Roger Moore dislike the more violent James Bond

sactoking

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Sep 24, 2007
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Clickie

Roger Moore dislikes the more violent James Bond
Tuesday November 11 12:45 PM ET

Movie audiences nowadays expect scenes of graphic violence in James Bond movies, unlike when Roger Moore played the super spy with a tongue-in-cheek humor, the actor believes.

"I am happy to have done it, but I'm sad that it has turned so violent," Moore said before "Quantum of Solace," starring Daniel Craig as a darker Agent 007, opens in North America on Friday.

"That's keeping up with the times, it's what cinema-goers seem to want and it's proved by the box-office figures," Moore told Reuters in an interview about his memoir, "My Word is My Bond."

The new Bond film opened in London on Oct 31, breaking the British weekend box-office record with a gross of $25 million. It has taken in more than $106 million worldwide so far.

Moore, 81, recalled being appalled at the violence in "A View to a Kill," the 1985 movie which was the last of the seven in which he played Bond. "That wasn't Bond," he said.

In his book, Moore writes of his distaste for guns, ever since he was shot in the leg by a friend with a BB gun as a teenager.

While making "The Man With the Golden Gun," director Guy Hamilton wanted Bond to be tougher and had him threaten to break Maud Adams' character's arm to get information, he writes. "That sort of characterization didn't sit well with me, but Guy was keen to make my Bond a little more ruthless.

"I suggested my Bond would have charmed the information out of her by bedding her first. My Bond was a lover and a giggler, but I went along with Guy," the British actor wrote.

Moore has not yet seen "Quantum of Solace," but based on Craig's first Bond film, "Casino Royale," believes it will be a success in North America too.

"Daniel has done one Bond and he was in 'Munich' and ... he's done a lot of stuff, but his face, after one Bond film, that's all he needs. He is Bond."

Asked about his own legacy as an actor known mostly for playing Bond and in TV series such as "The Saint," and "The Persuaders," with Tony Curtis, Moore said: "I would love to be remembered as one of the greatest Lears or Hamlets. But as that's not going to happen I'm quite happy I did Bond."

His memoir is full of anecdotes about Hollywood and the stars he worked with such as Vivien Leigh, Mae West and Lana Turner. He also tells of his bust-up with Grace Jones during the filming of "A View to a Kill," when he forcibly pulled the plug on her stereo and flung a chair against the wall because she was playing loud rock music.

The only child of a south London policeman, Moore also writes about growing up before and during World War Two, of evacuation to the country and air raids and getting -- and being fired from -- his first job with a cartoon film company.

By the time he was called up, the war was over, but he served as an officer in Allied occupied Germany, where he ended up in the Army's entertainment regiment.

That was his entree into show business, along with his marriage to British singer Dorothy Squires.

"You're not that good, so smile a lot when you come on!" his first repertory theater manager told him. His first wife, who was a professional ice skater, was no less encouraging: "You'll never be an actor, your face is too weak, your jaw is too big and your mouth's too small."

To reference another recent ATOT topic, isn't this like Hillary Swank saying the new Karate Kid remake is 'too black' or Val Kilmer saying the George Clooney Batman was 'too campy'? I mean, like Roger Moore has any right to complain about someone else's treatment of Bond. He was the worst Bond of them all.
 

SpunkyJones

Diamond Member
Apr 1, 2004
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Originally posted by: sactoking
Clickie

Roger Moore dislikes the more violent James Bond
Tuesday November 11 12:45 PM ET

Movie audiences nowadays expect scenes of graphic violence in James Bond movies, unlike when Roger Moore played the super spy with a tongue-in-cheek humor, the actor believes.

"I am happy to have done it, but I'm sad that it has turned so violent," Moore said before "Quantum of Solace," starring Daniel Craig as a darker Agent 007, opens in North America on Friday.

"That's keeping up with the times, it's what cinema-goers seem to want and it's proved by the box-office figures," Moore told Reuters in an interview about his memoir, "My Word is My Bond."

The new Bond film opened in London on Oct 31, breaking the British weekend box-office record with a gross of $25 million. It has taken in more than $106 million worldwide so far.

Moore, 81, recalled being appalled at the violence in "A View to a Kill," the 1985 movie which was the last of the seven in which he played Bond. "That wasn't Bond," he said.

In his book, Moore writes of his distaste for guns, ever since he was shot in the leg by a friend with a BB gun as a teenager.

While making "The Man With the Golden Gun," director Guy Hamilton wanted Bond to be tougher and had him threaten to break Maud Adams' character's arm to get information, he writes. "That sort of characterization didn't sit well with me, but Guy was keen to make my Bond a little more ruthless.

"I suggested my Bond would have charmed the information out of her by bedding her first. My Bond was a lover and a giggler, but I went along with Guy," the British actor wrote.

Moore has not yet seen "Quantum of Solace," but based on Craig's first Bond film, "Casino Royale," believes it will be a success in North America too.

"Daniel has done one Bond and he was in 'Munich' and ... he's done a lot of stuff, but his face, after one Bond film, that's all he needs. He is Bond."

Asked about his own legacy as an actor known mostly for playing Bond and in TV series such as "The Saint," and "The Persuaders," with Tony Curtis, Moore said: "I would love to be remembered as one of the greatest Lears or Hamlets. But as that's not going to happen I'm quite happy I did Bond."

His memoir is full of anecdotes about Hollywood and the stars he worked with such as Vivien Leigh, Mae West and Lana Turner. He also tells of his bust-up with Grace Jones during the filming of "A View to a Kill," when he forcibly pulled the plug on her stereo and flung a chair against the wall because she was playing loud rock music.

The only child of a south London policeman, Moore also writes about growing up before and during World War Two, of evacuation to the country and air raids and getting -- and being fired from -- his first job with a cartoon film company.

By the time he was called up, the war was over, but he served as an officer in Allied occupied Germany, where he ended up in the Army's entertainment regiment.

That was his entree into show business, along with his marriage to British singer Dorothy Squires.

"You're not that good, so smile a lot when you come on!" his first repertory theater manager told him. His first wife, who was a professional ice skater, was no less encouraging: "You'll never be an actor, your face is too weak, your jaw is too big and your mouth's too small."

To reference another recent ATOT topic, isn't this like Hillary Swank saying the new Karate Kid remake is 'too black' or Val Kilmer saying the George Clooney Batman was 'too campy'? I mean, like Roger Moore has any right to complain about someone else's treatment of Bond. He was the worst Bond of them all.

Timothy Dalton was worse, but I agree Moore should remain quiet.
 

KLin

Lifer
Feb 29, 2000
30,121
500
126
In his book, Moore writes of his distaste for guns, ever since he was shot in the leg by a friend with a BB gun as a teenager.

:laugh:

 

preslove

Lifer
Sep 10, 2003
16,754
64
91
Originally posted by: SpunkyJones
Originally posted by: sactoking
Clickie

Roger Moore dislikes the more violent James Bond
Tuesday November 11 12:45 PM ET

Movie audiences nowadays expect scenes of graphic violence in James Bond movies, unlike when Roger Moore played the super spy with a tongue-in-cheek humor, the actor believes.

"I am happy to have done it, but I'm sad that it has turned so violent," Moore said before "Quantum of Solace," starring Daniel Craig as a darker Agent 007, opens in North America on Friday.

"That's keeping up with the times, it's what cinema-goers seem to want and it's proved by the box-office figures," Moore told Reuters in an interview about his memoir, "My Word is My Bond."

The new Bond film opened in London on Oct 31, breaking the British weekend box-office record with a gross of $25 million. It has taken in more than $106 million worldwide so far.

Moore, 81, recalled being appalled at the violence in "A View to a Kill," the 1985 movie which was the last of the seven in which he played Bond. "That wasn't Bond," he said.

In his book, Moore writes of his distaste for guns, ever since he was shot in the leg by a friend with a BB gun as a teenager.

While making "The Man With the Golden Gun," director Guy Hamilton wanted Bond to be tougher and had him threaten to break Maud Adams' character's arm to get information, he writes. "That sort of characterization didn't sit well with me, but Guy was keen to make my Bond a little more ruthless.

"I suggested my Bond would have charmed the information out of her by bedding her first. My Bond was a lover and a giggler, but I went along with Guy," the British actor wrote.

Moore has not yet seen "Quantum of Solace," but based on Craig's first Bond film, "Casino Royale," believes it will be a success in North America too.

"Daniel has done one Bond and he was in 'Munich' and ... he's done a lot of stuff, but his face, after one Bond film, that's all he needs. He is Bond."

Asked about his own legacy as an actor known mostly for playing Bond and in TV series such as "The Saint," and "The Persuaders," with Tony Curtis, Moore said: "I would love to be remembered as one of the greatest Lears or Hamlets. But as that's not going to happen I'm quite happy I did Bond."

His memoir is full of anecdotes about Hollywood and the stars he worked with such as Vivien Leigh, Mae West and Lana Turner. He also tells of his bust-up with Grace Jones during the filming of "A View to a Kill," when he forcibly pulled the plug on her stereo and flung a chair against the wall because she was playing loud rock music.

The only child of a south London policeman, Moore also writes about growing up before and during World War Two, of evacuation to the country and air raids and getting -- and being fired from -- his first job with a cartoon film company.

By the time he was called up, the war was over, but he served as an officer in Allied occupied Germany, where he ended up in the Army's entertainment regiment.

That was his entree into show business, along with his marriage to British singer Dorothy Squires.

"You're not that good, so smile a lot when you come on!" his first repertory theater manager told him. His first wife, who was a professional ice skater, was no less encouraging: "You'll never be an actor, your face is too weak, your jaw is too big and your mouth's too small."

To reference another recent ATOT topic, isn't this like Hillary Swank saying the new Karate Kid remake is 'too black' or Val Kilmer saying the George Clooney Batman was 'too campy'? I mean, like Roger Moore has any right to complain about someone else's treatment of Bond. He was the worst Bond of them all.

Timothy Dalton was worse, but I agree Moore should remain quiet.

It's debatable. At least Dalton was only in 2 Bond films. Moore was in quite a few more, and they all blew.
 

zerocool84

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
36,041
472
126
I think Craig is the worst cus damn, it's not even a Bond movie. It's only a Bond movie in name. I was HIGHLY dissapointed in Casino Royale. Only had Bond music for a couple seconds and Bond only banged ONE, count um, ONE chick. Hardly any "smart" catch phrases. It was a good action movie but not a good Bond movie.
 

glutenberg

Golden Member
Sep 2, 2004
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Originally posted by: zerocool84
I think Craig is the worst cus damn, it's not even a Bond movie. It's only a Bond movie in name. I was HIGHLY dissapointed in Casino Royale. Only had Bond music for a couple seconds and Bond only banged ONE, count um, ONE chick. Hardly any "smart" catch phrases. It was a good action movie but not a good Bond movie.

He scored with two girls both of which died. There were plenty of catch phrases. I think you should re-watch the movie.
 

GagHalfrunt

Lifer
Apr 19, 2001
25,284
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Moore was the worst Bond ever. He caused more damage to the franchise than violence ever could.
 

Polish3d

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Jul 6, 2005
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IMO Bond is first and foremost a suave girl-magnet who solves problems with a kind of intelligent and humorous competence. We have enough grizzled action heroes, Bond is more than that. I'm not huge on Craig as Bond
 

TehMac

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Aug 18, 2006
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Originally posted by: preslove
It's debatable. At least Dalton was only in 2 Bond films. Moore was in quite a few more, and they all blew.

Disagree, Moore was an incredibly good Bond, he had the sophistication that was quite competitive with Connery's own.
 

Away

Diamond Member
May 1, 2005
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George Lazenby was the worst Bond. He did one and it sucked.
 

ConstipatedVigilante

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Feb 22, 2006
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I don't really like Craig as bond too much either. He seems too much like an action hero and not enough like a spy. His character screwed up far more than Bond should in Casino Royale. IMO Moore was a good Bond though - he had a very sophisticated air and rarely did the shit hit the fan.
 

clamum

Lifer
Feb 13, 2003
26,252
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In his book, Moore writes of his distaste for guns, ever since he was shot in the leg by a friend with a BB gun as a teenager.
What a schoolgirl.
 

Aluvus

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Apr 27, 2006
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Originally posted by: sactoking
Moore, 81, recalled being appalled at the violence in "A View to a Kill," the 1985 movie which was the last of the seven in which he played Bond. "That wasn't Bond," he said.

I just remember being appalled at "A View to a Kill".
 

vi edit

Elite Member
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Oct 28, 1999
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Originally posted by: ConstipatedVigilante
I don't really like Craig as bond too much either. He seems too much like an action hero and not enough like a spy. His character screwed up far more than Bond should in Casino Royale. IMO Moore was a good Bond though - he had a very sophisticated air and rarely did the shit hit the fan.

It's a series restart. Not continuation. He's a brand new agent and is supposed to be wreckless at this stage.
 

buck

Lifer
Dec 11, 2000
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Originally posted by: TehMac
Originally posted by: preslove
It's debatable. At least Dalton was only in 2 Bond films. Moore was in quite a few more, and they all blew.

Disagree, Moore was an incredibly good Bond, he had the sophistication that was quite competitive with Connery's own.

I agree even though I think Moore is a douche for saying this.
 

ConstipatedVigilante

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Feb 22, 2006
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Originally posted by: vi edit
Originally posted by: ConstipatedVigilante
I don't really like Craig as bond too much either. He seems too much like an action hero and not enough like a spy. His character screwed up far more than Bond should in Casino Royale. IMO Moore was a good Bond though - he had a very sophisticated air and rarely did the shit hit the fan.

It's a series restart. Not continuation. He's a brand new agent and is supposed to be wreckless at this stage.

Isn't he still 007/Bond? Bond is a name/person, not a title, right?
 

Arkaign

Lifer
Oct 27, 2006
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Originally posted by: vi edit
Originally posted by: ConstipatedVigilante
I don't really like Craig as bond too much either. He seems too much like an action hero and not enough like a spy. His character screwed up far more than Bond should in Casino Royale. IMO Moore was a good Bond though - he had a very sophisticated air and rarely did the shit hit the fan.

It's a series restart. Not continuation. He's a brand new agent and is supposed to be wreckless at this stage.

Wreckless? I should hope so. It would be good to be Wreck-less. That would imply perfectly avoiding all wrecks. Wrecking things is expensive and dangerous. Unless you meant 'reckless', which would be the exact opposite. That means you have no recks, and we all what that means! :music:
 
Oct 27, 2007
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Originally posted by: ConstipatedVigilante
Originally posted by: vi edit
Originally posted by: ConstipatedVigilante
I don't really like Craig as bond too much either. He seems too much like an action hero and not enough like a spy. His character screwed up far more than Bond should in Casino Royale. IMO Moore was a good Bond though - he had a very sophisticated air and rarely did the shit hit the fan.

It's a series restart. Not continuation. He's a brand new agent and is supposed to be wreckless at this stage.

Isn't he still 007/Bond? Bond is a name/person, not a title, right?

IIRC the new Bond films take place before the others, when Bond was younger and less sophisticated.
 
Feb 6, 2007
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It's ironic since the Bond films got progressively more violent under Moore than Connery, Lazenby or Dalton before him...
 

ManBearPig

Diamond Member
Sep 5, 2000
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Originally posted by: TehMac
Originally posted by: preslove
It's debatable. At least Dalton was only in 2 Bond films. Moore was in quite a few more, and they all blew.

Disagree, Moore was an incredibly good Bond, he had the sophistication that was quite competitive with Connery's own.

 
Mar 10, 2005
14,647
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Originally posted by: Away
George Lazenby was the worst Bond. He did one and it sucked.

HOW...DARE...YOU???

on her majesty's secret service was, for almost 3 decades, the best bond movie. it's all about the man, not silly gadgets and earth-shattering explosions. the action scenes were top notch for 1969, but not the focus of the movie. lazenby and savalas put in great performances. bond #21 and 22 (craig) are a welcome return to the 1962 - 1969 glory days (although i wouldn't mind a little less action and product placement). of course, gadgets are as much a part of bond as gunfights, impeccable clothing, serial seduction and villains in hidden lairs, but bond movies are at their best when bond himself is the focal point.