nemesis is about as bad as die another day
The Pierce Brosnan period was a definite low in the entire run, but that one eats the poisonous cake.
nemesis is about as bad as die another day
Look at superhero movies -- all the heroes who generally refuse to kill in the comics but whose enemies usually end up dying in the movies.
The Pierce Brosnan period was a definite low in the entire run, but that one eats the poisonous cake.
nemesis is about as bad as die another day
The Pierce Brosnan period was a definite low in the entire run, but that one eats the poisonous cake.
I thought that back in the day, the consensus was that Dalton had been disappointing as Bond and Brosnan was a more ideal choice. After all, Dalton was let go after two films and Brosnan did, what, four? But maybe that's been reassessed in retrospect?
^Good analysis, thanks.
I do remember how the general consensus was that Brosnan "should have" been Bond all along, and that might've been part of the reason Dalton was judged harshly as well as the reason audiences were so glad to see Brosnan take over at last. I guess there were some rose-colored glasses toward him at the time.
While I've never been that much of a Bond fan, I did see all the movies when they showed up on TV (though I haven't seen any since Craig's first), and I always liked Dalton better than most did, and thought Brosnan was a lightweight in comparison. I thought Dalton brought more gravitas and depth to the role, and what you say about how he didn't seem to enjoy the violence like Connery did was part of that. As I said, I don't relate to protagonists who are casual killers. Really, I think Bond's a pretty reprehensible character on the whole. But Dalton's version was one of the more palatable ones.
And really, Timothy Dalton is a better actor in general than most of the other Bonds. He's done terrific work in other roles, though for me, his most memorable roles have been villains: Neville Sinclair in The Rocketeer and Rassilon in Doctor Who: "The End of Time." Maybe he would've been better remembered if he'd been cast as a Bond villain rather than as Bond himself.
Moore and Connery had played Bond mainly alternating being a tough ass, with being witty and smooth. Generally Connery showed his bad ass side more often than Moore and Moore vice versa with the witty side, but both actors possessed both traits to a decent degree.
I think people though Brosnan was going to continue that kind of character based on his role in "Remington Steele" (again never saw the show so I can't make any personal opinions) and he sure LOOKED the part.
I just don't understand the double standard. If we think less of the villains because they kill people, why should we think more of the heroes when they do the same? Logically, if killing makes bad guys bad, then shouldn't we admire and celebrate the heroes more if they manage to avoid sinking to the villains' level? If they profess to stand for nobler values but end up reluctantly "making an exception" for the archvillain, or trying and failing to save them, then doesn't that failure diminish their achievement rather than amplifying it?
Sure, yes, you can say it's cathartic to see the villain die. But if we celebrate the death of someone we hate, then why aren't we rooting for the villains, whose whole MO is killing people they hate?
For myself, I root for heroes because they're different from the villains, because they fight for life instead of death. I hate it when fictional heroes are portrayed as casual or frequent killers. Sure, I get that it's make-believe, that nobody's really being hurt so we can indulge the fantasy of violence without guilt. We can ignore the grieving widows and families of all the hapless security guards who were just doing their jobs when the action hero mowed them down, or disregard the thousands of harmless maintenance workers and IT guys that Luke Skywalker blew up with the Death Star, because none of it really happened. But I like it when my fiction stands for something more than that. And when heroes claim to be fighting for life or peace or the rule of law, I want them to succeed in living up to those ideals rather than being forced to "compromise" them out of grim necessity, or being hypocrites with crap like "I don't have to save you." True heroism isn't just triumphing over the enemy, it's triumphing over your own weaknesses and limitations. So if everybody tells the hero he has no choice but to kill his enemy, I want that to be a challenge he manages to rise above by finding a better way that nobody else was smart or brave enough to think of. I'll take Kirk in "Arena" or "Day of the Dove" over Kirk in The Search for Spock. It was Star Trek that taught me that finding a better way is the real definition of heroism.
Heroes are supposed to be better than villains.
Superman, at least the previous incarnations until Man of Steel, had a code against killing.
Even Batman, at least until the two animated Justice league DVDs, didn't kill either. but for him he feared that he would go down a dark place that he couldn't climb out of.
If you're gonna make action movies, then a) there's going to be a villain; and b) they are going to be dispatched violently. That's just how Hollywood action films roll.
If you're gonna make action movies, then a) there's going to be a villain; and b) they are going to be dispatched violently. That's just how Hollywood action films roll.
There's no doubt that it is. But that doesn't mean it should be. Cliches are not automatically right, nor are they impossible to defy.
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