Bond, James Bond II

I didn’t mention in my earlier post the politics of the new Bond film, which differs from the traditionally conservative template. But Juan Cole on his blog does a nice job outlining the new Bond ideology:

The original Bond began his education at Eton (he was thrown out) and was a member of the British elite, even if he exhibited its otherwise hidden rough edges and occasionally ruthless methods (deployed against still more ruthless opponents such as Soviet assassination squads). Still, he defended the interests of his social class against challengers.

With this film, Daniel Craig’s Bond, who is from a considerably lower social class than Flemings’, has chosen to defy the white-tie set, and the Bush administration’s greed and lawlessness, and to stand up for the little people (including Camille, who symbolizes Morales’s Indios). At one point the smarmy CIA man Beame rejects any criticism from Bond of US imperialism, given Britain’s own long and sordid imperial history. But a country, and a people, always has a choice in each generation, of whether to do the right thing. They are not prisoners of their ancestors.

Craig’s Bond is an intimation of the sort of Britain that could have been, if Tony Blair had stood up to Bush and refused to be dragged into an illegal war of choice, and into other actions and policies that profoundly contradicted the principles on which the Labour Party had been founded (and you could imagine Craig’s Bond voting for Old Labour, while Flemings’s was obviously a Tory). In a way, this Bond stands in for Clare Short, who resigned as a cabinet minister from Blair’s government in 2003 over the illegitimacy of the Iraq War.

Bond, James Bond

Quantum of Solace hit the theaters in the United States on Friday and was the top-grossing film in the country. And, make no mistake, it is a thrilling, explosive action pic — a little out of character for the Bond franchise, but a great deal of fun.

But if I had to grade the film, I’d give it an incomplete. The reason? The film does not stand on its own. If you did not see Casino Royale — a top-notch Bond film, one of the best — then QoS will make little sense. That is not necessarily its death-knell, but it does limit its effectiveness.

I see the film more as a bridge from Casino Royale to whatever if is that will follow.

Some other thoughts:

  • The title credits, which were so striking in Casino Royale and play such an important mood-setting role in earlier bond films, were dull.
  • The theme song, performed by Jack White and Alicia Keys, was terrible, far less than the sum of its parts.
  • The opening car chase was both thrilling and confusing, a victim of an over-eager editor. Otherwise, the film was brilliantly paced, better in this regard than Casino Royale, which suffered from an overly long aside detailing Bond’s relationship with Vesper.
  • We didn’t need the homage to Goldfinger (I won’t say anymore; Bond fans will know what I mean when they see it).
  • The Bond character progresses in Qos, grows, and it’s clear that the hard edges are softening, the roughness giving way to a Connery-like charm.
  • The film was about 20 minutes too short, the 20 minutes not included being the back-story that would have better fleshed out the narrative.

Recommendation: See Quantum of Solace, but rent Casino Royale first.

A night at the moview with James Bond

The reviews are mixed — the bad ones committed to the old franchise in some way, angry that the new Bond films lack the cheeky humor, the good ones viewing this change as a way of energizing the series.

My take — based on Casino Royale and the last dozen truly mediocre films — is that the series needed a huge shot of adrenyline. I do believe that Pierce Brosnan was a fine Bond, but that his films were generally flat and overly filled with gadgets that had finally weighed down the franchise to the point where it was about to sink.

So now, we have Quantom of Solace, a film with mixed reviews, opening tonight. I’ll weigh in as soon as I can. I’m off to the theater in about 15 minutes.

No solace in waiting for Bond

The movie is still several months away, but every bit of news about it just piques my interest — as did the trailer for it (here).
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But the news that Jack White and Alicia Keys are teaming up for the theme to “Quantum of Solace,” well, that’s too cool.