(First published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard, January 16.)
The two most-hyped films showing on New Zealand screens this
summer were Skyfall and The Hobbit. I can’t muster the stamina
to sit through all two hours 50 minutes of Peter Jackson’s latest epic (more on
that later), but I did see the new James Bond movie.
I admit I went with an ulterior motive. Several years ago I
had seen Casino Royale, the first
Bond film starring Daniel Craig, and thought it was a stinker. I walked out, as
I often do these days if a film hasn’t hooked me within the first 30 minutes.
I couldn’t understand why so many critics were hailing Craig
as the greatest Bond since Sean Connery. His acting style, if it could be
dignified with that description, was so wooden it would have made a plank look
animated.
I was similarly unimpressed with his one-dimensional
performance in the only other film I have seen him in, a World War II action
drama called Defiance, in which he
played a Jewish resistance fighter.
But the release of Skyfall
saw Craig again being lauded by the critics, some of whom even suggested he had
now seized Connery’s mantle as the greatest Bond ever. So I went along to check him out again,
expecting to be as unimpressed as I had been with Casino Royale. After all, there are few things more satisfying than
having one’s prejudices confirmed.
I wasn’t prepared for what began to unfold on screen. The
first half-hour of Skyfall is a
cinematic tour de force. From the spellbinding title credits (featuring Adele’s
theme song, arguably the best Bond tune since Nancy Sinatra sang You Only Live Twice in 1967) through the
obligatory opening high-speed chase, I was swept along on an exhilarating ride
that reminded me of those memorable action sequences in the original Indiana
Jones films.
It was superbly filmed and brilliantly edited. If any Bond
film has produced a better opening pursuit, I haven’t seen it.
What’s more, I found myself warming to Craig, who seemed
less of an automaton than in his first outing in the role. He even showed
traces of the trademark humour familiar from earlier Bonds.
But sadly (and you must have known there was a “but”
coming), that first 30 minutes or so represented the best of the film. What
followed was formulaic Bond stuff – much of it highly implausible, as you’d
expect, but entertaining enough: exotic locations, beautiful but untrustworthy
women and, of course, an evil and fiendishly clever mastermind (played by
Javier Bardem, whom many will recall as the icily efficient assassin in the
Coen Brothers’ No Country For Old Men).
Had the director of Skyfall
(Englishman Sam Mendes) called it quits after, say, 110 minutes, he might have
had a respectable film – not a great film, but a respectable one, given the
limitations of the genre. The action scenes were done well enough to take your
mind off the plot, which grew sillier as it went on.
But just when I expected the film to neatly resolve itself,
it lurched into a ludicrous, drawn-out climactic sequence that gave the
impression of having been tacked on as an afterthought. If the first half-hour
of Skyfall is as good as Bond films
get, the last half-hour is preposterously, tediously bad.
It sees Bond and his boss, M, implausibly lead the villain
and his gang of cardboard-cutout henchmen to a remote, abandoned Scottish
mansion – the Skyfall of the title – where Bond had spent his childhood. There
Bond is reunited with the faithful old family gamekeeper, played by Albert
Finney, and together the three of them make a stand against the bad guys
(although why they didn’t just call in British security forces to do the job
isn’t explained).
I was going to describe Finney as a distinguished actor but
it should really be “formerly distinguished”, since the 70-something thespian
may not live long enough for his reputation to recover from this load of hokum.
His performance is risibly bad and you can only wonder what possessed him to
accept the part. He surely doesn’t need the moolah.
Bardem too will have some way to go to regain the respect he
previously enjoyed as a serious actor, but at least he has time on his side. In
Skyfall he plays a pantomime villain,
more comical than scary.
Having said all that, I accept that if I had a chosen a
career as a film director, I would have been a wretched failure. Films that I
think are absurd
show how out of touch I am with public taste. Skyfall is already one of the most
successful releases ever.
Avatar, which I
considered laughably bad, was the highest-grossing film of all time. Peter
Jackson’s King Kong, which was just
as silly, made $550 million and was one of the top five films of 2005.
Speaking of Jackson, I had intended to see The Hobbit but was put off after
watching bits of his overblown trilogy The Lord
of the Rings on television during the Christmas-New Year period. I
don’t think I can bring myself to sit through another in the same mould.
Jackson is a clever man who has done great things for the
New Zealand film industry, but his films are simply noisy spectacles – all
sound and fury, signifying nothing, to quote Shakespeare. But clearly that’s
what appeals to modern cinema audiences, judging by the list of the all-time top 20 box office
earners.
Movie fans don’t want believable, human stories and nuanced
characters; they demand action, noise, fantasy and special effects by the truckload.
And directors oblige, making films that not only insult the intelligence but
are overlong and undisciplined because the directors can’t bring themselves to
leave anything out.
The best two films I saw in 2012 were the American black
comedy Bernie, starring Jack Black
(which surprised me, because I’d never been a fan of his), and a German Cold
War-era drama entitled Barbara, featuring
a very good actress you’ve never heard of.
Both were low-budget, character-driven stories that used no
special effects and didn’t bombard their audiences with cringe-inducing noise.
Both were immensely satisfying and needless to say, went virtually unnoticed.
4 comments:
Perhaps you should read the film reviews of Peter Calde. Then do exactly the opposit! He said that 'Another Year' was an excellent film and I thought it the most tedious thing since 'Summer Holiday'- my all time worst film. He said 'Quartet' was only worth 2 stars and I thought it delightful if lightweight. So his reviews are valuable in one way...........
"His acting style, if it could be dignified with that description, was so wooden it would have made a plank look animated."
That description could be used for Ben Affleck in Argo, a simple film with a one trick plot.
It was sad to see Sean Penn almost ruin his deserved reputation as a good actor (Milk, Mystic River) by his over-acting in the cartoon-style Gangster Squad, whose stupid and anti-social plot is redeemed only by the presence of those great cars and planes of the 1940s.
Skyfall is rubbish but of the entertaining type, I suppose. How Craig can be considered for anything but part of the background amazes me. Which is why I work for a salary and he has a Swiss bank account. Quartet is wonderful. Terrific film, well acted and left me feeling good. Which is what I want from a movie. Les Miserables probably an acquired taste. I loved it.
I offered to take my children to The Hobbit and was surprised that even they were reluctant to sit through another 3 hours of Peter Jackson's interminable fantasy films.
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