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I saw View To A Kill a few days ago, and I can't defend it really, we've been through it a thousand times that Moore was evidently too old for the part of 007 by 1985 but if you watch he does have a way with the women, that age can be no barrier. Would Dalton have done a better job of it in his place if he had entered one film earlier?
In some areas Yes, in others No. Take the latter for example, you watch next time Bond with the women, OK, the Roberts relationship was a bit unsavory, but I watched and when Moore was in the Hot Tubs with Fullerton or at the Zorin residence 'Mayday where have you been?, I've waiting for you - to take care of me personally', it did kind of work in a strange way, even with the Iceberg girl at the very start in Siberia, I was thinking maybe Dalton wouldn't have worked so well in those moments. Certainly more plausible in the action department though and suitable actor
Moore has publicly stated that his swansong, sorry, his last Bond movie was by far his least favorite, he didn't like working with (Grace) Jones and all told it's one he'd rather forget he was involved in, I can fully appreciate that
Jones was at least interesting. The rest of this movie was on autopilot.
Everyone likes to bash Grace Jones/May Day but her character was quite interesting. Never mind her not being the most attractive and sexy but she worked well on screen with Moore and presented a good henchman/woman to Walken's psychotic behavior.
Tanya Roberts is good to look at but lets face it May Day was the more intriguing character.
Back to the question : would the film have worked with Dalton? With another heroine, less humor and tighter editing it might not receive the hate it gets from Bond fans.
I don't hate it, gave a full and comprehensive review recently, it's just so blatantly absurd and I have a hard time taking it seriously whenever I tune in. It does have some redeeming features I must have elaborated on before, but all told it's one of the most weakest Bond releases since the dawn of the franchise
Time for Bed
I-)
As for how the film worked out in the end, I can't help feeling that Rog' is playing a bit on his age in this one. Nothing specific, but I defenitely see it that way. In a way that works. Rog' is his humorous self, and that works fine. A AWTAK with Dalton could have gone either way. It's maybe a weak Bond-film, but I have no problem enjoying the revisits with the film from time to time. It's defenitely not a Bond-movie I would rather be without (that spot is taken by DAD).
I posted this in another thread but this is my rough and raw/"alternate universe" reimagining of a Dalton AVTAK
Pre title sequence: Introduce Timothy Dalton as the new 007 in a mini-adventure that has nothing or little to do with the rest of the picture(in the style of the teasers for GF, TB, FYEO and OP).
Title Sequence:(I would've retained the Duran Duran song, one of the few highlights of the actual film)
Albert R. Broccoli presents
Timothy Dalton as James Bond 007 in Ian Fleming's
FROM A VIEW TO A KILL
(I would have restored the full original Fleming title)
starring
Alison Doody as Mary Ann Russell
Patrick Macnee as Sir Godfrey Tibbett
Fiona Fullerton as Pola Ivanova
Christopher Walken as Max Zorin
and Tanya Roberts in a very small 5 minute appearance as the "sacrificial lamb" Jenny Flex
Movie opens proper: The first 20-30 mins would be a relatively faithful adaptation of the actual short story "From A View To A Kill". The SHAPE driver's murder would appear on screen and 007's subsequent investigation. He would be assigned to work with fellow agents Tibbett and lovely Mary Ann Russell(the girl in the original story), and would impersonate the SHAPE driver and infiltrate the Russian spy gang in the forest. The head assassin(who Bond is sure he has seen before) of this spy gang gets away and Bond finds a stash of Zorin microchips among the KGB spy ring materials. After a brief dalliance with the gorgeous Mary Ann, Bond reports this information to M. Bond would learn that Zorin industries are a private British defense contractor that is developing microchips that are impervious to the magnetic pulse of a nuclear explosion but they've not been put in use by the British defense systems yet. Zorin would still be of East German origin but he
defected to England, became a U.K. citizen and then spent several years in New York where he made his millions. (This would explain Walken/Zorin's NY accent). M then sends Bond to investigate Zorin at a party his Chantilly estate. While there Bond meets and flirts with Zorin's mistress/secretary Jenny Flex(who Zorin brought from NY, also explaining her accent) Bond also runs into another lady at the party, his ex-lover, ballerina/KGB agent Pola Ivanova. After some brief flirting and catching up on old times, Pola mysteriously vanishes. To get more info on Zorin, Bond starts romancing Jenny which Zorin learns about and of course has her promptly executed(a la Corinne Dufour). Bond uses his gadgets to listen in on Zorin and his partner-in-crime whom he recognizes as the KGB assasin from the forest. Thru closer detection, Bond realizes that Pola and the KGB assassin are one and the same. Bond is caught spying and is captured by Zorin & put in some
deathtrap from which of course he escapes but not without Zorin thinking he is dead.
Bond continues his mission in pursuit of Pola to learn more about what she and Zorin are up to. The Siberian ski chase could be inserted here where Bond pursues her but ultimately rescues Pola from an avalanche(a la Bond and Elektra). After this experience, they "warm up" in a hot tub reminiscing about old times. As Bond gets more of the information on their plan, Pola doublecrosses Bond and he is again captured by Zorin. It turns out that Zorin and Pola are planning to cause a nuclear blast in outer space over the U.K. to, as Frederick Gray put it, "paralyze us at the Russian's mercy". This will be done after Zorin installs the "nuclear-explosion impervious" microchips(which of course won't be) in all of Britain's national defense systems. In the end, Bond of course thwarts Zorin and Pola's plans with the aid of Mary Ann who Bond ends up with in the final clinch. Tibbett would also have a larger role as Bond's ally and not be killed off. Perhaps Tibbett
should become head of Station F-France.
Not that Moore wasn't charming as ever in View - he was - but he was starting to lose credibility.
Also, a 57 year old sleeping with 4 women all old enough to be his daughters? Urgh.
Quite possibly the best Bond fan plot i have read in some time Brilliant work!
Thank you! :)
If we got Dalton and Caroline Bliss, that would be a good start.
If Eon had gone for a change then Dalton as Bond followed by a new director!? But who... Martin Campbell was off the radar at this point, so who!? John Mctiernan!??
AVTAK... with Dalton as Bond, and Mctiernan behind the lens!!! Now i'd of paid to see that, but then I paid to see AVTAK as it is, several times in fact!!!? My first at the cinema on my own one tuesday afternoon in 85!! :>
Even though AVTAK is a favorite of mine, I do agree that the action is terrible, except for the ending of course. Moore's age is obsviously a factor with this, and if we had Dalton in AVTAK, it would have been light-years better on action.