Experimental Stage
Sweepy the Cat
Halifax, West Yorkshire, EnglaPosts: 986MI6 Agent
Me and my brother have notice something that TWINE seemed to be the last "normal" Bond film as the 2000's seems to have been the experimental stage for Bond with three completely different films (Different Bonds, different directors, different run-times, different styles, different tones, different writers etc) with the producers basically dipping their toes into the water to see what does and does not work in a Bond film.
Hopefully, now that that decade is just about over, we can move along with a more traditional Bond 23 which does not try to be something that it is not (e.g. XXX, Bourne)
Hopefully, now that that decade is just about over, we can move along with a more traditional Bond 23 which does not try to be something that it is not (e.g. XXX, Bourne)
Comments
And of course the casting of Craigger, the no-frills* reboot and the darker, more post 9/11-observant tone of the stories, etc., continue to take the character along a path that is fairly distinct from where he's been. I would tend to agree that the time is approaching when Bond should perhaps bring some elements of the Precious Classic FormulaTM back to the dance. As ever, the question is: how much, or how little?
The difference between success and failure along these lines is indistinct, however, and endlessly arguable between clearly-defined camps of Bond fandom---the dangerous and dodgy arena of BonditicsTM :v ---to the extent that, no matter what Eon does in #23, it will either be too much, or not enough, for someone. Regardless, I envision #23 as an historic opportunity to produce a once-in-a-generation classic, given the foundation that's been laid.
* No Q, Moneypenny, et al.
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
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