Film Review
After the supreme mega- disappointment that was
The Man with the Golden Gun,
EON's Bond franchise showed a remarkable, and completely unexpected,
return to form with its next film,
The
Spy Who Loved Me. The film was released in Britain just
after the Queen's Silver Jubilee celebrations, a rare
period of sunny optimism and well-being in what was a pretty dismal decade
(hence the more jingoistic-than-usual title sequence). It is not
hard to see why Roger Moore
rates this as his personal favourite: it had a colossal budget (14
million dollars) and feels like a compilation of all the best bits from
the Sean Connery Bond films. It also had one of the best villains
in the entire series (Jaws, the only Bond baddie to be named after a
Steven Spielberg film), and what is arguably the best Bond theme song,
the chart-topping hit single
Nobody
Does It Better, sung by Carly Simon. If EON could produce
a film as good as this, just what were they doing with their three
previous Bond films?
That
The Spy Who Loved Me was
a major improvement on what preceded it can be largely attributed to the
change in director. The previous three Bond films had been
directed by Guy Hamilton, who had taken the series in a new and far
from successful direction, towards comic book adventure seasoned with
cheap innuendo-based humour and the kind of jokes that you would only
expect to find in a cheap Christmas cracker. When Hamilton
dropped out, hoping to direct the first
Superman movie, he was replaced by
Lewis Gilbert, who was considered a safe pair of hands after having
directed one of the more popular Connery Bond films,
You Only Live Twice (1967).
The handover of director was just one of many production difficulties
that afflicted
The Spy Who Loved Me.
Work on the film was delayed when producer Harry Saltzman decided to
end his association with Albert R. Broccoli, for a mix of financial and
personal reasons. To cover his losses in other unsuccessful
ventures, Saltzman was compelled to sell his stake in EON, leading to a
protracted legal haitus over the ownership of the Bond franchise.
Matters were complicated by the fact that Kevin McClory, who had
acquired the rights to
Thunderball,
was in the process of making his own rival Bond film, and refused to
grant EON permission to re-use the character of Ernst Blofeld. As
if that was not enough, the author Ian Fleming only gave EON permission
to use the title of his novel
The
Spy Who Loved Me; the company was not permitted to adapt its
contents. In the light of all this, and with critical reaction to
the previous Bond film being generally negative, Albert R. Broccoli
could easily have been forgiven for giving up making Bond movies
altogether. But he kept faith and, against all the odds, he
defied his detractors by delivering one of the best Bond films in the
post-Connery era.
You don't have to have the brain of Einstein to spot that
The Spy Who Loved Me is a virtual
remake of
You Only Live Twice.
The basic plot is the same (a madman plans to provoke World War Three
by stealing manned missile delivery systems owned by countries on
either side of the Iron Curtain), and the set-piece denouement is
virtually identical as well. The one big difference is that far
more effort has gone into the screenplay, so that the plot, which
seemed ludicrous first time round, appears highly plausible in its
second incarnation. Lewis Gilbert's direction had also improved
with experience. Whilst action-adventure probably isn't his
natural forte, Gilbert directs the film with the energy and passion of
a man half his age, and even manages to regain some of the
sorely-missed classiness of the early Bond films (thanks in
part to Claude Renoir's sumptuous cinematography). The end-result
is easily the most exciting, the most stylish and best-paced of the
1970s James Bond films. Does any other film in the series have such
a spectacular opening sequence? I bet Her Majesty approved of this one.
The Spy Who Loved Me is so good
that it pretty well refutes the commonly held view that
Roger Moore was woefully miscast as Agent 007. The reason why the
actor failed to make much of an impact during his tenure of the role
was largely down to the poor quality of the scripts and the generally
sloppy direction of his Bond films. With a decent script and an
energised production team led by a focused director, Moore shows that
he is just as capable as any other actor to have played the role, and
perhaps better than some. In
The
Spy Who Loved Me, the camp humour is still there, but it is now
toned down and becomes just one facet of Moore's portrayal, instead of
being virtually all there is. Here, we can see other sides to the
character, including the cruel, almost cynical edge that was so evident
in Connery's interpretation. If Roger Moore had been lucky enough
to have had one or two additional Bond films of this calibre his era would now be
considered far more favourably than it is. Alas, it was not to
be. The turkeys just had to keep coming...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Lewis Gilbert film:
Moonraker (1979)
Film Synopsis
When British and Soviet submarines armed with ballistic missiles go
missing, the two countries assign their best agent to
investigate. This is how James Bond runs into his opposite
number, Major Anya Amasova, in Egypt. Both are on the trail of a
man who intends selling the plans to a sophisticated submarine tracking
system to the highest bidder. Although the man is killed, the two
spies recover the microfilm in his possession, and this provides their
next lead:
Atlantis, an ocean
research laboratory in Sardinia belonging to the reclusive millionaire
Karl Stromberg. The latter has captured the British and
Soviet submarines and intends using them to fire off nuclear missiles
that will precipitate a global nuclear war. Stromberg's intention
is to create a new civilisation, beneath the oceans. Realising
the threat that Bond poses, Stromberg sends his henchman Jaws, so-named
because of his lethal metal teeth, to destroy him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.