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The James Bond Film Discussion Thread (With Bonus Lazenby!)

I ended up watching FRWL and most of Goldfinger. My gods, the sexism! Still, after putting it in perspective of its era, FRWL is just a terrific film.
FRWL is always going to be my favorite of the franchise. You get the classic travelogue feel, it doesn't depend on gadgets or world-ending schemes for its plot. It's just a good, well-plotted spy thriller.

The train fight between Bond and Grant is something that I point to a lot as well as my favorite movie fight. It feels like a down and dirty fight between a couple of brawlers. Sadly today, fight choreography looks too much like... fake-ass choreography.
 
I always smile when I see the scene in Dr. No where Bond meets with M because M basically describes the end of From Russia With Love. Because that was the previous book. Even though it "hasn't happened yet". Which is why he makes Bond switch to a Walther PPK. "The CIA swears by them."

(And yet how many movies later is Bond identified by his gun as being the only man to carry such a weapon?)

That's really weird. Was it a goof?
 
Well that explains that then
And once you get past the first four films, with the exception of OHMSS, they start playing fast and loose with the novels (which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Just that if you pick up a copy of Moonraker and expect it to involve laser battles in space between the U.S. Marines and a bunch of Drax Industries henchmen, you're going to be sorely disappointed.)
 
FRWL is always going to be my favorite of the franchise. You get the classic travelogue feel, it doesn't depend on gadgets or world-ending schemes for its plot. It's just a good, well-plotted spy thriller.

The train fight between Bond and Grant is something that I point to a lot as well as my favorite movie fight. It feels like a down and dirty fight between a couple of brawlers. Sadly today, fight choreography looks too much like... fake-ass choreography.
My personal favorite Bond movie is The Living Daylights, but from an objective critical standpoint, I think From Russia with Love remains the best film of the franchise. The atmosphere and style are downright Hitchcockian at times, and few higher cinematic compliments can be paid than that. The casting is also impeccable, with Lenya and Shaw both putting in unforgettable villainous turns.
 
And once you get past the first four films, with the exception of OHMSS, they start playing fast and loose with the novels (which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Just that if you pick up a copy of Moonraker and expect it to involve laser battles in space between the U.S. Marines and a bunch of Drax Industries henchmen, you're going to be sorely disappointed.)
I get a kick out of the novelization of the film version of Moonraker being based on a feature film based on the novel.

My personal favorite Bond movie is The Living Daylights, but from an objective critical standpoint, I think From Russia with Love remains the best film of the franchise. The atmosphere and style are downright Hitchcockian at times, and few higher cinematic compliments can be paid than that. The casting is also impeccable, with Lenya and Shaw both putting in unforgettable villainous turns.
TLD is a damn good movie and is among my top Bond pictures. Agreed on all points on Russia. EON and Terence Young did an impeccable job on putting the film together in such short time. I gotta also give editor Peter R. Hunt credit for creating the first-ever pre-credit Bond sequence when they moved that sequence of Grant hunting the Bond double from way later in the picture. Hunt did his share of saving the picture during post production based on the making-of documentary.
 
FRWL is a fantastic film, but it definitely feels more old school than any other Bond, a throwback to the 50s, even down to the title song. It's a great film but you do have to wonder, if every Bond film had had that vibe whether the franchise would have taken off as much.

For a more book accurate film version of Moonraker of course one should watch Die Another Day ;)
 
I get a kick out of the novelization of the film version of Moonraker being based on a feature film based on the novel.
I feel dizzy.

TLD is a damn good movie and is among my top Bond pictures.
It's got a terrific tiny little adaptation of the source short story, too.

Starting with For Your Eyes Only they did these micro-adaptations of the original stories. FYEO did For Your Eyes Only and Risico as part of the larger plot. Maude Adams basically told Bond the story of Octopussy. (Leaving out the actual octopus, but Bond didn't know that one either.) I don't recall anything from A View to a Kill making its way into the film.

There is no story of an adulterous wife that a nervous diplomat tells to Bond to try and keep him from being bored in Quantum of Solace.
 
Which villains do you think had the most outlandish deaths?

My pick for one is Kananga
With a very cursory recollection, I can't beat that one.

I still don't know what happened to the fellow in The World is Not Enough.

Dr. No in the book had a dumptruck full of bat crap dropped on him.
 
I quite like Anthony Zerbes death in LTK, not the last time he has a film death of course that sees him have a stretched/blown up head death.
There are scenes of menace and peril in the Bond films that are legit scary. Bond being strapped to the runaway table in Thunderball. The centrifuge in Moonraker. Corrine being chased by the dogs.

And this. I think it's because the person has time to see it coming.
 
(And yet how many movies later is Bond identified by his gun as being the only man to carry such a weapon?)
It's a wonder Moneypenny never ribbed him for his clear-as-day psychological insecurities.
I ended up watching FRWL and most of Goldfinger. My gods, the sexism! Still, after putting it in perspective of its era, FRWL is just a terrific film.
Chippendale's in reverse. Who knows the secrets of the human loins?
The train fight between Bond and Grant is something that I point to a lot as well as my favorite movie fight. It feels like a down and dirty fight between a couple of brawlers. Sadly today, fight choreography looks too much like... fake-ass choreography.
Or Cuisinarted BOURNE-style 38-cuts-a-second imitations like QUANTUM OF SKIPIT.
Blofeld: "Only one man we know carries that weapon. JAMES BOND."
''I'm right here, Ernst. I see YOU brought YOUR weapon. Nice taser you've got there.''
''Please spare the insolence, if you please, and do NOT refer to be as such AGAIN.''
''That sounds fair enough. Don't tase me, Blo.''
My personal favorite Bond movie is The Living Daylights, but from an objective critical standpoint, I think From Russia with Love remains the best film of the franchise. The atmosphere and style are downright Hitchcockian at times, and few higher cinematic compliments can be paid than that. The casting is also impeccable, with Lenya and Shaw both putting in unforgettable villainous turns.
Shaw was my first Alternate Oscars Best Supporting win for a Bond film. Someday I'd pay to see Clive Owen take on Daniel Craig in a fight like RUSSIA's, provided Owen would get to win.
FRWL is a fantastic film, but it definitely feels more old school than any other Bond, a throwback to the 50s, even down to the title song. It's a great film but you do have to wonder, if every Bond film had had that vibe whether the franchise would have taken off as much.

For a more book accurate film version of Moonraker of course one should watch Die Another Day ;)
Guilty pleasures both. I adore them. Moore/Jaws, perfect times.
Which villains do you think had the most outlandish deaths?

My pick for one is Kananga
I couldn't rank them all, partially because Robert Goulet has the second-best film villain's death scene of all time in THE SMELL OF FEAR.
I quite like Anthony Zerbes death in LTK, not the last time he has a film death of course that sees him have a stretched/blown up head death.
Did Joel Silver produce LICENCE for America? If so, I sense an amped-up pattern here.
 
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