Film Review
The original series of James Bond films concludes in predictably showy
style with a smash and grab raid on all of the previous films, a treat
no doubt for the fans but a far from satisfying way to round off a
phenomenally successful franchise. The twentieth Bond film,
Die Another Day features Pierce
Brosnan in his fourth and final outing as the smoothest and chunkiest
007 since Sean Connery, with Halle Berry serving up a Bond girl who is
every bit his equal (a rare innovation). It isn't
up to the standard of
GoldenEye (1995)
but the film begins well, with a superbly gritty pre-credits opener which offers a glimpse of
how things would pan out with the re-booted James Bond series a few
years later. After this very promising start, things go downhill
faster than a Boeing 747 in freefall, and we are soon back in the old
Roger Moore days, with comicbook characters, comicbook plot and enough
tacky sexual innuendo to fuel another three hundred
Carry On films. Unlikely as
it sounds, this was the most commercially successful Bond
film to date - it took 430 million dollars at the box ofice.
Director Lee Tamahori's attempts to deliver a serious modern action
movie are comprehensively thwarted by a laughably bad script and
special effects which seem to have been created on a BBC microcomputer
from the 1980s. The screenwriters' ambitions were clearly far too
much for the production's budget, but rather than rein these in the
producer and director opted for the slightly less sane option of trying
to deliver a film on one tenth of the budget it would have needed to be
remotely convincing. So we get an invisible car that turns out to
be as naff as it sounds and the sorry spectacle of Bond happily surfing
on a man-made tsunami, looking as if he knows he is making a cheap pop
music video.
Add in a few really appalling gags and some pretty pointless slo-mo and
the film's credibility is dead way before we get to the laughably
bad CGI-saturated denouement. Brosnan's solid performance and
some sterling support from Toby Stephens, Judi
Dench and Rick Yune (not to mention a superbly well choreographed swordfighting sequence)
just about manage to distract us
from the mediocre effects work and sustain the spectator's interest, but
this is definitely not Bond's finest hour. Rather, it is what you
might hope to get if you randomly splice together all of the previous
nineteen Bond films and for no good reason overlay on top of that some
seriously bad computer effects. This one will leave you shaken,
and definitely not stirred. To coin a phrase, things could only
get better.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
James Bond's mission to assassinate rogue Korean colonel Tan-Sun Moon
ends in a frantic chase in which 007's target appears to fall to his
death. Bond is then captured by North Korean soldiers, who
subject him to brutal torture. Fourteen months later, Bond is
traded for Zao, Moon's sadistic henchman. Once his 00 status has
been rescinded, Bond evades MI6 security and begins his own mission, to
uncover the identity of the man who betrayed him. His quest
begins in Havana, where he meets Jinx, an American secret service agent
who, unbeknown to him, is chasing the same quarry. Bond discovers
that Zao is a patient at a gene therapy clinic, which can offer a
complete change of identity via a new DNA restructuring process.
Zao escapes but Bond makes an unlikely connection between him and the
billionaire businessman Gustav Graves. After a macho skirmish
with Graves in London, Bond accepts his invitation to his ice palace in
Iceland. Here, Graves proudly demonstrates his brainchild, an
orbital satellite that can focus solar energy onto small areas of land
- a powerful weapon if it should fall into the wrong hands...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.