Spike TV showed OCTOp***y (1983) which I watched the opening scene and credits. OCTOp***y was my first JAMES BOND film that I ever saw and will probably always be my favorite Bond film. What was your introduction film to James Bond?
For Your Eyes Only
I'm sort of ashamed to admit this but I don't think I even sat through a full Bond movie.
Scott wrote: What was your introduction film to James Bond?
The first one I can remember seeing at a drive-in theater (God, I love drive-ins) was DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER showing with The Beatles LET IT BE. I was around 10 years old and my older brother took me and my sister.
Scott
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For me it was "Goldfinger" (1967?). I watched it with my whole class in a bus when I was 10 or so.
Read a few books first and then whammo almost straight after I saw From Russia With Love, and then over a period of a few months [some station was showing Bond films weekly, or fortnightly etc] I was introduced to the whole thing. Then following soon after Goldeneye came out so I was on Bond overload. Hurray!!
Though the franchise is quickly losing it's appeal. At least some of the earlier films had a smidgent of credibility. now we have to put up with 'buy this' 'buy that' 'watch the big explosion' 'let's here about Bond in bed' type stuff which, to be fair, happened a fair bit in the earlier films, it just wasn't so damn obvious.
Here's hoping the next one kicks ass!
The first Bond film I can remember watching in Moonraker, which isn't the best way to be introduced to the series. The next one I remember is Goldfinger - which is a GREAT way to be introduced to the series.
The most recent one (I forget the name - it had Halle Berry in it ...mmmmmm ....pretty...) was horrible - almost as bad as a Timothy Dalton Bond Flick. It was just too much. And it had plot holes you could piolet a C-130 through. I know you're not supposed to look for a real solid plot in a Bond film, but come the f### on!
i actually liked timothy dalton. He gave it a good ol' try and he was badass in his own haphazard way.
My Dad and I watched Dr. No (on video, alas) when I was about 10, I think. I enjoyed it, but it wasn't until I saw Goldfinger that I really got into James Bond in a big way...
For the record, my favourite is a tie between Goldfinger and You Only Live Twice...
Dr. No.
"Thats a Smith and Wesson...and you've had your six."
Which is bull, as the dirty doctor had a Colt M1911! And it has 7 shots in a magazine! Now it had had had a Revolver, like in the book!....
GOLDFINGER is the best that I have seen, but I liked the Roger Moore as Bond. The one with Grace Jones was also good. The last one didn't interest me as much as I seen it on a flight to Pheonix last spring.
The first I remember watch was 'Diamonds are Forever.' I was quite young, and watched it with my Dad.
I'm pretty sure I started with The Spy Who Loved Me. I'm sure my family probably watched other Bond films on TV prior to that, but I didn't take much of an interest until I was 8 or 9.
I think the thing that has disappointed me most about the more recent Bond movies is that they have been mostly run-of-the-mill action films, with ordinary henchmen (compared to Jaws or Odd Job) and villains based too closely on reality â€" greedy media mogul, North Koreans, rogue Russian, etc. Even some of the weapons have been too rooted in reality, like the stealth ship, and the base in Goldeneye that looks a lot like the radio telescope in Puerto Rico. And I really think Bond has lost some the style that Connery and Moore put into the character.
The one thing I can say for Die Another Day, is that it at least tried to recapture some of the old Bond flavour. It had a rich, eccentric, two-faced (literally) megalomaniacal villain with a really freaky henchman and a kickass superweapon. There was a lot I didn't like (such as Bond being successfully held prisoner), but I think it was a step in the right direction.
Post Edited (12-30-03 14:55)
I think it was either THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN or LIVE AND LET DIE.
I was a Bond fanatic when I was a kid, but didn't watch them much after Roger Moore left. Of course, later on, I began to prefer Connery anyway. I've only seen a few of the newer ones and they just aren't the same.
When they released Goldeneye on the Nintendo 64 me and my brother rented the movie, which lead to The Living Day Lights. But the movie that REALLY got me into bond was "You Only Live Twice" to me it had everything. Ninjas, the mysteryious villian stroking a cat, plenty of gadjets, a cool country with nice scenary, Kissy Suzuki (the Japanese woman that wears a bikini for most of her screen time *throbbing heart*) a tank full of piranas, a big battle at the end that's made up of ninjas, katanas, a big henchman dressed in black called "Hans". Man that movie had everything!
Goldfinger. As Al Gore put it, you have to respect a movie with a redeemable character named p***y Galore.
For most people, I guess it depends on who was playing Bond when you were growing up.
That does not ring true for all though.
Since Roger Moore was the current Bond while I was a kid, "For Your Eyes Only" was my first Bond film.
My next was "Octop***y" when I was about 9 or 10 and my friends and I would always laugh at that title like Beavis & Butthead saying, "Huh huh Hehe....it has the word p***y in it! Hehe Huh huh"
ASHTHECAT wrote:
> .. "Octop***y" when I was about 9 or 10 and my friends
> and I would always laugh at that title like Beavis & Butthead
> saying, "Huh huh Hehe....it has the word p***y in it! Hehe Huh
> huh"
>
I was a senior in High School when "Octop***y" came out, and my girlfriend (the daughter of a Baptist Preacher) and I went to go see it. I still feel wierd saying the name of that movie out loud .............
ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE was the first one I ever saw, and I think it's the best. Great action, production values, music, acting... No wonder I love it. In my humble opinion, the beach fight is one of the best openers for ANY action movie.
"BATEMAN!!!!!!!!!"
Thunderball
ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE is way underrated, probably because it didn't do well at the box office, but I agree, it's better than a lot of them. Lazenby isn't bad even though he's inexperienced and Telly Savals and Diana Rigg are great.
Never Say Never Again
I saw a triple feature of DR. NO, FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE and GOLDFINGER at the drive-in when I was about 6 years old. That is my first memory of 007.
The first one with Roger Moore as James Bond, "Live and Let Die." I might have seen something earlier on television, but, that is the first one I remember seeing in the the theater. Of course, since then, I've seen them all, up to the last one. Even the "Casino Royale" w/ Ed Nelson as Bond.
I saw Dr. No and From Russian with love in the early 60's after throwing a major tantrum. My older brother (by 21 years) told my parents that they were too violent and had sex in them, but sometimes it pays to be the youngest child and I got too go.
The same brother later bought me one of those pistols that shot the little rubber pellets complete with shoulder holster and silencer. I even had a James Bond with karate chop action and an Oddjob who threw his hat.