No I don't anybody would like Bond in a genuine period piece that was faithful to the reality. And I must concede that if done with a light touch, a retro Bond could be clever, amusing and nostalgic.
But, isn't what people want from a retro Bond the opposite of a deft, knowing handling of a soap bubble version of the world? Don't they want the retro Bond to be someone whose violence, misogyny and heroism (and reactionary politics too) can be taken more seriously because it's encapsulated in a retro world?
The movies are of course much less lighter than the novels, and hardly merit discussion. But even though the novels were meant for escapism, the point is that a world where some ladykiller assassin is the hero is conceived as fun stuff, does indeed carrry a message. On one level, the Bond novels were saying that was the way Fleming and his audience wanted it to be. And I'm sorry I'm pretty sure that even Fleming thought that on one level it was really was the way the world was, that it really did have grotesque foes who could only be fought by men willing to kill without conscience. (Which is why Bond in particular gets my goat.) Saying it's not deep is a left-handed way of conceding it's kind of foolish. I too have enjoyed quite a bit of foolishness. But I find that Taking Nonsense Seriously is just not very entertaining, and goes overboard very quickly.
You don't have to camp up retro, as witness something like The Rocketeer, which still knew the whole time it wasn't serious. Retro is intrinsically difficult, as witness something like The Shadow, which slipped into wallowing.