The brilliance of Goldfinger...Explain please?
Elvedetto
Coev'n, NetherlandsPosts: 5MI6 Agent
Afternoon everyone! I joined this forum to get in touch with fellow Bond fans, but also to ask a simple question:
Goldfinger is mostly in everyones personal top 3. Can anyone explain this? I get it is the first time the DB5 appears and all, but i think the storyline is just so weak... Maybe its just me ) Hope some fans can inspire me to like this movie!
Goldfinger is mostly in everyones personal top 3. Can anyone explain this? I get it is the first time the DB5 appears and all, but i think the storyline is just so weak... Maybe its just me ) Hope some fans can inspire me to like this movie!
*If* you play the odds...
-For Your Eyes Only-
-For Your Eyes Only-
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But just think, the Miami scenes, Oddjob, pussygalore, the db5 scenes, bond and Oddjob's showdown.... Iconic bond moments set to an incredible score -{
BTW goldfinger is not one of my most loved or watched, and personally I can't rank the films..... I love them all.
"Better make that two."
-For Your Eyes Only-
Hi Meran! Welcome aboard! Good to see you around over here as well !
I think the power of Goldfinger lies in the complete picture it forms. Connery at his peak, a brilliant villian and henchmen, great production design with Fort Knox, the classic sound track, the DB5, Pussy Galore, the iconic pre title sequence, the golden chick on the bed. But above all, that Goldfinger did most elements we now consider 'a typical Bond film' for the first time. It established the formula. And while the plot is far from deep, the film is great fun from start to finish and I feel it deserves a lot of the praise it gets :007)
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Those are awful! Something I never noticed until blu-ray.
Nevertheless, Goldfinger will always be the quintessential Bond film. Even if it doesn't hold up in some aspects it still contains all the definitive elements of what makes 007 popular.
The mini-movie pre-title sequence
A classic theme song
Connery in his prime
The Aston Martin with gadgets
Imposing henchman Oddjob
Memorable girl Pussy Galore
Iconic scene of the girl painted gold
...
What does FRWL have that would be memorable or iconic? Not much compared to Goldfinger. Even if FRWL is considered a better Bond film, it still would not be the definitive one.
1. GE 2. MR 3. OP 4. TMWTGG 5. TSWLM 6. TND 7. TWINE 8.DN 9. GF 10. AVTAK
"Better make that two."
Yes, there are weaknesses which become apparent on multiple viewings (as with most movies) and these are mainly with the plot as well as technology moving on, but it's all carried off with panache. It's a good example of style over substance- "it ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it".
And I agree with what Jeroen says above! {[]
Dalton - the weak and weepy Bond!
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You lose that as solitary viewing, that sense of shared laughter. You want something more intense, usually.
Roger Moore 1927-2017
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Plus like others mentioned, it set the tone for the movies to follow: the PTS, The boombastic theme song, the Bond girls, the Q scenes, again the DB5, the gadgets, the megalomaniac villain, the soundtrack from Barry.
I still love Goldfinger, it is an all time classic with iconic moments.
1. Connery 2. Craig 3. Brosnan 4. Dalton 5. Lazenby 6. Moore
I agree. I'd take FRWL over GF. I love the look and the gloss of GF but the saggy middle is a negative.
By the way, welcome Elvedetto Out of curiousity, what are your top 3 Bond films?
Directors try to duplicate GF (most recently Spectre) but cannot. It's one of those happy accidents where everything came together to produce a great film.
The great Italian director Fellini was a big fan at the time, and its very telling that one of the world's greatest filmmakers responded to the movie like a kid with a shiny toy at Christmas. Which, I think, is the enduring charm of the film: it has always felt like it was made with a sense of sheer fun.
Best film in series? No. But forever enjoyable.
"No. Masterson. Jill Masterson. And she's covered in paint. Gold paint."
Goldfinger has one of the strongest storylines of any Bond film. It's character-based rather than merely fill-in-the-blanks plot formula. The ego of the villain, Goldfinger, drives the entire story. He is so inadequate as a man, that only his insatiable desire for gold lifts him out of whatever depression makes his life otherwise miserable. That James Bond is exactly the kind of man he will never be explains why he is so infuriated with Bond.
This is reinforced all throughout the film, from Bond's joke about having an inferiority complex to Goldfinger's murderous rage over being cuckolded to Goldfinger's constant need to cheat in order to measure up against Bond (and then still failing) to his gassing of his rivals only after basking in their admiration of his plan.
Speaking of his plan, it's one of the few in a Bond film that actually is clever. Goldfinger isn't holding the world for ransom or stealing anything -- only he is. In one fell swoop, he stands to completely destabilize the economic systems of the western world. If that isn't inspired, I don't know what is. Moreover, he's aiding the communists in doing it.
The film's iconic characters and playful aesthetic also make it rise well above its contemporaries, as well as every other Bond film. It may seem easy to do jokiness, but it's not. Actors and writers will tell you it's far easier to do drama than comedy. But Goldfinger does both, ablly. It's an adult fairy tale, and in this sense, it captures the spirit of a lot of Fleming's books, which walked that find line between reality and fantasy.
The score is simply pitch perfect, and the directing is right on target -- so much so that Guy Hamilton would never eclipse it in his career.
The actors knock it out of the park, and though I don't care for Cec Linder's Felix Leiter all that much, he serves the purpose of the story.
Lastly, it is sophisticated. It doesn't take sophistication to make something brutally real. That's just copying reality. But to create the world in which Goldfinger takes place and to give it dimension and expression from start to finish is no easy task. One misstep, and the whole thing unfolds, yet Goldfinger -- from its jokes to its clothes to its set ups -- stays on point all the way through. It's a truly adult film, when that word means "for grown ups" rather than pornographic.
Apparently Barry's Goldfinger score was Fellini's favourite film score of all time -{
After 50 odd years it is still a joy to watch, as are all the 1960's Bond's, they really can't be matched by anything that came afterwards.
Not that one wouldn't want to see a pornographic Goldfinger, with starring roles for Dink and Jill Masterton in a Texan hayloft/Miami Beach suite.
Roger Moore 1927-2017
Roger Moore 1927-2017