By Dan Hagen
If Hitchcock had ever directed a James Bond film, the result
might have looked something like what I saw last night — Sam Mendes’ “Skyfall.”
The brilliant director of “American Beauty” gives us the
kind of extended scenes of suspense that are rare in Bond movies, along with
arresting, impressionistic cinematography — characters caught in a blue ballet
of underwater battle, or framed lonely against burning buildings like the denizens
of some sort of hell.
Daniel Craig as a troubled James Bond 007 in 'Skyfall' |
And as the story starts, that’s just what Daniel Craig’s
James Bond seems to be — a survivor of experiences too harrowing even for him,
old-looking, trembling like an alcoholic with his double-oh skills badly
eroded. He’s lived twice, and too much.
The atmosphere feels thematic, and Craig’s Bond seems, on
some deeper level of context, to have been aged and battered by the very half-century
of cultural changes that have accumulated since these films began.
Women, mere playthings no more, are a serious presence to be
reckoned with. The cold-eyed killers of Smersh are as long dead as the Soviet
Union they served. But threats still slink in our shadows, and the villains who
bring them — the compelling Javier Bardem here — are more unsettling than they once
were, in part because we now sense they may have a legitimate grievance against
the authority Bond represents. It’s enough to leave even a superman stirred and
shaken.
Never fear. From the futuristic 21st century present,
with its electronic eyes on everything and its digital connections among
everyone, the film effectively moves backward through the strata of
time to an elemental past where secrets must be answered for.
That past was
also Bond’s heyday, a time when a knife, a radio and a single man’s
resourcefulness and resolve could supply the answers. And by the time Bond
arrives there, on the vast, ancient plain of Scotland, he’s 007 again, ready
for duty.
Yes, the Daniel Craig films do lack what the New Yorker
observed to be missing from them— that piratical sense of fun supplied by Sean
Connery’s gentleman-rogue. We ask more from our fictional heroes than suave
swashbuckling these days, and maybe we ask too much, leaving Bond as dour as
Bourne. In providing us a Bond worth pondering, the danger is that these films will
become ponderous.
But this time out, at least, Mendes knows the exact direction in which to point Bond’s Aston Martin DB5 (with modifications).
Skyfall moved me in a way the old Bond films never did; as much as I enjoyed Sean Connery, he always verged on becoming a very handsome action figure.
ReplyDeleteI know. But those films had a sense of fun I'm afraid they may be in danger of losing, although they haven't lost it yet.
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