Timothy Dalton was a Great James Bond

Synthaholic

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Jul 21, 2010
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More evidence that, had he started a few years earlier and had more 007 movies under his belt, he would have contended as the best Bond ever. Unfortunately, legal problems plagued the studio during his time.


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Timothy Dalton took over the part of James Bond at a time when the EON film series had veered far away from their literary source, and approached the role with the Ian Fleming novels and stories as the essence and foundation. In the press conference that officially introduced Timothy Dalton as the new James Bond, the actor noted that "I approached this project [the film The Living Daylights] with a sense of responsibility to the work of Ian Fleming."

He went on to discuss his interpretation of the Bond role further: "The essential quality of James Bond is a man who lives on the edge…he never knows when, at any moment, he might be killed. Therefore, I think some of the qualities we might associate with Bond, the qualities we´ve seen in this series of movies, the qualities that Ian Fleming wrote so well about, reflect that sense of danger in his own life…the qualities of the man are very much the qualities of someone who lives on the edge of his life." In the novel Moonraker, Fleming describes Bond´s "ambition to have as little as possible in his banking account when he was killed, as, when he was depressed, he knew he would be, before the statutory age of forty-five."

In Live and Let Die, Ian Fleming writes that there are times when a secret agent "takes refuge in good living to efface the memory of danger and the shadow of death." Dalton captures this idea of somebody who lives in "the shadow of death." Within the parameters of the scripts he was given, in his two cinematic appearances as James Bond, Timothy Dalton brought a welcome course correction to the film series, porting the core essence of Ian Fleming´s immortal secret agent to the screen.

In Fleming´s writing, James Bond is vulnerable to the sheer tension that the danger of his job inspires. Fleming writes of this in "The Living Daylights," the short story that inspired the first Dalton 007 film, with Bond returning to the apartment in Berlin where he must assassinate a KGB sniper, and gives "a light hearted account of his day while an artery near his solar plexus began thumping gently as tension build up inside him like a watch-spring tightening."


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While on the job and building up to a potentially deadly situation, Fleming´s Bond is a curt, focused professional. Dalton portrays this best in the introductory sections of The Living Daylights, often in smaller movements or gestures. As Bond and Saunders ("Head of Station V, Vienna") are about to step into the door of the building where 007 must kill the sniper, Dalton coolly glances both ways down the street, scanning for threats, and does the same briefly when they enter the ground floor room. "Turn off the lights," he almost snaps to Saunders, capturing some of the displeasure Bond feels in Fleming´s short story, where 007 notes the sight of Captain Paul Sender´s tie (the Saunders equivalent in the short story) and his "spirits, already low, sank another degree…He knew the type: backbone of the civil service; over-crammed and under-loved at Winchester…" His opinion of Saunders as an officious bureaucrat is revealed in Dalton´s contemptuous glance at him and curt tone as he counters Saunder´s assumption of ammunition type with "No, the steel-tipped. KGB snipers usually wear body armour."

Dalton shows the mild contempt through his clipped responses to Saunders, while allowing the buried coilsprings of tension to surface, in sometimes subtle ways. There is a small, almost imperceptible moment, where Dalton sits on the bed, preparing his sniper rifle, and his fingers slip as he loads the bullets into the rifle cartridge. Perhaps my favourite moment where Dalton portrays this subsurface tension is where he, sniper rifle in hand and ready for the kill, turns to Saunders, exhales distinctly, and quietly asks him to "Bring the chair." Compare that moment with Fleming´s Daylights: "Bond said, ‘Yes.´ He said it softly. The scent of the enemy, the need to take care, already had him by the nerves."

Fleming´s Bond takes brief refuge in sensual, carnal pleasures to help steel his nerves for the coming confrontation. In the beginning of the film version, which follows the basic plot of the short story, Dalton scans the crowd at a music recital, looking for the defector Koskov, and casually notes the "lovely girl with the cello." His expression while he says the line is a small, tight-lipped smile, an indication of the underlying tension as he gratefully takes in the beauty of Kara Milovy.

An underlying distaste and loathing for his profession also manifests in Fleming´s Bond stories, and this is another facet that Dalton brings to the screen. After Saunders expresses his anger at Bond´s commandeering of Koskov´s rescue and threatens to report to M that he deliberately missed shooting Kara, Dalton snaps back "Stuff my orders. I only kill professionals…Go ahead, tell him what you want. If he fires me, I´ll thank him for it." Dalton´s forceful delivery of this dialogue, tinged with an edge of cruelty and contempt, brings out James Bond´s uneasy relationship with the hard, soul-eroding surfaces of his double-o status.

Dalton is helped by similarities to some lines from the Fleming original: "‘Look, my friend," said Bond wearily, ‘"I´ve got to commit a murder tonight. Not you. Me. So be a good chap and stuff it, would you? You can tell Tanqueray anything you like when it´s over. Think I like this job? Having a Double-O number and so on? I´d be quite happy for you to get me sacked from the Double-O Section. Then I could settle down and make a snug nest of papers as an ordinary Staffer. Right?" (Sidenote: It´s amazingly easy to imagine Dalton delivering those lines exactly as written by Ian Fleming.)

Fleming´s Bond has an uneasy relationship with the killing that is a necessary part of the job of a double-o. In Chapter I of Goldfinger, Fleming details Bond´s self-reflection after completing a kill for Her Majesty´s Secret Service: "It was part of his profession to kill people. He had never liked doing it and when he had to kill he did it as well as he knew how and forgot about it." Though it is "his duty to be as cool about death as a surgeon," James Bond finds himself running the death over and over in his head, a signal that a part of the secret agent is uncomfortable with executing his licence to kill. Dalton´s performance in the opening of The Living Daylights captures this weariness, this tense introspectiveness, and brings it out through his clipped, almost cynical line delivery, quietly bringing to the surface the Bond that has an inner struggle between professional killer and the regret that lingers in his soul.





Much more at the link.
 
Timothy Dalton truly understood the James Bond character, as written by Ian Fleming. And he is by far the most accomplished actor to ever play the role. His background in theater really dwarfs all the others, including Sean Connery. Most people would never guess that Dalton made his debut in the same project that Anthony Hopkins made his debut.
 
Timothy Dalton - James Bond Wiki


Timothy Dalton's James Bond was a major departure from Roger Moore's. Dalton went back to the Fleming source novels for his inspiration. His Bond was dark, moody, flinty and focused on the job at hand, a job that he sometimes found distasteful. Dalton chose to cut puns and jokes from his Bond scripts, and with his formal training focused, instead, on the sub-text. His Bond did not careen from stunt to stunt, unchanged, but changed through the movie. Bond was ruthless and a bit of a cad, lying about his relationship to a defector to the man's mistress to obtain information, and then having no qualms about seducing her later. All those years playing Byronic "mystery men" payed off when Bond would allow himself brief, efficient romantic scenes.

Two moments in "The Living Daylights" typify Dalton's Bond. The first--his reaction to the death of Vienna Agent Saunders moments after the two have dropped their mutual hostility and come to respect each other. Kneeling over the agent's body, a stray balloon bearing the mocking words "Smiert Spionem" ("Death to Spies") sails into the scene. Bond's anger boils over as he squeezes the balloon to bursting. The pop snaps Bond to action as, seeing a cluster of balloons over a hedge. He leaps over it, gun drawn to blast the assassin, only to find a mother and child who shrink from his aggression. Still seething with adrenaline, Dalton's Bond attempts to pull himself together, scanning the crowd, and in the ensuing exchange with the innocent dupe, Kara Millovy, Dalton and Fleming's Bond fuse. "Yes," he bitterly hisses between his teeth. "I got the message." And Dalton makes real the passage Fleming used over and over to describe Bond's resolve: "His eyes became fierce slits."

The other is Bond's confrontation with KGB chief Pushkin (John Rhys-Davies), using the Russian's assignation with his mistress as a ruse. Pushkin is forced into an awkward position as Bond hovers over him, gun pointed at his temple. Dalton's Bond is wound tight, practically vibrating with tension, any distraction causing him to whirl, his outstretched gun searching wildly for a target, dangerous to the extreme. When Pushkin alerts his bodyguard to trouble, Bond brutally attacks Pushkin, then rips at the mistress' robe to make her naked form a distraction for the entering guard, who is brutally pistol-whipped. It's a tense scene, made more so by Dalton's barely-contained savagery and explosions of remorseless violence. The ensuing gavel sounds that make audiences jump is a credit to the effectiveness of Dalton's Bond.

At the time, Dalton said, "It's very important to make the man believable so you can stretch the fantasy. Whether people like this kind of Bond is another question."
 
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I've never been all that into James Bond...until the other night when I ran across Never Say Never Again and started watching it. It was pretty funny to watch Sean Connery as james bond dealing with aging...at a spa, getting his back cracked, eating healthy foods, talking about enemas, lol, pigging out on food he smuggled in with his pretty but definitely middle aged chiropractor...who he later rolls into bed with.

I liked that. Sadly, that's as far as I got because I fell sound asleep withing 20 minutes of the opening credits...as I always do. I think James Bond must be a guy thing.

But I LOVE Goldmember!
 
Dalton had the eyes. I fell in love with Timothy Dalton wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy back.

It was an odd movie. I loved it so much.
 
Dalton turned down the James Bond role 3 times before finally accepting:


  • In 1968, he was first offered to test for the role of 007 in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, but declined saying that, at 24, he was too young for the part, and sighting the formidable task of following in Sean Connery's considerable foot-steps (As we all know, George Lazenby had no such qualms).


  • Roger Moore balked at returning to play Bond in For Your Eyes Only, which would mark a new direction for Bond after the high-flying Moonraker. Once again, Dalton was asked to audition but declined, owing to stage commitments-always his first love.


  • Roger Moore officially hung up his Walther with A View to a Kill, and a new Bond was being pursued for the next film,The Living Daylights. Once again, Dalton was asked to audition...and did, impressing the Bond producers and United Artists. But, Dalton's commitment to the over-schedule Brooke Shields vehicle "Brenda Starr" (playing another "mystery man," the eye-patched Basil St. John) meant that he could not be on set when filming commenced. Bond impresario Albert R. Broccoli, with an "in-stone" opening would not wait, and hired Pierce Brosnan, a popular choice as star of the recently-cancelled "Remington Steele," to play Bond. Strike Three for Dalton.


  • But in Hollywood, there's "cancelled" and then there's "cancelled." With the announcement of Brosnan as Bond, the "Steele" producers and television network NBC decided to make hay on the news, announcing they would revive the series as a handful of "mini-movies" and Brosnan, under contract, was committed to them. Broccoli did not want his lucrative film-series competing with his Bond on TV, so opted out of the Brosnan deal. Dalton was again approached, "Brenda Starr" nearing completion, and second unit work commencing on "The Living Daylights." By extending the second unit work, Broccoli could maintain his schedule, and still have Dalton in Gibraltar to shoot close-ups. Dalton finished work on "Brenda Starr" on a Saturday, flew to Gibraltar on Sunday, and was James Bond Monday morning.
 
Now I know why all you RWers want to get rid of Sesame Street: it clearly failed you in teaching you to read, and this is your revenge. :lol:
 
Now I know why all you RWers want to get rid of Sesame Street: it clearly failed you in teaching you to read, and this is your revenge. :lol:
Yes, because that's MUCH easier to believe than the simple explanation that not everyone shares your opinion of Dalton as Bond.
He was the closest one to Fleming's books.

He was also the tallest, at 6'2". I believe Daniel Craig is the shortest.

Connery and Lazenby both look taller than Dalton, and Roger Moore looks shorter than Craig.

I like them all and think they all have their strengths (except maybe Lazenby). I just find no weaknesses in Dalton's version, except the script of "License To Kill".
 
IMO - Roger Moore will always be The Saint.

Loved those cornball openings when the halo appears over his head.

Thats why he was wrong for the Bond role.

Too closely identified with Simon Templar.
 
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Now I know why all you RWers want to get rid of Sesame Street: it clearly failed you in teaching you to read, and this is your revenge. :lol:
Yes, because that's MUCH easier to believe than the simple explanation that not everyone shares your opinion of Dalton as Bond.
He was the closest one to Fleming's books.

He was also the tallest, at 6'2". I believe Daniel Craig is the shortest.

Connery and Lazenby both look taller than Dalton, and Roger Moore looks shorter than Craig.

I like them all and think they all have their strengths (except maybe Lazenby). I just find no weaknesses in Dalton's version, except the script of "License To Kill".
Craig is my favorite. He brings a humanity that the others lack. He's not perfect the way the others were.

With Craig, Bond has a painful past. And it shows.
 

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