Unless you've been hiding under a very large soundproof rock over the last couple of weeks, you will be very much aware that the long awaited 23rd film in the James Bond 007 franchise, Skyfall, will be released on Friday. Of course, this blog will deliver its verdict on the film in due time, but for now, here is the blog's list of all Bond films in what it believes to be the favourites. Not the greatest, mind. The favourites.
22. Die Another Day - the film that killed the franchise for a few years, and sadly ended Pierce Brosnan's decent run up till then.
21. Moonraker - when Bond tries to jump on a band wagon, it generally gets it wrong. This is the case in this post Star Wars effort. An okay villain and lots of sexism.
20. Diamonds Are Forever - Sean Connery returned to the film that starts the tradition of Bond girls IQs been smaller than their bra sizes; Charles Grey's Blofeld, though amusing, should be a different character.
19. Quantum Of Solace - not as much of a mess as some would suggest, but a complicated plot doesn't help; the theme song is awful too.
18. The Man With The Golden Gun - a fantastic villain played by Christopher Lee is the only decent thing in this tired film, the last for the partnership of Albert Brocolli and Harry Saltzman.
17. A View To A Kill - A mixture of good and awful; Christopher Walken is blistering as the villain, and Grace Jones adds glamour, but Roger Moore looks very very old and the less said about the Bond girl in this one the better.
16. License To Kill - A dark, gritty, edgy film that tried too hard to be the same as the other action films around it; despite some great performances, the film is let down by the bandwagon curse again.
15. Octopussy - A colourful caper that should have been Moore's last; a good, old-fashioned romp from an author who knows how to write good, old fashioned romps.
14. For Your Eyes Only - the darkest of Moore's films, a Cold War flick that strips back the gadgets and throws away the meglomaniacs for once.
13. The Living Daylights - Timothy Dalton's debut is better than people remember, though it suffers from a lack of a strong villain.
12.Thunderball - The first Bond film to hit a bum note; though the underwater scenes would have been impressive back in the day,they are too long now and look slightly dated.
11. Live And Let Die - Moore's first Bond film is a fantastic adventure, filled with excellent bad guys and great class, though sadly not the greatest of Bond girls.
10.The World Is Not Enough - The most spy of Brosnan's Bond films, with a plot that twists and turns and a wonderful cast; shame about the nuclear scientist in hot pants
9. You Only Live Twice - the larger than life film that introduced Blofeld in all his bald glory, with some beautiful location shots in Japan
8. The Spy Who Loved Me - Moore's best; an exciting, engaging film that proved that Brocolli could produce on his own.
7. From Russia With Love - perhaps the most Cold War of all the Bonds; a faithful adaptation of a great novel with an excellent performance from Connery.
6. Casino Royale - Daniel Craig saves Bond; this is a great modern interpretation of the character that makes poker exciting.
5. On Her Majesty's Secret Service - the most misunderstood Bond film with the most misunderstood Bond; George Lazenby's only folly was himself. A wonderful film with a heartbreaking end
4. Goldfinger - summed up simply by the title. Big, bold, Bond. Glorious stuff.
3. GoldenEye - Brosnan's debut is fast, exciting, surprising and intelligent; a great way to show Bond could survive in the post Cold War world.
2. Dr No - the first Bond film is one of the best; it introduces so much into the cultural mainstream and establishes a formula that many try to copy and fail superbly.
1. Tomorrow Never Dies - not the greatest, but a hell of a lot of fun. Brosnan is very comfortable in the role, the storyline is topical even today, and the villain, sometimes mocked, is wonderfully psychopathic.
Tuesday, 23 October 2012
Saturday, 13 October 2012
Culture Section Round Up
Every so often, this blog will take a step back and focus on some of the stories circulating the cultural world, a few tasty morsels for us all to chew on.
In the theatre world, the worst kept secret on Broadway is finally out; Tom Hanks is doing a play. If you're a multi-millionaire over there be sure to book your tickets. Us honest, hard working plebs may not stand a chance of even sniffing the box office, let alone going to see it. Ticket prices on Broadway are now higher than they've ever been before, making it even more of a financial and, yes, creative risk to put any kind of show on over there. Although the West End is still fairly affordable, it is, just like Off Broadway establishments, the little theatres and the touring companies that have become the true pioneers now. Just look at Betty Blue Eyes last year; a musical loved by the critics, but it never stood a chance because people weren't buying the tickets. That's not the show's fault; the blame sadly has to lie on the producers, an astonishing claim to make I know since one of them is Cameron Mackintosh. In the 1980s Mackintosh was incredibly savvy with the way he produced his mega-hits; start on the West End, then transfer to Broadway when you've got enough money from the West End show. All producers need to focus on now is exactly that step, but for Broadway read West End, for West End read little theatres.
Not that that's stopping new productions moving in there. The star of the new production of Charlie And The Chocolate Factory was announced yesterday; surprisingly, it wasn't Russel Brand. Perhaps he failed his audition at the Olympic Closing Ceremony. The star to play Willy Wonka is Douglas Hodge, a very good actor who's already had a success in musicals and won a string of awards recently for his performance in La Cage Aux Folles. He also seems more like the kind of actor that Sam Mendes, the show's director, would go for. And Sam Mendes directs good musicals: Cabaret, Company, etc. Hopes are high for this one, even if one could be cynical at another Dahl musical after the huge success of Matilda. That show is being put on soon on the Great White Way, while we're inheriting two of their success stories: this year's Tony award winning Once, based on the gorgeous film of the same name, and (finally) The Book of Mormon, the (again) Tony award winner from the creators of South Park and one part of Avenue Q's creative team. Both these shows will be hitting our shores next Spring. The money is on Mormon to last longer than Once, but maybe it will surprise us. After all it's going to the Phoenix which is showing the last few weeks of its hit Blood Brothers. Stranger things have happened.
****
The theme tune for the new Bond film, Skyfall, by Adele has been released; it is already ten times better than the last effort by Alicia Keys and Jack White. It retains the Barry-esque qualities of so many great themes that echoed throughout the franchise over the 50 years. Pressure now on Tomas Newman to compose a score worthy of not just John Barry but also David Arnold, whose work on the last six Bond films has been superb.
And on the subject of music, this blog will soon be submitting its reviews of three scorching new albums: The XX, Muse and Ellie Goulding.
****
This blog has stayed silent up to now on the still developing horror story that is the allegations of sexual abuse by the late Jimmy Saville towards young girls in the 60s and 70s; it will remain to do so, save for this piece here. Last night (Friday 12th October) the BBC television comedy panel show Have I Got News For You took a brave step and focused a large part of their new series opener on the story. There were few laughs (obviously) and some footage from an archived episode with Saville that was chilling with hindsight. This blog applauds the programme makers for taking this decision; it meant that the panel could have a proper discussion about the story and the treatment over the last few weeks of the BBC by the media. As one of the guests, Graham Linehan, pointed out, the media are as just as much to fault over the scandal as the BBC are, if any. And for someone whose work has only really appeared on Channel 4 to come to the defence of the BBC, that's pretty decent. It was a risky step and was taken wisely, and all of the makers should be congratulated.
In the theatre world, the worst kept secret on Broadway is finally out; Tom Hanks is doing a play. If you're a multi-millionaire over there be sure to book your tickets. Us honest, hard working plebs may not stand a chance of even sniffing the box office, let alone going to see it. Ticket prices on Broadway are now higher than they've ever been before, making it even more of a financial and, yes, creative risk to put any kind of show on over there. Although the West End is still fairly affordable, it is, just like Off Broadway establishments, the little theatres and the touring companies that have become the true pioneers now. Just look at Betty Blue Eyes last year; a musical loved by the critics, but it never stood a chance because people weren't buying the tickets. That's not the show's fault; the blame sadly has to lie on the producers, an astonishing claim to make I know since one of them is Cameron Mackintosh. In the 1980s Mackintosh was incredibly savvy with the way he produced his mega-hits; start on the West End, then transfer to Broadway when you've got enough money from the West End show. All producers need to focus on now is exactly that step, but for Broadway read West End, for West End read little theatres.
Not that that's stopping new productions moving in there. The star of the new production of Charlie And The Chocolate Factory was announced yesterday; surprisingly, it wasn't Russel Brand. Perhaps he failed his audition at the Olympic Closing Ceremony. The star to play Willy Wonka is Douglas Hodge, a very good actor who's already had a success in musicals and won a string of awards recently for his performance in La Cage Aux Folles. He also seems more like the kind of actor that Sam Mendes, the show's director, would go for. And Sam Mendes directs good musicals: Cabaret, Company, etc. Hopes are high for this one, even if one could be cynical at another Dahl musical after the huge success of Matilda. That show is being put on soon on the Great White Way, while we're inheriting two of their success stories: this year's Tony award winning Once, based on the gorgeous film of the same name, and (finally) The Book of Mormon, the (again) Tony award winner from the creators of South Park and one part of Avenue Q's creative team. Both these shows will be hitting our shores next Spring. The money is on Mormon to last longer than Once, but maybe it will surprise us. After all it's going to the Phoenix which is showing the last few weeks of its hit Blood Brothers. Stranger things have happened.
****
The theme tune for the new Bond film, Skyfall, by Adele has been released; it is already ten times better than the last effort by Alicia Keys and Jack White. It retains the Barry-esque qualities of so many great themes that echoed throughout the franchise over the 50 years. Pressure now on Tomas Newman to compose a score worthy of not just John Barry but also David Arnold, whose work on the last six Bond films has been superb.
And on the subject of music, this blog will soon be submitting its reviews of three scorching new albums: The XX, Muse and Ellie Goulding.
****
This blog has stayed silent up to now on the still developing horror story that is the allegations of sexual abuse by the late Jimmy Saville towards young girls in the 60s and 70s; it will remain to do so, save for this piece here. Last night (Friday 12th October) the BBC television comedy panel show Have I Got News For You took a brave step and focused a large part of their new series opener on the story. There were few laughs (obviously) and some footage from an archived episode with Saville that was chilling with hindsight. This blog applauds the programme makers for taking this decision; it meant that the panel could have a proper discussion about the story and the treatment over the last few weeks of the BBC by the media. As one of the guests, Graham Linehan, pointed out, the media are as just as much to fault over the scandal as the BBC are, if any. And for someone whose work has only really appeared on Channel 4 to come to the defence of the BBC, that's pretty decent. It was a risky step and was taken wisely, and all of the makers should be congratulated.
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
"Drive" Review
A Driver (Ryan Gosling) makes his money by Hollywood stunt work by day and the occasional get away job at night; he's good, the best of the best. He strikes up a friendship with a young mother (Carey Mulligan) whose husband, once released from prison, is targeted for protection money by vicious mobsters. The driver agrees to help him, but when things go wrong, he must go to darker lengths to protect his new friends...
Drive is an awesome film; powerful, brooding and at times shockingly violent, it is a slow crescendo of tension that ultimately comes to a satisfying, if slightly ambiguous conclusion. Nicolas Winding Refn has created an ode to the great movies of the mid-80s, noticeable by the titles of the film and the synthesised soundtrack by Cliff Martinez which never invades the atmosphere of the film.
Refn is aided by fabulous performances; Mulligan proves even further how good an actress she can be, while Bryan Cranston adds to his Breaking Bad persona with a crooked garage owner who makes more trouble than he realises. The film's protagonists are a wonderful mixture of brute force and bizarre, Ron Pearlman's more archetypal gangster matched by a unique performance from Albert Brooks, who shocks as a quiet psychopath.
But the film belongs to Gosling; his performance is quiet and thoughtful, rarely raising his voice or fists unless absolutely necessary. He oozes cool, particularly in the stunning first ten minutes of the film where we see him take part in a getaway job - the watch on the steering wheel,the police radio by his side, the streets of the city perfectly memorised. It's a wonderful job that shows just how versatile an actor he really is.
The film looks beautiful, wonderfully photographed and lit eerily with the lights of the city nightlife. The violence, when it happens, echos the violence in The Godfather - it is essential to the plot, no matter how sudden or shocking; one such example involving Christina Hendricks, who has a small but vital role in the failed robbery, a role that perhaps could have been a little bigger. But the violent acts move the story along, as the driver goes from helpful, potential love interest to Carey Mulligan's mother to the vengeful saviour we see at the end of the film.
Drive is brilliant, evocative and stunning all in one; though it perhaps wastes a couple of the talents involved in it, and is a little too short (not often a criticism for a film), it is still a major production that needs to be seen.
8/10
Drive is an awesome film; powerful, brooding and at times shockingly violent, it is a slow crescendo of tension that ultimately comes to a satisfying, if slightly ambiguous conclusion. Nicolas Winding Refn has created an ode to the great movies of the mid-80s, noticeable by the titles of the film and the synthesised soundtrack by Cliff Martinez which never invades the atmosphere of the film.
Refn is aided by fabulous performances; Mulligan proves even further how good an actress she can be, while Bryan Cranston adds to his Breaking Bad persona with a crooked garage owner who makes more trouble than he realises. The film's protagonists are a wonderful mixture of brute force and bizarre, Ron Pearlman's more archetypal gangster matched by a unique performance from Albert Brooks, who shocks as a quiet psychopath.
But the film belongs to Gosling; his performance is quiet and thoughtful, rarely raising his voice or fists unless absolutely necessary. He oozes cool, particularly in the stunning first ten minutes of the film where we see him take part in a getaway job - the watch on the steering wheel,the police radio by his side, the streets of the city perfectly memorised. It's a wonderful job that shows just how versatile an actor he really is.
The film looks beautiful, wonderfully photographed and lit eerily with the lights of the city nightlife. The violence, when it happens, echos the violence in The Godfather - it is essential to the plot, no matter how sudden or shocking; one such example involving Christina Hendricks, who has a small but vital role in the failed robbery, a role that perhaps could have been a little bigger. But the violent acts move the story along, as the driver goes from helpful, potential love interest to Carey Mulligan's mother to the vengeful saviour we see at the end of the film.
Drive is brilliant, evocative and stunning all in one; though it perhaps wastes a couple of the talents involved in it, and is a little too short (not often a criticism for a film), it is still a major production that needs to be seen.
8/10
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)