Best James Bond?
i would pick sean connery i do not like the others very much. pierce brosman is ok but im not to excited about the new one.
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You'll all hate me but Roger Moore by far with Dalton a close second. Moore brought humor to the franchise, Dalton brought a suave class that Flemming infused into the books. No disrespect to Connery but the brogue? comon....
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Last edited by Othelo; 10-29-06 at 10:49 PM.
Connery
Was there really any doubt?
I always figured the brogue was perfect. Bond's character is supposed to be a study in contrasts. He is exquisitely refined, yet essentially a rogue. He is a 'hero,' but he's also an amoral sociopath. He's a lover of women who is deeply contemptuous of women. The brogue adds just the right touch of incongruity.
Was there really any doubt?
I always figured the brogue was perfect. Bond's character is supposed to be a study in contrasts. He is exquisitely refined, yet essentially a rogue. He is a 'hero,' but he's also an amoral sociopath. He's a lover of women who is deeply contemptuous of women. The brogue adds just the right touch of incongruity.
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Originally Posted by Officer 663
Connery
Was there really any doubt?
I always figured the brogue was perfect. Bond's character is supposed to be a study in contrasts. He is exquisitely refined, yet essentially a rogue. He is a 'hero,' but he's also an amoral sociopath. He's a lover of women who is deeply contemptuous of women. The brogue adds just the right touch of incongruity.
Was there really any doubt?
I always figured the brogue was perfect. Bond's character is supposed to be a study in contrasts. He is exquisitely refined, yet essentially a rogue. He is a 'hero,' but he's also an amoral sociopath. He's a lover of women who is deeply contemptuous of women. The brogue adds just the right touch of incongruity.
Last edited by Othelo; 11-01-06 at 07:01 PM.
Originally Posted by Othelo
I can see that. But, for me, the best bonds have been the ones who do everything with a sense of irony and a self-awareness of not only the contradictions you mentioned but the absurdity of the whole spy game.
That's what made the first Austin Powers movie so appealing - it had the courage just to be a joke and didn't try to play it straight for laughs. The Bond franchise wants you to believe that its films are some sort of ironic postmodern action oeuvre, but it's just a clever marketing gimmick (as has become increasingly clear as Bond has become the chief agent of Her Majesty's Product Placement Service).
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Originally Posted by Officer 663
This is what I always hated about the later Bond flicks. They play the 'so bad it's good/wink wink, nod nod' card way too often, but at the same time, we're supposed to take them at face value as action films. It's a total copout.
That's what made the first Austin Powers movie so appealing - it had the courage just to be a joke and didn't try to play it straight for laughs. The Bond franchise wants you to believe that its films are some sort of ironic postmodern action oeuvre, but it's just a clever marketing gimmick (as has become increasingly clear as Bond has become the chief agent of Her Majesty's Product Placement Service).
That's what made the first Austin Powers movie so appealing - it had the courage just to be a joke and didn't try to play it straight for laughs. The Bond franchise wants you to believe that its films are some sort of ironic postmodern action oeuvre, but it's just a clever marketing gimmick (as has become increasingly clear as Bond has become the chief agent of Her Majesty's Product Placement Service).
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Kill me if you must, but I think the two finest performances by an actor playing James Bond were:
1. Timothy Dalton in "License to Kill"
2. Pierce Brosnan in "Goldeneye"
That said I think Connery brought a rugged, toughness to the role that's difficult to match.
1. Timothy Dalton in "License to Kill"
2. Pierce Brosnan in "Goldeneye"
That said I think Connery brought a rugged, toughness to the role that's difficult to match.
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It'shhhh got to be Shhhhir Shhhhean.
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George Lazenby!!!!!! Ok, maybe not...
Although Connery is the classic (& did you know also Scotland's entry for Mr. Universe 1950, apparently), I'll go for Roger Moore. For me he was so quintessentially English & had the wardrobe & dapper look just right. Plus he was the best smirker. Nobody smirked like Moore.
Although Connery is the classic (& did you know also Scotland's entry for Mr. Universe 1950, apparently), I'll go for Roger Moore. For me he was so quintessentially English & had the wardrobe & dapper look just right. Plus he was the best smirker. Nobody smirked like Moore.
Originally Posted by Caylin_Calandria
Mister Sean Connery - of course...
Don't know about this Daniel Craig character....
Don't know about this Daniel Craig character....