Great Film: GoldenEye
Brosnan helps resurrect Bond in an "A" effort
Much had changed for James Bond since Sean Connery first took the role in
1962. The series had taken a turn for the worse in the seventies, when five
films were made but zero good ones were. Still, the public was willing to
grant Bond limitless amnesty that decade, even as his escapades grew less
and less exciting and more and more campy with each new film. The 70s came
and went, ushering in the 80s, which kicked off well with 1981's "For Your
Eyes Only." However, it went all downhill from there as the public finally
stopped tolerating the bad movies and his popularity tanked in favor of
superior competition. Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger became mega
stars during that time, and the emergence Indiana Jones was making Bond look
dull and decrepit by comparison. Tim Burton's summer sweep of the cinemas
with "Batman" in 1989 exacerbated Bond's woes, and when legal disputes arose
between the production company and the studio shortly thereafter, it
appeared that Bond had finally died his horrible but well deserved
death.
When the legal issues were finally put to rest in 1994, it was announced
that another Bond film was going to be made, but not with erstwhile
incumbent Timothy Dalton. Pierce Brosnan was given the role after being
forced to reject it in the late eighties, and production began. The success
of the film was crucial. If it lacked spark or came across as campy, it was
likely that Bond would be finished forever. With the stakes in mind, the
Broccoli family (the Bond producers) hired an all-new creative team and set
to work re-establishing 007 in a new era.
I knew none of that when I first saw the film in 1999. It was my
introduction to the world of James Bond, and was a truly an exceptional
first handshake. Knowing what I know now, and seeing the Bond films I have
seen now, I still find it as worthwhile as I did then, and I am forever
thankful that it was made well enough to not only resuscitate Bond, but
propel him into the nineties with the momentum of a blazing
fastball.
The film opens in the eighties, ironically, with a scene depicting the Bond
and Agent 006, real name Alec Trevelyan, being detected inside a Soviet
chemical weapons factory. This section also introduces the character of
Ourumov (Gottfried John), who murders Alec seemingly on a
whim.
Nine years later, Bond meets an appealing young lady (Famke Janssen) while
driving...make that playfully racing, near Monte Carlo. Suspicious, he
follows her to a nearby casino where he finds out that her name is Xenia
Onatopp and she carries ties to the Janus crime syndicate in St. Petersburg.
He chases Xenia when he suspects an imminent crime, but is not in time to
avert her theft of the Tiger--a helicopter that is hardened to all forms of
electronic interference.
Back at MI-6 headquarters, the Tiger is spotted via satellite at Russian
satellite control facility, and it soon becomes obvious that the copter is
merely part of a grander scheme to steal a scary satellite weapon called
GoldenEye. What it does can be described with words, but not with as much
clarity as seeing it in the movie (there are lapses in the visuals here, but
the sight is so impressive that they hardly matter). Bond then departs for
St. Petersburg to find the Janus head man (Sean Bean) and stop him from
using GoldenEye on a more vulnerable target. Much mystery surrounds the
identity of Janus, but it is in the trailer and I suspect most people know
it by now.
There are several reasons that "GoldenEye" is the best Bond film made in
many, many years. The first is the tone, which has ushered out all of the
giddy goofiness of Roger Moore's films and assumed one reminiscent of the
earliest Bond films. The sets, the camera work and the dialogue all come
across as subtle, subconscious reminders of why Bond became so beloved to
begin with.
I always felt there were two major problems with the Bonds of the seventies
and eighties. The first is the inane tone (exception: "For Your Eyes
Only,"), a point I am driving into the ground. With the same exception, they
also featured uniformly unexciting (read it: bad) action plus horrendous
acting. There are light moments in "GoldenEye," as there should be, but the
correct tone is never compromised.
The only problem is that there is a little too much padding in the middle.
The story is well told, although there is a meeting with Bond and Valentin
Zukovsky (reprised by Robbie Coltrane in "The World is Not Enough") that has
no significance to the advancement of the story. It is unnecessary and
causes the film to drag some. After Bond meets Janus, though, prepare for
the film to take off, as there will be little rest from there on
out.
Just like in the early Bonds, the acting transcends the genre. Pierce
Brosnan is the clear focal point, and is mostly successful. He seems too
reserved at times, as if he is a little timid at acting his best for fear it
might look bad. He does not lack charm, though, because there is something
about Pierce that makes him the ultimate ladies man on screen and off.
More successful is Sean Bean as James's opponent. Bean brings cold, subtle
intensity to the role that shows off the acting skills that got him cast in
"The Fellowship of the Ring." General Ourumov, who is in bed with Janus,
provides a second bad guy. Gottfried John portrays him as a demonstrative
brute, and his style provides a fine foil to Bean's controlled anger. Alan
Cumming plays an evil computer nerd who provides most the light moments I
referred to earlier. Fellow X-Man Famke Janssen's character is downright
demented, and will not be forgotten easily.
My friends, I have just explained why "GoldenEye" is a most superior Bond
film that brought Agent 007 back from the dead and won over a new generation
of fans. The best way I can think of to conclude this review is to comment
on the film's conclusion. At one point it involves a brawl between Bond and
Janus (who is referred to by his real name by that time) that buries just
about every other one in the series. While it does quite not take the gold
from the fistfight that opens "Thunderball," is does serve as a final
reminder that Bond is indeed back, and that he is once again a force best
not ignored.
Cast
- James Bond played by Pierce Brosnan
- Defense Minister Dmitri Mishkin played by Tchéky Karyo
- M played by Judi Dench
- Jack Wade played by Joe Don Baker
- Miss Moneypenny played by Samantha Bond
- Alec Trevelyan played by Sean Bean
- Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky played by Robbie Coltrane







