For all their reliably repeated elements – tailored suits,
tricky gadgets, glamorous women, outlandish villains, M, Q, and Moneypenny –
the oft-rebooted James Bond movies are one of our culture’s most reliable
barometers. (Or should I say they are reliable cultural dipsticks, a more
fittingly utilitarian and phallic metaphor?) The series is awfully good, for
better and worse, at reading the zeitgeist’s mood and reflecting our current
storytelling obsessions back at us. That’s evident in Spectre, the fourth to feature Daniel Craig as 007. His decidedly
post-9/11 entries have viewed geopolitical dangers with dread and a greater
interest in personal demons, threats in the business of wounding a more human
Bond more closely. This latest one pushes further into the postmodern
blockbuster’s main interests: being grim and dark, obsessed with backstory, and
paranoid about surveillance but ambivalent about its necessity. And yet
director Sam Mendes, returning from the last, terrific entry, continues to find
a way to make a film both derivatively modern and classically Bond. It’s a
tough balance, but he mostly pulls it off.
From the opening shot – a long, unbroken one dancing through
a crowded festival, into a hotel, up an elevator, out a window, over a ledge,
and across some roofs – it’s clear Mendes knows great cinematography can be as
good as any dazzling special effect. With Hoyte Van Hoytema behind the camera
(he who is responsible for the austere beauty of films like Interstellar, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, and Let
the Right One In), Mendes crafts a movie with not a single misjudged image.
(Call it cinema du “One Perfect Shot.”) The movie globetrots with Bond as he
follows a series of clues on the trail of a mysterious villainous organization.
Each stop is appealingly photographed, exquisite in its rendering of bright
snow, crackling desert expanses, warm Italian villas, and chilly grey London
streets. Handsome, expertly constructed frames find silhouettes and
reflections, smooth glass and flickering flames. The movie is as well put
together and aesthetically pleasing as a luxury car, a perfectly fitted tux, or
a supermodel in high-fashion attire.
The look is all well and good, but what’s happening in this
artful design? Well, it’s more or less a typical Bond film, but with its recent
tonal habit of sustained seriousness. The super-spy is suave and flirtatious.
His boss (Ralph Fiennes), assistant (Naomie Harris), and gadget supplier (Ben
Whishaw) are alternately impressed and exasperated by his antics. A slimy villain
(Christoph Waltz) hides in the shadows, pulling strings on an elaborate
megalomaniacal plan. The antagonist’s brutish henchman (Dave Bautista) is
lurking around every other corner. And two beautiful women (Léa Seydoux and
Monica Bellucci) are tough, hold valuable information, and want nothing to do
with Bond until he proves just too irresistible to not make out with for a bit.
The plot develops in a controlled, subdued manner, the better to hide the
grinding formula, I suppose. When the action arrives, it’s tough and smashing,
flipping helicopters, flinging cars, smashing planes, and exploding buildings.
The best is a close quarters hand-to-hand fight aboard a train, echoes of From Russia with Love.
It’s built around a need to draw connections, not just to
traditional Bond elements, but most obviously to Craig’s previous outings. The
screenplay (credited to John Logan, Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, and Jez
Butterworth) brings back a character from Quantum
of Solace (Jesper Christensen’s Mr. White), references the events of Skyfall (Judi Dench briefly appears in a
message from beyond the spoiler), and alludes to Casino Royale’s villains. This is supposed to make its
conspiracy-minded plot more impactful because we can recognize threads from the
last few Bond films. I like it in theory, but in practice it’s muddy and
forced, full of loose ends and plot holes. Besides, it puts too much faith in
Bond as a character instead of a construct. It’s one thing to groove on the
franchise’s persona. It’s another thing entirely to care about James Bond the
man, especially when there’s not a lot of evidence pointing to characterization
worth caring about.
Craig’s Bond is best at projecting unflappable competence
and wounded backstory while never dropping the strong mostly silent type act.
The movie’s at its best when it sends him hurtling into wordless action – it’s
unfailingly sharply staged and thrillingly paced – or poses him in attractive
tableaus against striking scenery and painterly light and shadow. There’s not
much depth here, which makes it hard to care when the movie pretends there is.
The characters, though inhabited by great actors, are ultimately nothing more
than sparsely developed types. And the political interests are strictly
unserious despite the gravity with which it frets over the double-oh’s future
in the face of a digital dragnet, amounting to nothing more than an argument
for ditching cold computerized snooping in favor of artisanal spying. And yet,
for all two-plus hours, it basically works. The look is impressive, and it slides
along seductively enough on expert craftsmanship. As a delivery device for
slick surfaces and fun setpieces, Mendes and crew give you your money’s worth.
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