Bond has never been particularly continuity-heavy.
This is not a true statement. There are numerous references and callbacks to previous films included throughout the pre-Daniel Craig films.
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Bond has never been particularly continuity-heavy.
Several MCU characters have been played by two or more actors, including Bruce Banner, Howard Stark, Jim Rhodes, Fandral and Tina Minoru.
Recasting has happened many times in many ongoing series in film and TV.
I was kind of amazed when I first realized how many references there were back to earlier movies there were in the Bond serie. I think they even referred to his wife or fiance, I can't remember which she was, who was killed even after one or two actor changes.This is not a true statement. There are numerous references and callbacks to previous films included throughout the pre-Daniel Craig films.
Batman Forever specifically reuses footage from Batman and Batman Returns so it's less ambiguous than you think.
Recasting in the context of an ongoing film or television series may be common and provide many precedents, but that doesn't make it optimal or desirable.
And while narrative continuity can of course still be maintained, it breaks the illusion of a continuing reality, which is part of what ongoing stories and shared universes are designed to create.
I will personally be disappointed if any roles in the DCEU are recast, and I think that's legit. I might adjust to a new Batman, I might even like him, but it will unavoidably take something away from the sense that this particular universe is "real" and unified within itself.
And Bond is (I think?) the longest-running franchise in movie history, so recastings were inevitable
I know you've taken a position here and are loath to give any ground, but are you really saying it does no damage to the integrity of a shared universe like this if they have, say, a different Wonder Woman in every movie?
This is not a true statement. There are numerous references and callbacks to previous films included throughout the pre-Daniel Craig films.
Yes, of course the series was not totally devoid of continuity - Tracy is referenced in You Only Live Twice and less directly in LTK. The same Russian general appears in a few Moore movies. Lazenby takes a stroll down memory lane recalling the events from before OHMSS (a clear effort to establish for the audience that he's the same character as Connery, somewhat undermined by the fourth-wall-breaking "this never happened to the other fellow" line at the start of the movie). Continuity certainly began to tighten up in the Brosnan era, but hat was reflective of modern audiences, who could re-watch films over and over more than 1960s audiences. But the Realist never said it didn't have any continuity, just that it wasn't particularly continuity-heavy, and his statement is absolutely correct.
Batman Forever specifically reuses footage from Batman and Batman Returns so it's less ambiguous than you think.
Recasting does not necessarily count for continuity breaking but when you have Blofeld played firstly as a Dr Evil prototype by Donald Pleasance, then a suave heavy American like Telly Savalas and then a camp English Charles Grey across 3 films, it does not make for particularly good continuity.
The thing is, though... with something like Bond or Doctor Who or Marvel Comics or Frankenstein, nobody's expecting the audience to believe it's a genuine, consistent reality. It's an extended exercise in fantasy and mythology. So continuity references are not meant to say "This is a realistic, consistent history and you can fill in the right answers to pass a test." They're just meant to evoke a feeling of recognition in the audience, to be Easter eggs or evocative leitmotifs. To convey the idea that the different works are conceptually linked even if they don't quite mesh on a strictly literal level. That's why Marvel is constantly referring back to events in 1960s or 1970s comics as if they happened just 5-7 years ago or less. That's why Bond films do much the same with their continuity nods within an otherwise shifting continuity. It's not meant to be a literally consistent reality, it's meant to be a mythology with recurring motifs and internal rhymes. The casting doesn't matter in Bond films, because the characters are archetypes and the stories are formulas.
Continuity is just one tool in the creative kit, one of multiple means to the end of telling an entertaining story. In some works, it's a fairly central concern, but in others, depending on the style and approach and goals, it's just a grace note, at best.
However, if you compare how Diamonds are Forever follows OHMSS with how Quantum of Solace follows Casino Royale, you can see how the series has evolved.
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