007 heading to streaming? Amazon buys MGM for $8.45 billion!

12829303234

Comments

  • Posts: 4,325
    Agreed about Bond’s age in CR. If anything making Bond younger (even 28) would have probably required a bit more explanation and may have impacted the writing. As it is Craig was about the age we typically associate Bond as being, and the character was a seasoned professional who’d recently gotten to the highest field agent position in MI6.

    Anyway, preserving strict continuity is an overrated concept. It is in filmmaking in general. I personally wouldn’t want them to backtrack on the ending of NTTD because of that, just like how I wouldn’t have wanted them to rewrite OHMSS to account for Bond meeting Blofeld in YOLT. I think a fresh start is more beneficial for Bond 26, and OHMSS is all the better for its decision. Hell, even some of the ‘retcons’ in the Craig era are for dramatic storytelling reasons (ie. Madeline’s mother being killed by Safin whereas in SP White seems to imply she left him). Just tell the most interesting story and don’t worry about any of us trying to nitpick the logic. Most audiences don’t care.
  • edited December 23 Posts: 1,475
    Barbara wants control, that's all. Of course they knew they had to do a reboot. I don't think they need help hiring a controversial actor. They already have experience in that.

    ;)

    Anyway It's not that they have stopped being populist filmmakers. There are creative differences...

  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,251
    Continuity wasn’t even that much of a priority with the 1962-2002 films because they were largely standalone entries with very rare references to one another. That’s partly why those films were so successful too. When audiences went to see any Bond film, that could essentially serve as their very first Bond film. When TND came out there was no need to try to catch up to all then 17 films beforehand. The Craig films of course changed that, but since they came out at a time when Bond films were more accessible than ever before, and its limited to five films, that’s not an overwhelming amount to try to catch up.

    And now Eon has another opportunity to make a new film that will effectively be a first Bond film for a new generation of audiences.
  • NoTimeToLiveNoTimeToLive Jamaica
    edited December 23 Posts: 108
    bondywondy wrote: »
    There is no plan in place for a reboot. Nothing.

    Also, since NTTD was completed three Sonic The Hedgehog films have been released. I mention that fact because the original 2020 release date of NTTD was February 14th 2020, the same release date of Sonic The Hedgehog 1.

    Well yes, but they're also awful. I would rather watch the 60s Casino Royale or Die Another Day than watch either Sonic movie again.
  • mtmmtm United Kingdom
    Posts: 16,663
    Continuity wasn’t even that much of a priority with the 1962-2002 films because they were largely standalone entries with very rare references to one another. That’s partly why those films were so successful too. When audiences went to see any Bond film, that could essentially serve as their very first Bond film. When TND came out there was no need to try to catch up to all then 17 films beforehand. The Craig films of course changed that, but since they came out at a time when Bond films were more accessible than ever before, and its limited to five films, that’s not an overwhelming amount to try to catch up.

    And now Eon has another opportunity to make a new film that will effectively be a first Bond film for a new generation of audiences.

    Yes, and even by the point of NTTD, how much is there to pick up on? Bond has retired to be with his love and Blofeld is in prison after Bond captured him. It’s not really overwhelming to someone who didn’t see Spectre as its all presented to you and not hard to follow. Oh and Bond had a love called Vesper who died, but I reckon a lot of people would remember CR.
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    edited December 23 Posts: 4,710
    bondywondy wrote: »
    There is no plan in place for a reboot. Nothing.

    Also, since NTTD was completed three Sonic The Hedgehog films have been released. I mention that fact because the original 2020 release date of NTTD was February 14th 2020, the same release date of Sonic The Hedgehog 1.

    Well yes, but they're also awful. I would rather watch the 60s Casino Royale or Die Another Day than watch either Sonic movie again.

    Well, to each their own. I'm thankful for the families that go to the theaters for Sonic. Also, most video game movies aren't that good. Sonic is rare in that sense. Plus, it feels like the old Jim Carrey is back. One of his better performances in recent years. And a lot of people go to see Kenau Reeves movies simply because of how nice he is to everyone. A lot of kids are going to see presents under the tree this year probably because of him.

    As for Bond and Amazon, it seems that IFP has followed their wants for spinoffs. I don't know how this will play out. It'll be interesting, and we're truly seeing history unfold before us. I agree with Barbara and EON that Bond (movies, at least) ALWAYS deserve time at a public cinema. Maybe Amazon doesn't want Purvis and Wade writing another script? Just joking, everyone ;) they'll always be rumors.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,288
    bondywondy wrote: »
    There is no plan in place for a reboot. Nothing.

    Also, since NTTD was completed three Sonic The Hedgehog films have been released. I mention that fact because the original 2020 release date of NTTD was February 14th 2020, the same release date of Sonic The Hedgehog 1.

    Well yes, but they're also awful. I would rather watch the 60s Casino Royale or Die Another Day than watch either Sonic movie again.

    Amen to that. Please don't watch Knuckles, either. That TV series is even worse.

    Also, why should we care? I can go to MacDonalds for a tasteless meal that's high on calories and low on nutrition. But hey, at least they throw that garbage on a hot plate faster than you can eat it. Instead, I prefer a meal that takes time to be properly prepared, with ingredients fresh from the market, hand-picked by the chef himself. I cannot just walk into the restaurant and expect to have it ready, but it'll be worth the wait. Yes, we used to get a Bond film every one or two years. Things were different then.
  • Posts: 4,325
    Continuity wasn’t even that much of a priority with the 1962-2002 films because they were largely standalone entries with very rare references to one another. That’s partly why those films were so successful too. When audiences went to see any Bond film, that could essentially serve as their very first Bond film. When TND came out there was no need to try to catch up to all then 17 films beforehand. The Craig films of course changed that, but since they came out at a time when Bond films were more accessible than ever before, and its limited to five films, that’s not an overwhelming amount to try to catch up.

    And now Eon has another opportunity to make a new film that will effectively be a first Bond film for a new generation of audiences.

    I’d say the Craig films are a lot like the 60s films. They have overarching threads and even stories which carry over from film to film but are separate adventures. Continuity wise it’s not strict though, and on an individual film basis it doesn’t have to be airtight. Bond can, in one film, claim he visited Japan years ago, and in another say he’s never been there previously. So long as the stories work for the individual films.

    I do find it interesting that the biggest plot hole of the 60s films - namely the Blofeld not recognising Bond in OHMSS - came from Peter Hunt, an editor in his earlier career. A lot of Hunt’s editing work on Bond, like most great editors, isn’t heavy on continuity and prioritises storytelling (there’s all kinds of continuity ‘mistakes’ in the 60s Bond films like cigarettes jumping between hands from shot to shot. Some in DN are pretty egregious by today’s standards. It doesn’t matter as, again, it’s all about the storytelling, and I can imagine he brought that mentality to his direction).

    I like that way of describing the next Bond film and I like the idea. It’ll be someone’s first Bond film.
  • VenutiusVenutius Yorkshire
    edited December 24 Posts: 3,172
    CraigBond was carrying a lot of emotional baggage by the time of NTTD. NewBond needs to have the proverbial clean slate and be allowed to live his own life, not carry the accumulated weight of CraigBond's damage around with him wherever he goes. IMO, obvs.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,251
    Venutius wrote: »
    CraigBond was carrying a lot of emotional baggage by the time of NTTD. NewBond needs to have the proverbial clean slate and be allowed to live his own life, not carry the accumulated weight of CraigBond's damage around with him wherever he goes. IMO, obvs.

    100%.
  • edited December 24 Posts: 376
    Maybe I'm stating the exceedingly obvious by saying just undo Bond death. He survived the missiles and was injured, maybe lost his memory.

    That way you preserve the continuity, Bond 26 is a soft reboot. I don't think Eon and Amazon would find reason to disagree over that. Also, from a cinema going experience....Bond surviving is a surprise twist! Everyone thought he was dead but da da daaa... he survived! Given the right director the explanation how he survived - the reveal - can be exciting. I think it has huge potential, be a great way to get people to see the film - the first teaser can hint Bond survived - and the huge advantage is you preserve continuity. Amazon should be happy and maybe they'll forget about Bond tv spin offs or whatever.

    If Eon commit to Bond not dying that's a decent foundation to get a screenplay in motion. Bond alive, living in a country, has a new identity. MI6 track him down and convince him to return. Meanwhile the rest of the plot unfolds. A new villain threatens the world. There you go, the first act of the screenplay established! Surely that's the easiest way to do Bond 26?

    If Arthur Conan Doyle can undo Sherlock Holmes' death... so can Eon. 😉







  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,954
    EON presenting Bond as alive is a good idea.

    I'd also prefer Bond is at a time in his career sometime prior to retirement.

  • DwayneDwayne New York City
    Posts: 2,870
    Bond is still alive? How do you escape an explosion?
    Well, this worked for Godzilla at the end of 1966's Ebirah, Horror of the Deep. :))

    I0D629j.gif
  • MurdockMurdock The minus world
    Posts: 16,362
    I don't want a continuation of the Craig era. I'm ready for a new continuity free to do what it wants or go back to the 62 through 02 continuity which I doubt they will do.
  • QBranchQBranch Always have an escape plan. Mine is watching James Bond films.
    Posts: 14,703
    Clean slates.

    54225265801_6a91d435fb_o.jpg
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,251
    Murdock wrote: »
    I don't want a continuation of the Craig era. I'm ready for a new continuity free to do what it wants or go back to the 62 through 02 continuity which I doubt they will do.

    Starting from scratch seems the sensible way to go. Just start it like DR. NO where everything already established with Bond just taking a new mission and move forward from there.

    Trying to connect to the 62-02 “timeline” wouldn’t work either. That Bond was called a relic of the Cold War. You could stretch your imagination just enough to suggest Connery through Brosnan could be the same guy that fought the Soviets. Wouldn’t be convincing with an actor who was either an infant or not even born when the Berlin Wall fell.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    edited December 25 Posts: 8,236
    bondywondy wrote: »
    Maybe I'm stating the exceedingly obvious by saying just undo Bond death. He survived the missiles and was injured, maybe lost his memory.

    That way you preserve the continuity, Bond 26 is a soft reboot. I don't think Eon and Amazon would find reason to disagree over that. Also, from a cinema going experience....Bond surviving is a surprise twist! Everyone thought he was dead but da da daaa... he survived! Given the right director the explanation how he survived - the reveal - can be exciting. I think it has huge potential, be a great way to get people to see the film - the first teaser can hint Bond survived - and the huge advantage is you preserve continuity. Amazon should be happy and maybe they'll forget about Bond tv spin offs or whatever.

    If Eon commit to Bond not dying that's a decent foundation to get a screenplay in motion. Bond alive, living in a country, has a new identity. MI6 track him down and convince him to return. Meanwhile the rest of the plot unfolds. A new villain threatens the world. There you go, the first act of the screenplay established! Surely that's the easiest way to do Bond 26?

    If Arthur Conan Doyle can undo Sherlock Holmes' death... so can Eon. 😉

    No, no and no to all of this.

    I'm ever more convinced that people are bouncing around terminology that they don't really understand when they say they want to undo the ending to NTTD as a "soft reboot".

    The Craig-era was a very financially successful experiment that made some very specific choices that cannot simply be undone. I liked a lot of it, but disliked plenty. Let it be its own thing.

    Give me a new Bond, clear of any and all connection to the Craig era. Audiences aren't idiots and I believe they love the Bond character over all else. You don't need to explain why Bond is "still alive". He just needs to be alive and we're on to the next adventure.

    You'd be tying yourself up in further knots trying to explain it. Using your example, Conan Doyle ran into similar issues when he clearly designed the Reichenbach arc to end with Holmes demise. Any explanation afterwards seemed hollow.

  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,403
    bondywondy wrote: »
    Maybe I'm stating the exceedingly obvious by saying just undo Bond death. He survived the missiles and was injured, maybe lost his memory.

    That way you preserve the continuity, Bond 26 is a soft reboot. I don't think Eon and Amazon would find reason to disagree over that. Also, from a cinema going experience....Bond surviving is a surprise twist! Everyone thought he was dead but da da daaa... he survived! Given the right director the explanation how he survived - the reveal - can be exciting. I think it has huge potential, be a great way to get people to see the film - the first teaser can hint Bond survived - and the huge advantage is you preserve continuity. Amazon should be happy and maybe they'll forget about Bond tv spin offs or whatever.

    If Eon commit to Bond not dying that's a decent foundation to get a screenplay in motion. Bond alive, living in a country, has a new identity. MI6 track him down and convince him to return. Meanwhile the rest of the plot unfolds. A new villain threatens the world. There you go, the first act of the screenplay established! Surely that's the easiest way to do Bond 26?

    If Arthur Conan Doyle can undo Sherlock Holmes' death... so can Eon. 😉

    No, no and no to all of this.

    I'm ever more convinced that people are bouncing around terminology that they don't really understand when they say they want to undo the ending to NTTD as a "soft reboot".

    The Craig-era was a very financially successful experiment that made some very specific choices that cannot simply be undone. I liked a lot of it, but disliked plenty. Let it be its own thing.

    Give me a new Bond, clear of any and all connection to the Craig era. Audiences aren't idiots and I believe they love the Bond character over all else. You don't need to explain why Bond is "still alive". He just needs to be alive and we're on to the next adventure.

    You'd be tying yourself up in further knots trying to explain it. Using your example, Conan Doyle ran into similar issues when he clearly designed the Reichenbach arc to end with Holmes demise. Any explanation afterwards seemed hollow.
    bondywondy wrote: »
    Maybe I'm stating the exceedingly obvious by saying just undo Bond death. He survived the missiles and was injured, maybe lost his memory.

    That way you preserve the continuity, Bond 26 is a soft reboot. I don't think Eon and Amazon would find reason to disagree over that. Also, from a cinema going experience....Bond surviving is a surprise twist! Everyone thought he was dead but da da daaa... he survived! Given the right director the explanation how he survived - the reveal - can be exciting. I think it has huge potential, be a great way to get people to see the film - the first teaser can hint Bond survived - and the huge advantage is you preserve continuity. Amazon should be happy and maybe they'll forget about Bond tv spin offs or whatever.

    If Eon commit to Bond not dying that's a decent foundation to get a screenplay in motion. Bond alive, living in a country, has a new identity. MI6 track him down and convince him to return. Meanwhile the rest of the plot unfolds. A new villain threatens the world. There you go, the first act of the screenplay established! Surely that's the easiest way to do Bond 26?

    If Arthur Conan Doyle can undo Sherlock Holmes' death... so can Eon. 😉

    No, no and no to all of this.

    I'm ever more convinced that people are bouncing around terminology that they don't really understand when they say they want to undo the ending to NTTD as a "soft reboot".

    The Craig-era was a very financially successful experiment that made some very specific choices that cannot simply be undone. I liked a lot of it, but disliked plenty. Let it be its own thing.

    Give me a new Bond, clear of any and all connection to the Craig era. Audiences aren't idiots and I believe they love the Bond character over all else. You don't need to explain why Bond is "still alive". He just needs to be alive and we're on to the next adventure.

    You'd be tying yourself up in further knots trying to explain it. Using your example, Conan Doyle ran into similar issues when he clearly designed the Reichenbach arc to end with Holmes demise. Any explanation afterwards seemed hollow.

    Well stated. Let's just move forward with a new Bond and a new continuity.

    I'd add that I don't want the new Bond mooning over Vesper or Madeleine or even Tracy. It is time to change!
  • echo wrote: »
    I'd add that I don't want the new Bond mooning over Vesper or Madeleine or even Tracy.

    Think I would pass on that one as well 😏

  • edited December 25 Posts: 376
    Dwayne wrote: »
    Bond is still alive? How do you escape an explosion?
    Well, this worked for Godzilla at the end of 1966's Ebirah, Horror of the Deep. :))

    I0D629j.gif

    Yeah. Like Godzilla, Bond leaps away. I'm sure there are lessons in 'How to escape a relentless missile attack' at the 00 training school. ;))
  • Posts: 2,003
    Im ready to go back to stand alone Bond films. Tho idk if they can get away with that in todays movie climate
  • edited December 25 Posts: 351
    bondywondy wrote: »
    Maybe I'm stating the exceedingly obvious by saying just undo Bond death. He survived the missiles and was injured, maybe lost his memory.

    That way you preserve the continuity

    So you want the new Bond era to feature an elderly retired agent?
  • echoecho 007 in New York
    Posts: 6,403
    With a girlfriend and kid.

    Sounds thrilling. Goldcarpool and Thunderhomework.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,251
    What's the point of preserving continuity with the Craig films?
  • sandbagger1sandbagger1 Sussex
    Posts: 965
    When it comes to continuity I guess this is a personal thing. For me, up until Spectre I could make believe all the Bond films happened, though perhaps not quite in the way that they were told. So Thunderball and OHMSS coexist in my head, but Thunderball is kind of vague and easily replaced by the novel version - OHMSS was a course correction to pull closer to the books, and consequently strengthen Bond as a character. That way each film adds to the Bond legend.

    With Spectre that became more difficult, and frankly it wasn’t a good enough story that I want it in the canon - I decided I could safely ignore it without too much trouble. With NTTD, however, I’ve got a film that is built around the events of Spectre, compounding that misfire, and heavily leans into plot-points that are difficult to work around: Bond has a love of his life and daughter that are obviously very important to Bond, but presumably will never be mentioned again in the series; and of course Bond has to give up his life to save them, with we’ll never hear mentioned. These are two films that never happened in the previously existing (in my mind at least) Eon continuity - they are as canonical as the CR’67, and NSNA. They’re fanfic in this context, and they try to tie themselves closely to the rest of the Craig films, so am I supposed to decide that CR, QOS, and Skyfall don’t exist in any way to non-Craig films? Are Eon going to take this more obviously compartmental approach to future iterations of Bond, where anything goes in terms of continuity?

    For some of us this takes away from the films and the character they portray, and that’s why you’re getting these complaints or attempts to tie the Craig films back into the main sequence by some people. I get it. Not everyone feels that way - I get that, too.
  • Posts: 4,325
    This might sound harsh, but we as viewers have no ability to change what actually happened in these films. We can ignore things we don’t like or not watch some of them. But ultimately anything that’s in the films are there.

    I understand not liking the idea of Bond’s death. But ultimately that’s how they ended the Craig era and thought it best to do so. I’m pretty sure it’ll be a fresh start and I’d say that’s the best route creatively. I think trying to tie Bond 26 to the Craig era even in a roundabout way and just to retcon a decision some fans don’t like is pointless and a bit ‘fan fiction’.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,251
    Michael G. Wilson has believed since the 90s that each actor exists in their own bubble, regardless of returning actors and the rare references to past films. And that view is as valid. I can definitely separate the Connery films and OHMSS, as they actively contradict each other, along with DAF starting in Japan as if to suggest OHMSS didn’t happen for Connery.

    The Moore films may be more explicit in referencing events in past films, but that could just be a case of Bond simply having a shared history. After all, Craig has a shared history with his predecessors too. Connery thru Brosnan probably had their own Vesper on their past that we were never privy to. Then there’s choices like setting the PTS in 1986, as if suggesting they’re overwriting the Dalton films.

    It doesn’t really matter because most of these films are supposed to function individually to an extent. The events in a movie like GOLDFINGER doesn’t necessarily inform events that take place in GOLDENEYE. Eon is fully aware that each new film is potentially someone’s first Bond film and 85% of the time they treat it as such.
  • Posts: 4,325
    To paraphrase Bond when it comes to continuity - don’t think it about it too hard. Just let it happen.
  • sandbagger1sandbagger1 Sussex
    Posts: 965
    Michael G. Wilson has believed since the 90s that each actor exists in their own bubble, regardless of returning actors and the rare references to past films. And that view is as valid. I can definitely separate the Connery films and OHMSS, as they actively contradict each other, along with DAF starting in Japan as if to suggest OHMSS didn’t happen for Connery.

    The Moore films may be more explicit in referencing events in past films, but that could just be a case of Bond simply having a shared history. After all, Craig has a shared history with his predecessors too. Connery thru Brosnan probably had their own Vesper on their past that we were never privy to. Then there’s choices like setting the PTS in 1986, as if suggesting they’re overwriting the Dalton films.

    It doesn’t really matter because most of these films are supposed to function individually to an extent. The events in a movie like GOLDFINGER doesn’t necessarily inform events that take place in GOLDENEYE. Eon is fully aware that each new film is potentially someone’s first Bond film and 85% of the time they treat it as such.

    “Shared history” is loose continuity in this context. Nobody’s going to be sharing NTTD though, so it becomes no more consequential than CR’67.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,251
    For all we know NTTD is how all the Bonds’ stories end.
Sign In or Register to comment.