Craig is the next Bond.

I usually find that if there's some chemistry and some plausability in motives of plot, then the movie works.

I recently watched "For Your Eyes Only," and almost no gadgets (save the face-recogniton computer), and there was very little to go on there. The girl said she wanted revenge, yet I didn't believe her.

"The Living Daylights" also was an attempt at more-realistic compared to, say, the Lewis Gilbert-directed movies, but I liked it, because Bond and Kara fell for each other.

Though, one thing I do agree with (and this is where my two examples fail) is that a series of movies relies on a good villain. "Star Trek II" had Khan, "Goldfinger" had Goldfinger, and "Moonraker" had Drax. Those two didn't. A man who modeled himself after various historical generals? This might've worked if he had wanted to destroy the world and not play with toys.
 

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While we're on the subject of realistic Bond films, I'd like to nominate From Russia With Love as the most realistic of the series (not to mention one of the best).
 

Dark Jezter said:
While we're on the subject of realistic Bond films, I'd like to nominate From Russia With Love as the most realistic of the series (not to mention one of the best).

Gah! How could I forget? I watched that last night. Definitely one of the best (if not the; I'd have to re-watch "Goldfinger").
 

Goldfinger... It's one of those channel-flip black holes. I am powerless to resist watching it. Source of the best JB quote ever.

I hope Casino Royale will be more hard-edged and less cartoony. I don't mind over-the-top action/fight scenes but the last movie reminded me of the Roger Moore "Jaws lifting a truck/laser battles in space" days.

But I do hope they tone down the part where JB gets tortured. I don't want to see his **** get ****ed by a *****.
 

For me (personal opinion alert), Timothy Dalton was the worst- he had no charisma or on screen presence and always seemed constipated. Bond seemed like any other angry against the world cop shoot em up.

when i first saw Remington Steele i thought the Pierce Brosnan should be Bond and he bought the charisma and suaveness that Bond had lost. We will see with the new guy, he seems too serious, can't imagine the Bond smirk on him. Time will tell.
 

Sadly, the more the movies try to resemble the original novels in feel and atmosphere, the weaker the box office performances. On Her Majesty's Secret Service, License to Kill, both did a great job of capturing the feel of the books. Many Bond afficianados (not all, I won't even claim a majority just to save my hide :) ) now feel those are two of the better entries. So it's a real tough call for the producers to make. Personally, I liked the Brosnan performances (even if some of his movie entries weren't great). However, my personal favorite two were From Russia With Love (Connery's best entry for me), and OHMSS. Lazenby was a very good Bond, but sadly looked too soft physically to make a strong impression. Bond needs to be big time, over the top action at this point, with gadgets and all the acoutrements, but the best entries shine through, and thankfully, any new entry is likely to pick up fans because of the different equations used in each. I think that's a great thing. This one doesn't work, next one will, because enough people will like this one to keep the next coming. A double-edged sword, perhaps, but hey, that's life. :D Personally, Craig looks promising, I'd like a bit of a harder edge, and I'll be waiting for the final product to hit the screen before I make a final call.

Take care,
Don
 

Staffan said:
Except they weren't made in that order. Living Daylights preceded License to Kill.
Oh my god! You are of course right. LD was in '87 and LtK in '89.

* Hands in his James Bond Fanboy badge and Walther PPK *


Must. Go. Atone.

I switched them, I have done this before.

The idea behind LD was to 'modernize' Bond. Make him a 80s man. Y'know, tough, yet soft,
I can kill, but I can cry too, romantic yaddayaddayadda. These was a huge backlash from
the fan community so they toughened him up which resulted in another backlash...

Bond had been decamped a bit before, though.

Then there was some fighting over the rights to Bond and in '95 we finally got GoldenEye.

Which rocked.

And then the movies continued to get worse. Damn them.

(Also, you don't need to hit enter to get line breaks. They sort themselves out. Only use that for paragraphs.)
(I am very well aware of this and one might think you had noticed by now, since I have
done this for years that I merely do this as a stylistic preferance.)
 

Personally, I liked Dalton. While he may not have been as charming as some others, I believed he could be scary, and that's something Bond really has to have. I wouldn't find Roger Moore or George Lazenby frightening if they came at me in a dark alley with a knife, but I can buy Dalton as an assassin.

Brosnan is still my favorite to date, though, sine he got both aspects down. I'm looking forward to seeing what Craig can do with it.
 

Viking Bastard said:
The idea behind LD was to 'modernize' Bond. Make him a 80s man. Y'know, tough, yet soft, I can kill, but I can cry too, romantic yaddayaddayadda. These was a huge backlash from the fan community so they toughened him up which resulted in another backlash...

Bond had been decamped a bit before, though.
Not in my opinion he hadn't. The movie right before Living Daylights was View to a Kill, which was just as campy and silly as just about anything else from the Roger Moore era.

Also, that "stylistic decision" is really annoying. All that it accomplishes is to cause line breaks in the middle of the line, especially when you're being quoted. I have to go through and remove all your line breaks from the quote, or get a mess.
 

Joshua Dyal said:
Not in my opinion he hadn't. The movie right before Living Daylights was View to a Kill, which was just as campy and silly as just about anything else from the Roger Moore era.
A bit, I said.

I liked VtK, though. If mostly for Christopher Walken. Rate it similarly as LD.
Also, that "stylistic decision" is really annoying. All that it accomplishes is to cause line breaks in the middle of the line, especially when you're being quoted. I have to go through and remove all your line breaks from the quote, or get a mess.
Bah! Humbug! Don't care!
 

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