James Bond is no stranger to the concept of death. Over the
course of 22 films, MI6’s most famous secret agent has seen more than his share
of mortality and managed to survive with his trademark confidence intact. He
has been portrayed by Sean Connery, George Lazenby, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton,
Pierce Brosnan, and Daniel Craig, with each iteration witnessing death
firsthand throughout the course of their Bond careers. But while his 23’rd
outing, Skyfall, features Bond coming back
from certain demise once more, the character was almost dead on arrival long
before the film’s November 9’th release. Thanks to parent company Metro Goldwyn
Mayer’s financial troubles and bankruptcy claim in 2010, many thought we had
possibly seen the end of Ian Fleming’s creation after 2008’s dreadfully dull Quantum of Solace. Despite retaining
popularity both for the franchise and current leading man Craig, there was a possibility
that we might have seen the end of one of the longest-running film franchises
in Hollywood history. Fortunately, while both the Bond name and series are finally
returning from their near-death experiences, the character puts on one of his
best all-time showings.
The car, like Bond, is vintage. |
Thankfully not a mere continuation of the previous story in
the Daniel Craig trilogy, Skyfall
begins a whole new tale; Bond, thought dead after a mission gone bad in Turkey,
has resurfaced after three months and a deadly attack on Great Britain’s MI6
headquarters. While M (Judi Dench) is blamed for the security leaks that led to
the attack and the exposure of agents embedded in terrorist organizations, she
sends Bond after the man who orchestrated the bombing: Raoul Silva (Javier
Bardem), a former MI6 agent who decided he could do more by going rogue than he
could as a member of a government agency. Not back to full strength, Bond must somehow
find a way to defeat Silva while also preserving the integrity of England and
MI6 at the same.
Bardem; the Villain of 2012? |
This is a Bond film for absolutely everyone. For those who
loved Casino Royale’s change in pace
from the austerely smooth storylines that preceded it to the brutal, gritty style
that emphasized Bond’s confidence, character and humanity, then director Sam
Mendes ups the ante by knocking 007 from his perch and forcing him to work up
back up to anything approaching his usual self. In following through with this,
Craig reminds everyone why we love to see him as the hero of this series; he
manages to pack into a very tightly-wound package the charisma, focus and
killer instincts that make Bond such an effective and beloved character. Craig
does all this with a striking confidence that automatically makes him the most
impressive thing in the room, with the addition of a vulnerability rarely seen
in Craig and never seen in Bond. It’s a refreshing difference, and one that
helps define his past and future. He rarely in this film is his character
tasked with anything so superhuman as to defy belief. And his Bond is one who
keeps up with style, but doesn’t let it define his life; he’s as comfortable in
a classic tux as he is in casual wear. At this point it’s safe to say that Craig
has surpassed much-loved Sean Connery as the most renowned Bond of all time, a
notable achievement after many (myself included) criticized his casting before Casino Royale was ever finished.
The requisite topless scene. |
But for those of you pining for a more old-fashioned spy
narrative, you’re also in luck. Released during the 50’th anniversary of James
Bond in the movies, Skyfall is at
most times homage to the franchise itself. Bardem is by all standards the
epitome of a classic bond villain; he doesn’t lack in scope, aim or confidence,
and best of all doesn’t need lumbering, monosyllabically-named henchmen to do
his dirty work for him. Silva has no problem handling his own business, and the
fact that he’s Bond’s physical and intellectual superior creates no end of
difficulty for the super agent. This film needed an expert villain (seriously,
do you even REMEMBER Quantum of Solace’s bad guy?) and Bardem
is so impeccably scary that I doubt you’ll see a better Bond nemesis in the
coming years. And Dench’s M is still a force to be reckoned with, accepting a
much larger role in the film than she has in her previous entries to date.
Dench is one of those actresses you’re always happy to see, and her role here
cements her status as one of the best all-time fictional MI6 heads.
His office doubles as mother's basement. |
Skyfall also
features the return of Q (Ben Whishaw), the quartermaster who supplies Bond
with his weapons and gadgets. I know a lot of fans have been looking forward to
Q’s return, and the decision to revamp him and the entire tech department as
young hackers with ability to do more significant damage on a laptop in bed
before they get up than any one agent can do in a week was a move both inspired
and brilliant in execution. Despite these familiar additions however, Mendes
makes it clear in his story that the world is a different place than it was in
1962. Unlike previous decades in which we could see with clarity who our global
enemies are, our fears have replaced the Soviets or the Chinese with the
Taliban, non-centralized terror groups that don’t claim nationality but are
just as – if not more – effective in their attacks than those global
superpowers we used to worry about. Skyfall
masterfully addresses that, and how MI6 and similar espionage groups will be
effective in both the Bond future and
the modern world.
So much promise, such poor execution... |
Of course, not everything classic can be considered good for
the Bond franchise. Sooner or later the series is going to have to graduate its
female characters to a semi-respectable status, if for no other reason than
common decency. In most Bond movies, Bond Girls are either mindless twits who
fall in love with our hero or ruthless killers who… also fall in love with him.
More often than not, Bond’s love interests get knocked off through brutal, throwaway
means, and often without much fanfare. The Women’s Liberation Movement has not
hit Fleming’s England yet, and while there have been a few women in the series
who have excelled as characters through strength (Grace Jones in A View to Kill), skill (Honor Blackman
in Goldfinger or Michelle Yeoh in Tomorrow Never Dies) or intelligence
(Eva Green in Casino Royale), the
franchise has never featured a true woman warrior who was ever close to Bond’s
equal in all respects. Berenice Lim Marlohe is talented but otherwise useless
as a typical Bondette whose biggest contribution is a shower scene with Craig,
and while we’re teased by the arrival of weapons-savvy female MI6 agent Eve,
played by Naomi Harris, we are disappointed twice; once, by Harris and Craig’s
nonexistent chemistry, and the second time by the rather pedestrian manner in
which the story uses her.
He's getting too old for this $#!% |
But that hardly matters in the long run. Skyfall appears to be not just a new
chapter in the Bond saga, but the start of something new and wonderful. Clever
in its execution, smartly told and impeccably guided, it’s quite possibly the
best Bond movie of all time. That doesn’t necessarily translate to best movie
of the year, but as action epics go it easily outpaces the likes of Cloud Atlas and The Dark Knight Rises by a good
margin. And that’s what makes the future of Bond so exciting and scary: it
still has room to grow. With a wealth of respect and adoration from its fans
and contributors and a brand-new lease on life, there’s little reason not to
believe that the coming 24’th James Bond film will be even better. As we’re
told in the closing credits, James Bond will return, and Skyfall proves that the franchise can mature and evolve with the
times. The next entry will have to be the one to prove that it can continue
down that same path.
2 comments:
"The car, like Bond, is vintage." Or is it timeless?
Great read thannks
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