I like or adore all three of those. Licence to Kill is my favorite of the three.
TLD, L2K, and Goldeneye is the best three-film run short of the original three.
Goldeneye was heavily promoted as a course correction after the unfair perception that Dalton was the "politically correct" Bond. It was crafted to kill the specter of Dalton and bring an unapologetically old-fashioned, "misogynist dinosaur" Bond into the '90s...so I doubt that they ever had Dalton in mind for it.
As much as everyone made a big deal about M's "sexist, misogynist dinosaur" line showing the franchise turning a critical eye on itself, her remarks to Bond about "I don't want you running off on some kind of vendetta" and "Don't make it personal" are a direct rebuke of Licence to Kill.Goldeneye was heavily promoted as a course correction after the unfair perception that Dalton was the "politically correct" Bond. It was crafted to kill the specter of Dalton and bring an unapologetically old-fashioned, "misogynist dinosaur" Bond into the '90s...so I doubt that they ever had Dalton in mind for it.
The first drafts for GOLDENEYE were already being written in 1993 by Michael France, and Dalton didn’t depart until 1994. Even prior to that, there was a entirely different draft that was supposed to bring back the more fantastical elements even going as far as including a cyborg henchman.Goldeneye was heavily promoted as a course correction after the unfair perception that Dalton was the "politically correct" Bond. It was crafted to kill the specter of Dalton and bring an unapologetically old-fashioned, "misogynist dinosaur" Bond into the '90s...so I doubt that they ever had Dalton in mind for it.
Not true. Moore was already done by the time AVTAK was finished. In fact, prior to writing TLD, Michael G Wilson and Richard Maibaum wrote a Bond Begins treatment that Cubby ultimately rejected. Then they started writing TLD, but it wasn’t written in mind for any actor (as the casting of Bond was very prolonged), so they wrote it in a way that would be a one size fits all for any actor.I think TLD was kinda written for Roger.
Yes. Those would be the original three.You could say Dr No, FRWL and Goldfinger also,
Licence to Kill was Mooreish leftovers? If anything, that film was tailored to how Dalton wanted to portray Bond — colder, more ruthless. Not that his Bond wasn't above tossing off an occasional quip or bedding both Pam and Lupe, but there was definitely a harder edge that we hadn't seen since TMWTGG (where they inadvisably tried to make Roger more like Sean), and then previously in the early Connery films.
The Living Daylights, on the other hand, was incredibly generic — it could have worked for Moore, it could have worked for Brosnan if he hadn't been dicked over by NBC, and it more or less worked for Dalton.
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