Bond Films – Worst To Best. By Laurence Buxton. 2018.
Any aspiring writer with a love of films (and bank holidays) has probably ended up wondering which the best Bond film, or the best actor to play the part of the secret agent, is. However I’ve gone one further and listed the 007 films, from worst to best. It’s all down to a matter of opinion, but here’s mine and I’d be keen to hear yours (civility included!) Here goes…
*
26th Casino Royale. Directed by Ken Hughes, John Huston, Joseph McGrath, Robert Parrish, Val Guest, Richard Talmadge (1967)
Oh dear. It seems ridiculous including this farrago of a film in among the other movies, and simply confusing to anyone who would never have come across this and realised it had any connection to the 2006 movie, yet as Never Say Never Again gets in and the original Casino Royale was intended to be a serious competition to the main series, then in it goes too. David Niven uneasily takes the role of an aged, stammering 007, tending to his garden and refusing to come out of retirement until his country residence is destroyed, killing M (who was the one behind the destruction in the first place). This opening sequence, by far the most restrained part of the film, sums up the confused tone of the movie, which even for a 1960s-style romp is utterly chaotic.
There are numerous bewildering plots featuring a succession of characters masquerading as Bond (including Peter Sellers and Woody Allen, both of whom have rarely been used this badly). An all-star cast, including George Raft with a backwards-firing gun, Stirling Moss, Peter O’Toole and even Ursula Andress as Vesper Lynd, indulge in behaviour which is too odd to be funny and too strangely-edited to make sense, and bigger chuckles will be elicited by the spotting of Ronnie Corbett and Bernard Cribbins in minor roles. The centrepiece of the movie, buried amid surrealist and impressionist nightmares, is still the game of baccarat at Le Touquet between a surrogate Bond (Sellers) and Le Chiffre (Orson Welles), but due to a falling out Sellers notoriously refused to appear in the same scene as Welles and had to be re-shot: nonetheless it’s the nearest the film gets to the source material. The picture allegedly suffered from Sellers’ behaviour onset, and ended up being fractured into several different productions in different locations, the end results never gelling. It’s a total car crash and as an attempt to lampoon the Bond series it missed the mark by miles, but for the same reason it is anything but dull to watch.
25th Die Another Day. Directed by Lee Tamahori (2002)
Brosnan’s farewell to the role and one of the least distinguished outings for the legendary spy. It’s a movie which initially promises so much: in the pre-credits sequence there’s a rare foray into the brutal and mysterious North Korea, with a downbeat end to the normally triumphant opening sequence, and the sun-kissed, more glamorous side of Cuba is used for some of the series’ most effective location work, only for the picture to stupidly tap into the growing penchant for superhero tropes (the villain has a special Iron Man-style suit), jaw-droppingly bad CGI – notably during the Korean scenes later in the movie – and gadgets which change the once-cool to pure geek (the notorious invisible Aston Martin).
The picture takes a nosedive once Madonna, who also provided the stuttering, cringeworthy theme song, and a leering Damian Lewis (who would later admit he disapproved of the way he’d had to play the antagonist Rupert Graves) appear halfway through, and it never really recovers, despite Halle Berry doing her best to combine Ursula Andress-style sultriness with a more modern action heroine aesthetic. With a ridiculous plot, hammy performances and confused tone, Die Another Day ends Brosnan’s time in the role in disappointing style.
24th A View To A Kill. Directed by John Glen (1985)
Even by his self-effacing standards Roger Moore had little time for this final hurrah, another example of a tenure going on too long. Here, pushing 60 (and with the even older Patrick Macnee alongside him at one point), he’s engaging in sub-Carry On antics with Tanya Roberts, clowning around on the back of fire engines and trying to stop Christopher Walken’s increasingly undisciplined and demented Max Zorin, who seems to pose more of a threat to his own people than anyone else.
It’s not without memorable moments: Walken is certainly effective in the earlier, more restrained parts of the film(in a part once offered to David Bowie), Grace Jones’ May Day is both intimidating and her changing loyalties are intriguing, and the Golden Gate bridge finale is one of the series’ most striking, but it’s a very roundabout trip to get there. The film’s San Francisco segments drag badly until the final showdown and the use of The Beach Boys’ California Girls as comedy background music robs a vital chase scene of any tension or danger. Whilst the film was yet another massive commercial success Timothy Dalton’s more serious and restrained approach was probably overdue.
23rd Diamonds Are Forever. Directed by Guy Hamilton (1971)
With this film Sean Connery, lured back by a huge fee, started to turn into the character that Roger Moore would eventually embody, notably A View To A Kill. Looking older and carrying a few more pounds he spends much of the movie stateside, hanging around in hotels with Jill St John or other assorted lovelies, and the structure of the film seems oddly episodic, with a dragging pace. It also contains the famous ‘car on two side-wheels’ stunt: can you spot the continuity error?
Generally the action is distinctly comic-tinged (Bond finds himself talking to rats in underground pipes, indulging in car-destroying antics around Las Vegas, stealing moon buggies or fighting off camp assassins Mr Wint and Mr Kydd), even whilst you’re not sure if that was the intention. It’s a far cry from the lean, menacing character who thrilled in Dr No, and despite the weighty musical score it’s closer to the lighter, tongue-in-cheek style that the Roger Moore-era stories would lean increasingly towards than to the vintage Connery years. Diamonds Are Forever is James Bond at its campest, even including Charles Gray – famous from the Rocky Horror Picture Show – as a Blofeld with a penchant for cross-dressing.
22nd. Quantum Of Solace. Directed by Marc Forster (2008)
This sophomore, ultra-serious Daniel Craig effort attempts to continue the storyline from the series’ successful relaunch with Casino Royale, but straight away it’s in trouble – the pre-credits car chase sequence is dizzying and almost impossible to follow, the locations are largely bland and featureless and the emotional relationships which Bond was building up in the previous instalment are kept oddly behind the shutters. Even the subplot mirroring Bond’s own revenge storyline falls oddly flat, as does a parallel plotline concerning the monopolisation of Bolivia’s water supply.
In the film’s favour is its finely-directed opera house standoff scene where the musical score perfectly builds the tension, Daniel Amelric’s quirky villain Dominic Green (according to the actor the character was intended as a dark take on Nicolas Sarkozy), and an unusually brutal final fight which evokes memories of the thrilling clash between Connery and Robert Shaw in From Russia With Love, but the film doesn’t just lack humour, it lacks heart.
21st The Living Daylights. Directed by John Glen (1987)
An oddly bland start for Timothy Dalton, who had turned down the part post-Connery due to his youth. The Cold War era was approaching its end but is the central plotline here, despite a well-shot opening stunt on the Rock Of Gibraltar. If Diamonds Are Forever is the forerunner of the Roger Moore era then this is the Daniel Craig era’s prototype: a grittier, more serious take on the role, with a little less mindless philandering and a few more glowering standoffs.
The film’s attempts to play things a little more modestly are both welcome and unintentionally silly: one of the most prominent baddies is introduced as a killer milkman, evoking memories of the opening scene from Carry On Spying, whilst the Napoleon-complex nemesis Brad Whittaker, though well-performed by Joe Don Baker, is one of the series’ most forgettable villains. Maryam d’Abo’s Bond girl is elegant yet has an oddly emasculating effect on 007 and Dalton misses the mark with his character’s trademark quips, lacking his predecessor’s light touch. Yet the leading man does look the part and grounds a character who had become anything but believable, Jeroen Krabbe adds a touch of comedy and complexity with the character of Koskov, and the film at least puts an end to the farcical clowning that had palled in recent years.
20th Tomorrow Never Dies. Directed by Roger Spottiswoode. (1997)
A curiously flat outing, despite an interesting, topical storyline (the domination of saturation news outlets and its unscrupulous bosses) and an effective enough retread of the plot from You Only Live Twice, where two national powers are tricked into thinking the other is sabre-rattling. Jonathan Pryce , whilst a fine actor, is a mixed success as the Randolph Hearst-influenced villain presented here: effective enough in the scenes opposite Teri Hatcher yet less so in those against Bond where he seems to be on the verge of bursting into tears or having a Dr Evil-style tantrum. He’s not helped by his henchman, Stamper, being neither menacing nor distinctive.
Michelle Yeoh’s martial arts expert Colonel Wai Lin is often held up as one of the finer examples of a more independent Bond girl but the actress has little chemistry with Brosnan here, and the action sequences, such as when the two heroes are chased by a helicopter through Saigon, somehow fail to thrill. According to the normally genial Irish actor himself the movie experienced other clashes between its leading performers, notably himself and Hatcher. It’s not Brosnan’s best 007 film, but neither is it his worst: that ‘honour’ goes to Die Another Day. It’s just a shame that the corrupt media mogul theme didn’t get wedded to a more gripping action film.
19th Moonraker. Directed by Lewis Gilbert. (1979)
Bond at its silliest and also at its most genre-jumping. 007 goes into space when would-be God figure Hugo Drax decides to create a perfect race of humans, and annihilate everyone else. A clear cash-in on the then (and now) Star Wars craze, the film also strolls through lush country estates and tourist-trap Venice, leading to perhaps the stupidest stunt in a spy film which contains laser fights among the stars – the gondolier sequence in Venice, with watching birds doing double-takes. The once-ruthless and frightening Jaws is reduced firstly to cartoonish bumbler (falling off waterfalls, crashing through building roofs and reappearing afterwards without a scratch) and then to lovesick gentle giant.
Yet, because rather than in spite of this, the film remains one of the best 007 films to enjoy with friends and a drink: a camp foray into the greatest excesses of the genre to the point even the Austin Powers series struggled to parody it. It even manages to pull off the occasional more serious moment, such as when Bond is almost killed in a centrifuge chamber after Drax coolly says to his henchman “see some harm comes to him”. Like many of the Moore films it justifies its commercial success: just don’t take it too seriously.
18th The Man With The Golden Gun. Directed by Guy Hamilton. (1974)
The most ‘1970s’ of the films, this includes everything from chop-socky kung-fu, louche playboy mansion-dwellers, psychotic midgets, energy crisis storylines, funky theme songs and vapid leading ladies. There’s also some frequently bizarre humour (Scaramanga’s flying car, Goodnight’s name being used for puns, the cereberally-challenged agent being locked in the boot and the even broader jokes from the returning JW Pepper character that first appeared in Live And Let Die).
Whilst this was his second outing the increasingly irreverent approach of the Moore era really starts here and the film’s reputation has taken a battering because of this, but Maud Adams makes an effective first appearance in the series in this outing (before taking the titular role in Octopussy) and any scenes with Christopher Lee’s Scaramanga, played as a shadowy version of Bond, are immediately lifted by his on-screen presence. It also contains one of the most memorable, and surreal, showdowns of the series in Scaramanga’s crazy fun house, which shows an ambition not always shown elsewhere in the franchise.
17th The World Is Not Enough. Directed by Michael Apted. (1999)
On paper this should have been a classic outing for Brosnan, with all the ingredients there: a solid theme song performed by Garbage, Robert Carlyle as the villain, and Sophie Marceau as the curiously complex Elektra King. Indeed on a first viewing it’s largely effective, its set-pieces are well-staged and it throws in a few new ideas – Carlyle’s doomed Renard is also a faceted character. There’s a welcome larger role for Judi Dench’s M, which would add greatly to later movies such as Skyfall, and Robbie Coltrane makes a strong return too. There’s also some strong location filming in Eastern Europe and Turkey, and a twist around the halfway point that dramatically changes the course of the movie.
But the twist, when it comes, is rather predictable, and on repeated viewings the film’s flaws seem to magnify: notably Denise Richards’ utterly implausible nuclear physicist Dr Christmas Jones and Bond’s cringeworthy one-liners mostly to her and at her expense. The World Is Not Enough is a middle-ranking 007 movie, but it ticks enough boxes to make it an entertaining outing and its pre-credits sequence with the chase up the Thames is one of the franchise’s most memorable: with laughs, gadgets and action in equal measure.
16th For Your Eyes Only. Directed by John Glen. (1981)
The decision was made to tone down the daftness of recent outings such as Moonraker for this film, which takes some of the elegance, complex character histories and more restrained approach of From Russia With Love and updates it to the glitzy 1980s. It’s aided no end by the presence of a strong supporting cast, the best being Julian Glover as Kristatos and Michael Gothard as the stone-faced and unscrupulous contract killer Largo.
But whilst it’s good to see Moore playing the role more seriously for once, and being more convincing doing this than he’s often given credit for – there’s a particularly surprising execution of an opponent – the humorous elements then feel a little jarring. A Citroen 2CV chase finishes upside-down, with jokey asides from the hero rather dampening the serious moment experienced beforehand, and an initially-menacing ice-hockey sequence finishing with a hooter celebrating each bad guy ending up dumped in the goalmouth. There’s also the now-mandatory ‘Bond caught in flagrante with the leading lady’ closing scene. The revenge storyline, foreshadowed by Bond apparently killing off Blofeld in the pre-credits sequence in an oddly offhand manner, perhaps deserved better.
15th License To Kill. Directed by John Glen. (1989)
This is John Glen’s final directorial credit for the Bond franchise and considering how successful he had been with the lighter touch (notably during the Moore movies) this is surprisingly as dark and gritty as the series ever got. It’s a rare foray by the series into South American drug barons, brutal retributions and acts of vengeance. The plot is a distant cousin of previous ‘score to settle’ adventures such as Thunderball or For Your Eyes Only, but this time it’s with a more graphically violent approach that brings the series more into line with then-current thrillers like the Die Hard or Lethal Weapon series. It also taps into the American locations of those films.
The early sequence of Bond’s best friend Felix Leiter (in his latest guise) losing his leg in a vicious retributive punishment was enough to push the film’s recommended age rating up for the first time in the franchise, whilst one where Anthony Zerbe’s typically oily character also falls foul in an even nastier fashion is just as unsettling. There’s a particularly violent streak running through the film: a young Benicio del Toro makes a major impression as the fiery, murderous Dario, and his employer Sanchez, played by Robert Davi, is an underrated Bond villain, his brutal behaviour offset by a curious obsession with loyalty. The final clash between a vengeful Bond and a betrayed-feeling Sanchez has more of an emotional kick than many of the movie climaxes. Despite Q’s extended appearance this time round, though, it doesn’t quite feel like a Bond film, though this doesn’t mean the movie isn’t worth a further evaluation.
14th Never Say Never Again. Directed by Irvin Kirshner (1983)
Released as a Taliafilm/Warner Bros rival to the Roger Moore Eon Bond movies, Never Say Never Again is a rather odd concept for a 007 movie. It’s a Thunderball update, and Connery’s age and physical condition are played for Moore-style laughs throughout, with disparaging references to his out-of-date car and poor medical condition. Adding to the comedy there’s even a role from Rowan Atkinson as his bumbling, naive ally. falling into pools and shouting for the secret agent in a manner which would alert even the dimmest of enemy agents.
It’d appeal more to Moore fans than Connery diehards, with its central computer game face-off between Bond and Largo that’s a mile away from anything in its source material, enlivened as it by rising tension amid the worsening electric shocks for the losers. But despite the odds being stacked against the film – it isn’t just Connery’s Bond which seems dated here – there are plenty of sequences that hold up reasonably well: Klaus Maria Brandauer makes a genuinely unpredictable villain and the scene where Connery tricks a hotel worker into thinking his cigarette case is a bomb is brilliantly played; a rare moment of subtlety for a normally larger-than-life character. Never Say Never Again is, ultimately, far from being the worst onscreen outing for Ian Fleming’s creation, and no worse a send-off for Connery in the role than Diamonds Are Forever twelve years previously.
13th Spectre. Directed by Sam Mendes. (2015)
The latest 007 flick at the time of writing, Daniel Craig’s fourth outing is perfectly decent, if paling in comparison to its predecessor. The decision to recruit Christoph Waltz as Bond’s nemesis Blofeld is a shrewd one (and the torture scene is one of the series’ ickiest) but the backstory, which weaves a family history between Bond and Blofeld into series lore doesn’t quite convince: unlike Skyfall the storyline threatens to swamp the narrative.
For all the huge hype around the film, and for all of Craig’s huge fee to remain in the role, it’s a bit of a mixed bag. The Day Of The Dead opening sequence has plenty of thrills, spills and destruction of scenery, but doesn’t really seem to fit with the theme or action of the film, and the chase sequence between henchman Mr Hinx and Bond completely lacks any semblance of tension; indeed the former might just be the series’ least memorable henchman of all. There are high points: the direction of Bond’s unexpected reunion with Mr White is a highlight, and Sam Smith’s winsome ballad “Writing’s On The Wall” is one of the better theme songs for the series and deserved its Academy Award and Golden Globe, but whilst it’s solid throughout it’s difficult to see the film as a crowning glory.
12th Live And Let Die. Directed by Guy Hamilton. (1973)
Roger Moore was already 46 by the time he took the role of 007, far older than Connery was when he first appeared in the part, but he brings a certain youthful naivety to this tale of voodoo, heroin smuggling and assassinations. Tapping into black cinema – curiously Felix Leiter is played by African American actor David Hedison and gets the finest line in the whole film when he mocks 007 for being the only white man in Harlem – and with a less out-and-out comic performance from its star than would be the case later, it’s a constantly startling adventure with dramatic and sometimes brutal setpieces: the moment where Bond is literally cut open to attract sharks is particularly wince-inducing.
There’s even a supernatural element in the consistently-reborn Mr Kananga which is unsettling and silly at the same time. On top of this there’s perhaps Paul McCartney’s finest moment in the dynamic brilliance of the title song, Yaphet Kotto pulls off his dual role as Dr Kananga and Mr Big excellently and is frighteningly intense throughout, and Bond’s offhand trickery to seduce the virginal Solitaire (Jane Seymour) is both admired and shown to have serious consequences. It’s a unique, memorable encounter, and even the comic interlude with JW Pepper punctuating a boat chase sequence is well-staged. Live And Let Die was a striking entrance for Moore, different to anything before and to what was to come in the rest of his commercially-rewarding tenure.
11th Octopussy. Directed by John Glen. (1983)
After For Your Eyes Only throttled back on the tongue-in-cheek elements of the series, Octopussy reintroduced them. This time the comedy is largely focused around the lead character himself, whether he’s swinging through the trees doing a Tarzan-style war cry (absurdly whilst he’s trying to remain inconspicuous from his pursuers), dressing as a clown to sneak into a circus and defuse a bomb or even using a mechanical crocodile to infiltrate Octopussy’s island, which with its nubile, exclusively- female inhabitants would be a schoolboy’s wet dream.
All ludicrous, of course, but it’s enormous fun. An expanded role for Q gives some enjoyable comic chemistry between Roger Moore and Desmond Llewellyn, Maud Adams plays it straight and makes the most of a role that could have been campily ridiculous, Louis Jordain’s ultra-smooth villain is a joy and some gorgeous location filming in India makes the whole thing play like an Alan Whicker travelogue. Taken in the right spirit even Steven Berkoff’s performance as General Orlov, one of the most OTT in the series alongside Christopher Walken’s Max Zorin, is just something else to savour.
10th Dr No. Directed by Terence Young. (1962)
The brutal elements of Bond’s first outing are all the more notable now. Connery’s character is surly, bossy, brutal and downright aggressive, making Daniel Craig’s outing more of an updating than exploring brand new ground. The film looks both backwards and forwards: backwards with its 1950s-styled laboratories and offices and parochial behaviour – the manner in which Bond barks out orders to Quarrel, for example, not to mention at the villains in their lair later on – and forwards with its fire-breathing mechanical dragon and Ursula Andress’ iconic first appearance out of the sea. In this movie you can feel the sensible 1950s giving way to the glamour of the 1960s.
007 here is cold, unflinching, stone-faced and assertive, an alpha-male like no other before in a beautiful but dangerous ‘paradise’. It’s naturally dated in place and it’s quickly clear from watching it that this is the series debut, but it’s also notable how many of the series tropes (such as the theme tune and animated titles) were introduced, and with such confidence. With the leading man’s instant impression, garish filming and a lack of polish that makes it a far cry from future instalments Dr No starts the massively successful franchise in a curious and captivating fashion.
9th Thunderball. Directed by Terence Young (1965)
The great success of the Bond series, following the particularly populist Goldfinger (for many the best of the movies) led to Thunderball. The West Indies setting wasn’t entirely new to the series, having been explored in Dr No, but by now the stunts and gadgets were more uninhibited than ever, with a jetpac being produced to facilitate the hero’s escape.
Yet the film’s actually a slower-paced affair than expected, lingering for a long time on scenes such as the Junkanoo or the underwater sequences. As such the movie tends to suffer in relation to its lofty predecessor, and is accused of dragging. But Adolfo Celi (dubbed in a similar fashion to Gert Frobe in Goldfinger) makes a distinct visual impression as Largo, and Domino is one of the more underplayed and sympathetic Bond girls, notably when discovering her lover is responsible for the death of her brother. The movie is probably superior to its 1980s remake, Never Say Never Again, and whilst more leisurely and not in quite the same league as its two predecessors it’s another fairly strong outing for Connery.
8th Goldeneye. Directed by Martin Campbell. (1995)
A real reinvention for the series for the mid-1990s, Goldeneye means business from the outset. There’s a spectacular Russian base invasion by Brosnan and Sean Bean, a fine Tina Turner performance in its title song, genuinely amusing innuendo with the vampish, murderous Onatopp – a sly update of Fiona Volpe from Thunderball – and other brilliantly-played supporting characters including Alan Cummings as the comic computer expert Boris, Izabella Scorupco as the leading lady gets some decent dialogue and dramatic clout, reflecting a more enlightened time, and the stunts are memorable throughout: even Bond in a tank crashing through St Petersburg isn’t as out of place as it could have been.
There’s a dramatic plot twist (yes, another one!) which gives an emotional as well as a dramatic kick to the second half of the movie, Judi Dench makes a brief but brilliant debut as the feisty new M and there’s a great Robbie Coltrane cameo too (as well as a concurrent one by Minnie Driver). Sexy, sassy, funny and dramatic and even enhanced by the release of one of the finest videogame spinoffs of all time, Goldeneye was a crowning glory Brosnan would never top in the role.
7th The Spy Who Loved Me. Directed by Lewis Gilbert. (1977)
Often hailed as Moore’s finest hour in the role, this third outing for him gives him an underplayed adversary, Stromberg (Curd Jurgens) and a particularly memorable henchman, Jaws (Richard Kiel). There’s iconic material everywhere – the pre-credits sequence where Bond opens his union jack parachute to the Bond theme is probably the finest opening scene in the franchise – or the Lotus Esprit which doubles as a missile-launching submarine.
However there’s a grittier approach to the ‘base under siege’ battle sequence near the end which offsets some of the location filming and more comic moments elsewhere, whilst the scene where Jaws rips a van apart to try and get hold of Bond and Barbara Bach’s agent, Anya Amasova, is a good example of playing a scene both for laughs (Moore’s calm reaction contrasting with Bach’s panic) and in establishing the relentless powerful menace that pursues them. Carly Simon’s song Nobody Does It Better perfectly fits this era of the films, celebrating the fun, confidence and style of the character and the sparkling glamour of 007’s world too. It’s not my personal favourite of the Moore movies but it certainly holds up as extremely accomplished and firmly in the top echelons even by those who prefer the films at their most serious.
6th You Only Live Twice. Directed by Lewis Gilbert. (1967)
Connery was starting to tire of playing the world’s favourite secret agent by this point, although there’s so much original content thrown into this adventure (set in the Far East) and tropes that the Bond films would corner it’s an absolute thrill ride. This is the story that brought giant spaceships that can consume other spaceships whole, underwater volcanoes which contain massive hidden bases, Ernst Stavro Blofeld with his Nehru suits, scarred face and nasal voice, Q’s contraptions becoming more and more implausible yet delightful (the helicopter Little Nellie) and the use of a helicopter with a huge magnet that can pick a car up and dump it in the drink.
There are great set pieces here, ranging from the moment when Bond is attacked on the tops of the buildings by more and more enemies, reminiscent of the scene from The Matrix Reloaded but far more disciplined, and the ninja attack on Blofeld’s base later on. The quieter moments are also well-directed (when Bond is attacked by an assassin trying to get him to ingest poison whilst unconscious). Apart from a slightly odd assassination early scene on (with Charles Gray making a brief appearance in the series before taking on the larger role of Blofeld) and an Asian makeover to disguise 007 that is more laughable than offensive it’s full of spectacle, glamour and oriental intrigue. The original Austin Powers spoof could virtually have been taken from this movie alone.
5th Casino Royale. Directed by Martin Campbell. (2006)
Despite great reservations from the media about Daniel Craig’s suitability for the role (because of his height and hair colour in particular) the actor made a fantastic impression in his debut and managed to completely turn around the critics. Cold-eyed and cynical, but finally thawed out by his love for the mysterious Vesper Lynd, Bond here is played as an almost unstoppable force, and he’s matched all the way by the chilling performance of Mads Mikkelsen as Le Chiffre. Both are shown to be incredibly tough yet curiously vulnerable at the least expected moments.
The always-excellent Eva Green plays Vesper and shares excellent sexual chemistry with Craig, though the train scene is a little tarnished by the blatant product placement that would become an unfortunate element of this era of Bond films. Yet it’s a fine movie: a desperate chase sequence through an airport veers from subtle (where Bond and the enemy agent silently battle for supremacy) and plane-threatening spectacle, there’s a fist-in-mouth nasty torture scene and the baccarat game, interspersed with more than one of the lead characters having life-and-death moments, remains tense and gripping throughout, not least when Bond cuts his losses and grabs a knife to finish off his foe once and for all. After a tragic denouement which evokes memories of On Her Majesty’s Secret Service the film ends with a cliff-hanger which is new ground for the series but would arguably harm its successor; nonetheless this is a superb renovation of a series which had badly run aground.
4th On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. Directed by Peter R Hunt. (1969)
The loss of Sean Connery could have sunk the franchise before the 1960s were out, but this entry, with the unlikely and controversial hiring of George Lazenby, who lacked acting experience, to replace him, is held in the highest regard by the likes of Christopher Nolan and Steven Soderbergh: both claimed it to be an influence on their own work. A far more bittersweet tale than anything before or since, the film immediately sets out to cut Bond down to size (“this never happened to the other guy” he complains after saving the beautiful Tracy (Diana Rigg) from suicide only for her to flee: a rare fourth-wall breaking moment. The gorgeous Alpine cinematography comes to make 007 feel oddly overwhelmed, and even the theme music, composed by John Barry, has an ominous refrain to it which suits the material to follow. This atmosphere means that moments such as the murder of one of Bond’s allies, seen hanging upside-down, leave a nastier taste than normal.
Indeed familiarity is thrown out of the window. Blofeld’s blackmail plot, in order to obtain respectability and amnesty, is new territory for the series, as is the battle between Bond’s womanising ways and the potential monogamy of settling down with Tracy. The ending, of course, remains the franchise’s most tear-jerking moment, and further emphasises 007’s increased humanity and the loss of his old invincibility. Some will always think the Bond series was finest with Connery as the lead and see Lazenby’s awkwardness as a fatal impediment in his sole outing. Yet others applaud the more fragile nature of Lazenby’s incarnation, his accomplishment in the fight scenes and the storyline as being one of the series’ greatest, and in this regard Lazenby’s sole outing in the lead remains unique in the canon. It’s an unusually cynical and doomed outing for the character of Bond, reflecting the year it was made in, and of all the 007 flicks it’s probably the most haunting.
3rd Skyfall. Directed by Sam Mendes. (2012)
As excellent as Casino Royale was this is arguably Daniel Craig’s finest hour in the role to date. Taking the dramatic momentum of his debut whilst injecting enough humour and connection to past iconic successes (such as the character of Miss Moneypenny and Bond’s Aston Martin) Skyfall pits 007 against former agent Silva, played by Javier Bardem (who had provided such a memorable, unsettling villain in No Country For Old Men).Together with Judi Dench’s M, who moves centre-stage, there’s a dramatic, personal narrative between this triangle.
Craig’s masculinity is offset by the strangely fey menace of Bardem, and the first appearance of Silva, long-delayed, is a brilliantly-played psychological face-down more than the expected torture scene. The final shootout at the family home of the title is a tour-de-force, and the denouement in the church at the end is full of symbolism and metaphors of betrayal, which is one of the film’s principal themes. Adele’s song is naggingly memorable and beautifully-performed. It’s one of the best Bond films of the whole series, let alone of recent times, and shows just how nostalgia, action, humour and distinctive location shooting could all blend together to create the perfect package.
2nd Goldfinger. Directed by Guy Hamilton. (1964)
Still ranking as the nation’s favourite Bond movie in polls taken years after its release, Goldfinger is the quintessential action-packed thriller, larger-than-life, exciting and stylish throughout. All the elements that were played straight in From Russia With Love are taken to the max here – whether it’s the ejector seats in the Aston Martin; the development of Desmond Llewellyn’s deadpan inventor into a grumpier yet more engaged character who would go on to spar affectionately with our hero in future films; the outrageous Goldfinger himself played memorably by German actor Gert Frobe (dubbed by Michael Collins), as showy and extravagant in his schemes as the likes of Blofeld, Klebb and Grant in the previous outing were subtle and shadowy; the innuendo-laden Pussy Galore and her fellow female pilots and, of course, Shirley Bassey’s lung-busting title song, perhaps the series’ finest of all.
The film’s got everything and makes everything in it memorable. There’s Shirley Eaton’s alluring appearance and unforgettable exit, gold-painted to death; Harold Nakata’s mute yet brutish Oddjob; unexpected betrayals among the villains and the expertly-structured and directed Fort Knox set-piece. The incidental music is used expertly throughout to heighten tension, and even the shock late reappearance of the title villain feels effective and fresh. Along with The Great Escape it’s the films bank holidays were made for.
1st From Russia With Love. Directed by Terence Young (1963)
It’s all subjective, but this is perhaps the high watermark for the James Bond films. Sean Connery had added a touch more sophistication and restraint to his portrayal of the character here, and the plot moves away from the bright colours and sun-kissed menace of the Caribbean to a more low-key, Cold War-styled plot, the kind of which would be mined by the Harry Palmer series subsequently. Connery is brilliantly opposed by a number of unforgettable villains: Robert Shaw is 007’s darker alter-ego, Grant, and the scenery possibly shakes as the two slam into each other in their final confrontation on the Orient Express; Rosa Klebb, the cold and cruel villainess who leers suggestively over Bond’s love interest Tatiana Romanova and kills her victims with the poisonous spikes in her shoes, and last but not least there’s Anthony Dawson as Blofeld (albeit with Eric Pohlmann’s distinctive tones), who at this point never shows his face and is given a mystery that would be removed later on.
Although there’s genuine emotion running through the story: the gypsy fight, Ali Karim Bey’s battle for vengeance and Tatiana’s feelings for our hero there’s also a real espionage and ‘don’t trust anyone’ streak running through the film to contrast with the more broad characters that would dominate from Goldfinger onwards. Just to top it all of there’s Matt Munro’s voice in the theme song. From Russia With Love is a spy film for those who aren’t necessarily big fans of James Bond, and a peak for the series with regards to mature storytelling.
THE END. Please get back to me if you have any comments or opinions of the subject or the article. Many thanks.