It is really hard to step into the
shoes of a giant. James Bond is a British legend, and when
Daniel Craig took over he was immediately crowned the Bond for the 21st
century. ‘Casino Royale’ took the series
back to the beginning, ‘Quantum of Solace’ was more or less a misstep, and this
Bond movie takes us to a Bond who is later in his career. The aged hero, a bit too old to pass the
muster physically, but who still has his wiles about him.
The movie opens with yet another
spectacular chase scene, with Bond and another agent, Eve (played by Naomie
Harris) chasing a bad guy who has stolen a computer hard drive that has all of
the names of all of Britain’s undercover agents on it and their cover
stories. Okay, this is a major act of
stupidity that MI-6 would allow someone to have all this information on a
laptop computer—what were they thinking?
Complete idiocy, but you have to accept that to move on.
Bond is nearing the end of his career
as an agent, but M (still played by Judi Dench) is also on her last legs. She is less of a mother figure and more of a
ruthless witch in this—she seems very unsafe to work for. Not the woman who will bring her agents home,
but rather the woman who will leave them out in the cold. Not even an ambulance for the wounded. The bad guy in this one is a man from her
past, out to bring her down. He is
played by Javier Bardem, and while he is less scary than the role he played in
‘No Country for Old Men’, he is still fairly creepy (something about the blonde
hair adds a convincing air of menace).
All does not end well here, in the 50th
anniversary of the James Bond series, but Daniel Craig comes off both as a hero
and as a man. His bond is more human than superhero, and that is a very nice
turn of events.
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