This installment of Bond asks if 007 and his era of spy craft are still relevant. This leads into the theme, which is pretty in your face throughout the film, which is have the times past 007 and M? It's the class of old school verses the new. This theme seems appropriate in the fiftieth year of the Bond franchise. Bond was created in the post-World War II, Cold War era. It seems fair to ask how this Cold War invention play in today's digital terror era.
This theme plays itself most visible in the first scenes with Bond's new Q, which is the first Q of the Daniel Craig era. Q in this film looks like he's straight out of college, as does the new Moneypenny by the way. Bond meets Q in an art gallery as he stares at a painting of a old warship being brought in to be scraped, as I said the theme is pretty in your face. Q gives Bond his gadgets for the mission, which are a gun and a radio distress signal. Bond looks at Q and asks if that's it. Q follows with a quip about not having any exploding pens. Gadgets have been part of the lure of the Bond films I have seen. You always ask what were the gadgets, who was the girl, who was the villian, and who sang the opening song (in this case Adele). This is a very conscious departure from past films to emphasize the conservative way Bond is being cast in this film. They are basically sending him into the field with a gun, radio, and a good luck. Of course, they didn't go completely old school as the gun will only fire if it reads Bond's fingerprints.
This movie just as much about Bond as it is M. Both have story lines which questioning their usefulness at their advanced age and antiquated ways. This actually increases the drama as you question if either of them will be around in a next film. It had a very Dark Knight Rises feel to it. As in that movie, Bond fails (and falls) on an early mission and is assumed dead, but in contrast to Bale's jail-hole dwelling Batman, Bond is living comfortably on a beach drinking his life away. Bond returns to action after a terrorist attack on MI6. His skills and mental state, however remain suspect, just as Batman's did throughout Dark Knight Rises. M's ability and decision making choices are immediately questioned as she must choose whether to order a shot which could hit Bond or take out a target with sensitive information in the opening scenes.
The villain in this film is played by Javier Bardem who is a former MI6 agent, which M had sold out to the Chinese. His mission is to destroy M, much the same way she destroyed him. Bardem, who plays Silva, is reminiscent of Dark Knight's Joker and Dark Knight Rises' Bane, in that they have a grand plan and seem to be a step ahead of everyone. You should skip ahead to the last two paragraphs if you don't want spoilers.
Other similarities include how Silva allows himself to be captured to compromise the new bunker MI6 and escape into London, much like the Joker in Dark Knight. Silva has a Chinese island which was abandoned after he claimed there was a chemical leak, much like Bane is able to control an island in Dark Knight Rises. Silva, in the end, is a little confusing to me. Was his goal destroying the entire intelligence agency or just M? It seems like he could have done either with a lot less grand planning. It almost seems as though he planned the whole getting caught part to escape into London to kill M. A plane ticket and hiding out in M's house, which Bond is always able to do, seems a lot easier. Well, then maybe he got caught to trying to take down MI6 again, but he already did that once and there is no further story line about this motivation after Silva escapes into London. In the end, he just seems obsessed with killing M, who is like a mom to both Bond and Silva. This doesn't seem like it would be that difficult with everything else he's accomplished. But then again maybe I'm analyzing someone who isn't the most stable of people
That being said, the drama over Judy Dench's future role in the series is gripping. The action scenes are wonderfully ridiculous. Bond, M, and Bond's groundkeeper Kincaid preparing his boyhood home has a bit of a Home Alone/Saving Private Ryan feel as they prepare to defend against a much greater numbers.
The visuals in the film are pretty stunning and I'm not just talking about the scenery from Turkey to China to London. The film expertly uses light and takes shots off glass and mirrors to show reflections. The best scene is the assassination scene on the upper levels of a Shanghai skyscraper which shows glass, outside advertising, and obscured views. There are also many other scenes at Bond's childhood home which wonderfully use of light through bullet holes and fog (in different scenes).
In someways its almost as if the film is asking us to believe that Bond is still relevant and he is. Bond is still very alive in all of his gentlemanly brutish, British swagger. He's classic and this movie shows how a tuxedo, a martini, and an Aston Martin never go out of style.
A radio station started in Springfield with no broadcasts or contests where you can win an elephant named Stampy.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Turning the House Upside Down: Bears vs. Seahawks
Flipping the House
During the Lovie Smith era, you can look at the Bears team as a house. The defense is the foundation and the offense is the house that sits on top. No matter how much the offense changed above ground (Shea/Turner/Martz/Tice, Orton/Grossman/Griese/Cutler, Jones/Benson/Forte), the base below (Urlacher/Briggs/Tillman) stayed the same. No matter how the offense looked, we have always relied on the defense below to support the team to at least play .500 ball. This game flipped the equation with the house holding up the foundation.
Last week, I ended by saying, "Cutler can look in control throughout games, but I still doubt whether he has that elite quarterback ability to will his team to win in the last few minutes of a game."
I've always considered Cutler the key to the Bears becoming an elite team. Sure the Bears can win games against inferior opponents, but can they win a close playoff game in Lambeau? My gut told me that in a close game with Cutler needing to run a two-minute drill, the Bears would end up somewhere around midfield and end the game on a 4th down incompletion. Cutler, at least for a week, proved me wrong. In the last 24 seconds of the game, he and Brandon Marshall willed this team towards a victory.
But they lost. The Bears vaunted defense allowed a rookie quarterback to run all over them (literally) on them in two consecutive drives totaling 177 yards and 2 TDs when the game mattered most. We've seen the defense falter before. We've seen them give up play after play in soft prevent defense which allow opposing offenses to perilously march down the field. However, I can't remember the last time the Bears defense seemingly fell apart so badly (a 97 yard drive, followed by a 12-play 80 yard drive) and it was the offense came to the rescue (temporarily). For one week at least, it was the defense cracking and the offense providing the clutch plays.
Finding a Match
This was probably the most evenly matched team the Bears have played this year. Most of the other teams, seemed superior (Green Bay, 49ers, Texans) or inferior (Titans, Jaguars, St. Louis). The Seahawks seemed in that Goldilocks zone, which possibly informs where the Bears will eventually end up. One good takeaway (only on fumble this week) from this game was that the Bears outplayed the Seahawks for most of this game. They just couldn't reflect it on the scoreboard. I remember midway in the 2nd quarter thinking, "Wow, the Bears are complete owning the game right now, yet the score is only 7-0." Then when Seattle went in to half up 10-7, I remember thinking that the Bears won about 75% of that half, but lost the 25% which produced scoring. In the 2nd half, its seemed like both teams played to a draw until Russell Wilson just decided to run free. Cutler's and Marshall's heroics turned out to be a small respite, until Seattle methodically drove down the field in their first drive in overtime. On a final note, while the game ended in a loss, this was easily the most exciting game this season. For the first time this season, my hands were actually clammy as I listened to the last minutes of the fourth quarter and overtime.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)