Yet Again On Bond, James
Bond-Will The Real 007 Please Stand Up- Daniel Craig’s “Casino Royale” (2006)-A
Film Review
DVD Review
By Seth Garth
Casino Royale , starring
Daniel Craig, Judith Dench, 2006
[I am not a guy who
endlessly speaks about how this and that was better in the old days although
surely some stuff was and some stuff today is unquestionably better as well.
After yet another firestorm around this freaking two bit 007 Bond, James Bond
series which site manager, Greg Green, the guy who figures what films to review
and by whom in an effort, a futile effort if you ask me, to reach the younger
more action film-oriented crowd I am coming to believe that maybe in the old
days when the Hollywood studios sent out the press releases on films they were releasing
and you took it from there better. A film reviewer, critic, acrobat or whatever
you want to call him or her only had to if he or she was in his or her cups,
had snorted too much cocaine or was off on a tryst for a few days just snipped
off the top, added a couple of synonyms, added his or her name and sent it
along for payment to whatever publication was footing the fool’s bill. (Those
the days when we were getting paid by the word and could depend on some 3000
word minimum on a press release especially when the writer when crazy
describing the plot. Now I can’t even charge for this foolish in brackets
introduction part of the review which maybe longer than the review itself and
certainly to me at least more interesting.)
I could, and maybe
someday will, tell you some tales about the profession, about big time film
critics like Arthur Lemay, Heddy Harnett, and our own Sam Lowell which would
make your hair stand on. The beauty of the scam was that the studio, or rather
the screenwriter for the film who did double-duty writing up the press release
since he or she at least had the story line down even if the film was based on
a book and the author had disowned the film as being nothing like he or she had
written hand, wasn’t going to complain
when the reviews were uniformly positive and the poor schmuck of a writer
couldn’t claim any infringement since that would expose who wrote the damn
thing so nobody kicked. Nobody except the audience who actually had to watch
the ton of turkeys that had gotten undeserved thumbs up. Such is life.
Now though in the age of
alternate facts, fake news, extraordinary self-serving bullshit and a phalanx
of flaks, flak-catchers and screwballs with monomania you have to at least
pretend that you give a damn about most films on your own dime, have to
actually watch or hire somebody to watch the damn things. And make pithy
comment on such or risk the scorn of some, get this, cinematic studies freshman
looking to make goodie points with some erstwhile professor who couldn’t make
the real film industry cut. Get cut to pieces in some arty cinema journal which
nobody reads, not any live audience, except maybe those kids whose parents paid
out a ton of dough so their aspiring film critic could cast scorn on guys who
have really done it for a living-and survived to tell the tale.
Of course having to
actually look at the film and come up with some interesting slant comes with
its own set of dangers as I learned when I made a few casual comments in my
last 007 review neo-007 Danny Craig’s Skyfall.
I mentioned Bond creator Ian Fleming’s affair with Queen Elizabeth back in the
old days in the 1950s when her old man, Prince Phillip, yeah, the Duke of Earl,
no, Edinburgh up in nowhere Scotland was off with his Protestant whore out in
the moors, mentioned the Rolling Stones Mick Jagger’s, now Sir Mick Jagger,
1960s affair with the good queen immortalized in his tribute song Sister Morphine (and speculated that
was how he got that vaunted knighthood), and orphan boy, stone-cold killer 007
Danny Craig’s later tryst with her majesty. None of this history, none as the
old time actor Sydney Greenstreet was fond of repeatedly saying was schoolboy
history nor Mr. Wells’ history but was history nevertheless. And unless you are
that schoolboy which excuses you from knowing anything other than the Pablum
they feed you in school then some kind of mock shock at the revelations seems
extremely naïve. That is all I can take from the firestorm of criticism not
from the usual suspects Phil Larkin and Will Bradley who were as surprised as I
was that adults were clueless about the inner workings of the royal households
of Europe. While it would take about a ten thousand page book to gather in all
the infidelities and off-hand trysts of the incestuous and inbred European
royalty shock over modern doings seems bizarre to me.
Let me go by the numbers.
Look MI6 in the 1950s was not only the plaything of Soviet spy Kim Philby or of
the so-called Homintern, the public schoolboys with a fondness for other boys
in their youth carried over when they ran the spy organization and clubbed up
with the likes of Auden, Spender, Isherwood and the Queen’s art collector Tony
Blount but of serious if bureaucratic types like Fleming who were after the
main chance. Fleming saw his road to upward mobility going through Windsor
Castle so when he found out the Duke was playing footsie somewhere he took his
shot. It was all over the papers at the time that the Virgin Queen, part two (that
was a good one back in namesake Queen Elizabeth I times when everybody from the
ill-fated Earl Of Essex to the stable boy was the subject of her “favors,”
wink, wink) was seeing quite a bit of a junior MI5 officer and wondering
whether he was giving her the high hat on Soviet intelligence-or what.
Sure the Fleming scandal
was hush-hush in the days when you could count on the media to allude to
goings-on and not spread every lurid photograph on the front page but the
Jagger affair was much more public in the days when Mick, not the Queen, not
Her Majesty was conning older women into his expansive bed. I think Charles
said something about it (while he was mussing up his own pillows) but Phillip
was pleased as punch since with the Queen shooting up with a known junkie he
could run around with one of his Catholic whores for solace. I urge you to go
back into the archives, especially the younger set not around when the Queen
was eating magic mushrooms and such. I will say in her, their defense that I was
appalled as anybody else when the rumor that Mick was cavorting with Queen Mother
Mary went the rounds. Is there no decency in the world at all anymore.
The Danny Craig incident
is a little more problematic since he was an orphan and was trained to be an
old school stone-cold killer for God, Country and the Queen. I don’t know whether
it was a mother fixation or his own version of that attraction to older women that
Mick went through until he got older and started going the other bopping
teenagers but Danny begged to be assigned to the Queen livery or whatever they
call it in order to protect her from international terrorists, the IRA, Rupert Murdoch,
the late Dennis Hopper whom she called her easy rider, or Prince Phillip once
he got impotent and took up with some Quaker lass. That is all I can say for
now and I hope that you don’t feel cheated by the film review after all the
total truth information I have just laid at your doorsteps. Seth Garth]
*****
I really do feel these
days that Big Brother is watching over me, and not the usual suspects NSA, CIA
or FBI. And no I am not paranoid at least not in this instance where I know
from whence my suspicions emanated. Big Brother has a name, two names, Phil
Larkin and Will Bradley two fellow reviewers on this site who have also waded
in on this seemingly never-ending 007 James Bond series which somehow site
manager Greg Green thought might help boost readership among the spy thriller
aficionados, especially the 24/7/367 action every minute tribe. Meaning of
course that is the kids who those of us who knew better have had a big laugh
over since the bastards don’t read toney reviews, don’t read at all as far as I
can see. Phil and Will have, or had been having a running feud over who best
portrayed the spirt of 007 on the screen the former a partisan of Sean Connery
and the later Pierce Brosnan. No others need apply. How I got caught up in this
madness was that I have been assigned the Daniel Craig 007 segment and
off-handedly mentioned that their respective selections seemed to be the two
best examples of the spirit of the Bond character if skewed away from Ian
Fleming’s hard copy book hardball flame-throwers. That was like meat to the
sharks, the great white probably, as both tried to use that benign comment to
enlist me as a partisan on their respective sides.
Of course the reality has
nothing to do with the merits of any individual Bond, James Bond actor, hell
one of them could have taken Roger Moore if it came to that. It has everything
to do though with turf, with moving up the food chain, in the profession which
is done, no fooling, by blasting the inadequacies of your fellow’s review of
some film or some character. I have characterized this as worse than the
back-biting in the academy which is going some since those contenders as least
have some intellectual position staked out and probably an array of learned
papers and conferences at their beck and call. I have also mentioned that back
in the old days, Phil would know this although twenty-something Will would not,
we used to just grab our copy from whatever the studios put out, what they
called press releases, and either worked from that or just put our names on it
and sent it in.
Now it is all about
“game,” about cutthroat competition anyway and in any place you can. Thus I was
drawn into the abyss by these guys. The latest “play” on this game board was a
passing remark I made about a recent Craig 007 review where I mentioned that
the gratuitous and seemingly non-stop violence was over the top even for
action-filled Bond vehicles. That unleashed a thunderclap of comment from both
Phil and Will once again pointing out that their respective candidates got by
with plenty of guile and charm and didn’t have to resort to over the top
bang-bang and chase scenes to get the bad guys at bay.
Which brings us to this Casino Royale segment of the Bond legend
which was actually Daniel Craig’s first run at the role of the bulky muscled
super-man spy. The problem for me was that somehow things got screwed up here
in the assignment department and I was given the sequel to this episode first Quantum of Solace where they are many
references back to the action and particular the Bond love interest, Vesper,
who like a great many of the more serious Bond love interests from the very
first film Doctor No has a fatal fate
in store for her.
Of course like all
post-Cold War products in this series the obvious bad guys are no longer Cold
War Russian enemies or their allies but vague but widespread international
criminal cartels who don’t care who or what they fund as long as the rate of
return makes the grade. This one involves a young neophyte Bond working his way
up the 00 chain. MI6 in the person of M, played by Dame Judith Dench, has given
Bond the task of connecting the dots between a well-known financier of
international terrorist organizations and that murky cartel.
In the end it is all
about Bond’s ability to play high stakes poker with the high rollers, with that
financier who made a serious mistake with an African mercenary group who let
him invest their money in a scheme to short stock on an airline bringing out a
new model which he has hired help to destroy and which James saves from
destruction just in the nick of time. Hence our financier’s need for serious
dough, a hundred million anyway. Bond, with the aid of fetching but as I have
mentioned doomed Vesper, played by Eve Green, his “banker” from the British
Treasury and later love interest through several travails including being
poisoned by the financier’s girlfriend wins “the pot.” Not good, not good at
all by that loser financier’s light and so Bond and Vesper are kidnapped to fork
up the dough won at the gambling tables. Bond won’t give up the password to the
Swiss account even under torture so as we later find out Vesper, now Bond’s
lover, bargained with the bad guys for his life in exchange for the money. That
did not sit well with Bond as he thought she had sold the whole operation out.
According to M Vesper bargained the dough for the bastard ingrate Jimmy’s life.
But that was later long after Vesper had died during the big final scene where
Jimmy is facing off against the bad guys in Venice. Like I said the Bond
character is hell on women, eye candy love them and leave them as earlier in
the series and of late when there is some intimacy and sharing of emotions
reflecting a difference sensibility these days.
I noticed when looking at
the Internet to see how at the time reviewers critiqued this one they were very
favorable in their estimations. A good number thought the change to a more
original Ian Fleming book-based stone cold killer even if for a good old cause
take made the grade. That and the romance for more than two minute copulation end.
I have already mentioned that I thought the plot was thin against other efforts
and that the violence and mayhem was way over the top. I guess I have to add
now this reversion to a more originally Fleming conceived character did not sit
well with me after what Sean had built up from day one. Phil and Will make of
that what you will.
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