strange_complex: (Penny Gadget)
[personal profile] strange_complex
I know I am several years late to the party on this one. I did actually try to see this film when it first came out, but hadn't booked ahead and couldn't manage to get into a showing. So, what with one thing and another, this is the first I've seen of Daniel Craig's Bond.

It's definitely quite a change in direction. I liked how the chase straight after the opening sequence was on foot - it signalled the 'back to basics' approach, but also still made me gasp with awe at the clever use of gymnastics and props. And I like the way some of the old paradigms were inverted - like seeing Daniel Craig emerge dripping from the sea in his bathing trunks, in place of the classic old-school image of Ursula Andress in Dr. No.

I can't say I followed the plot terribly well, despite having read the novel as a teenager, mainly because I actually watched this film in two halves with several months in between them (all to do with a cock-up in setting the recorder for it in the first place). But it didn't really matter - I don't ask for Bond films to be anything much more than a series of impossibly-exotic characters floating through a succession of spectacular set-pieces anyway. And the set-pieces certainly delivered - particular the destruction of the Venetian palazzo at the end of the film, which was absolutely breath-taking.

I did find the portrayal of Le Chiffre's asthma slightly annoying - it's often mis-portrayed in film and TV, and I do wish actors and producers would bother investing five minutes in learning how inhalers are actually meant to be used before trying to portray it on screen. Still, then again, I don't suppose many people really go around bleeding continually from their left eye or re-joining poker games minutes after experiencing cardiac arrest either, so maybe I shouldn't be too picky.

Click here to view this entry with minimal formatting.

Date: Monday, 19 April 2010 21:39 (UTC)
ext_550458: (Me communing with nature)
From: [identity profile] strange-complex.livejournal.com
Yeah, I get that sometimes too. But that is the other thing about film and TV asthmatics - they're clearly never actually short of breath when they are using their inhalers anyway.

Profile

strange_complex: (Default)
strange_complex

January 2026

M T W T F S S
   123 4
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Tags

Active Entries

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Tuesday, 6 January 2026 09:48
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios