It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
^ Back to Top
The MI6 Community is unofficial and in no way associated or linked with EON Productions, MGM, Sony Pictures, Activision or Ian Fleming Publications. Any views expressed on this website are of the individual members and do not necessarily reflect those of the Community owners. Any video or images displayed in topics on MI6 Community are embedded by users from third party sites and as such MI6 Community and its owners take no responsibility for this material.
James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
Comments
While Glen showed a *little* visual flair with FYEO I found that his style was pretty tired by LTK and he didn't really add anything to it that another director couldn't. I thought that his direction of LTK was breath-takingly adequate. He had his run, it was time for new blood and a new energy by Brosnan's era.
And for my money Glen would have added nothing to the Brosnan films. I don't think he had a particular style of his own. He thought that adding a personal touch to a film was putting in a scene where a pigeon spooks Bond.
Afraid it takes more than that.
It's odd that Octopussy and AVTAK are from the same director as FYEO, TLD and LTK.
Even though I have a big love for OP...it's just so brought down by partly horrible humor. Could have been one of the best, and I mean that!
That said, Goldeneye was Campbells baby and it worked. And who knows if Campbell had made CR if he hadn't done GE? And that would have really been a loss imo.
No, Glen got his share and did a good job. Though I agree with Mallory, he never really had a particular style or flair. They are technically fine and work well, but with Goldeneye, there was time for a change.
I agree with this. I enjoyed a couple of his films, but they did lack flair or any kind of vision
I don't want to see another director do 5 in a row. Step aside and let somebody else show off their style.
I never had any problems with John Glen as a director for the Bond films. At least three of his films - "FOR YOUR EYES ONLY", "OCTOPUSSY" and "THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS" are big favorites of mine. And I cannot think of any other Bond director who has worked on so many favorites of mine.
As for the Brosnan films, one is pretty damn good - "GOLDENEYE"; one is pretty decent - "THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH"; I have mixed feelings for one - "DIE ANOTHER DAY"; and I find one to be generic and lacking in any originality - "TOMORROW NEVER DIES". If there is a problem with any of the Brosnan films, I would have to blame the screenwriters.
It is the tone of the films I think most people attribute to the director and, though it is odd to think both A View to a Kill and Licence To Kill were helmed by the same writers and director, it is usually the script that's to blame for something coming across as a bit weak, though weak direction doesn't help, admittedly!
This is why I'm unsure about what was going on in Octopussy, for the most part, a hard edged Cold War drama/thriller with espionage, car chases, military secrets, deception and politics mixed with lavish locations, beautiful women, amazing stunts and a lot of tension plus more violence than a lot of Bonds at the time (multiple head shots, stabbings and a face crashed through a fish tank). Quite why the film (or, I hate to admit, John Glen) sometimes stoops to using the Tarzan yell, lines like "Get off my bed!" or Bond zooming in to a woman's cleavage with a video camera is anyone's guess - they can't have been in the script. I can only imagine they were improvised as Glen thought "this needs lightening up a bit!"
When I think of Glen's films I remember the best bits, not the worst, so my opinion of him is very high. As I dislike G*ld*nEye with a burning passion, I can only say even Glen couldn't make it work as the fault was with the rancid dialogue and lousy logic of the script...plus the rubbish continuity, highly inappropriate music score and the wooden acting of the two lead males. Overall I prefer the fairly straight tone of the John Glen films with occasional missteps into unnecessary humour than the constantly weak, almost amateur feel to the whole of Martin Campbell's first Bond.
Thank God his second was so much better.
I myself can't see sometimes all the adulation and plaudits for Goldeneye. Some make out it's the equivalent of Gone With The Wind, and I think it's simply not as great a movie as some insist, but it's all about opinions. Campbells second was arguably his greatest work as mentioned
I think most of the strengths of Glen's better films were from the actors and writers, not necessarily from Glen. (Although he was pretty good at directing action.)
I agree.
Regarding Glenn directing Brosnan's films. Personally no - and I'm not a basher of Glenn. True I would rather have had him than someone like Lee Tamahori but, by that point, I think new blood was needed. Surely there were other directors out there who weren't John Glenn but better than Spottiswode, Apted and Tamahori.
I'd have rather had more Martin Campbell films. True there were some dodgy moments direction-wise in GE (Desmond looking off camera) but there were also some great ones (the mimes outside the casino in Monte Carlo, Bond walking through the statue park).