Why did Craig succeed when Dalton failed?

1356720

Comments

  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,804
    ^ All of the above. L-)
  • edited January 2014 Posts: 11,189
    A slightly different note since we have been talking about him and directors, I've recently been wondering what the relationship between Dalton and a director like Alfred Hitchcock would have been like had they worked together. Hitch famously said that "actors should be treated like cattle" yet no one can deny his brilliance.

    Part of me thinks that it would have been a verbal bloodbath - although Dalton would have openly praised him in interviews.
  • chrisisall wrote:
    ^ All of the above. L-)

    Not sure how that makes me a loser but to each his own.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    edited January 2014 Posts: 17,804
    chrisisall wrote:
    ^ All of the above. L-)

    Not sure how that makes me a loser but to each his own.
    Loser? Dude, I'm agreeing with all you wrote. Spot-on, my man!
    (isn't that a 'pointing above' emoticon?)
  • chrisisall wrote:
    chrisisall wrote:
    ^ All of the above. L-)

    Not sure how that makes me a loser but to each his own.
    Loser? Dude, I'm agreeing with all you wrote. Spot-on, my man!
    (isn't that a 'pointing above' emoticon?)

    I saw it as an "L" over the head. My mistake.
  • Perdogg wrote:
    I am not really sure one can call Craig a success yet. A commercial success yes, but not necessarily the artistic success in the overall Bond legacy.

    oh god I heard everything now.

    His Bond films have won awards, critical acclaim and box office. Oscars and Bafta's and critic's onside, I don't think any other Bond actor had that in their time. Casino Royale and Skyfall are probably the two best Bond films since Connery's Peak. Come on son, get you're head out of the clouds.

    I liked Dalton but his Bond films are the least spoken about and seen cause they aren't really top tier Bond films simple as. The Dalton fan's would have you believe they are lost classic's, they are fine films but hugely flawed not cause of Dalton but of the time they were made. I liked The Living Daylights but damn Dalton is awkward when it comes to the romance and The third act is a total failure. LTK is Miami Vice-lite with James Bond thrown in, Dalton gives a fine performance but Davi is the man in that film. While Craig films are especially in the case of CR and Skyfall. Top tier Bond films, well made action films with heart. With a top notch supporting cast with great directors especially in the case of Sam Mendes. Since Craig has come aboard the Bond films feel like Events again during Dalton's reign it felt on crusie control really.
  • Posts: 7,653
    scheevers wrote:
    I liked Dalton but his Bond films are the least spoken about and seen cause they aren't really top tier Bond films simple as. The Dalton fan's would have you believe they are lost classic's, they are fine films but hugely flawed not cause of Dalton but of the time they were made. I liked The Living Daylights but damn Dalton is awkward when it comes to the romance and The third act is a total failure. LTK is Miami Vice-lite with James Bond thrown in, Dalton gives a fine performance but Davi is the man in that film. While Craig films are especially in the case of CR and Skyfall. Top tier Bond films, well made action films with heart. With a top notch supporting cast with great directors especially in the case of Sam Mendes. Since Craig has come aboard the Bond films feel like Events again during Dalton's reign it felt on crusie control really.

    Nicely put.

  • Posts: 15,161
    Craig also has better backing than Dalton. He certainly got along much better with his directors than Dalton did with Glenn. Not a major factor, but it does help create a certain climate on set that shows in the media. His infamous line about LTK may not have been the nail in the coffin, but it does illustrate a certain state of mind.
  • Posts: 1,052
    I think a factor is the that back in the 80's early 90's to be a leading man it was generally understood that you had to have a lot of charisma and screen prescene and not essentially be a great actor.

    These days character actors can become massive stars as leading actors, so I don't think someone like DC would have been a big star back in the 80's.
  • NicNacNicNac Administrator, Moderator
    Posts: 7,584
    I think a factor is the that back in the 80's early 90's to be a leading man it was generally understood that you had to have a lot of charisma and screen prescene and not essentially be a great actor.

    These days character actors can become massive stars as leading actors, so I don't think someone like DC would have been a big star back in the 80's.

    Character actors have always broken through and become leading stars. From the 30s, Charles Laughton, Spencer Tracey, Humphrey Bogart, all the way up to the 70s and Charles Bronson and Gene Hackman. Not a pretty boy amongst them. All had a certain charisma though.

    Charisma and screen presence has always been essential for a top star whether they were handsome or not. No one has ever become a big star without this kind of attraction to pull the punters in. When you put a non charismatic support star into a lead role eg Vinnie Jones now, or someone like Franchot Tone back in the 30s, then the results are obvious.

    Great actors? That's something else entirely. Many great stars have been limited as film actors (Arnie), or have been allowed to do what they please with occasionally worrying results (Al Pacino, Jonny Depp). You certainly have never needed to be a great actor to be a great star.

    I think Craig is a great if at times overly earnest film actor. And he has charisma to spare.
  • edited January 2014 Posts: 11,425
    It's funny, I have always felt it was Brosnan who really lacked presence and charisma as Bond.

    That said, I don't put Dalton in the same league as Connery or Moore or probably even Craig for on-screen presence. But I think Dalton holds the screen pretty well. He was not and never became a huge star and there must I suppose be a reason for this. I think in a way Dalton suffered from lack of ambition. He did not want to become a big star - or thought perhaps that his actorly credentials would be devalued by embracing too much the persona and mindset of a 'star'. Perhaps that's just the man he is. You can see Craig struggling with similar issues, although I think he is now increasingly more comfortable with his star status. I do think perhaps with different directors and with a different attitude, Dalton could have really broken through, but we'll never know.

    One other thing. The old school actors, particularly Moore, were actively groomed by the studios to make them into 'stars' - ways of talking, walking and generally behaving were all to an extent managed by the studios. From Dalton onwards, the actors have come from a totally different place. I personally don't think there are many screen actors around today who have quite the presence of the old school.
  • edited January 2014 Posts: 4,622
    chrisisall wrote:
    What about Craig makes you say that?
    Oh, all this tosh about Brosnan's Bond shooting machine guns & being like Rambo, then we get Craig's T-1000 version of Bond and that's suddenly okay apparently.
    [-(

    But I don't ever recall Brosnan's Bond having to clean up his wounds after he's been slashed with a machete or getting shot (twice) or having his plums whacked so hard, they end up in his stomach requiring a fairly long convalescence in hospital.

    Watch how Brosnan shoots with a machine gun in the PTS of TND. He's holding it sideways for christ sake!
    But lets not forget that Broz Bond faced way more physical abuse than any other Bond. The guy spent 14 months being tortured daily in a brutal North Korean prison camp, with Madonna music playing in the background. Not pleasant.
    Mind you his torturer (scorpion girl) was at least good looking in a kink kind of way, and he was spared the torture of having to shave every day. silver linings.

    To the question at hand. I think its been well answered by others. The public mood was more receptive to Craig's portrayal in 2006 than it was to Dalt's post-Moore depiction circa 1987-89.
    Personally I am much more receptive to Dalton's Bond than Craig's. I was reasonably satisfied with TLD at the time. I didn't like CR at all though, other than bits and parts of it, but that's just me.

  • edited January 2014 Posts: 11,189
    I think Dalton's got a television drama look about him. You notice that when you see him alongside Connery, Moore etc. I did when I saw him on those big screens in London. Yes he's tall and pretty imposing but he just lacks something onscreen as a main lead. "Magnetism" might be the right word. He's the sort of actor that's better for side roles in films and lead roles in tv and theatre. His career kind of suggests that.

    Craig hardly looks like a "movie star" but he does capture the screen more than Dalts IMO.

    I sound like a broken record :p
  • edited January 2014 Posts: 6,396
    timmer wrote:
    chrisisall wrote:
    What about Craig makes you say that?
    Oh, all this tosh about Brosnan's Bond shooting machine guns & being like Rambo, then we get Craig's T-1000 version of Bond and that's suddenly okay apparently.
    [-(

    But I don't ever recall Brosnan's Bond having to clean up his wounds after he's been slashed with a machete or getting shot (twice) or having his plums whacked so hard, they end up in his stomach requiring a fairly long convalescence in hospital.

    Watch how Brosnan shoots with a machine gun in the PTS of TND. He's holding it sideways for christ sake!

    But lets not forget that Broz Bond faced way more physical abuse than any other Bond. The guy spent 14 months being tortured daily in a brutal North Korean prison camp, with Madonna music playing in the background. Not pleasant.
    Mind you his torturer (scorpion girl) was at least good looking in a kink kind of way, and he was spared the torture of having to shave every day. silver linings.

    Yes which makes it even more of a shame that ten minutes later it's all forgotten about when he's lording it up in a 5* hotel...
  • Posts: 11,425
    Those Philishaves really help you get over torture that bit quicker.
  • edited January 2014 Posts: 6,396
    Getafix wrote:
    Those Philishaves really help you get over torture that bit quicker.

    And of course the psychological damage can easily be undone by laying out your designer shirts on the bed.
  • Posts: 1,548
    As much as I admire Dalton, Craig is tougher and more popular with the ladies! And he can deliver a one liner better!
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,978
    BAIN123 wrote:
    A slightly different note since we have been talking about him and directors, I've recently been wondering what the relationship between Dalton and a director like Alfred Hitchcock would have been like had they worked together. Hitch famously said that "actors should be treated like cattle" yet no one can deny his brilliance.

    Part of me thinks that it would have been a verbal bloodbath - although Dalton would have openly praised him in interviews.

    I'm far from an expert on Hitchcock, but I think he would have kept an eye on the actors, rather than leave them to act. But I can't ever imagine EON hiring a director as big as Hitchcock, surely he would have wanted more control over the film than EON would have been willing to give up?
  • Posts: 6,396
    BAIN123 wrote:
    A slightly different note since we have been talking about him and directors, I've recently been wondering what the relationship between Dalton and a director like Alfred Hitchcock would have been like had they worked together. Hitch famously said that "actors should be treated like cattle" yet no one can deny his brilliance.

    Part of me thinks that it would have been a verbal bloodbath - although Dalton would have openly praised him in interviews.

    I'm far from an expert on Hitchcock, but I think he would have kept an eye on the actors, rather than leave them to act. But I can't ever imagine EON hiring a director as big as Hitchcock, surely he would have wanted more control over the film than EON would have been willing to give up?

    Yes I often wonder if that's why Spielberg was never offered the gig.
  • Posts: 15,161
    Getafix wrote:
    It's funny, I have always felt it was Brosnan who really lacked presence and charisma as Bond.

    That said, I don't put Dalton in the same league as Connery or Moore or probably even Craig for on-screen presence. But I think Dalton holds the screen pretty well. He was not and never became a huge star and there must I suppose be a reason for this. I think in a way Dalton suffered from lack of ambition. He did not want to become a big star - or thought perhaps that his actorly credentials would be devalued by embracing too much the persona and mindset of a 'star'. Perhaps that's just the man he is. You can see Craig struggling with similar issues, although I think he is now increasingly more comfortable with his star status. I do think perhaps with different directors and with a different attitude, Dalton could have really broken through, but we'll never know.

    One other thing. The old school actors, particularly Moore, were actively groomed by the studios to make them into 'stars' - ways of talking, walking and generally behaving were all to an extent managed by the studios. From Dalton onwards, the actors have come from a totally different place. I personally don't think there are many screen actors around today who have quite the presence of the old school.

    Brosnan is of a different generation, but his approach to acting as a job is very old school, I think.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,804
    Personally, I resent the title of this thread.
    "Dalton Failed"?

    How about looking at it another way:
    Why did Craig's movies fail when Dalton's succeeded?
    Especially Skyfall. Yeah, let's go on about how much money it made, and meanwhile I'd like to point out that The Phantom Menace, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, and Titanic all made similar money. Also remember that DAD was a huge hit for EON. Big box office usually means a film isn't too good IMO.
    CR was damn good. QOS was better. SF is adequate.
    None of them are better than Dalton's two. As BOND movies, that is. As a giant generic action blockbuster designed to make one weep at the end, SF is fairly peerless.

    End of counter-rant.
  • doubleoegodoubleoego #LightWork
    Posts: 11,139
    Wait, what? Brosnan may not have had the presence but he most definitely had the charisma. Out of all 6 actors he's the one who clearly showed that he looked to be having the most fun in the role.
  • edited January 2014 Posts: 11,425
    chrisisall wrote:
    Personally, I resent the title of this thread.
    "Dalton Failed"?

    How about looking at it another way:
    Why did Craig's movies fail when Dalton's succeeded?
    Especially Skyfall. Yeah, let's go on about how much money it made, and meanwhile I'd like to point out that The Phantom Menace, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, and Titanic all made similar money. Also remember that DAD was a huge hit for EON. Big box office usually means a film isn't too good IMO.
    CR was damn good. QOS was better. SF is adequate.
    None of them are better than Dalton's two. As BOND movies, that is. As a giant generic action blockbuster designed to make one weep at the end, SF is fairly peerless.

    End of counter-rant.

    My opinion of SF has changed slightly over the weekend. I rewatched it and no longer think it's quite as awful as I originally thought. I found that the thematic elements came across much more strongly on the last watching and that this helped to sort of paper over a lot of the narrative and plotline cracks underneath - although I still don't think it's nearly as good as the hype makes out and agree that I'd still put it beneath CR and QoS.

    One thing that I was even more struck by is the shift in character from CR and QoS though. It's not necessarily a 'fault' but the jump from QoS to SF is a bit stange, considering that CR and QoS were about a rooky and then suddenly in SF we have a washed up old has-been.

    I wouldn't describe it as generic action blockbuster though.

    And for me personally TLD remains a much more enjoyable Bond movie than all of Craig's outings. I can see that DC has huge popular support, but from my personal perspective he has less range - certainly as Bond - than Dalton did. DC''s Bond feels to me less 3-dimensional than Dalton's, but that's obviously a controversial view.
  • edited January 2014 Posts: 4,622
    The Dalton movies have aged very well. I consider them to both be Bond classics -the two closing films of the 3 decade Cubby era of Bond -the last hurrahs from the original producer and his long time associates, Messrs Barry and Glen.
    The two Dalts films make for a fine double bill. I also like to pair AVTAK with TLD. Makes for an interesting transition pair, moving from the Rog period into the late '80s Dalts interlude.
  • Posts: 15,161
    chrisisall wrote:
    Personally, I resent the title of this thread.
    "Dalton Failed"?

    I explained in details what I meant by that. It has nothing to do with the intrinsic value of the movies, or Dalton as an actor.
  • As others have mentioned, the title needs to be amended. Dalton was no failure, and was the closest to the Fleming character than any of the other actors that played the part. Anyone who took over from Moore's last near embarrassments was going to be a vast improvement and Dalton gave us two releases that were just about (for James Bond 007 alone) flawless. Only Connery in his first two films and Craig for the most part, have really come close, and even then Dalton didn't have to resemble superman to do a stellar job, as recently see in the Craig releases, with at times, ridiculous nonsense. Craig is one of the best Bonds, and the soda and popcorn brigade may sit back and take it all in with implausible feats of endurance and having more lives than the proverbial cat, and still being able to save the day, but it's an issue to some peoples viewing enjoyment

    This seems like going over old ground, and just because Skyfall (and indeed QOS and Casino Royale) made a shit load of money, doesn't make it so. Bond today brings in more money than it ever did at the time of Dalton's tenure, so while Craig's Bond has been more commercially successful than the other, you take all those dollars away, and it still doesn't make for an all-round better James Bond actor. Granted, all of Craig's releases are vibrant, exciting (for the most part), and suspenseful, and with bigger budgets today and money to splash around, the finished product will be more of an extravaganza than past years, but don't tell me they all make for a better Bond with it

    Craig was up against it from the moment he was annnounced for the part, with the issue of hair and eye color, not to mention Bond being more physiqued than usually seen, and while detractors will still raise issues (I learned to let it slide and give Craig a chance) the actor has done a great job of things, but once more, the biggest issue I have now it would appear is the 'indestructibility' side of things, that wasn't as evident with any previous Bond actor - certainly not with Tim Dalton

    Both Craig and Dalton took over from Bond actors that provided a last awful movie release, and had stayed too long in the part, and while some may argue that either failed, I can't look beyond the fact that both of them were a success. Unfortunately Dalton never got to do another James Bond adventure after his second, but with those two releases, he is on a plateau with Connery only in '62 and '63 for true Fleming characteristics. Craig has come close, very close on occasion, to being up there with them in his hitherto adventures, but still can't quite place him in that elite category

    I do hope that covers everything because not going back to it

  • As far as you second point goes, while I still think Craig's scripts are much better than Dalton's there's no doubt that an actor of Dalton's caliber deserved a better director than John Glen. Supposedly Dalton and Glen had a heated confrontation on the set of LTK. Dalton and other actors would walk up to Glen with questions about their characters and he would basically blow them off and get back to focusing on an explosion. Dalton had had enough and called him out on his abilities working with actors. Afterwards the actors all went to Dalton for guidance rather than Glen.

    Just some clarification, re. Glen and actors in LTK - in Cinefantastique magazine, Carey Lowell asserted that Glen seemed largely disinterested in delving into character histories, whereas Dalton provided her some feedback/discussion there. I haven't seen any interviews suggesting all the actors went to Dalton for guidance.

    Robert Davi, in the same magazine, said he loved working with Glen, found him a keen collaborator, and underrated as a director of actors. These are sentiments Davi has repeated decades later (i.e. the sentiments are more sincere than just simple "press junket" endorsements). Could be that Lowell prefers delving into character, while Davi and Glen run more by instinct. Hard to say, unless there are some other words on record to clarify this.

    In his autobiographical "For My Eyes Only", John Glen mentioned that he and Dalton did have "a bit of a slanging match" towards the end of principal photography of LTK. He was unsure whether it related to tiredness or just the accumulated tension of an arduous shoot. Dalton may have his own view on why the slanging match occurred, but to my knowledge, hasn't spoken on the issue. There's nothing to say Dalton was calling Glen out on his work with actors.

    In the same book, Glen mentioned that Dalton stepped out of "Christopher Columbus: The Discovery" around the time Glen stepped up as director. Dalton cited "creative differences", but he did not state with whom or how many these creative differences occurred. Generally, creative differences relate to actor-director disagreement, but CC:TD was a troubled production on many-varied levels (script issues, producer issues, financing issues), and Dalton may well have been on "creative" tenter hooks prior to Glen's arrival. (And Glen's stated concern was that Dalton might have felt "typecast" through appearing in another John Glen film so soon after TLD and LTK.)

    Anyway, for all that, all I can say is that I loved how in LTK Glen really gave the scenes (and the relationship) between Bond and Sanchez the time of day. By today's standards, such scenes (sadly) could be classed as leisurely. But they have a great quiet tension (not hyped up by filmic bells and whistles), so much so that I'd argue that the climax of the film is not so much the tanker chase, as it is Sanchez's angry outburst at the factory following his discovery of Bond's true identity.





  • Because the best fight scene from either Dalton film didn't have Dalton in it.
  • Because the best fight scene from either Dalton film didn't have Dalton in it.

    I know which one you mean from TLD. The kitchen fight. But which one are you talking about from LTK?

    Either way that probably wasn't a reason.
  • Dalton certainly didn't bomb as Bond, but his movies were very low-grossing by Bond standards, as you can see here: http://www.007james.com/articles/box_office.php

    The Living Daylights did do slightly better than A View to A Kill, and Bond had been on a steady decline at the box office since Moonraker, but Dalton still didn't do as well as the producers certainly hoped.
This discussion has been closed.