Will Brosnan go down as a great Bond?

I personally think he was fantastic and managed a certain Bond presence on film. He had just the right touch of humor and he wasn't over the top corny like some others.
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  • The CatThe Cat Where Blofeld is!Posts: 711MI6 Agent
    Oh my God... You really don't want my opinion on this... 1... 2... 3... 4... ... 10. Okay, I'm calm. Huh...
  • taitytaity Posts: 702MI6 Agent
    Me, I dont dislike his films - they're just not anything special. I too miss Roger's era. Brosnan looked like a good Bond, ill say that.

    Well, too use an old cliche, curiosity killed the cat, what do you think The Cat. Go on, let the cat out of the bag. (And with that, Im out of cliches - not a moment too soon)
  • asioasio Melbourne, AustraliaPosts: 546MI6 Agent
    Oh yeah, he was a great James Bond. It's just a pity that the plots & scripts weren't as good as what they could have been.
    Drawn Out Dad.
    Independent, one-shot comic books from the outskirts of Melbourne, Australia.
    twitter.com/DrawnOutDad
  • Willie GarvinWillie Garvin Posts: 1,412MI6 Agent
    I agree with Asio.Brosnan was often better than his material.That said,he was a terrific 007.
  • Mr MartiniMr Martini That nice house in the sky.Posts: 2,699MI6 Agent
    Quoting taity:

    Well, too use an old cliche, curiosity killed the cat, what do you think The Cat. Go on, let the cat out of the bag. (And with that, Im out of cliches - not a moment too soon)

    If I could answer this one for The Cat. Curiosity killed The Cat, but satisfaction brought it back!
    Some people would complain even if you hang them with a new rope
  • The Sly FoxThe Sly Fox USAPosts: 467MI6 Agent
    edited March 2005
    Quoting Willie Garvin:
    I agree with Asio.Brosnan was often better than his material.That said,he was a terrific 007.
    That's true. The best thing about Die Another Day was that Brosnan was in it. He was an excellent asset to the Bond franchise. This is just my opinion, but GoldenEye and The World Is Not Enough were two of the best Bond Films ever made, yet what really made them shine were Brosnan's performances in them. He added the perfect touch to what were already excellent films. I think they just wouldn't have been the same without him. Therefore, though my opinions on Bond Films and the actors who starred in them tend to change every now and then, Pierce Brosnan will always be my favorite Bond (or at least one of my favorites :D ).
  • royale53royale53 Posts: 24MI6 Agent
    Brosnan isn't my favourite bond but each of his films have exceded 300 million dollars worldwide. And thats saying somthing.
  • The CatThe Cat Where Blofeld is!Posts: 711MI6 Agent
    edited March 2005
    Quoting Mr Martini:
    If I could answer this one for The Cat. Curiosity killed The Cat, but satisfaction brought it back!

    Satisfaction??? WHERE? Show me!

    I'm not pushing my luck on this subject. ;)
  • FiremassFiremass AlaskaPosts: 1,910MI6 Agent
    yes, i think he will.

    unfortunatly,his movies were pretty weak. Goldeneye was the only winner, as far as I'm concerned.

    he ain't got nothin on Sean or Rog though....those are my homies
    My current 10 favorite:

    1. GE 2. MR 3. OP 4. TMWTGG 5. TSWLM 6. TND 7. TWINE 8.DN 9. GF 10. AVTAK
  • PredatorPredator Posts: 790Chief of Staff
    JakeL has got it spot on IMHO ... Brosnan was a breath of fresh air to the series, but increasingly poor stories, scripts and direction did him no favours at all.

    He can certainly hold his head high and be compared favourable as a Bond actor to the others. However, each has their own strengths and weaknesses as Bond, so I think they all brought something significant to the franchise. There we go ... Predator sits on the fence ... they are all great! ;)
  • Lady RoseLady Rose London,UKPosts: 2,667MI6 Agent
    Quoting The Cat:
    Oh my God... You really don't want my opinion on this... 1... 2... 3... 4... ... 10. Okay, I'm calm. Huh...

    Oh Cat,you are a spoilsport ... and when you've finished maybe we'll ask MarJil his opiion as well :)) :)) :))
  • wordswords Buckinghamshire, EnglandPosts: 249MI6 Agent
    edited March 2005
    Agree with everyone who thinks that, while Brosnan was a great Bond, history will not look kindly on the three movies that followed Goldeneye. I just don't think any of them have good repeat value because they become rather dull with frequent re-viewing. Will this effect how Brosnan's Bond is regarded in the future?
  • Sir Hillary BraySir Hillary Bray College of ArmsPosts: 2,174MI6 Agent
    The fact of the matter is, Brosnan is the only present-day face of Bond for a whole generation of film-goers, including many Bond enthusiasts who frequent this site. I would argue that, more than anyone except Connery, he is viewed as THE James Bond by many people, because the six-year wait was almost like starting from scratch, because the transition from Connery to Moore was pretty smooth, and because Lazenby and Dalton are seen as one-offs. Viewed as such, there's no question that Brosnan will go down as a "great" James Bond, certainly an "important" one.

    This has little to do with our opinions of his portrayal or his films. I'm like many others in admiring his performances a great deal but feeling that his films, for the most part, leave a lot to be desired.
    Hilly...you old devil!
  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,270MI6 Agent
    Agreed. It's a real shame. Brosnan was a definitive 007 in that he was accepted by critics and the general public. But the new producers lack Cubby's showmanship or Harry's no-nonsense discernment and so Pierce's films just weren't up to much.


    For me, only TWINE even FELT like a Bond film. Director Apted was the only one who seemed to know how to set up a one-liner. That said, the film should have been a bit more colourful.

    Brosnan was lucky in that he LOOKED like James Bond and his films were well marketed. And the press were very much behind him.

    He was only as good as him material though. He could rarely put a spin on a duff line, though he shouldn't have needed to. 'You're mad', his reponse to Carver in TND is a cliche, but Mel Gibson might have said it in that 'hey-ho!' blue-eyed, punchline manner he had when needling Joss Ackland in Lethal Weapon 2. Brosnan just says it flat and some of his delivery is too plaintive and knackered out sounding imo.

    What's more, lack of top one-liners = lack of personality = Bond becoming more iconic, with references to his trappings more than ever to compensate ie vodka martinis, Aston Martin etc. The changeover of directors caused this too! His Bond never had a terribly consistent personality cos his films don't. Similar, in fact, to the 1965-1971 years which had four different directors from Thunderball to DAF. Truthfully, Bond himself seems a different sort of guy in each film the iconography prevails.
    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • canoe2canoe2 Posts: 2,007MI6 Agent
    Brosnan managed to combine the weight of Connery (at least DAF Connery) with the humour of Moore (without veering into the silliness that came later: Tarazan yell anyone?). Bronson was an excellent Bond, not as good as Connery at his best (FRWL and GF) but equal to Moore in TSWLM and FYEO. Now if only the material was as good. I believe this will always be the question about his reign (and possibly the regret?): what could Pierce have with a script like GF, TSWLM, FYEO or TLD? As much as he may say it, I don't think he had the right style to pull off a FRWL or OHMSS.
  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,270MI6 Agent
    Am I the only one who thinks it's a shame Brosnan never had a movie with a part US setting eg Brosnan in a plush New York skyscraper a la Someone To Watch Over You, or off in LA, with the sort of stuff we saw in DAF or that Steven Sodenburgh film with Terence Stamp. Brosnan had semi-American looks, it's another missed opportunity.
    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • HardyboyHardyboy Posts: 5,882Chief of Staff
    Quoting Napoleon Plural:
    Brosnan had semi-American looks, it's another missed opportunity.

    Errrr. . .what does a "semi-American" look like?

    Anyway, I'm not bothered by the Brosnan Bond not being in the U.S.--I'm more bothered by the fact so few of his locations have been particularly exotic or romantic (Hamburgh, Azerbaijan, etc.).
    Vox clamantis in deserto
  • A7ceA7ce Birmingham, EnglandPosts: 655MI6 Agent
    Broz will be remembered for bringing Bond back and rightly so, and also winning a greater array of female fans this time around (compared to 80's).

    He will be the ONLY Bond for a whole generation, although my 8 year old nephew knows that he is Number 5. He Knows SC was no.1 from the LXG. He doesn't know who the 3 in between were and probably doesn't care. With the action movies and action games the last few Bond movies have been on par with their level. I don't think kids could watch FRWL today and enjoy it like I did when I was 8 in the 70's.
  • NarcosisNarcosis Posts: 2MI6 Agent
    I think he could have been a terrific Bond, but as other people have already said, he starred in some of the weakest entries in the series. Besides GoldenEye, all of his other Bond films are the ones I hardly ever re-watch. Heck, I've only seen DAD once and I'll most likely never watch it again.
  • canoe2canoe2 Posts: 2,007MI6 Agent
    I do think it will be very interesting to see how younger fans interpret the Bond actors after the FRWL video game. Are they planning on using Connery's image? Because more than any other Bond, Brosnan managed to cross mediums: people didn't have to wait every two years to see him as Bond, they could see him as Bond everyday in a video game. This will have an impact on the longevity of his popularity.
  • The CatThe Cat Where Blofeld is!Posts: 711MI6 Agent
    Quoting canoe2:
    I do think it will be very interesting to see how younger fans interpret the Bond actors after the FRWL video game. Are they planning on using Connery's image? Because more than any other Bond, Brosnan managed to cross mediums: people didn't have to wait every two years to see him as Bond, they could see him as Bond everyday in a video game. This will have an impact on the longevity of his popularity.

    I know it's my mistake, since I can't possibly know what's the impact of the video games, but I think that's a bit of an overestimation of the role of video games...
  • AlexAlex The Eastern SeaboardPosts: 2,694MI6 Agent
    edited March 2005
    Quoting JakeL:I hope people will forget Brosnan as Bond pretty soon...
    Well, you'll draw a blank with me.
  • DominoDomino Posts: 31MI6 Agent
    Brosnan will go down as a good Bond to the younger generation. They love explosions and don't like (or care) about direction/scripts, etc.
    That is sad. I care aboout scripts, I wanna know what is happening. But, Brosnan still was a good Bond, classy, eh... (see I have a system Sean is Bond, George is the rest, Roger is the funny, Tim is the serious, and Pierce is the classy). I really liked GE. It was the first film I saw but his other 3 were...eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, eh, (personally, I liked DAF more than TWINE). And, sayanara...
  • Sir Hillary BraySir Hillary Bray College of ArmsPosts: 2,174MI6 Agent
    Quoting The Cat:
    I know it's my mistake, since I can't possibly know what's the impact of the video games, but I think that's a bit of an overestimation of the role of video games...
    You're probably right about video games in specific, Cat. However, a major factor contributing to Brosnan being seen by many as the definitive Bond is that he's the only one to play the role during the true Information Age. Things like video games, but especially the Internet, have plastered his image in the role everywhere, in a way not imaginable in earlier times. The marketing aspect too -- it seems like ads for Rolex, BMW, etc. have featured Brosnan as much as the products themselves. I don't remember that with anyone else.
    Hilly...you old devil!
  • vodkamartinivodkamartini Kent, EnglandPosts: 3MI6 Agent
    I think that Brosnan has pro's and cons, just like all the Bonds that have been so far, and will be in the future.

    To me his main strengths lie in a complicated morass of issues:

    I think that he was the first Bond of the information/technology age, and therefore benefitted by being on TV, on Internet, in adverts for the huge product placement that his films contained. He therefore was seen as being "James Bond" by people who had not only seen the films, but by people who were merely curious and in a jewellers looking at Omega Watches for example. They may even have been influenced by his image and appeal to have a look at the product so placed. Therefore his overall visibility was much higher on the film going public's radar, and was more associated with the Bond role than any other Bond before him. For a generation (As 10 years is enough to grow up with an actor/series-look at Star Trek or the X files)he WAS Bond, and for many fans, he was the FACE of Bond.

    His interpretation of the role, I agree, did vary depending on the situation that he was in. I think that he went from tired playboy to introvert. Consider GE, at the casino for the first, on the Cuban beach for the second. He was able to convey a range, and whether it was a WIDE range is another matter, of emotions and thoughtfullness about the character that most people hadn't seen in Roger Moore, for example. I do think that sometimes he did seem rather flat, a little embarrassed and I don't think that he did "angry Bond" that well. Compare, Brosnan's "Personal vendettas" to Dalton's and you see what I mean.

    So in many ways, he was a bit of a hybrid of the styles that came before him. He did have an air of the debonair, but he never managed SC's "Coolness". Noone, would ever have thought of him as "cool". He did have some of SC's arrogant swagger and conceitedness but not enough, and this was accompanied by periods of introvesion, perhaps contradicting the arrogance and leading us to think that this James Bond is really, well, insecure. I think that actually Bond is insecure, in many ways, I think that it took PB for some people to see it. I think that he also had some of the better more human attributes of GL, and I think that there were times when his emotions obviously did get the better of him, and again, we return to the emphasis on soulfulness. The effect that Elektra King had on his Bond, as an example. He had some, but not all, of TD's intensity, and darkness, witness the feelings of desparation and betrayl that he feels when seeing Trevelyan in the statue park in Russia. He also had charm, like RM, and he had it, perhaps not like RM's spadefuls of inappropriate charm, but still in an overt and obvious way. Look at the way he charms his instructor in GE, for example.

    Whilst his Bond may have been a hybrid, and so, perhaps, no bad thing, I think that his films, had bad screenplays, some poor direction and a misplaced idea of "spectacle". I agree, I think that the majority of people don't go to see a Bond film because they want to see explosions, or an Aston Martin, they go because they want to see Bond. I think that a lot of empahsis in his films was placed on his trappings, his environment, and not enough emphasis was placed on characterization, and plot development. My only exception to this I feel was TWINE, which was slightly better in this regard, and also some parts of GE, which in places seemed as though it was less return to the mainstream and more a return to the more character driven plots of before.

    I don't think that any of PB's films had the writing or depth of characters or plot that FRWL, GF, OHMSS, FYEO, OP, TLD or even LTK had. Is that a shame? Did the Bond fit the film? Well, actually, yes I think that it is a shame, I think that he could have done better than what he was given.

    I would have liked PB to do one more, a more character driven piece, an attempt to close his era with a FRWL, a OHMSS, a TLD, a FYEO, something that would have made us, fans , say, wow! Now that was a GREAT James Bond.

    To paraphrase PB's interpretation of our hero:
    "Close.....but no cigar"
  • PendragonPendragon ColoradoPosts: 2,640MI6 Agent
    YES

    ~PD
    Hey! Observer! You trying to get yourself Killed?

    mountainburdphotography.wordpress.com
  • royalmileroyalmile Station CPosts: 115MI6 Agent
    Yes, Brosnan was a terrific Bond.
  • FiremassFiremass AlaskaPosts: 1,910MI6 Agent
    yea, it's really too bad Pierce isn't gonna do one more, because I have a feeling it's gonna be a much more serious down-to-earth affair.


    DAD was a bad one to go out on


    (then again, so were AVTAK and NSNA (or DAF))


    (but for different reasons)
    My current 10 favorite:

    1. GE 2. MR 3. OP 4. TMWTGG 5. TSWLM 6. TND 7. TWINE 8.DN 9. GF 10. AVTAK
  • PendragonPendragon ColoradoPosts: 2,640MI6 Agent
    and he's handsome too! :D

    ~PD
    Hey! Observer! You trying to get yourself Killed?

    mountainburdphotography.wordpress.com
  • broadshoulderbroadshoulder Acton, London, UKPosts: 1,363MI6 Agent
    Well...it comes down to who writes history?

    The critics? The fans? The general public?

    The critics rave about him. So when he was cast that was half the battle won (the critics wern't so easy on Dalton ie Alexander Walker in the Evening Standard and they roasted Lazenby). Every TV write up seems to quote him as "the second best James Bond..". They also are kinder to his films then the fans. Even DAD got good reviews from some critics particularly if they liked Brosnan. He was a media darling and done well on the chatshow circuit and magazine covers - somethind Dalton never looked comfortable doing. In short, he played the game and won friends amongst the media.

    The fans?

    Well, these are more discerning. Its part of their lives and they are far more exacting and demanding then the critics in their own way.Many have read the books and it is not a contest on whether 007's should be worn on the left hand side or right.Not that kind of geekiness. They seem to be the bearers of the Fleming legacy - keeping the character in check and knowing what works and what doesn't.

    And they seem to be the main critics of him and his films.

    I've heard epithets on other websites about Brosnan such as bland,beige, "greatest hits package" and I have to agree that there is something missing in his portrayal of Bond ie the elegant growl of Connery, the humour of Moore, the dash of Dalton. He seems to be an elegant crowdpleaser exemplifying the 007 traits without making the role his own.

    And the films have let him down. His four are not classics like GF or OHMSS. And the blame must lie with the producers for inconsistent directors, lousy villains and weak scripts. The main pull is in fact Pierce Brosnan but the fans hark back to the days when we had good identifiable Bond and good films..

    The general public?

    Well, he seems popular. They've been watching these things for forty years and they still sit down on the TV and watch them instead of Fame Academy. His box office pull is enormous and a new generation after 1995 say that he is their James Bond.

    So who writes history? You decide...
    1. For Your Eyes Only 2. The Living Daylights 3 From Russia with Love 4. Casino Royale 5. OHMSS 6. Skyfall
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