Thunderball (1965). I can see why this film did well when it came out, and I can see why the director would have wanted to put all that underwater footage on screen. I also have to respect the fact that they had to build all that gear--especially the subs and the separating hydrofoil Disco Volante. In the end, though, the film has not aged all that well. It's too long, too slow, and Bond is too SA-ey. It was okay, though I nodded off once or twice.
Skipped YOL2x and DAF because Prime implemented ads.
Live and Let Die (1973). The first Roger Moore film. Moore is a pretty good Bond. Paul McCartney makes a really good Bond theme. Jane Seymour is an outstanding Bond girl. We can see the silliness and comic-book physics start to creep into the franchise in this one, though Bond himself mostly avoids the comic relief. It doesn't help that I watched this Caribbean-set film right after the Caribbean-set Thunderball, but it was definitely better than Thunderball.
Probably skipping TMWTGG because it's not free, plus I think I've seen it, so next up is TSWLM on Max. I'm struggling with whether I should go back and pay Apple for YOL2x and DAF. At least they're not Amazon.
Masters of the Air (2024). This Apple TV+ original is the U.S. Army Air Corps counterpart to Band of Brothers and The Pacific. Growing up in an Air Force household I'm pretty familiar with the exploits of the Bloody 100th in WWII. Three episodes in I'm pretty happy with the accuracy of the story and portrayal, although I feel they're sanitizing the violence a little bit. We don't see too much of what happens in the many, many, many B-17s that get shot up and shot down. Any given bomber crewman in the 100th had a 25% chance of surviving their tour in 1943. But we're only three episodes in and there are some more horrific missions coming up, so maybe I've spoken too soon.