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Mori-Bond
See this speaks to the unevenness of the tone; at times he is very non-Bond in panicking, in crying out in pain, or getting easily and inescapably caught, and at other times he is dispatching dangerous situations with insouciant grace. There seems to be no telling which, when or why.
I am in totally agreement with you and I think the only answer is that the communism financing plot of the book has been updated to terrorism financing, though the fellow in Africa looked more like oppressive military despots rather than political terrorists.
Yes, but it becomes a problem because it contradicts one of the central rules of the film. In all writing there are rules you set up and you should not contradict them or you go beyond the realm of the world you create or betray the premise of your project. If this Bond is a borderline sociopath and is totally emotionally inaccessible, which is what makes him good at his job would he then be so easily swayed to be this Alan Alda style romantic. It was jarring, and quickly drew snickers in our cynical Boston audience. I laughed at the film at this point. They lost me at the car crash and by this point I wish literally laughing at it, wishing it were over, and wishing that “The Good Shepherd” was playing in an adjacent theater.
They last film was ridiculous bubblegum, much like Moonracker or one of the worst of the Moore films (“For Your Eyes Only” though was one of the best films of the series and captured the magic of the Connery years), but it knew what it was, it established rules and stuck to them, and it kept the character consistent.
This film had no control over characterization whatsoever.
It did give me a shot in the arm to see Venice and to see that they filmed there. It is funny to know that I know that city well enough that when he came from over by the Gritti, you can see Louis Vuitton in the background, and entered San Marco, the Basilica should be in front of him, and it is for a brief moment, but then suddenly it is to his left, because he is suddenly passing through the Torre de Orologio. Of course, this is pedantry and I do not hold a film to too strict a standard. It was also nice to see them sail by the Rialto Market.
See for me, the flaws in character (it was simply not Bond), the bad writing, the embarrassing dialogue, the poor editing, the lack of a discernable plot, all broke the spell for me, and I was not alone.
Also, if Brosnon was looking for some kind of redemption, this film made 15% less money in its opening weekend that Brosnon’s last film. Money, sadly, is the measure of worth in the movie business.
GOK, you know I respect all of your opinions and I enjoy sparring with you, matching foils and parrying. There’s really nothing you have said that I could take great issue with.
My only hope for this series is that they work on these films a little more. With a bit of polish, this film really could have been something.
Bond, much like Hemingway Jones, never panics; it’s unbecoming of a gentleman.GOK said:Maybe he panicked? Let's not forget that at this point he is still very much a rookie. If this were a Brosnan film we were talking about, I'd be nodding my head in agreement with you Jones, but I think that due to the timeframe, we can be generous here. Besides, we women had the shower scene, so why shouldn't you men get the car smash?
See this speaks to the unevenness of the tone; at times he is very non-Bond in panicking, in crying out in pain, or getting easily and inescapably caught, and at other times he is dispatching dangerous situations with insouciant grace. There seems to be no telling which, when or why.
GOK said:Speaking of timeframes, that was one thing I did find difficult to get my head around. If this was a retrospective look at Bond, why was it set now? I can live with the female M but surely the references to 9/11 were uneccessary? Chronological ambiguity would have been preferable IMO.
I am in totally agreement with you and I think the only answer is that the communism financing plot of the book has been updated to terrorism financing, though the fellow in Africa looked more like oppressive military despots rather than political terrorists.
GOK said:I deliberately avoided all mention of this in my earlier post because I think I was trying to blank it out but you're right. It was cheesy, contrived and completely insincere. If a man spoke to me like that, I'd be striving not to giggle. We're used to the rubbish Bond one-liners (IMO they are even worse when spoken by Brosnan) but some of the things Craig was given to say were apalling. Perhaps we ought to chalk it up to him not having learned anything about seduction yet?!
Yes, but it becomes a problem because it contradicts one of the central rules of the film. In all writing there are rules you set up and you should not contradict them or you go beyond the realm of the world you create or betray the premise of your project. If this Bond is a borderline sociopath and is totally emotionally inaccessible, which is what makes him good at his job would he then be so easily swayed to be this Alan Alda style romantic. It was jarring, and quickly drew snickers in our cynical Boston audience. I laughed at the film at this point. They lost me at the car crash and by this point I wish literally laughing at it, wishing it were over, and wishing that “The Good Shepherd” was playing in an adjacent theater.
It was indeed and another major pitfall in the writing. They almost had me back when he almost did what he was about to do. Had he done it, they would have had me forever.GOK said:Was that in Venezia? If it's the part I'm thinking of, I agree and it puzzled me too.
Well, I respect that they tried something new in this film. They tried to achieve some of the magic of the Connery years and they came close, very close, but for all too brief passages.GOK said:We can hope! But I'm not sure we will ever get a truly marvellous Bond film...and this was nowhere near as bad as the previous one.
They last film was ridiculous bubblegum, much like Moonracker or one of the worst of the Moore films (“For Your Eyes Only” though was one of the best films of the series and captured the magic of the Connery years), but it knew what it was, it established rules and stuck to them, and it kept the character consistent.
This film had no control over characterization whatsoever.
Most of those remarks are confined to personal correspondence.GOK said:Jones, I am surprised you had nothing to say about Venezia!
It did give me a shot in the arm to see Venice and to see that they filmed there. It is funny to know that I know that city well enough that when he came from over by the Gritti, you can see Louis Vuitton in the background, and entered San Marco, the Basilica should be in front of him, and it is for a brief moment, but then suddenly it is to his left, because he is suddenly passing through the Torre de Orologio. Of course, this is pedantry and I do not hold a film to too strict a standard. It was also nice to see them sail by the Rialto Market.
GOK said:When all is said and done, I went to the cinema to be entertained by this film and I was. I wanted escapism, not realism and whilst in parts I found the film to be a tad too graphic to be purely fantastical, it did its job. It may not have been technically perfect and yes, there were flaws but I can live with that.
See for me, the flaws in character (it was simply not Bond), the bad writing, the embarrassing dialogue, the poor editing, the lack of a discernable plot, all broke the spell for me, and I was not alone.
Also, if Brosnon was looking for some kind of redemption, this film made 15% less money in its opening weekend that Brosnon’s last film. Money, sadly, is the measure of worth in the movie business.
GOK, you know I respect all of your opinions and I enjoy sparring with you, matching foils and parrying. There’s really nothing you have said that I could take great issue with.
My only hope for this series is that they work on these films a little more. With a bit of polish, this film really could have been something.