HistoryProf wrote:
An acquaintance who works at an LA multiplex and fancies himself a cinephile declared Skyfall "the Best Bond since Goldeneye!" I could only ask "is that good?" He went on to present as his bonafides the following list of the top 5 Bond flicks:
From Russia With Love
On Her Majesty's Secret Service
Skyfall
Goldeneye
Casino Royale
I'm really amazed by that list because my top five would resemble that pretty closely except Goldeneye would be nowhere near the top and closer to the bottom. Watching it again it's still, for me, one of the more mediocre Bond entries. I'm guessing if it was one of the first ones you saw,
maybe I would understand the love, but it really has one of the lamer schemes, a bland Bond villain (even though I like Sean Bean a lot as an actor) and other than the tank chase some of the more ho-hum action scenes. Famke is great, and so is Gottfried John, who I really wish was the primary villain, but everything else -- meh.
I loved
Skyfall, which I felt was a love letter for Bond nuts like me. My favourites are
From Russia with Love and
On Her Majesty's Secret Service and this one was more in tone with those. I actually liked the more reflective nature of it, and thought Craig delivered one hell of a performance. I think Bardem ranks up there with the top Bond villains, though I'll admit his scheme was a bit farfetched (I guess his character would know how MI6 would react to certain things but it was hard to buy he could plan everything down so perfectly.) I realize now there was actually very little action in the film, but the set pieces it had (the opening, the midway chase, and the finale) were all great. But I loved how Mendes and team actually tried to build up suspense instead of coming up with outlandish scenarios. I also geeked out from many of the references
including the Aston Martin from Goldfinger
and was especially thrilled by the ending and what it might mean for the series as it continues.
Seeing Miss Moneypenny back in her little reception area, complete with the coat rack, really made me giddy, as did the padded sound proof door to M's office. And though I figured it out a bit early, I was so happy to see Ralph Fiennes now behind M's desk. I'm actually surprised he'd sign on to play the character, who is important but is really secondary to everything else, but I think the casting is rather perfect.
I'm really thrilled about where the series could be going now. Yet I will admit I hope they can bring back some maniacal villain hellbent on world domination, or comes up with extraordinary extortion schemes. Blofeld could use a refresh.