Eh, I think that time is passed, really. Sure, the old school 60s Bond films were a blast to watch, especially for the first time, but that material has been mined out completely, and I think modern audiences just aren't gonna buy it.
Even in the 60s, Bond movies became formulaic. How many of them end with a commando raid on a villain's remote-yet-impossibly-well-defended lair? You've got the undersea battle in Thunderball (always a fav of mine), then the ninja raid in You Only Live Twice, the commando raid on the mountaintop fortress in OHMSS, the attack on the oil rig in Diamonds Are Forever, etc., etc., etc. The evil plan in You Only Live Twice gets lifted and stuck underwater for The Spy Who Loved Me (as does the commando attack at the end), and then shot into space for Moonraker.
'Austin Powers' stabbed a fork into the eye of 1960s-70s Bond movies. The early Bond material has no hope of going over with a straight face until the memory of AP fades.
That said, the AP movies are already 20-25yo. Lots of younger kids haven't seen them now. Those were pure derivative send-up comedies (not action/comedy, etc) and that class of stuff tends to age out of pop culture pretty quickly no matter how good it is.
But yeah, in the bigger picture James Bond is another 20th-century franchise that is struggling to keep up in the 21st. As the decades go by it's getting painted into a corner:
-- the character & story feels like classic Bond.
-- the story takes place in this century.
-- the movie is feasible/sellable today.
Pick any two.
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