Film Review
Moonraker is widely considered
by far the weakest entry in EON's series of James Bond films, and
rightly so. An all too obvious attempt to cash in on the success
of the sci-fi extravaganzas of the late 1970s -
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
(1977) and
Star Wars (1977) - it departs
too far from Ian Fleming's concept and reduces Britain's most famous
fictional spy to the level of a cartoon action hero.
Although the film was a massive hit, recouping its colossal 34 million
dollar budget three times over, it is a travesty of a Bond film - mired
in its own self-parody, crippled by a poor script and ruined by some ludicrous comic excesses. And these
are just some of its better points.
Perhaps the most frustrating thing about
Moonraker is that it had so much
going for it. It was directed by Lewis Gilbert, a respected
filmmaker whose previous two Bond films -
You Only Live Twice (1967) and
The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) -
are two of the most well regarded films in the 007 franchise. It
takes in numerous exotic locations, with the canals of Venice
providing the setting for one of the most wacky Bond chases. The film also has one of the most
ambitious pre-credit sequences of any Bond film. And it includes
some of the most stunning special effects work ever seen in a British
movie. Just how could it all go so wrong?
The problem is that
Moonraker
is a palace of gold built on the soggiest of quicksand. Stunning
production values are of little consequence if the film's foundations, i.e.
its concept and script, are made of decaying, beetle-infested
balsawood. The concept is as obvious as it is trite: put
James Bond in a spacesuit and send him into outer space so that he can
take part in a gigantic laser gun battle. Of course it is no coincidence
that the film's climax almost exactly mirrors that of
Star Wars. Unfortunately, to
get to this point, the screenwriter had to tag on a ninety-minute
prelude, which resembles little more than a random splicing together of
all the previous Bond movies - an endless series of fancy set-piece
action sequences with next to nothing in the way of a plot to knit them
all together. Needless to say, virtually nothing of Fleming's
original novel found its way into the film - rather, this book would provide
material for the later Bond film
Die Another Day (2002).
All this might not have been so bad if the production team hadn't
been so inclined to go overboard with the humour. Bond dashing
about St Mark's Square in a gondola-cum-hovercraft is borderline
acceptable; startled pigeons doing a double take is obviously going too
far. It's good to see Jaws back for another round of
metal-dentured villainy, or at least it was until he goes all soppy and
does his Tristan and Isolde bit with a myopic blonde
midget. Whilst the musical reference to
Close Encounters are amusing, the
wholesale rip off of
The
Magnificent Seven theme appears gratuitous. Given
how utterly bonkers the plot is, it is perhaps surprising that the
screenwriter and director didn't go all the way and make this a
deliberate, rather than an accidental, Bond spoof. Michael
Lonsdale would have made a brilliant comedy villain;
instead, held back by a silly, non-committal script, the best he can do is to make Drax look wierdly camp.
(It may be a coincidence, but in Fleming's
Moonraker novel Bond
describes Drax as 'a sort of Lonsdale figure'...)
Trivia fans should note that
Moonraker
was the first (and to date only) Bond film to have been produced in
France (to escape the punitive tax regime that afflicted Britain in the
late 1970s). This accounts for why many of the locations are
recognisably French and why the cast includes an unusually high quota
of well-known French actors - Michael Lonsdale, Corinne Clery, Blanche Ravalec and
Jean-Pierre Castaldi being faces that will be familiar to French film
aficionados. (Clery was of course the star of Just Jaeckin's 1975
erotic masterpiece,
Histoire d'O).
The film's instantly forgettable theme song was sung by Shirley Bassey,
a dismal effort compared with her previous renditions of the
themes for
Goldfinger and
Diamonds are Forever.
This was the last Bond film in which Bernard Lee appeared as M (in fact it was
Lee's last ever film role), a sad way for him to leave the series.
Moonraker is easily the
silliest and most ill-conceived Bond film of them all. If the
naff humour doesn't irritate you, the egregious use of product
placement certainly will - Air France, BA and 7-Up (to name just three)
all got their money's worth. In his fourth Bond outing, Roger
Moore looks so stiff that he risks being mistaken for a cadaver,
although considering some of the dialogue he is given you can
understand why. The film just about passes for entertainment if
you skip the first ninety minutes and get yourself seriously inebriated
beforehand. Watch it in its entirety stone cold sober and you
will probably end up choking to death on your Dom Pérignon.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Lewis Gilbert film:
Educating Rita (1983)
Film Synopsis
When a Moonraker space shuttle goes missing during its transatlantic
delivery, agent James Bond is called in to investigate. He begins
by paying a visit to Hugo Drax, the multimillionaire owner of the
company that manufactures the Moonraker shuttles. For some
reason, Drax doesn't take to Bond and instructs his henchman to kill
him. The attempt fails and Bond heads off to Venice to probe more
deeply into Drax's activities. Here, he discovers a secret
laboratory equipped with a deadly nerve gas. The gas apparently
derives from a poisonous plant found only on the banks of the Amazon
River. During a stopover in Rio de Janeiro, Bond discovers that
Drax has closed down the Brazil end of his operation. Accompanied
by CIA agent Holly Goodhead, he heads for the Amazon, and discovers an
ancient city populated by beautiful people - and Mr Drax. This is
Drax's secret base, from which the megalomaniac millionaire intends to launch a
series of Moonrakers. Despite the best efforts of Drax and his
henchman Jaws, Bond and Goodhead manage to avoid being roasted alive by
the shuttle exhaust fumes and end up piloting one of the
shuttles. Entering the Earth's stratosphere, the Moonrakers dock
with a huge space station, which is invisible to Earth tracking systems
because it is equipped with a radar jamming device. Here, Bond
uncovers Drax's dastardly plan. He intends to wipe out the entire
population of the Earth with his deadly Amazonian poison and replace it
with a master race bred aboard the space station...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.