The trick to
partaking in a James Bond movie marathon is not to try and do it all at once.
Cramming as many viewings as you can within a week’s time or so quickly becomes
a chore, thereby taking the fun out of it. I started back in mid-January at an
average, easy pace of three per week, wrapping things up just yesterday. That’s
all 24 films, including the one non-Eon Productions installment. I’m done. Sharing
my thoughts on every single film of the series would likely drive what’s left
of my functioning brain into a vegetative state. Instead, I’ve laid out my Top
10 of the franchise followed by a summary opinion on who I rank as the best
actor to play Bond. No doubt, a number of my picks, and/or omissions, will
prove unfavorable by the majority. I wholeheartedly welcome all gasps and
criticism so feel free to respond with any degree of WTF?! you deem necessary.
But before we proceed with the list, I’m compelled to at least cover the one
Bond film I consider the worst. I do this for perspective and, because this is
intended to be a celebratory blog post, to get most of the negativity out of
the way early. So, here we go. Worst Bond movie:
Hey,
Moonraker maybe and goofier than shit but at least it makes good on its
ridiculous promise of sending Bond to outer space, while the marginally less
dumb Die Another Day delivers a wicked swordfight and goes for broke with a
pretty neat ice fortress. A View to a Kill is slow-pokey but kept afloat with a
manic Christopher Walken/Grace Jones duo and some scenic San Francisco
locations. So what saves Diamonds Are Forever? Next to nothing, as far as I can
tell. This lumbering excuse for a Bond film has the ugly brownish look of an
early 70s TV show and suffers from wonky attempts at mixing camp with suspense.
Set in Las Vegas, it actually feels like a second-rate night club act of the
times, with Bond and villains alike doping about in bad blazers and hitting the
bar in between their autopilot shticks. On paper the notion of Bond escaping a
desert research lab in a retro futuristic moon-car sounds deliciously fun,
when, in fact, the on-screen results are just bland and stupid. That’s really
the whole movie right there: a collective "Whah Whah Whaaah!" gag, and the less
said about Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd, the better. Connery is frumpy and out of
shape (ironically, bouncing back spryer some twelve years later in the just
average Never Say Never Again) and looks bored out of his mind. The only
highlight is the scantily clad Jill St. John; the shot of her naked body
half-wrapped in a white fur blanket is prime hard-on material. Otherwise, I can
watch this movie well enough to get through it but by the end credits I’m all
too eager to welcome any amount of Roger Moore’s cheeky antics.
My Top 10
10.
Markedly
downsized from the ludicrous scenarios of the latter 70s entries, this
seventh-and-best of the Moore era forgoes fanciful secret lairs and world
domination villainy for more semi-credible espionage. Sure, there’s a MacGuffin
plotline hinged on the threat of ballistic missiles, but the proceedings mostly
deal with Bond escorting an impassioned femme driven by 'Greek vendetta'. And
while Moore still manages to goofball his way through at least one contrived
downhill ski set-piece, scored by Bill Conti’s dated disco beats (which I find
admittedly charming), the action narrative eventually settles for a rock
climbing climax in the Mediterranean that succeeds with some genuine degree of
suspense.
Bond outruns
the Czech Army in a makeshift cello case sled and Joe Don Baker plays with
battlefield miniatures. There’s also a pretty rad Mujahideen desert raid that
ends with an exciting henchman fight aboard a cargo plane. This entry features
some impressive scale but likewise steers clear of the more elaborate spy
fantasy. For his first go-around in the role Dalton’s Bond is maybe a bit too
perpetually irritated but he does nonetheless refreshes the character with some
harder physicality and doggedness that in turn gave the franchise a much-needed
boost of energy, and I really dig his intro along with the opening Gibraltar
set-piece as a whole. The only notable weak link is the hapless and plaintive
Maryam d'Abo, though I suppose her character was intentionally written as such.
Consider this
the all-purpose James Bond film, due, I suspect, to its timing as the belated
17th installment of the franchise where the producers seem compelled to honor
the more outlandish spectacles of past entries with slick 90s polish while also
anchoring the story with some heftier emotional stakes in order to meet modern
dramatic standards. We get space lasers and secret lairs and wanton model-FX
and even a dopey sight gag involving computer hacker Boris and some antifreeze,
yet the conflict between Bond and fellow friend/MI6 agent-turned-evil (a smooth
Sean Bean) centers the film with dignified purpose. I also like the two Bond
girls: the spitfire Natalya and Famke Janseen’s breakout as the ever memorable
Xena Onatopp. Special props go to director Martin Campbell’s sharply staged
action & stunts, including one of the best fight scenes of the series.
Somewhat
reluctantly. I still have issues with two-thirds of the scripted material for
its derivatives and missed opportunities -- see my comments over at JKM -- and
yet I cannot deny that goddamn third act; a masterstroke of conceptual
storytelling that illuminates Bond’s origins via darkly Western noir poetics
without undermining the very mystery that both surrounds and drives him as
agent 007. Overall, the film offers superb visual representations of the deeper
storied content and tone, accumulating in what is no doubt the most
artistically inclined interpretation of Fleming’s spy world to date. It’s also
got a vintage Aston Martin with machine guns and a scene where Bond fights
dudes in a Komodo dragon pit.
Cool, creamy,
pastel ...on the surface this Caribbean set exploit, the first Bond entry out
of the gate, plays for palm tree paradise escapism with quaintly lurid thrills.
But I wonder if we today take for granted what a truly unexpected mind-fuck
this must have been for general audiences of 1962. Ya know, there’s something
vaguely surreal about Dr. No, with its sublimely tropical front hiding sinister
violence and giving way to a frankly bizarre circumstances involving a
mermaidesque Ursula Andress appearing randomly out of nowhere, an
atomic-powered island stronghold conversely furnished in postmodern 60s
swank -- with sex fantasy female staff and a magnified aquarium glass dining
room -- owned by a self-proclaimed, Aryan-Asian "doctor" (of what, exactly?) who
dresses like he’s from the future and sports a metal hand. Think about it. This
movie just gets weirder and weirder.
I’ve always
admired this rather uncharacteristic foray into the then popular genre tropes
of the Miami Vice and Lethal Weapon decade (even appropriating a Michael Kamen
score), swiping out Cold War espionage with DEA/drug cartel intrigue. Yes, this
film is more gruesome in its various depictions of death while baddies Robert
Davi and a young Benicio del Toro are borderline sadistic. It all fits with
Dalton’s steelier Bond who’s hell-bent on personal revenge, and I think it cool
to see him blaze off MI6 reservation in 80s 'rogue cop' fashion. An expanded
part for Q and some Wayne Newton shtick still keeps one toe in the waters of
lighthearted fun and I also like the pearly white, Acapulco overlook used for
drug lord Sanchez’s lavish villa. Best of all, perhaps, is the multiple tanker
chase climax along the Mexicali highway that displays some ballsy staging a
pyrotechnics.
4.
Hands down,
this is the most undeviatingly entertaining James Bond installment of them all.
It is the go-to Bond film that, in decades following, would be amorphously
defined, referenced and parodied across pop-culture for its quintessential
alchemy of fanciful spy dangers, heterosexual bravado and super-villain reveal
of the notorious Blofeld and his volcano crater SPECTRE base, altogether
amounting to the franchise’s first, and still best, "big shebang" of comic book
proportions. And then there’s the speedy pacing itself; I challenge anyone to
find a needless lag or boring stretch amidst Bond’s Japan-hopping narrative.
Intermittent throughout his near-death escapes, including some awesome
gyrocopter air-combat, is an endless trove of exotic, Far East venues and
eroticism, whether he’s bathing with lush beauties or training at a ninja camp.
Said volcano lair boasts some remarkable soundstage production value, complete
with monorail cars and a rocket ship. Lastly, Donald Pleasence is still the
best Blofeld.
3.
The
comparatively short, 106 minute runtime for this entry also determines its overall
tone. Stripped down from the sprawling (and, to be honest, slightly taxing)
story arc of Casino Royale to what is little more than a thinly plotted
wrap-up, this film is almost purely reactionary in both set-piece and its
emotional depiction of Bond himself; the former reflecting the latter’s mood
with the rapidly cut bursts of action. The whole thing acts as a kind of
limbo-expressway that allows Bond to find closure before moving on. Even the
visual aesthetics matches the brisk pacing with European and South American
settings that range from travelogue casual to ultra-sleek to downright barren.
I dig this trimmed approach; its singular clarity. Mathieu Amalric as Dominic
Greene oozes Euro-smarm and this was the first time I ever laid eyes on Gemma Arterton,
here as Strawberry Fields.
2.
Specifically,
this is the most underrated Bond film of the franchise, as fan consensus seems
to glaze over it indifferently with a sort of "meh" attitude or dismiss it
altogether as a runner-up for franchise worst. I reckon this has to do with a)
the film’s seemingly dreary tone and lack of pageantry, with locales mostly
limited to nondescript portions of Eastern Europe, and b) the casting of Denise
Richards as a, ahem, "nuclear physicist". Okay. Richards’ acting is maybe a
little flat but she’s really just the secondary, plucky sidekick Bond girl, so
I never had a problem with her. The crux of the story rests on Bond’s
relationship with the femme fatale antagonist, Elektra King, played alluringly by
Sophie Marceau. It is here where the Brosnan era is most dramatically
compelling -- practically equal to the Craig films that would follow
-- branching off into a (pre-Skyfall) revenge plot against M and a torrent,
triangle-affair between Bond, King and Robert Carlyle as the terminally cold
Renard. I for one love how the film is deep and rich in its darker, overcast
and often candlelit visual atmosphere, as it classes up the story with a
moodier romantic expression. There’s also cool mini-jet-boat intro and, later,
a nifty set-piece inside an oil pipeline where Bond has to chase down a
weapons-grade plutonium bomb.
There is no
such thing as a perfect James Bond film, for there has since grown within the
franchise one too many ports of interest in both content and tone. Where some
prefer the bigger and more outrages entries, others prefer the more brooding
and serious. Heck, some fans are even partial to the notably campy Bond films.
As mentioned, GoldenEye’s all-purpose approach works, though it never quite
soars, ultimately settling for a common middle ground, leaving much to be
desired from fans who seek a more prudent entry in whatever direction. No one
Bond film can do what every Bond film has done to its best and fullest, is my
point. With that in mind, let me contend the following:
1.
From Russia with Love
is the most antiquely classical spy adventure of the series, so much so that it
harkens the older vivid tales of WWII espionage laced with hints of Hollywood
film noir that would inspire Ian Fleming's Cold War spy novels to begin with.
Its plot MacGuffin is not a super-death weapon, but a cryptographic device, the
Lektor. The mission stakes are not predicated on some elaborate world
domination scheme nor are there any melodramatic conflicts concerning love
betrayals or haunted psyches; rather, it's all just a deadly gentlemen’s game
of 'cloak and dagger', but a game nonetheless. Most of the narrative consist of
Bond engaged in subtler clandestine pursuits, making contacts and reconnoitering
a Soviet consulate for a planned heist. The film takes on a leisurely but
shadowy semblance in this respect, drifting from seedy Gypsy camps and marbled
stoneways of Istanbul to after-hour happenings aboard the Orient Express,
featuring multiple scenes of stealthy trailing, interceptions and murder.
Robert Shaw as Red Grant remains the greatest of all Bond’s adversaries and the
duality among the two men established from the film’s opening scene is
appropriately downplayed until their first and only confrontation, one that
coolly escalates from a poker face parlay of smiles and greetings to a full-on
passenger car brawl. Even dubbed, Daniela Bianchi matches vivacious sex appeal
with bubbly charm as Tatiana Romanova and I like how Bond indulges her as his
own foil of sorts. Lastly, the film’s sleuthing is countered with two
back-to-back big finishes: Bond on foot against a strafing helicopter (a macho
response to Hitchcock’s North by Northwest) and a speedboat escape from a
SPECTRE squad, both ending in fireball array. More than any other, this is the
Bond film that deftly threads the eye of Fleming’s needle, and with style to
spare.
So who is the best Bond?
First, let’s
give it up for Roger Moore. The guy put in for seven Bond films over the course
of twelve years. Many have since jeered his depiction of the character but,
really, that was the Bond of the time as decided by the studio whereas Moore
simply played the hand he was dealt, consummately, I might add. And despite his
age creeping up on him near the end of his run, I admire how he maintained the
role in such a way that avoided any noticeable trace of apathy. Moore was the
Johnny Carson of Bonds, always laid-back and comfortable with his disposition
as the spy who loved the ladies and the lounging while treating the missions
more like they were vacations. His films are the easiest to lull into as casual
excursions that deliver the franchise’s storefront delights while demanding
little to no concentration or emotional investment in return. Contrarily,
Timothy Dalton’s lopsided harder-edged sense of urgency rendered a Bond who
wasn’t just interested in the missions but damn near obsessed, which in turn
brought them closer to center stage for audiences. Dalton’s Bond pushed himself
from one plot point to the next; the girls and luxury were ultimately
distractions, at least until his objectives were complete.
While I appreciate
what they did with George Lazenby in the role, at the end of the day, it’s just
not for me. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service is well-made and Lazenby handles
his action scenes with verve. He’s also suavely confident enough when wooing
Countess di Vicenza (a superb Diana Rigg) or sparring with Kojak’s Blofeld. And
yet, there’s still an air of befuddlement about him that robs the character of
its roguery. I can’t quite put my finger on it. Lazenby’s bond comes off a tad
too...affable. This coupled with the film’s last-minute dour ending gives way to
the franchise’s one, rare 'wet blanket' moment. I’ll take Daniel Craig and
Pierce Brosnan instead, together tied as my 2nd favorite of the Bonds. Craig
has since carried over from the brief Dalton era a similar degree of fierceness,
though he seems to find greater lasting pleasure in aforesaid niceties. Enough
has been discussed about the more sophisticated writing approach to this most
recent Bond that allows for Craig some on-screen internalization of the
character’s angst. And that’s all fine and good. Personally, though, I just
like Craig because his Bond is the bruiser-thug of the bunch whose promotion to
no-expense-spared globetrotting and womanizing leaves him in a constant state
of "the cat that ate the canary".
Brosnan, in preserving the Bond traits that
had since been cultured before him -- all the customary posturing required for
007 to walk into frame in tux or let loose whatever the cheesy kill-pun or
sexual innuendo -- sailed in and made it look effortless. His own mark left on
the role, however, was the ever-faintest touch of smug disdain; juust enough to
give the character a cocksure edge befitting the glossy 90s reboot of the
franchise. Sure, Brosnan’s Bond was a prick, but he was a badass prick who
could get the job done. In tandem, he also gave Bond a newfound soulful
presence that never fell prey to ineffectual moping.
Sean Connery
is my favorite James Bond.
Others might
agree for more cursory reasons, with such sentiments as "because Connery was
the first." Not me. My choice has nothing to do with tradition or nostalgia. All
of the other actors in the role each have their particular hook, yet with
Connery there is no hook. Essentially, there is nothing to his Bond. The word
"cool" perhaps serves as the best uniform definition of 007. In this context,
Connery’s performance takes that word to its purest meaning: his Bond is the
most unaffected.
There’s a
scene in Dr. No were bad guy crony, Dent, attempts to murder Bond while
sleeping in a bungalow bedroom, only to fall into the latter’s trap.
"That's a
Smith & Wesson, and you've had your six."
Bond says before shooting Dent
twice, one in chest and the other in the back. THAT is James Bond: not just a
licensed killer, but a complete cipher. There is no angst or passion or honor.
He’s not driven by revenge, or to prove himself. Duty to Queen and Country? A
façade. An oath sworn merely as a formality. No, this Bond does what he does
because, well, he’s good at it. This Bond is simply in it to win ...and to smoke,
gamble and get laid in the process. With Connery in the role, the amorality to
the very idea of James Bond is most apparent. We have to acknowledge that he’s
really not a great person. At all. And therein lies the fundamental male
fantasy to live as a rover free from all social norms, indulging in masculine
urges of sex, danger and the constant testing of one’s prowess.
Top 5 James
Bond Title Songs
5. 'Moonraker'
– Shirley Bassey
4. 'The World
Is Not Enough' – Garbage
3. 'You Only
Live Twice' – Nancy Sinatra
2. 'A View to
a Kill' – Duran Duran
1. 'Goldfinger'
– Shirley Bassey
Special
mention goes to K.D. Lang’s 'Surrender', which should have been the title song
for Tomorrow Never Dies instead of the rather obnoxious wail we got from Sheryl
Crow. Also, the original version of 'For Your Eyes Only' by Blondie over Sheena
Easton’s disco ballad.