Monday, May 18, 2020

My definitive ranking of the Bond films to date

Haha, I'm going to cop out a little bit. Rather than give a strict "this one is better than this one" thing all the way through, I'm going to group the films in to clusters of five (for the most part). Tiers, rather than a straight ranking, if only because I don't particularly care to quibble whether Quantum of Solace is worse than Live and Let Die. Within each tier, the films will be ordered chronologically.

The Top Three (cinematic art)

From Russia With Love (Connery, Terence Young, 1963)
The best Connery film by a mile is also one of the closest adaptations of a Fleming novel. Some people say Connery hadn't yet found his footing, but Robert Shaw and Lotte Lenya (yes, the one name-checked in the Louis Armstrong and Bobby Darin versions of "Mack the Knife") are positively brilliant as the villains. They say Goldfinger's the one they keep trying to remake, but they always do the hotel room scene from this one when they're casting a new Bond, hmm...

On Her Majesty's Secret Service (Lazenby, Peter Hunt, 1969)
I stand by everything I said here and here. I really don't think there's anything more that needs to be said. They use the hotel room scene in this one when casting new Bonds, too.

The Spy Who Loved Me (Moore, Lewis Gilbert, 1977)
People routinely put this around number eight on their lists. Those people are wrong. With the possible exception of the lead actor (and Moore was given far more to do than Connery was), this is superior in every way to Goldfinger, and people who disagree should have a word with Jaws.

Four and Five (A-)

The Living Daylights (Dalton, John Glen, 1987)
This is the only non-sixties Bond film that Ian Fleming might plausibly have written. I don't think I need to say anything else, but I will: Timothy Dalton is a brilliant James Bond, and it's too bad if you can't see that.

Casino Royale (Craig, Martin Campbell, 2006)
Fact: Casino Royale is the most overrated Bond Film that isn't Goldfinger. Fact: It's still very, very good.

Six through Ten (watch these to understand what a Bond Film is)

Dr. No (Connery, Terence Young, 1962)
It is a film that exists. Better films followed.

Goldfinger (Connery, Guy Hamilton, 1964)
A film that far too many of its successors tried to emulate.

Thunderball (Connery, Terence Young, 1965)
A film that blubbers, boggles, and bemuses.

GoldenEye (Brosnan, Martin Campbell, 1995)
It is a film that exists. Worse films followed.

Quantum of Solace (Craig, Marc Forster, 2008)
If Licence to Kill, the second film featuring a more serious actor playing Bond Out For Revenge, was a Lethal Weapon knockoff, then Quantum of Solace, the second film featuring a more serious actor playing Bond Out For Revenge, is a Bourne Tepidity knockoff, right down to the shakycam. It's better than it's given credit for being.

Eleven through Sixteen (either "so bad it's good" or "they tried something different and it didn't quite work")

You Only Live Twice (Connery, Lewis Gilbert, 1967)
Turning Japanese I think I'm turning Japanese I really think so. Famous for giving us Dr. Evil and the only one where Bond never learns the name of the girl he ends up with.

Live and Let Die (Moore, Guy Hamilton, 1973)
A Blaxploitation flick dressed up as a Bond film nevertheless delivers one of the best villains in the entire series. Roger Moore's introduction ably proves that they can throw him up against just about anything and he'll make it work.

Moonraker (Moore, Lewis Gilbert, 1979)
Star Wars ruined everything. Great music, though.

For Your Eyes Only (Moore, John Glen, 1981)
The "average" Moore film is average. Quelle surprise.

Licence to Kill (Dalton, John Glen, 1989)
A Lethal Weapon knockoff that goes Road Warrior at the end. Someone was really upset they didn't get Mel Gibson, I guess. It's supposed to be one of the darkest Bond films, but the mickey-mousing gunfire during the tanker chase is utterly hilarious now that the world has graced us with Baby Driver.

Tomorrow Never Dies (Brosnan, Roger Spottiswode, 1997)
If I absolutely had to rank these, this film would be the best of this batch. There is no actual reason for it to exist other than $, but it's inoffensive and entertaining, and Brosnan gives what is probably his best performance. It has one standout scene (the one with Doctor Kaufman) and the villain is simultaneously a Rupert Murdoch caricature and stunningly prescient. Really the only of the Brosnans that has aged remotely well.


Seventeen through Twenty-One (do not watch unless you're marathoning the series)

The Man With the Golden Gun (Moore, Guy Hamilton, 1974)
Christopher Lee didn't fare any better in Bond than he did in Star Wars, managing to get less interesting as this film blunders on. There are a couple of good scenes (Bond's first encounter with the baddie's girl being foremost among them) and a plethora of bad ones (anything pertaining to a fake nipple or Britt Ekland).

Octopussy (Moore, John Glen, 1983)
The best of this batch by virtue of being the most forgettable. The plot is actually pretty complex, which is a refreshing change of pace. Kristina Wayborn, who gives the the-censors-must-have-been-asleep line "That's my little octopussy" is in my opinion one of the most overlooked Bond Girls ever. Ultimately, though, it's tonally inconsistent, and its basic idea was repackaged four years later in the vastly-superior The Living Daylights.

A View to a Kill (Moore, John Glen, 1985)
Roger Moore deserved a better swan song, and his horrible facelift doesn't help at all. What keeps this film out of the bottom three is Christopher Walken in a Thatcher wig, but even he can't stop me from noticing that Tanya Roberts is the worst Bond Girl ever. I am rather fond of the firetruck chase through San Francisco, though.

The World is Not Enough (Brosnan, Michael Apted, 1999)
It's Pierce's turn to take on OHMSS. (Oh, sorry, did you not notice the Tracy/Elektra comparisons, the skiing, and the villain who cut off their own earlobes?) The helicopter assault on the caviar factory is quite good and belongs in a better movie.

Skyfall (Craig, Sam Mendes, 2012)
Sam Mendes does not understand James Bond. I'm sorry, but that just needs to be said.

Twenty-Two through Twenty-Four (watch only to prove that yes, they can make utterly terrible Bond films)

Diamonds Are Forever (Connery, Guy Hamilton, 1971)
Gay villains: the movie. Features laser satellite.

Die Another Day (Brosnan, Lee Tamahori, 2002)
Gay villains: the movie. Features laser sat... wait.

Spectre (Craig, Sam Mendes, 2015)
The only thing Mendes understands less than James Bond is Bond Villains. This film is a grotesque farce, a horrid throwback to the Hamilton Error, except it insists on playing everything straight. Pro-tip: when you take a gag from Austin Powers and make an entire film around it, you're very likely to end up with the very worst Bond Film ever on your hands.




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