Musings on Bond and genres

2020.09.19

Tom Hardy rumored to be the next Bond… Yeah I could see that.

In contrast with my usual stance, I’d also welcome a revisit of older Bonds. “Thunderball”, “You Only Live Twice”, etc., set in their original period. “The Man from UNCLE” showed that retro spy movies can work if you care enough about the material…

Call it escapism, but I’d rather watch a fresh take on the classics than modern-day Bond these days. It would also free writers from trying to fit a Cold War hero into a 21st century setting, which let’s face it has become more and more forced with the latest iterations.

This connects to something I was thinking about yesterday, about my own writing. I think, and I touched a bit on that in my guest post for Susan, that old-school adventure should make a come back. Well written pulp stories that are not comedies, yet know what they are and don’t take themselves too seriously.

I’d like to see a comeback of serious adventure stuff, and when I say serious, I don’t mean the movie itself, I mean to take the project seriously and with respect. Respect the story, and respect your audience. Don’t make a fifth Indiana Jones, make a “Tales of the Gold Monkey” movie! Or do something new, something engaging, and fun, like “Romancing the Stone” was… Make Bond pulpy again. Set it back in the 60s, and run with it.

A great example of a movie that does exactly that is “Memoirs of an International Assassin”. It takes the basic concept of “Romancing the Stone” with a clever twist, and delivers brilliantly on everything it sets to be: there’s action, adventure, a dash of espionage, and it’s tremendously funny at times, without being camp.

“Memoirs…” plays with its tropes in a very confident way, because it knows what it is, and perhaps more importantly, what it is not.

I think the world is starved for light-hearted action-adventure. Perhaps it’s time we swing the pendulum away from gritty realism, and get back to the fundamentals:

Entertainment.

Something’s cooking…

2020.09.18

Mini-review: “Challenger: The Final Flight” (2020)

2020.09.17

I just binged “Challenger: The Final Flight” on Netflix. I wanted to start with the first and see the rest in the course of a few days, but I just couldn’t stop. Even when you know the story, it’s just harrowing to see there were so many opportunities to prevent this tragedy, and the ones who tried were powerless to do it…

As one review said, an actual miniseries (i.e. with actors rather than a doco) would make for an excellent counterpoint to HBO’s “Chernobyl”. A combination of cutting edge technology and hubris, and smart investigators who smell through the BS to nail the real culprits behind the disaster…

I liked that it really explored the general political context at the time, not just NASA’s internal management, and that it went in depth into who each of the crew was, instead of focusing on McAuliffe. I found it to be pretty good, and very emotional at times.

New guest post!

2020.09.15

Gearing up for the launch of my debut novel “The Dragon Run” on November 1st!
I had the privilege to be invited to write a guest post for the blog of fellow author Susan Shiney. You should check out her website, it’s full of wonderful stories as well as helpful tips and techniques about writing and promoting your work. Thank you Susan for having me on your platform!
Link: https://bit.ly/35EJEqc

Research: Sōryū

2020.09.14

While reading about Midway (cf. yesterday’s post), I found out that the IJN aircraft carrier Sōryū was actually at Hainan Island in 1940 to provide support for the Japanese invasion of French Indochina. So… it’s a bit of a stretch, but I might just go and squeeze a cameo in “The Kerguelen Cat”…

I will check the timelines!

Mini-review: “Midway” (2019)

2020.09.13

Got around to watching “Midway” (2019) on Prime. Great flick in terms of research and terrific work on the CGI, the SBD Dauntless and all the ships are spectacular… I loved the attention to detail given to the flight and dive scenes, crazy to think a lot of the stunts shown are not Hollywood spectacle, but actually happened!
Sadly it gets bogged down by an uninspired script and kinda wooden performances, and probably the typical problem of trying to cram to much stuff in a single movie: it goes through the Pearl attack, the Doolittle raid, the Marshall Island & Coral Sea campaigns to build up to the actual Midway climax… That’s a lot for two hours.
Still, better than “Pearl Harbor”, and it would be unfair to dismiss it by association. It’s definitely worth a watch

D-50

2020.09.12

D-50 before “The Dragon Run” launches! Throwback to when I got a ride in a genuine 1944 DH.89 Dragon Rapide at Flying Legends 2015. A gorgeous day in one of the finest-looking biplanes ever!

Pre-order “The Dragon Run” on Amazon!

Progress

2020.08.24

Work on the paperback formatting and cover design is almost ready for beta print!

💪

In focus: Boulogne sur Mer

2020.08.10

“The Dragon Run” protagonist Yann Vatel was born in Boulogne sur Mer. Located right across the channel from England, the town was once a staging area for Julius Caesar’s armies and, centuries later, Napoleon’s. It was also the point of departure of the first attempt to cross the Channel by flight, in 1785. Sadly, it ended in tragedy when the hot-air balloon crashed, killing its creator, pioneer Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier.

Like many of the locations in “The Dragon Run”, this is a place I actually visited: This is where I did the last year of my Master’s, back in 2002-2003. It’s a charming little town, and although I haven’t been back since I graduated, I would love to go again and see the old center, its beffroi (the medieval guard tower) and its massive domed church.

Pre-order “The Dragon Run” now on Amazon!

Bob Morane, the OG adventurer

2020.08.01

Bob Morane is one of the big inspirations behind The Dragon Run‘s protagonist Yann Vatel. In this 1950/1960’s series of pulpy adventures for kids and teens, ex-RAF pilot Bob Morane roamed the world, one exotic location after another, fighting spies, pirates and mad scientists…

Reading it in 2020, let’s face it, it hasn’t aged too well (among other things, women are often little more than potted plants, and some racial stereotypes are cringy, to put it generously) but it’s easy to see how these fun, exciting tales captured the imagination of kids and adults alike… And if I can stir the same emotions with my stories, then my job is done.