unless you’re looking).

    If anything I think Connery looks worse in NSNA despite him being slimmer (his toupee isn’t as good or at least has this odd shorter styling to it, even compared with the DAF 70s sideburns. Looks a touch too grey even for an older Bond, but then again I suppose that’s consciously what they were going for).
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