verdant monkai said:
FelixG said:
verdant monkai said:
...I now really want to see a James Bond involving an octopus with a British accent.
Think of the fight scenes!
Quick help me think of an Octopus pun, that we can use to satirise that bit from the theme song..
Do you expect me to talk?
NO MR BOND! I EXPECT YOU TO DIE
*clears throat*
Do you expect me to talk?
NO MR BOND! I EXPECT YOU TO DYE!
Also, how weird would it be for the Bond girls?
If James Bond was an Octopus, you'd need a Japanese director to manage all the tentacle rape that would occur in the movie(s)...
AzrealMaximillion said:
I still think it'd be a bigger twist if Bond didn't fight Eastern Europeons...
OP: Idris Elba would make a great Bond if he could pull of a British accent well enough. To be honest I personally thing he'd make a better villain. Villain's are Elba's forte. If he played a villain that didn't die at the end of it all, he'd be great.
Lol, I wonder how many people in the world don't know that Idris Elba is british. I also wonder how many people think Hugh Jackman is not Australian.
bz316 said:
I'd actually like to see Idris Elba as Bond for a couple of reasons:
1) He really is a phenomenal actor,
&
2) If you assume Bond-universe continuity is a thing, it will pretty much confirm that James Bond is a code-name identity, with Daniel Craig's Bond being the original, actual Bond against which other "Bonds" are selected.
I've always
known that 007 is the top agent of MI6. I've always
known that their top agent is James Bond. But I've always
thought that James Bond is 007 in all of the movies. You have to bend the universe quite a bit (especially the movies) to make that work, but it still applies in my mind. If you assume that James Bond is the alias that 007 (the top agent of MI6) takes on when he
becomes 007, then that opens up the universe to literally anything. James Bond can be any race, any age, could even potentially be a woman (but that would be harder for fans to accept).
Just a thought.
elvor0 said:
deathninja said:
I though "James Bond" was just the pseudonym successive 007 agents took.
No reason there shouldn't be a black Bond.
That's just a fan concept, not actually canon, there's a few sites that prove this isn't the case. Such as later bonds referring to things they did as earlier bonds. It's just a willing suspension of disbelief. Plus in the books, I'm pretty sure that's his actual name and he's pretty much Bruce Wayne going by the description. Was it the case then go for it, but otherwise eeeeh no. I'd say Craigs Bond is seperate from the original movies though, given Q is younger and just started in Skyfall. They work as a prequel trilogy to the legend rather than a fit to all the other 20 movies.
OT: I have no problems with him being black persay. But I'm going to go with the sentiment of "just make a new character and story". Why mess with an already established character? Given they are all meant to be the same person, I can suspend my disbelief to a certain degree, but when he's suddenly black, that really does screw things up a bit. You could quite literally make a James Bond movie, and just swap the name for something else and blam, spy movie, fans aint upset, you get a guy who can be his own character, possibly a franchise and everyone's happy. Heck you could even stick him in the same universe and make him another 00 (none of them have been introduced yet as far as I remember in the new trilogy) and have them team up.
It seems to me that you are implying that his skin colour conflicts with the Bond character so much, that they should just make him his own separate character, and keep James Bond "whole". Why is that? When you compare Roger Moore to Sean Connery, they are so incredibly different, but are both white. Is skin colour
that important to the character of James Bond? Why?
The Plunk said:
As long as he's still a suave, British gentlemen, his skin colour shouldn't matter. If they turn him into a black stereotype, I'll be pissed.
I think that, when a character is in a multi-cultural setting, it doesn't matter what race they are. I'm sure there are black people in the British secret service. However, it makes no sense to have black characters in, say, a medieval Europe setting, unless their ethnicity is an important part of their character (there were a very small number of black freemen in Britain in the middle ages). It also makes no sense to have a white guy playing a Zulu warrior.
If Idris Elba
actually does turn out to be the next bond I think it will be the casting/director/whoever makes the decisions about these things, nodding to multiculturalism in the UK. That is a really smart move and one I really respect. I also like that Elba has said, "I don't want to just be 'a black bond'", he wants to be Bond for the sake of Bond, not for the sake of his skin colour. As for his nationality, I'd say he is no less British than any other British actor that could fill the role, so that should be no issue.
mechashiva77 said:
I wouldn't mind Elba being bond if it was established that James Bond was a pseudonym for 007 agents. But based on the movies and novels it seems that James Bond is staunchly white. If you recall in Skyfall you see the last name "Bond" on his parent's graves at the Church in Scotland. Since Craig's bond is a bit of a reboot of the series, his real name being James Bond and it not being a pseudonym might only be true for JUST that continuity. If you were to include Elba, I would have to say a reestablishment of the universe is required.
Lore-wise, I think they could handle that in this way:
Daniel Craig's Bond in Skyfall is the
first Bond. That will make purist fanboys mad, but they'll have to deal with it. This makes 007 = James Bond forever after. When Daniel Craig's Bond dies or retires, a new agent takes the role of MI6's top agent, they become James Bond 007. This makes James Bond an identity rather than a person, and makes the role of James Bond, much more flexible.