Casino
Royale was a well paced and superior addition to the James Bond franchise, shifting
dramatically from the exotic almost science fiction entries from
previous years to gripping spy narrative focusing more on espionage and
intrigue than gadgets and explosions. It was followed up by the more
traditional and forgettable Quantum of Solace before the final turn in
Skyfall with a deconstruction of Bond as a character and a Mission
Impossible style exploration of the destruction of Bond's support
structure.
The trilogy genuinely felt complete, which
tragically undermines Spectre's attempts to insert itself into the
previous narrative with heavy handed gimmicks and exposition based on an
increasingly implausible back story forced directly onto Bond's
character. Absolutely
everything that is wrong with this movie
revolves around attempting to tie it into the narrative of the complete
and well resolved trilogy leading up to it. If you're able to overlook
these issues, you're in for a treat to one of the best action movies of
the summer.
The movie opens with one of the best set piece
locations of any Bond movie to date, and explores it fantastically,
jumping right into one of the better action sequences in recent memory.
It's an aggressive and entertaining start that feels like it's ready to
move the story into interesting places with exciting speed. While the
movie fails to capture and maintain this forward momentum, this can
hardly be considered a failing as that would have made it one of the
rarest of action movies.
The acting is spot on, the
directing is well paced moving the story forward and keeping viewers
engaged. The cinematography is a treat with some of the best framed
locations and images since Mad Max: Fury Road earlier this year. The
music absolutely shines from beginning to end, and the cast of villains
is superb, though you may end up asking why Bond is so bad at killing
people despite frequently being labeled as an assassin quite heavy
handedly. The movie would be about half as long if Bond bothered to
check a pulse every once in a while when he gets a breather instead of
just running off without a second thought.
Spectre is a
perfectly respectable final outing for Daniel Craig as James Bond, but
it definitely isn't a high note for the series or for Craig's portrayal
of the character. This would have been better if it had been written to
stand on its own rather than trying to force its way into an already
complete narrative. Spectre will go down in history as relatively
forgettable because of that, but here and now it stands as some of the
most fun you'll have this year.
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