davidn: (bald)
[personal profile] davidn
Whitney's family and I went to see the new James Bond film a couple of days ago. I'd been fascinated by how different the film looked from any other one before it - from the previews, it felt like a revival of a series that had been gone for decades rather than just four years.

It's obvious that the people who made this film viewed Die Another Day as a mistake. To be fair to it, that film was just ridiculous, with its invisible vehicles, ice palace, and slicing off bits of the continent with a satellite. They've taken a more realistic approach for this one, and while it takes some getting used to, it tends to work.

It isn't actually as different as the preview implies, as the spirit of it is still very much alive. The theme song is much better than the dire effort last time around, featuring a vocalist I hadn't heard of before who sounds decidedly like Roy Khan in places. For the first half hour, it's pretty much a normal James Bond film. It opens with a pre-credits chase through an African construction site against a villain who seems to think he's from the Matrix, with his constant wall-running action (down a lift shaft at one point), and quickly progresses on to an airport scene involving cutting a bus in half with a fuel tanker. The conclusion to this scene is hilarious, and provoked a round of applause from the audience I was with.

But it's a lot darker, somehow. I'm well aware that that term has been overused significantly recently, but it's the only way to describe it - the fighting is more realistically dirty, and after the quick start, it's a lot more tense in many places rather than relying on the traditional action-plot progression-action cycle of the other films. Most surprisingly, James Bond isn't portrayed as anywhere near as perfect and superhuman as in the other films - he makes mistakes, hurts himself, though still manages to be a rather self-satisfied smeghead in between.

Despite the quite misleading trailers, it still feels like a part of the series (with a subtle undo of Die Another Day). Just un-maddened a bit.

Date: 2006-11-26 12:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stubbleupdate.livejournal.com
The vocalist for the Bond song is Chris Cornell, from Soundgarden and Audioslave.

I believe that the initial villain is the chap who invented La Parka, or whatever the name for the French urban gymnastics thing is called.

I also haven't seen the film.

Date: 2006-11-26 01:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thackary.livejournal.com
I think the parkour sequence would have worked better as an opening sequence instead of the (never been done before) flashback. Although the flashback did culminate in bond being framed in the barrel of a gun as he fires towards the camera. Not sure how that could have been worked into the explosion in the embassy...

Date: 2006-11-26 02:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tweeasfuck.livejournal.com
I have not seen the film, but I can tell you that the theme tune is by Chris Cornell, ex of Soundgarden, a Bad Grunge Band.

I am one of those people who don't like Bond; just dislike the character really. Though by all yardsticks Die Another day was horrendous - the ex dragged me to see it and I wanted to cry with the tedium of it all.

Date: 2006-11-26 06:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gr33bo.livejournal.com
It was a great film that - methinks whoever designed the opening chase scene had definitely been watching a bit of "Jump London" or similar.

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