
Is it possible to make a Bond film without James Bond?
#1
Posted 26 April 2010 - 03:03 PM
That's a bit silly, but in pursuing it I'm left wondering a far more interesting question; what is it that makes a Bond film a Bond film? In a series which has gone on so long, had so many changes of actor, visits so many locations, has had so many different writers, directors, composers, what is the underlying notion that makes a Bond film a Bond film. What is it beyond the names of the characters and organisations involved that stops me thinking that the Mission Impossible series (to pick a random example) is not a Bond film.
Can it be the character? The character who is played completely differently in say The Spy Who Loved Me to Quantum of Solace? If it is the character, it must be the name and general demeanour. But if I took Raiders of the Lost Ark and replaced Harrison Ford with Timothy Dalton, and Indiana Jones with James Bond, would I have a Bond film? No. The situations? Well, again, the situations seem pretty similar to a lot of globetrotting spy movies. The Music? Possibly- It's certainly not the Bond theme, which makes next to no appearances in Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace- and yet I regard their scores as exceptionally 'Bondy'. But then Goldeneye doesn't have a particularly James Bond score, and that does alright.
I really am genuinely stumped. So two questions I'd love to hear responses to:
1) What makes a Bond film a Bond film?
2) Is it possible to make a quasi-James Bond film without James Bond?
#2
Posted 26 April 2010 - 03:09 PM
2) No. A film without James Bond would just be another spy thriller. That could work, of course. But why would EON want to start another spy franchise? Very counter-productive. They can be happy that BOURNE self-destructed after three films.
#3
Posted 26 April 2010 - 03:21 PM
1) What makes a Bond film a Bond film?
Great scores.
Missing in action since 97.
#4
Posted 26 April 2010 - 03:44 PM
But, I suppose EON could dust off that idea they bounced around, very briefly, after DAD of having a "Jinx Johnson" spinoff movie. As she's an ex Bond character and an agent herself, some might argue it would be close enough to a Bond film without Bond.
Whether they should is another matter entirely - a bit late in the day, I think, for that idea.
#5
Posted 26 April 2010 - 04:19 PM
I've been wandering round a few of the speculative threads of what happens now that Bond 23 is on ice, and it's been a lot of fun seeing people's far out ideas of where the series could go. And I was going to start one myself- wondering how Eon could best fill the gap between Bond 22 and 23- we've already had mention of a possible non-Bond spy movie coming from Eon. And I was going to speculate as to whether they could do a Spy-Action-Thriller movie in the Bond vein (perhaps even arguably set in the same continuity) without using the James Bond names and associated ephemera.
That's a bit silly, but in pursuing it I'm left wondering a far more interesting question; what is it that makes a Bond film a Bond film? In a series which has gone on so long, had so many changes of actor, visits so many locations, has had so many different writers, directors, composers, what is the underlying notion that makes a Bond film a Bond film. What is it beyond the names of the characters and organisations involved that stops me thinking that the Mission Impossible series (to pick a random example) is not a Bond film.
Can it be the character? The character who is played completely differently in say The Spy Who Loved Me to Quantum of Solace? If it is the character, it must be the name and general demeanour. But if I took Raiders of the Lost Ark and replaced Harrison Ford with Timothy Dalton, and Indiana Jones with James Bond, would I have a Bond film? No. The situations? Well, again, the situations seem pretty similar to a lot of globetrotting spy movies. The Music? Possibly- It's certainly not the Bond theme, which makes next to no appearances in Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace- and yet I regard their scores as exceptionally 'Bondy'. But then Goldeneye doesn't have a particularly James Bond score, and that does alright.
I really am genuinely stumped. So two questions I'd love to hear responses to:
1) What makes a Bond film a Bond film?
2) Is it possible to make a quasi-James Bond film without James Bond?
1. The protagonist being Fleming's James Bond. To make a point, neither unofficial version of Casino Royale qualifies as a James Bond film because their protagonists are clearly not Fleming's Bond.
2. No. If there were to be a spinoff, it should be based around HMSS, like The Moneypenny Diaries. To make a Jinx movie would show a complete ignorance of what makes a Bond movie attractive to audiences worlwide.
#6
Posted 26 April 2010 - 04:33 PM
#7
Posted 26 April 2010 - 04:56 PM
But, I suppose EON could dust off that idea they bounced around, very briefly, after DAD of having a "Jinx Johnson" spinoff movie. As she's an ex Bond character and an agent herself, some might argue it would be close enough to a Bond film without Bond.
I gather that the Jinx film - far from merely being just an idea that was "bounced around, very briefly" - got fairly far into pre-production, with a completed script by Purvis and Wade and an interesting director attached (Stephen Frears). I for one was very curious to see how it turned out.
#8
Posted 26 April 2010 - 05:09 PM
#9
Posted 26 April 2010 - 05:15 PM
60 - 70 cigarettes per day
Scrambled egg fetish - evident meanness and lack of social grace accentuated by ordering this as an evening meal and pretending that taking champagne with it makes this remotely acceptable.
Adventurous views on the Korean, and the Balt.
Ill-read, therefore inexpert in much.
Pints of bourbon at a time.
S+M fantasies.
They've been making Bond films without James Bond in them for forty-eight years. It takes an undeformed athletic man strapped into a suit and banging on about the vintage of champagne (how hugely impressive) and big 'splosions.
#10
Posted 26 April 2010 - 05:23 PM
#11
Posted 26 April 2010 - 05:29 PM
As far as making a Bond movie without Bond, I feel you can. For years, I contested that EON look into making a movie with other double o's. Then you can have actor's like Guy Pierce, Clive Owen, etc. not beholden to an interpretation. Great topic again.
#12
Posted 26 April 2010 - 05:30 PM
#13
Posted 26 April 2010 - 05:43 PM
The Bond of the books is the best literary character yet to be filmed. I do wish they would hurry up and do this.
#14
Posted 26 April 2010 - 05:44 PM
#15
Posted 26 April 2010 - 10:51 PM
The producers could do something stupid like put Roger Moore back in the role and I'd go see the movie, because it's Bond. Gadgets, girls, stunts, locations--they are all important, but not as important as Bond himself.
#16
Posted 27 April 2010 - 12:13 AM
#17
Posted 27 April 2010 - 11:20 AM
Edited by jamie00007, 27 April 2010 - 11:21 AM.
#18
Posted 27 April 2010 - 11:47 AM
The Bond of the books is thrillingly ghastly
The Bond of the books is the best literary character yet to be filmed. I do wish they would hurry up and do this.
Would you cast someone just starting to enjoy vast quantities alcohol, 70 fags a day, scrambled eggs, doing mininmal excercise, becoming an illiterate xenophobic percunious pompous

Or would you cast someone who was showing the effect of these things over the years.

#19
Posted 27 April 2010 - 03:06 PM
In the former you will see Jame Coburn doing everything perfectly, because he knows everything and knows he cannot be defeated, even without his 83-function lighter. Roger Moore at his worst never let on that he knew his character was going to win in the end (although we knew - that's part of the appeal).
In the latter (the only Matt Helm film I can stand watching) you will see Dean Martin drinking himself stupid (while driving!), making very bad jokes and self-referencing his rat-pack connections.
Neither film/ series took themselves seriously, because the makers knew that they couldn't seriously compete with the glamour and sophistication of the James Bond films. It would be like the British attempting to produce hard-boiled gumshoe noir movies with a Sam Spade or Philip Marlowe lookalike.
Bond works because he's European. Americans just can't pull off that level of sophistication (Jason Bourne choosing a wine?). The nearest successful competitor was True Lies, and it was successful because, unlike the two films mentioned above, it wasn't trying to beat EON at their own game.
Another important factor is the director. From the start, every Bond director has been either British or Commonwealth. Do you really want to see Quentin Tarantino direct a Bond film? Let him do MI4.
#20
Posted 27 April 2010 - 03:45 PM
From the start, every Bond director has been either British or Commonwealth. Do you really want to see Quentin Tarantino direct a Bond film? Let him do MI4.
Marc Forster is German/Swiss/American, so it would appear that a British or Commonwealth background is no longer a prerequisite.
And I'd love to see what Tarantino would do with a Bond film, especially after Inglorious Basterds.
#21
Posted 27 April 2010 - 06:21 PM
The Bond of the books is thrillingly ghastly
The Bond of the books is the best literary character yet to be filmed. I do wish they would hurry up and do this.
Would you cast someone just starting to enjoy vast quantities alcohol, 70 fags a day, scrambled eggs, doing mininmal excercise, becoming an illiterate xenophobic percunious pompous- at the start of the mission, "becoming Bond as it were".
Or would you cast someone who was showing the effect of these things over the years.
On the first option, casting myself would be the act of a scoundrel, but I can think of no-one better suited to that description.
On the second option, thoughts run to the thread debating whether the current hiatus is the option to bring back the seventy-something Mr Brosnan.
#22
Posted 27 April 2010 - 07:42 PM
Half a bottle of spirits per day
60 - 70 cigarettes per day
Scrambled egg fetish - evident meanness and lack of social grace accentuated by ordering this as an evening meal and pretending that taking champagne with it makes this remotely acceptable.
Adventurous views on the Korean, and the Balt.
Ill-read, therefore inexpert in much.
Pints of bourbon at a time.
S+M fantasies.
It's worked for me for years. I don't know what everyone else's problem is. Go figure.

#23
Posted 28 April 2010 - 07:03 AM
Half a bottle of spirits per day
60 - 70 cigarettes per day
Scrambled egg fetish - evident meanness and lack of social grace accentuated by ordering this as an evening meal and pretending that taking champagne with it makes this remotely acceptable.
Adventurous views on the Korean, and the Balt.
Ill-read, therefore inexpert in much.
Pints of bourbon at a time.
S+M fantasies.
It's worked for me for years. I don't know what everyone else's problem is. Go figure.
Go see AMC Hornet's post #19, paragraph 5 for your answer, Brycey.

#24
Posted 28 April 2010 - 11:38 AM
1) The character of James Bond is the main ingredient which influences everything else.
It's not a Bond movie unless it has James Bond in it. Period.
And so it is the character which makes the series unique. But what is that character? As I've already said the Daniel Craig model is far removed from the Roger Moore type.
The best overall description I can find of the movie-Bond is the Casino Royale biography (largely adapted from Fleming), which teaches us that Bond has an internationally mobile upbringing, but after being orpahned at a young age was educated in two of Britain's most highly renowned private schools but expelled from Eton for lacivious behaviour. He has a keen passion for combat and outdoor sports; running, swimming, skiing, climbing, and enjoys drinking (not to excess), driving for pleasure, gambling and liaisons with women. The only additions I would make to that are that Bond identifies himself as British, he has finer tastes in food and has a tendency to get personally involved with his missions.
But when you think of it, that's all pretty vague isn't it? If you were designing from scratch a British spy character (in the hero mode) you'd expect him to have a similar background; maybe orphaned, certainly well educated, physically tough and as Dalton so rightly put it, always living on the edge and therefore consoling himself with the finer things. On the face of it there is nothing about this character which could be described as unique.
It appears to me that James Bond only remains a unique character and series because rival studios allow him to remain unique. Whenever a studio knowingly takes on the Bond franchise it is always with a 'twist' which ultimately results in the lack of the films longevity. As AMC Hornet pointed out, 'He's like Bond, but doesn't take himself seriously' doesn't really work, and nor does 'He's like Bond, but he's an American muscle-laden hero'. Thus the only real competitors Bond has ever had have been secret agents (or policeman) who exist in very different worlds.
Which begs the question- if many of the highest grossing Bond films had excised the Bond trademarks, and replaced the name with Martin Somerset, would they have been hits?
Edited by JLaidlaw, 28 April 2010 - 11:40 AM.
#25
Posted 28 April 2010 - 11:49 AM
#26
Posted 28 April 2010 - 12:14 PM
#27
Posted 28 April 2010 - 10:07 PM
Goes hand-in-hand with my feelings when I first read this topic: ...........................................................Of course you cannot make a James Bond film without 007. Otherwise it is not a Bond film.
#28
Posted 29 April 2010 - 09:18 AM
#29
Posted 29 April 2010 - 09:28 PM
Technically, Bond was in CR '67. Multiple times.One could say there already is a Bond film without Bond: Casino Royale (1967).
#30
Posted 30 April 2010 - 11:24 AM
Technically, Bond was in CR '67. Multiple times.One could say there already is a Bond film without Bond: Casino Royale (1967).
If you mean a character called James Bond, indeed there was one in CR, even more then one after a while as we all know. However, the character that Fleming wrote about and the EON's (+NSNA) is about was not featured in CR, although mentioned twice. So CR'67 is a Bond film without Bond.