It is nice we can agree that it's not the actor. Even though I don't like Craig as Bond I can't pin all of my disdain for the direction of the franchise on him. So cheers.Captain Nash wrote:An excellent post Bond 77, and one I wish more members here would recognise. I wasn't saying that Pierce Brosnan was the reason for his films being of a poorer quality, but as you've pointed out. With silly characters, poor casting choices, and over the top story lines.Bond77 wrote:Oh Captain Nash. Common sense would tell you that Brosnan was more than sufficient with his portrayal as Bond and it was silly scripts (Die Another Day), and lousy characters (examples: Christmas Jones, Eliot Carver) that plagued the Brosnan era. That is, if the Brosnan era is to labeled "plagued".Captain Nash wrote:And we as loyal fans deserved better than some of the films his contribution gave us.Bond77 wrote:And five years ago Brosnan was dumped like a worn out shoe. He deserved better for what he did to reinvigorate the franchise.007 wrote:
We had a black flag flying all day at DCINB headquarters.
Aside from GoldenEye, were his films really that good. Certainly not alot of TND, and nearly all of TWINE. DAD was entertaining, and probably his second best portrayal of the character.
I liked Pierce as Bond, and would've welcomed a fifth from him. But it wasn't to be. Let's be honest he was starting to look old in DAD, and with the injury he sustained during filming, could EON risk it two or three years down the track? With the possibility of the star out of action, it can cost a film millions for delays like that.
It's just common sense.
At the risk of digression, I must say that this brings me to what I don't get about criticism against Roger Moore. As if Roger Moore coordinated the "slide whistle" stunt sequence in The Man with the Golden Gun, created the Jaws character, or wrote the Moonraker script. Roger did nothing more than work with the materials given to him. Besides, Roger Moore showed that he was more than capable of playing a straight, heroic role in The Saint. It was the producers and the creative team of EON that made Bond silly in the 70's and 80's...
...which brings make to the Brosnan era. If the Brosnan era is to labeled "plagued", "silly", or what have you then the blame should be directed at Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson. They captain the Bond ship, and there are ultimately responsible for the direction of the franchise.
Now, the notion that Brosnan was beginning to look too old. I think he looked fine in his last outing as Bond, and he looked like he could have played the role as long as Moore had and it would have been fine. Besides, even if he was looking to old I'd rather have an "old looking Bond" then some one who has never looked or acted like James Bond.
I agree with you on the silly antics of the Roger Moore era, not being attributed to Moore. I wonder then why Craig gets ridiculed for scenes like running through a plasterboard wall in CR? Surely this is the same ?
At the end of the day EON must front the blame for the direction the series takes, and the decisions that they make. But as I said, Pierce Brosnan did sustain a knee injury during the filming of the hovercraft chase in DAD, which lead to filming being postponed. Knowing Pierce (then in his fifties) would be two years older at least before the next Bond film went into production, could EON risk using an actor that may injure himself again and hold up production on the film?
It's one of my beliefs as to why Pierce was dumped, and the reboot established. A younger Bond, a new direction for a tired looking series.
But as I said, I do agree with most of what you have to say.
I understand your theory about Brosnan's knee injury, but production companies should be able to take injuries and illnesses in stride. I read Roger Moore's book and in it he describes how he was either injured or ill during the filming of almost each of his Bond films. In a physically demanding role like James Bond you have to expect injuries and mishaps and work around them. Craig experienced them too, and they didn't replace him.
I think the theory that has more validity is the one that has Broccoli, disliking the institution that her father helped create, wanting to remake the Bond franchise in her own image. Thus, resulting in the Daniel Craig era.
It would have been better that she continue making Bond films the way her father did. Even if she didn't like the Bond films they would have produced millions of dollars for her to make films she wanted with all the post-materialist themed drivel she could stuff in to celluloid. Instead, she has forced her ideology into the 007 franchise. We used to watch Bond fight against the evil schemes of Goldfinger, Blofeld, and Dr. No - evil foes whose intentions had worldwide implications. Now we have Bond racing against time...to provide drinking water to Bolivians?
And she has done all of this for what? To have no money for post-materialist drivel, and to have no financial footing to get Bond 23 off the ground? Who suffers at the end? The millions of moviegoers who look forward to seeing Bond save the world every two years.


