I cannot describe how happy it made me when they proved that you COULD wear a tuxedo under a wetsuit.Didn't they cover the first one in that Bond-themed episode of Mythbusters?
I cannot describe how happy it made me when they proved that you COULD wear a tuxedo under a wetsuit.Didn't they cover the first one in that Bond-themed episode of Mythbusters?
I know he's still working, but Campbell will soon be 81 and who the fuck knows how old he'll be by the time they actually get around to making another Bond film!There is apparently a shortlist of directors for the next 007 film. The original telegraph article is paywalled, so I’m linking to this summary of it from Den of Geek.
I wonder will Martin Campbell make a hat-trick of launching new Bonds or is he just there to make up the numbers? Few of his non-Bond films are of any merit IMHO, but he has certainly made two of the best Bond films.
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James Bond 26 Directors List Includes the Best 007 Relaunch Director
A familiar name is reportedly on Eon's list of potential directors for the next James Bond movie.www.denofgeek.com
Man, thanks to a friend, I remember being invited to screening for the critics here in Seattle a week or so before it hit theaters. Now I feel old.I was wondering how old Campbell was; next year will be the 30th anniversary of GoldenEye (please, pass the Advil).
I hadn’t actually realised that, but then again, look at Ridley Scott and Clint Eastwood!I know he's still working, but Campbell will soon be 81 and who the fuck knows how old he'll be by the time they actually get around to making another Bond film!
Bond was around all over the place when I was growing up. I saw The Living Daylights on opening night. I never saw License to Kill in the theater as it was washed away in the Great Blockbuster Deluge of 1989.
Then he went way for six years. I even rolled my eyes a bit when they went back and cast Brosnan.
Then all of a sudden Goldeneye became my most anticipated movie in the fall of 1995. (That poster of Brosnan in gold with the gun barrel and the tag "There is no substitute" was amazing.) Waiting can be good.
And if Brosnan had taken on the role in 1987, who would’ve replaced him in the mid-1990s or whenever he decided to hang up his Walther? Assuming that his tenure wasn’t also derailed by going up against Batman in 1989.
I was thinking Ralph Fiennes. My logic is that after the rougher, edgier Dalton years, they went back to a more populist and light hearted incarnation with Pierce. So if you have Pierce replacing Moore, then his replacement might have been more edgy, but at this stage Daniel Craig isn’t in the picture. Apparently they did approach Fiennes in 1994 or so, after he was Oscar nominated for Schindler’s List, but felt that his take would’ve been to similar to Tim’s. But this wouldn’t be a problem in our alternate timeline (or Timline).The only two actors that immediately come to mind for me are Hugh Grant and Sean Bean.
I was thinking Ralph Fiennes. My logic is that after the rougher, edgier Dalton years, they went back to a more populist and light hearted incarnation with Pierce. So if you have Pierce replacing Moore, then his replacement might have been more edgy, but at this stage Daniel Craig isn’t in the picture. Apparently they did approach Fiennes in 1994 or so, after he was Oscar nominated for Schindler’s List, but felt that his take would’ve been to similar to Tim’s. But this wouldn’t be a problem in our alternate timeline (or Timline).
No Tim To DieA Timless Timline doesn't bear thinking about.
Those are excellent points. Food for thought.We Have All the Tim in the World.
So here's the thing with the alternate Brosnan timeline. There are a few variables.
Brosnan's instincts were not THAT far off of Dalton's. Especially with Bond coming off of Roger Moore AND PB coming off of Remington Steele, I'm not sure Brosnan would have necessarily danced with the one that brung him at the point. He too might have tried to go with a more serious Bond. Even if not, I don't know that he would have gone for the perfect triangulation of Connery and Moore that we got. Or maybe that's just how Brosnan plays Bond and exterior forces don't play into it.
Anyway he would not have been getting Martin Campbell. He still would have been getting John Glen. AND the waning Cubby Broccoli. AND the Dalton Moneypenny.
While I'm sure they tried to play to Dalton's strengths and would have tried to do the same for Brosnan, License to Kill was as much a response to action films like Die Hard as it was to Dalton wanting to be "grittier". And really, don't you think Brosnan would have LOVED to play against Felix Leiter getting fed to a shark?
Brosnan was SO much more self assured in 1995 than I think he would have been eight years earlier. The seasoning did him loads of good. So even if everything went smoothly he might not have been as good of a Bond.
Oh, right, even if LtK had been a more substantial hit I don't know if it would have managed to stave off the troubles with the sale of MGM.
But assuming that Brosnan managed to get a third film in a timely manner (which actually seems unlikely) OR if everyone was willing to wait (they were not with Dalton or Dalton wasn't with them) then I expect Brosnan still would have left in the mid 2000s at about the same age that he did. (Hopefully he would not have been the only Bond to be fired!) And however Brosnan wound up playing Bond (I'm pretty sure he wouldn't have played it as the guy from The Fourth Protocol only as Bond) that the next Bond would have been a reaction to that. And to Bourne, and to 9/11, and to everything else that went into the Craig era.
Now the question is, when would we have gotten Judi Dench?
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