Showing posts with label Judi Dench. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judi Dench. Show all posts
Saturday, November 21, 2015
SPECTRE
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Columbia Pictures
Rated PG-13
Running time: 148 Minutes
Click below to watch a movie trailer of Spectre from YouTube.
In Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Columbia Pictures SPECTRE, James Bond, Daniel Craig, goes after the criminal organization that has been manipulating his life.
In the twenty-fourth James Bond film, Based on characters created by Ian Fleming - and the fourth appearance by Craig who is also the Co-Producer - Bond/Craig is undergoing an unofficial mission from the previous M - an uncredited Judi Dench - and recovers assassin Alessandro Cremona's ring that has a stylised octopus. The current M, Ralph Fiennes, then suspends Bond/Craig from field duty for Bond's/Craig's unauthorized mission. Meanwhile M/Fiennes undergoes a power struggle with C, Andrew Scott, as a result of domestic MI5 and foreign MI6 merging and C/Scott proposing that Britain joining a global electronic surveillance and intelligence initiative between nine member states - and shutting down the outdated licensed to kill '00' section. Bond/Craig disobeys M's/Fiennes's order of standing down from field duty and goes off to visit Cremona's widow, Monica Bellucci, and learns about Cremona's criminal organisation that he works with - SPECTRE.
While I liked the movie, I felt the movie could have been tighter in the story. It felt like it was dragging to me and did not seem as suspenseful to me as a result.
Monica Bellucci has the distinction of being the oldest Bond girl in the series. Bellucci is extremely hot and it is hard for me to believe she is 51 at the time of the movie's release. When Bond searches for the daughter of Jesper Christensen, who was a former member of a SPECTRE sub-organization, psychologist Lea Seydoux, you could tell that she would be a strong Bond girl character in the movie who could also kick butt. Although I felt that Seydoux fell in love with Bond/Craig a little too soon.
The title song by Sam Smith Writing's on the Wall does not have does not have the same name as the title of the movie, and so to me did not have as much of a connection to the movie as other Bond songs, while in actuality the title comes from a quote from Pierce Brosnan's GoldenEye. In a sense, this is appropriate as the title Spectre is not an Ian Fleming story title. Although the song did become the first Bond song to get to the UK Top of the Pops No. #1 rank. The music by Thomas Newman does have the feeling of a Bond movie.
I can understand the argument between human intelligence and electronic/signals intelligence. In the real world both are necessary - as sadly evidenced from recent events, especially when in the movie there was a plan to blow up a stadium. Now intelligence sources are strongly being going over in the real world as a result of intelligence failure during the recent events.
The movie references classic Bond films.
M/Fiennes, Q/Ben Whishaw, and Moneypenny/Naomie Harris return in the film to assist Bond/Craig, as well as cameo portraits of other Bond characters from Craig's Bond films appearing in the movie. I liked that Q/Whishaw had a scene outside of the lab. Dave Bautista's introduction in the movie was most impressive, and he only had one word of dialog in the entire movie. Christoph Waltz was great as the Bond villain who has been manipulating Bond throughout his entire career. It is incredible that the criminal organisation SPECTRE has not been seen since the 1971 movie Diamonds Are Forever.
I loved the Day of the Dead sequences in Mexico City and wished there was more of the references for Bond to what the parade meant to the people. There is a world-wide feeling to the movie as evidenced by the five different languages spoken in the movie with the subtitles, and the intelligence gathering alliance of countries, as well as the various locations - which includes London, Mexico City, Austria, Morocco, and Rome, Italy.
The film's budget made SPECTRE one of the most expensive movies ever made, yet there was only one over the top Bond action sequence that was slightly unbelievable, and one explosion that to me was a bit of an overkill. The rest of the action sequences were good. Aside from the Aston Martin DB10 coupe car for Bond, there was only one Bond gadget that was in the movie. SPECTRE is the second Bond film to be screened in IMAX, although it was not filmed in IMAX. The movie had the biggest opening of all time in the United Kingdom during it's first 007 week of release.
This is the first Bond film not to feature the trumpet playing of Derek Watkins who has played on every film since Dr. No. This is also the longest Bond film to date.
It is said that Craig will not come back to playing Bond, so this film had a finality of Craig's last film as Bond. It seemed appropriate that it referenced classic Bond films as a result, as well as cameo pictures of past stars in Craig's series of Bond films of which his series of movies was an overarching storyline.
Click below to watch another movie trailer of Spectre from YouTube.
James Bond will return.
Rated PG-13 for violence, sexual situations, language. Running time: 148 Minutes.
Pancho
All people smile in the same language.
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Sunday, November 11, 2012
SKYFALL
Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer
Rated PG-13
Running time: 143 Minutes
Click below to watch the Skyfall trailer.
In Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer's Skyfall, based on Ian Fleming's James Bond series, Daniel Craig as James Bond must protect M, Judi Dench, from becoming the victim of blond terrorist Javier Bardem.
With 2012 as the Fiftieth Anniversary of James Bond films, the relocation of MI6 headquarters to The Churchill Bunker System, and adding several new characters to the movie like Naomie Harris as intelligence officers being introduced in Skyfall - the movie will take the James Bond films into a new generation.
After Craig/Bond has been injured on an assignment to retrieve a computer drive, Dench comes under fire politically from Ralph Fiennes and Parliament when the drive was lost - as the drive contains a list of undercover agents embedded into terrorist organizations around the world. Watching an ousted agent being executed because his identity was released was rather sad. It was fortunate Craig was not on the list. Dench is also pursued by Bardem from Dench's past and wants revenge against her, targeting her office in one attack.
Dench finally gets to act in a Bond film as half of the movie is about her, thus making Dench one of the Bond girls. I have always felt that the Bond movies were wasting Dench's talents and this movie more than makes up for it. In Skyfall, Dench acts more like a Mother/authority figure to Craig/Bond as the movie explores their relationship. Young Ben Whishaw as the new Quartermaster is appropriately young and geeky enough to be the new Q. With more and more of technology going into information technology, as well as being more of a realistic film, there seems to be less need for gadgets in the field. As is tradition, Bond's gadgets are basically only used once in the movie and these are basically essential gadgets - like Bond's traditional Walther PPK gun, this time a PPK/S gun with palm-print encoding is given to Craig/Bond. The move toward signals intelligence espionage is a major issue for MI6 amongst Dench's inquiry after the lost of several human agents - as well as MI6 being hacked. But to paraphrase Dench, human intelligence is needed to fight in the darkness. While there are typical action chase scenes, having the first responders respond to terrorist aspect in London - such as the London Tube - gave rise to that fact of terrorism. The terrorism gives a more realistic feel - especially with real life newscasters from CNN and the BBC reporting on it - to the movie than other films in the Bond series.
While Craig drove several cars and motorcycles in Skyfall - it was great to see Bond's Aston-Martin DB5 car again, referring to Bond's roots as well as hearing the Bond music sting when you see the Aston-Martin, just as Skyfall refers to Bond's roots. With the first James Bond played by Scotsman Sean Connery - and with Ian Fleming's family once owning a Scottish estate, and Fleming loving the countryside of Scotland - having orphan Bond having Scottish roots seemed quite appropriate for a United Kingdom series. It was also nice knowing the names of Bond's parents. Skyfall is the third film in the unofficial trilogy of Bond's ancestry. As a tribute to the late Bond music composer John Barry, Judi Dench's house in the movie was the home of John Barry. It is funny that Fiennes is now part of two big franchise films, Harry Potter and James Bond. It was also cool to see the Agusta Westland Merlin AW101 helicopter used during the 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremonies with Daniel Craig and the Queen Elizabeth II of England and their Skyfall used in the movie Skyfall.
With Craig/Bond being injured, the movie plays up to the fact both medically and physically that he is not up to the role of being a 00 agent physically as he was before - with Fiennes questioning Craig's/Bond's fitness. This ties into Craig aging as Bond, in that he may not be able to physically play the role of Bond much longer. There is also a scene where Craig/Bond, recovering his health, is having a drinking contest with a scorpion. I could barely watch this scene because of the scorpion - especially when my mother was bitten by a scorpion when she was a teenager, and her leg is still swollen by it.
Skyfall is a non Ian Fleming James Bond title used for a James Bond film. As there are very few Bond titles left, I would not be surprised if the producers start using original titles for the start of the next 50 years of Bond movies. As it is, Skyfall does not connect to the previous Daniel Craig Bond films.
The film was influenced by the Batman Dark Knight series, and this was most obvious to me during some of the music score. Both films are very complicated films, although there were a couple of plot points in Skyfall that did not make sense. The Asian element of Skyfall is the most obvious element of being opposite of the English world, especially since Shanghai is basically on the opposite side of the world to London.
The opening title credits sequence, while connected to the themes and story of the movie, is perhaps the darkest Bond title sequence that I have ever seen. The title sequence was very macabre and made me think that Skyfall was going to be a voodoo movie like Live and Let Die.
As stated during the end credits -
Bond Will Return.
Rated PG-13 for violence, sexual situations, language. Running time: 143 Minutes.
Pancho
All people smile in the same language.
Pancho's Movie Reviews
Rated PG-13
Running time: 143 Minutes
Click below to watch the Skyfall trailer.
In Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer's Skyfall, based on Ian Fleming's James Bond series, Daniel Craig as James Bond must protect M, Judi Dench, from becoming the victim of blond terrorist Javier Bardem.
With 2012 as the Fiftieth Anniversary of James Bond films, the relocation of MI6 headquarters to The Churchill Bunker System, and adding several new characters to the movie like Naomie Harris as intelligence officers being introduced in Skyfall - the movie will take the James Bond films into a new generation.
After Craig/Bond has been injured on an assignment to retrieve a computer drive, Dench comes under fire politically from Ralph Fiennes and Parliament when the drive was lost - as the drive contains a list of undercover agents embedded into terrorist organizations around the world. Watching an ousted agent being executed because his identity was released was rather sad. It was fortunate Craig was not on the list. Dench is also pursued by Bardem from Dench's past and wants revenge against her, targeting her office in one attack.
Dench finally gets to act in a Bond film as half of the movie is about her, thus making Dench one of the Bond girls. I have always felt that the Bond movies were wasting Dench's talents and this movie more than makes up for it. In Skyfall, Dench acts more like a Mother/authority figure to Craig/Bond as the movie explores their relationship. Young Ben Whishaw as the new Quartermaster is appropriately young and geeky enough to be the new Q. With more and more of technology going into information technology, as well as being more of a realistic film, there seems to be less need for gadgets in the field. As is tradition, Bond's gadgets are basically only used once in the movie and these are basically essential gadgets - like Bond's traditional Walther PPK gun, this time a PPK/S gun with palm-print encoding is given to Craig/Bond. The move toward signals intelligence espionage is a major issue for MI6 amongst Dench's inquiry after the lost of several human agents - as well as MI6 being hacked. But to paraphrase Dench, human intelligence is needed to fight in the darkness. While there are typical action chase scenes, having the first responders respond to terrorist aspect in London - such as the London Tube - gave rise to that fact of terrorism. The terrorism gives a more realistic feel - especially with real life newscasters from CNN and the BBC reporting on it - to the movie than other films in the Bond series.
While Craig drove several cars and motorcycles in Skyfall - it was great to see Bond's Aston-Martin DB5 car again, referring to Bond's roots as well as hearing the Bond music sting when you see the Aston-Martin, just as Skyfall refers to Bond's roots. With the first James Bond played by Scotsman Sean Connery - and with Ian Fleming's family once owning a Scottish estate, and Fleming loving the countryside of Scotland - having orphan Bond having Scottish roots seemed quite appropriate for a United Kingdom series. It was also nice knowing the names of Bond's parents. Skyfall is the third film in the unofficial trilogy of Bond's ancestry. As a tribute to the late Bond music composer John Barry, Judi Dench's house in the movie was the home of John Barry. It is funny that Fiennes is now part of two big franchise films, Harry Potter and James Bond. It was also cool to see the Agusta Westland Merlin AW101 helicopter used during the 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremonies with Daniel Craig and the Queen Elizabeth II of England and their Skyfall used in the movie Skyfall.
With Craig/Bond being injured, the movie plays up to the fact both medically and physically that he is not up to the role of being a 00 agent physically as he was before - with Fiennes questioning Craig's/Bond's fitness. This ties into Craig aging as Bond, in that he may not be able to physically play the role of Bond much longer. There is also a scene where Craig/Bond, recovering his health, is having a drinking contest with a scorpion. I could barely watch this scene because of the scorpion - especially when my mother was bitten by a scorpion when she was a teenager, and her leg is still swollen by it.
Skyfall is a non Ian Fleming James Bond title used for a James Bond film. As there are very few Bond titles left, I would not be surprised if the producers start using original titles for the start of the next 50 years of Bond movies. As it is, Skyfall does not connect to the previous Daniel Craig Bond films.
The film was influenced by the Batman Dark Knight series, and this was most obvious to me during some of the music score. Both films are very complicated films, although there were a couple of plot points in Skyfall that did not make sense. The Asian element of Skyfall is the most obvious element of being opposite of the English world, especially since Shanghai is basically on the opposite side of the world to London.
The opening title credits sequence, while connected to the themes and story of the movie, is perhaps the darkest Bond title sequence that I have ever seen. The title sequence was very macabre and made me think that Skyfall was going to be a voodoo movie like Live and Let Die.
As stated during the end credits -
Bond Will Return.
Rated PG-13 for violence, sexual situations, language. Running time: 143 Minutes.
Pancho
All people smile in the same language.
Pancho's Movie Reviews
Saturday, November 12, 2011
J. Edgar
Warner Bros.
Rated R
Running time: 137 Minutes
In the true story of Warner Bros. J. Edgar, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation - J. Edgar Hoover, Leonardo DiCaprio, dictates his life's story to varous Federal agents.
Based on the true story of Hoover's life, and Directed and with Music by Clint Eastwood, this film is a very dramatic history of both J. Edgar and the FBI. It is amazing how much forensic proceedures J. Edgar developed in both library research and criminal science. These proceedures were very critical in the solving of the Charles Lindbergh baby kidnapping case. The film makes references to various criminal related cases the FBI was involved with, such as the notorious gangsters as well as the Charles Lindberg baby kidnapping. Throughout the 20th century, these cases of the FBI helped make J. Edgar a national hero. The private files J. Edgar supposedly kept of various political figures, including Presidents also made J. Edgar notorious and a person you did not want to make a political enemy of.
When a bomb explodes at the home of his boss, J. Edgar (DiCaprio) becomes driven throughout the rest of his life in dealing both with radical groups, as well as the subversives against America, and also in dealing in criminal science - such as having criminal's fingerprints being registered and centralized at the FBI. J. Edgar is soon made Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and has a career that lasts half a century and eight Presidents. The film goes back and forth between the mature characters of the present, and their younger selves. J. Edgar struggles in gaining respect for the Bureau, in that he has strict standards for his agents, getting proper jurisdiction and funding for the Bureau during Congressional Hearings - as well as getting loyalty and respect for himself. As a result, J. Edgar's biography "The Untitled FBI Story" is rather embellished with stories about J. Edgar.
The film also deals with J. Edgar's relationship with his mother Judi Dench, and his "daffodil" relationship with agent Clyde Tolson, Armie Hammer. While I knew of this relationship from various studies, the relationship was subtly played in the movie. Although it is interesting J. Edgar originally wanted a relationship with his new secretary Helen Gandy, Naomi Watts. However Watts only wanted a business relationship with J. Edgar. As a result, J. Edgar becomes uncomfortable with girls, and has a different relationship - although the FBI continues to deny any such portrayals of J. Edgar. It is ironic of having Armie Hammer in the movie when Armie Hammer's great-grandfather, tycoon Armand Hammer, was suspected by J. Edgar Hoover of having Soviet ties.
There was definitely an older crowd for this movie in the theaters. I am not sure if that is because of Clint Eastwood, or that the older crowd is more familiar with J. Edgar Hoover. Most probably it is because of the relationship the older crowd has with J. Edgar despite the star power of Leonardo DiCaprio. J. Edgar was the reason I saw the movie. I would not be surprised if DiCaprio is nominated for an Oscar for his performance in this movie.
Rated R for langauge, violence, and sexual situations. Running time: 137 Minutes.
Pancho
All people smile in the same language.
Pancho's Movie Reviews
Rated R
Running time: 137 Minutes
In the true story of Warner Bros. J. Edgar, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation - J. Edgar Hoover, Leonardo DiCaprio, dictates his life's story to varous Federal agents.
Based on the true story of Hoover's life, and Directed and with Music by Clint Eastwood, this film is a very dramatic history of both J. Edgar and the FBI. It is amazing how much forensic proceedures J. Edgar developed in both library research and criminal science. These proceedures were very critical in the solving of the Charles Lindbergh baby kidnapping case. The film makes references to various criminal related cases the FBI was involved with, such as the notorious gangsters as well as the Charles Lindberg baby kidnapping. Throughout the 20th century, these cases of the FBI helped make J. Edgar a national hero. The private files J. Edgar supposedly kept of various political figures, including Presidents also made J. Edgar notorious and a person you did not want to make a political enemy of.
When a bomb explodes at the home of his boss, J. Edgar (DiCaprio) becomes driven throughout the rest of his life in dealing both with radical groups, as well as the subversives against America, and also in dealing in criminal science - such as having criminal's fingerprints being registered and centralized at the FBI. J. Edgar is soon made Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and has a career that lasts half a century and eight Presidents. The film goes back and forth between the mature characters of the present, and their younger selves. J. Edgar struggles in gaining respect for the Bureau, in that he has strict standards for his agents, getting proper jurisdiction and funding for the Bureau during Congressional Hearings - as well as getting loyalty and respect for himself. As a result, J. Edgar's biography "The Untitled FBI Story" is rather embellished with stories about J. Edgar.
The film also deals with J. Edgar's relationship with his mother Judi Dench, and his "daffodil" relationship with agent Clyde Tolson, Armie Hammer. While I knew of this relationship from various studies, the relationship was subtly played in the movie. Although it is interesting J. Edgar originally wanted a relationship with his new secretary Helen Gandy, Naomi Watts. However Watts only wanted a business relationship with J. Edgar. As a result, J. Edgar becomes uncomfortable with girls, and has a different relationship - although the FBI continues to deny any such portrayals of J. Edgar. It is ironic of having Armie Hammer in the movie when Armie Hammer's great-grandfather, tycoon Armand Hammer, was suspected by J. Edgar Hoover of having Soviet ties.
There was definitely an older crowd for this movie in the theaters. I am not sure if that is because of Clint Eastwood, or that the older crowd is more familiar with J. Edgar Hoover. Most probably it is because of the relationship the older crowd has with J. Edgar despite the star power of Leonardo DiCaprio. J. Edgar was the reason I saw the movie. I would not be surprised if DiCaprio is nominated for an Oscar for his performance in this movie.
Rated R for langauge, violence, and sexual situations. Running time: 137 Minutes.
Pancho
All people smile in the same language.
Pancho's Movie Reviews
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