★★★★
Martin Campbell has something of a spotty directing record,
but if you want to reboot a franchise like this one, Casino Royale establishes
him as a go-to guy. By the second
James Bond film, To Russia with Love, Bond films were already ossified into a
formula: an athletic, handsome, womanizing 007 who isn’t afraid to work outside
established procedures; beautiful women who are genuine love interests or femme
fatales; big action sequences; international settings; and outrageous
technology. And there’s the "stirred, not
shaken" martini and “Bond. James Bond.” And as soon as the formula was set, the films turned
to parody and clever variation to draw their crowds.
The achievement here is that Campbell manages to follow the
recipe perfectly but still keep us in the film. Daniel Craig is strikingly handsome and
athletic, and he’s lit and dressed in clothing throughout to set off his body. The women he encounters are smoky beauties with
large eyes and beautiful clothes.
Campbell’s action sequences are riveting, too. The opening chase scene involves a suspect running through African streets and then being pursued through a construction site
with leaps and balancing that maintain suspense; it concludes in compound with
Bond and his bad guy facing a small army.
It’s vintage Bond, but amped up beyond showmanship to genuine
engagement. Shortly later, there's a pursuit though Miami
airport and near the end, a shootout in a sinking Venetian palace--all great action
sequences. And as Bond speeds though
various international locales, from Madagascar to London to Miami to the Czech
Republic to Venice, he’s got his Aston Martin, which happily includes a defibrillator.
But more important to the success here than renewing the Bond
formula is Campbell’s decision to give us the elements straight, without
irony. Craig’s Bond is completely
invested the action he’s involved in and rarely delivers a line of dialog with
self-conscious parody. Craig shows us a
vulnerable Bond from the beginning of the film as we watch his first kills and
see him banged and scarred from the initial chase sequence. And Craig takes us into Bond, too, feeling
his anxiety at the card game and his growing love for Vesper Lynd. As the film approaches its conclusion, we
feel real, personal stakes for 007 in a way that very few Bond films have been able
to make us feel. The Bond here has a sincerity and depth that we've hardly seen since Dr. No, and this engaging authenticity inspires life in a film recipe that was tired.
Casino Royale brings together an outstanding directorial
performance from Campbell and an exceptional performance from Craig to create
one of the best films of the franchise.
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