Spike Television has carried on the mantle of its predecessor TNN, and is broadcasting a Bond-a-thon over the holiday weekend. It's back-to-back Bond for four days, save a few Three Stooges episodes and the standard litany of overnight infomercials.
All this TV left me shaken, not stirred, but not so much that I couldn't put together a list of Bond superlatives.
Best Bond. Any discussion about Bond begins with who was the best. I choose Roger Moore, anathema to Sean Connery fans I know, but Moore was helped by having the best scripts (
Octopussy and the bayou tour de force
Live and Let Die come to mind right away.) So it's Moore, Connery, then Pierce Brosnan. George Lazenby and Timothy Dalton bring up the rear. I can give Dalton a pass, though, because he was the first post-Cold War Bond, and didn't really have anybody to fight.
Best Villian. Speaking of which, Bond is only as good as his villian, and nobody did it better than Christopher Walken in
A View to a Kill. Far scarier than the Ernst Blofeld character on which Dr. Evil is based, creepy crazy Chris Walken still gives NaturalBlog the heebie jeebies when I think about his plot to flood a fault line and trigger a massive earthquake in San Francisco. Walken's Zorin character, by the way, died in a tragic dirigible accident.
Walken had the help of Grace Jones in
A View to a Kill, though she doesn't even crack the Top 10 of
Best sidekicks. This is a tossup between Odd Job from
Goldfinger and the recurring Jaws character. I can't pick between them, so you'll have to imagine a fight between the two to determine who's best.
Best Bond Girl. I believe I'm partial to Jill St. John as Tiffany Case in the forgettable
Diamonds are Forver. Honorable mention to Jane Seymour. (As Solitaire in
Live and Let Die, for providing an "I didn't realize she was a Bond girl moment.") Rounding out the top three is Denise Richards as Christmas Jones in
The World is Not Enough.
That's a nice segway to
Best Pun. Bond has a million, but I think I have to cite the love scene at the end of
The World is Not Enough when he tells Dr. Jones, "I thought Christmas only came once a year." Classic.
Just a few more.
Best stunt. Probably the boat chase in
Live and Let Die, though the ski chase scenes in
Living Daylights and
For Your Eyes Only are up there.
Worst Special Effect. I think I have to nominate
Moonraker, not one special effect, but the whole freaking movie. Just awful.
Best theme. You may not realize many Bond themes met some modicum of commercial success, most of them eponymous with the movie. Wings's
Live and Let Die , Carly Simon's
Nobody Does it Better,
View to a Kill by Duran Duran. Madonna was in on the action in the last Bond movie,
Die Another Day. But the best, by far, is Shirley Bassey singing
Goldfinger. "Golden words he will pour in your ear, But his lies can't disguise what you fear, For a golden girl knows when he's kissed her, It's the kiss of death from Mister Goldfinger." Nice.
I would be remiss if I didn't mention Homer Simpson's spoof of the Goldfinger theme when he changes his name to Max Power:
Max Power, he's the man who's name you'd love to touch! But you mustn't touch! His name sounds good in your ear, but when you say it, you mustn't fear! 'Cause his name can be said by anyone!
Labels: Bond, Times I've used the phrase "be remiss"