The Other Fellow

2022

Biography / Documentary / Thriller

Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 100%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 80%
IMDb Rating 7.7 10 51

Plot summary



March 18, 2023 at 07:12 PM

Director

Matthew Bauer

Top cast

Daniel Craig as Self
Sean Connery as Self
Pierce Brosnan as Self
Timothy Dalton as Self
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
738.27 MB
1280*624
Multiple languages 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 20 min
P/S ...
1.34 GB
1920*936
Multiple languages 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 20 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by mrjohnnyandrews 8 / 10

A life-affirming documentary that should appeal to all audiences - whether you're a fan of the Bond films or not.

Extremely happy to not only have seen the world premiere of this fantastic documentary last night at the Civic in Auckland, but I'm also the first to post a review of it here on IMDb.

THE OTHER FELLOW charts men around the globe who all carry the name James Bond. It is at times both hilarious and tragic, with a number of emotional hooks that underline the film.

Superbly made - particularly the editing (and sound editing) - it's a film that explores the curse, or perhaps the benefit, of having such a name 60 years after Ian Fleming made it famous. The archival footage of Fleming talking about how he arrived at the name - an interview very familiar to James Bond fans - is painted in a different light here, as we see the 'theft' of the name from the viewpoint of the OG James Bond, the ornithologist and author whose book on birds of the West Indies Fleming lifted it from.

There's a lovely thriller element in the last third of the film which takes a few surprising turns, and adds yet another layer on the benefit / curse of the name.

I wonder how George Lazenby is going to react to the film given that he's so far been the #1 Australian association with Bond. The director of THE OTHER FELLOW, Matthew Bauer, is Australian, and the name of the film is lifted from perhaps Lazenby's most famous line of dialogue.

A life-affirming documentary that should appeal to all audiences - whether you're a fan of the Bond films or not.

Reviewed by jamesdmilnefilm 10 / 10

A tale of victory from suffering and a fight against oppression hidden in a Name

What starts out a tale of how the name James Bond came to be, and how it affects a number of people who have the same legal name turns into a story of overcoming family abandonment and domestic violence.

Director Mathew Bauer has put together what seems like a documentary that would be shallow and short; into a winding and stunningly engaging film that touches the heart in ways you would never expect.

From the story of redemption of Fleming himself to the tale of a man over coming abandonment of a parental figure by engaging in a new identity, and, the most surprising of the all the story of triumph over domestic violence through anonymity of a name this doco is honestly just beautifully put together with Bond vibes through out it.

The story of the Dark Night and the oppression he faced and that of the Trump supporter reaching out the African American for support shows that though ideals divide us, something as little as a shared name can unite us for compassion for one another.

I think we all identify with all the characters in this documentary, we feel pain for those the name was thrust upon, we feel a sense of relief for those who chose to change their name to better their children's lives and we feel trepidation for the next generation to go through this remarkable predicament.

How so much can come from such a incredibly SIMPLE concept shows that documentary success is not based on your depths of your concept, is based on how far you are willing to adventure into the concept and how well it is put together by your production team.

Sound and Editing stunning and very professional. Particularly touching scenes of the Dark Nights reunions with his family. Well chosen shots and appropriate use of soundscape and transitions. A class production on what I can see was a shoe string budget. The new age of film makers belong to those that have the willing and know how, not those with the funds.

Brilliant work, recommend to all. Personal recommendations to those who are/were suffering domestic violence.

Long live James Bond's everywhere.

Reviewed by BandSAboutMovies 7 / 10

James Bond

What an incredible idea for a film. Matthew Bauer, who directed this and co-wrote it with Rene van Pannevis, went around the world to learn what it's like to actually have the name James Bond. The title for this movie comes from George Lazenby's line in his lone appearance as 007: "This never happened to the other fellow."

James Bonds appear - from an inmate to a theater director, a man who runs a Bond museum in Sweden to even a woman who took the name to keep a violent ex-lover from finding where she's gone - and even the story of how Ian Fleming took the name from the ornithology author who wrote the definitive book on the birds of West Indies is told in this exploration of what's in a name, particularly when that name is so famous.

Is it a blessing or a curse to be named after - or have the same name - as MI6's top agent? That's what this film gets to the bottom of, yet Bauer does it in an exciting way that lets you know the people behind the names, several of whom have stories that rival anything Fleming wrote.

It also tells how Mary Bond, the wife of the namesake of Bond, wrote to Fleming regarding the use of her husband's name. The author wrote back saying, "I must confess that your husband has every reason to sue me. In return, I can only offer your James Bond unlimited use of the name Ian Fleming for any purpose he may think fit. Perhaps one day your husband will discover a particularly horrible species of bird which he would like to christen in an insulting fashion by calling it Ian Fleming." She replied by writing the books How 007 Got His Name and To James Bond With Love, both of which feature very spy action-looking covers.

Perhaps the wildest story in this is about Gunnar Schaefer, who changed his name in 2007 to Gunnar James Bond Schäfer. After having a childhood with a father who escaped Germany at the end of World War II, he found a new father figure in Ian Fleming and his creation. Today, he runs a museum out of his auto parts store that houses many Bond props.

Bauer spent a decade on this and had the goal that none of these people would just be the name Bond, but instead you would see them as individuals. He has succeeded beyond measure.

Also: If you have a problem with a black James Bond, there already is one in this. Get over it.

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