post #121 of 131
3/28/09 at 7:47pm
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Originally Posted by Jeff Cooper
His real name is Renee Mathis, as said by M in the movie.
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Originally Posted by Ray H
And back the Mathis, personally I took the code name thing to be a joke. The character's an Italian going by the name Mathis.
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Originally Posted by Jeff Cooper
His real name is Renee Mathis, as said by M in the movie.
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Originally Posted by TonyD
I thought that Bond took Mathis' money out of his wallet then threw him and his wallet in the dumpster to make it look like a mugging, don't know what the need for that would be though.
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Originally Posted by Ray H
Thanks. I must have missed this. When does she say this?
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Originally Posted by Chris Atkins
I will say this about the editing: for a film with as many quick cuts as QoS has, it's amazing how LONG the film feels, and it only clocks in at 1 hour 46 minutes.
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Originally Posted by Richard--W
Are you complimenting the film? I hear most people complain it's too short. Personally I think the timing is off-kilter, and I don't mean the action sequences. We're not given enough time to feel the moment. The action sequences are cut so tight there isn't enough time for the images to pass through the retina and travel up the optic nerves to register on the brain(!)
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Originally Posted by Jeff Cooper
I think it is when Bond goes back to the hotel and Strawberry Fields is dead on the bed covered in oil and M is there waiting for him. She says something like "Renee Mathis was found dead in a dumpster with two bullets in his back".
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Originally Posted by Nelson Au
I realize that it was a disappointment that Casino Royale and this film following on is not being totally true to the novel. I read it and I really liked the book a lot and how the characters are fleshed out there. But I see this film series is EON's Bond. So I look upon it as such and evaluate it on those merits. Plus I see how they have to make certain changes in order for the film to resonate better to a modern audience.
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Originally Posted by Nelson Au
Another instance brought up in this thread is the growth of the Bond character. if it's there, it was lost to me.
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Originally Posted by Nelson Au
On another note, one thing that I found interesting in this film is the level of brutality in the hand to hand combat. No doubt a lot of the fighting and chase is very Bourne like. But I like to go back to Goldeneye. I thought the fights in that film were pretty brutal too. Though tamer. I particularly thought the fight at the end between Bond and Alec Trevelyan was quite well done. And Fleming had often described the brutality of the fighting in the novels.
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