Sunday 21 October 2012

Crappy Movie Reviews - Bond, James Bond




5 Worst James Bond Films

Alright, with the release of the new Bond film, Skyfall, I have hopped back into the bad reviews and ready to critic some of the films from my favourite franchise. Bond, James Bond.  Now it’s been a few years since I have watch some of the most appalling of the lot, so I bringing back some of the darker moments of my life. I was going to pick the worst, but, in fact there is some appallingness from many films that would be very wrong of me to miss. So, here are my worst 5 James Bonds films, no particular order, they have their own reasons for being there.

For anyone not familiar with the history of Bond in film check out Wiki
 
A View to a Kill – 1985

Preview:


 
This was the last of Roger Moore’s films before handing it over to Timothy Dalton. After Sean Connery had retired the 007 status in 1971, Bond writers had wanted someone who could keep up with the legend that was Connery. They found it in Moore, a semi famous English actor at the time. He went on to do several fantastic Bond films, including Live and Let Die, Man with the Golden Gun and The Spy Who Loved Me. More humorous and light hearted than Connery he was well received... .until this film.     

Filmed in the US it pits James Bond up against a microchip manufacturer hell bent on destroying the Silicon Valley. Now, the best part of this film is that the villain is Max Zorin, played by a young looking Christopher Walken and his velvet voice. Now, being 1985 we should be expecting a film which is on par with Die Heard (1987) or Lethal Weapon (1988), but its not. This feels like a 1960s film. 

Firstly, Bond looks OLD. Really OLD. Moore was almost 60 at the time and his face and hair look it. Moore runs around tired and exhausted until his stunt double takes over. Most of his scenes he doesn’t DO anything. Lots of staring, slight hair turning and raising eyebrows. 

The next thing is that for a Bond to be good you need some wicked action scenes. Think Craig Daniel’s Parkour running, Brosnan’s Soviet Dam scene or Connery’s “No, I expect you to die!”. This has nothing. The best is some weird horse riding scene where Zorin changes the show jumps heights to get rid of Bond or where a fat US cop is chasing Bond in a firetruck or the worst where Grace Jones as one of Zoran’s henchmen fly fishes one of Bond’s informant in the face.... to Moore’s responce “There is a fly in his soup!” BOOOOOOO!!!!!!

The last thing is Grace Jones. Now, for those who don’t know her she was a singer in the 80’s from Studio 54. Tall, dark and well a hair style that was well... cartoonish. While she maybe a singer, she clearly can’t act. She stumbles through most of her lines and clearly looks out of place. The one interesting thing about this was that at the time she was going out with Dolph Lundgren another B Grade actor at the time. He ended up doing a small part in the films, his first part ever. 

Oh, and the clip was done by Duran Duran, which basically sums up film.



Licence to Kill - 1989

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This 1989 film was the 2nd and last Bond for Timothy Dalton. This was the film that put to rest the bond series for a 6 year siesta. Now, I remember this as being a pretty pitiful film, but in hind sight it’s not actually as bad as I remember. But, it does have some definite pitifullness which keeps it on the list. 

The films basic premise is that Bond is on a revenge mission after his friend and CIA Felix Leiter is seriously injured and Leiters wife murdered while on their honeymoon. The revenge mission is no sanction by M15 and acts as a rouge agent for the story. 

Now to start. Dalton is a terrible Bond. Just putting it out there. He sits on the bottom of many people’s list as the worst. He is just a little weak and not much fun. The point about Bond is that you want to be him, you want to be as cool as him. This man is a little well.... meh. All the other Bonds have a fun streak and had a bit of a reputation as a cool actor before doing Bond. Dalton was a Shakespeare and period drama actor. There is nothing wrong with that, but the thing is you don’t want to grow up to be him. He wanders through a bit out of place, like if Kenneth Branagh was in Die Hard.

The first thing I noticed about this film that I remember from my original watching is that it is violent. Really violent. There is nothing subtle about someone being decompressed and exploding or a henchmen being cut up through a shredder (The henchmen is a young Benicio Del Toro, playing is 2nd on screen role). I remember this as a kid, feeling kinda awkward, this was not like the older Bonds. This is probably tame compared to today’s movies, but even today’s Bonds don’t have this kind of gore level. It’s not needed, I want to have fun, not be grossed out.

The other stark this is the weird one liners. In Bond movies they are very commonplace puns, with a fun but subtle expectation that they happen. In Licence to Kill, it feels like they forgot to write them in and the re-filmed the puns months later and placed them in. One example is the someone running a forklift into a wall. Dalton on the other side of the wall, says “Must of run into a dead end” almost like an eternity later, like he woke up later that night and thought of something cool to say. It wasn’t even a good line. 

The last thing is that main bad guy doesn’t die well. He just gets shot. How boring, not underwater drill to the face (Tomorrow never dies) or golden pistol duel in mirrored mansion (Man with the Golden Gun). YAWN!

Die Another Day - 2002

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Similar to Licence To Kill, this movie was so bad it sent the Bond series into a hiatus. This time 4 years and a swap to Daniel Craig. This was the last of the Peirce Bronson’s 4 movies, which peaked at Goldeneye and had gone downhill since. 

The premise to this film is stupid. Just stupid. Starts off a some North Korean infiltration, then some weird torture scene, then Richard Branson lookalike bad guy, diamond face guy... Halle Berry.... more stupid then a satelittle whatever. I hate it. This is probably my most hated film, it’s stupid and makes me angry. The thing that makes me so angry was that it was my first film that I got to see when it first came out, I was finally old enough to see an M-Rated Film and I left feeling dirty. Really dirty. Why?

Well firstly it doesn’t make any sense. The film was done as a tribute to the previous 20 EON films’ taking much of the classic last 20 years, tributes include a laser satellite from Goldeneye, jet pack from You Only Live Twice, C130 from The Living Daylights and the laser table from Goldfinger. These were crudely cuts them and make a montage and mockery of everything this I love. The lack of plot is the dispersed with really poor CGI, crappy action shots and feral early 2000s dance music. 

The casting in this is also terrible. Apart from M, there is a serious lack of decent roles in this. The bad guy is (spoilers) is played by two actors who changes his looks half way through. The second half is Gustav Graves (Toby Stephens, son of Maggie Smith) a billionaire playboy with more toys that well ... a toy store. He is a really poxy, kind of whiny pom who is really kind of weak. Halle Berry as Jinx is also really awful. After Denise Richards in The World is Not Enough they should have learnt to not have Americans in it. There is a weird unsubtlety about both these actors. Most of Berry’s lines are corny one liner and by the last “I have got the THRUST of it” you want to give in. 

This was also the first Bond movie to use CGI. This may let you forgive it for looking bad because the technology was so new. But, this was out AFTER the Matrix, but looks like an early B Grade film. The ski scenes look really awful. In conjunction with the awful sets anything half decent to come of the film is quickly forgotten. The invisible car chase scene, with it John Woo fast forward scenes, is particularly terrible. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6w6FV8P7HXg

The last thing. Madonna is in it. She sings and “acts”. That is all.



Moonraker - 1979

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The first Bond in space. Now, I’ll admit that this is terrible. Really terrible. But, I REALLY love this film. This is classic Bond, but done so ridiculously that it is basically terrible. If this starred Mick Myers rather than Roger Moore we would laugh through it. 

This movie was an original Ian Fleming novel. The book written in 1954 is intended to be a film even before the movies were started. It was held off to be movie until 1979 basically due to the Star Wars films being so popular. This film lasted as one of the highest grossing Bond films for near 30 years, basically until Goldeneye came out. 

The premise is that a philanthropist Hugo Drax starts a space race, builds a space station and wants to rid the world of ‘normal’ humans and start a super human race, all completely unknown to the rest of the world. Now, does this sound ridiculous? It only gets better. 

Lets list a few, the girl in this film is called something hideously misogynist...  Holly Goodhead TICK. A gondola that turns into a hovercraft TICK. Pigeons that do double takes TICK. Bond wrestling a snake TICK. Mass space fight between US Marines Astronauts verses rebel Drax Astronauts TICK. Finally...  the ultimate henchman JAWS.... TICK.

Lets start with Jaws. First seen in The Spy Who Loved Me. He was meant to have died in that but changed because he was so popular. He is probably the most famous of henchmen behind Odd Job (Goldfinger, he throws a hat) and Nick Nack (Man with a Golden Gun). This giant man teeth have been replaced by metal which means he can bite through anything. In the original he was a monstrous unstoppable force. This is similar, but here is the ridiculous bit. He falls in love with a pigtailed blonde call Dolly. This redeems him, making him Bonds ally, helping him leave the space station. Pure brilliance. 

One really good thing about this is Hugo Drax. His bad guy is fantastic. Evil, scary and bearded. His pure race involves sexy woman and it looks like he has banned bras. He has some great lines, “I will leave you in your own private crematorium”. The ridiculous part is he does the pure bad guy thing. Captures Bond, shows him his base, tells him his plans then, in his wisdom leave Bond in a highly escapable situation without checking if his dead.


Never Say Never Again - 1983

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The last on my list is an odd one. Never Say Never Again is not really considered a Bond film. Due to some legal wrangling, a man named Kevin McClory held the rights to the Thunderball story. This was because he helped Ian Fleming write the original story. After the original Thunderball movie was written in 1965 he was contracted to not write another Thunderball movie for ten years. But, in 1975 when the contract was up he wrote another calling it Never Say Never Again. This is not sanctioned by EON productions, so not really considered a Bond film, but because it has the Bond character, Sean Connery is in it and it is awful, so I am considering it.

The reason it is awful is because of the above mentioned. Firstly, because the book didn’t have certain rights, a few things are left out of the movie, including Q (known in this movie as Alfy), the gun barrel scene, the opening music scene, “shaken not stirred” and the traditional Bond theme.  The other main bit is that Sean Connery was used. Now this sounds offensive, buts it true. 

Before this Sean Connery’s last Bond film was Diamonds Are Forever in 1971, during which he was 41. Bordering on old for a secret agent. In Never Say Never Again he was 53. Really pushing it. He had sworn never to do a Bond film again, but was persuaded with a $3 million paycheck plus a slice of the profits. In interviews he stated that he wanted to use the money to fund a school program in Scotland. This was a huge amount of money for a role at the time, but it paid off making a killing even though it was released in the same year as Octopussy.

Now, the film. Well, its forgettably bland. Little happens in it that doesn’t happen in Thunderball. It doesn’t really stand up well against the original, just looks older. Connerry looks old and tired of it all, his toupee or wig is dreadful. Rowan Atkinson’s cameo is pretty awful. The awkward sex scene with Kim Bassanger at the end is really awkward. She also does some weird swimming scene which is criminally wrong.

Notable Crappy –

While these are the worst, there are a two more, which I would tell people not to bother with. 

Die Another Day – Denise Richards as Christmas Jones is truly bad
The Living Daylights – More Dalton