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Cracking film. Glamorous, exciting and tense and also relitively faithful to Fleming's book. Connery is great as are Lotte Lenya, Anthoney Dawson and Robert Shaw. However IMO John Barry is the icing on the cake. His score really sets the mood for the rest of the film.
Agreed about John Barry's score! I loved "007 Takes the Lektor" and "James Bond Theme with Bongos". Those were very impressive!
I heartily agree with everything said above. I had the honour to see a film print in a rep house a while ago and it looked absolutely stunning. The plot is wonderfully constructed (and complex) and the chess metaphor is brilliant. Bianchi is one of the loveliest women I've ever seen and the audience wasn't sure of her motivation or allegience until the very end - which was a great pleasure to watch.
Connery is back and his confidence in the role seems greater than ever. The same year he does Marnie (literally and figuratively I suppose...), Connery gives us one of his very best performances as Bond ever. This is the film that demonstrates Bond’s talents as a spy and his skills as a survivor, assassin and clever strategist. Never bored or without some form of a challenge, never clumsy or arrogant but always surprisingly cool yet with a sixth sense, picking up threats and danger wherever he goes, Connery’s Bond in this film makes every man jealous. Granted, he has someone watching over him during the second act, but we need those few moments because they give Spectra extra credit as a powerful adversary for Bond.
How often indeed does the enemy feel like a force to be reckoned with? How often do you feel like there’s genuine danger involved? In this film, you do. Spectre’s careful planning and meticulous execution overshadow Bond’s exotic adventure. The game is played with lethal moves and treacherous pawns. FRWL benefits tremendously from this. For once we’re dealing with villains you can actually fear. For once we’re dealing with people who command respect because they swirl Bond from one deception into the other, amidst the fierce political and ethnic tensions that exist behind the iron curtain. While so many villains to come are laughable at best, FRWL takes some of the series’ most iconic and thus also most parodied nemeses and turns them into anything but a joke. For this reason alone, FRWL is one of the very best Bond films ever made.
And there’s even a female villain… a lesbian no less. Kicking against the establishment was one of the things that gave the Bond film their sexiness back in the day. What’s more, the villain isn’t a hot woman, like most of the others from the series. Klebb is portrayed as a woman of little beauty but then, we have Daniela Bianchi, a Hitchcockian blonde, to fill that position. Gorgeous and elegant, she’s a fine addition to the pantheon of Bond girls, replacing Honey’s sexiness with a much more prominent importance to the film’s story.
Let us also consider Peter Hunt’s wonderful editing and his finest contribution to the series: the PTS. What better way to begin a Bond film than with the gun barrel, a little adventure preceding the actual film and then the amazing opening titles. Speaking of which, while Maurice Binder is often credited as the man who gave us those sensual silhouettes of naked women and the amazingly creative artwork that turn the OT into special experiences of their own, it was actually Robert Brownjohn who came up with the enlightened idea to project the titles on a belly dancer’s well-shaped body. I find this man too often overlooked by critics. Back to Hunt though, with extra gasps of amazement for his brilliant editing of the infamous train fight, which stands in my book as the best man-to-man fight ever showed on film. Ted Moore’s cinematography is of course instrumental in giving the film its charming, exotic vibes.
Last, but not least, there’s John Barry, the man with the golden touch. Here we arrive at the clearest result of the rethinking I talked about in my opening paragraph. Listen to DN’s score. Then listen to the score for FRWL. The rise in quality reaches vertical slope – it’s that impressive. What a theme song! I’m in fact much more impressed by the instrumental version than by Matt Monroe’s contribution. The way the composition segues into the Bond Theme as Barry’s name is centred on screen, sends a cold chill down my spine each time again. It has the power of a prayer. Along with the fabulous 007 Theme and Barry’s confident use – not overuse! – of the Bond Theme, this score presents one of the golden gems in the Bond legacy. Adding seasoning to an already tasty dish, Barry’s music for FRWL cemented his pivotal role in the creation of the legendary and unmatched sound of Bond.
All things combined, FRWL nears perfection in every respect. Being only the second Bond film, it is outstanding in each art form present. People may call a film this old ‘boring’, ‘unwatchable’, ‘unpleasant’ or even downright ‘outdated’. They know not of what they speak. FRWL is my go-to reference when anyone gets irrationally critical of films from the old days. FRWL has stood the test of time far better than AVATAR or TRANSFORMERS ever will. Relying on skill, rather than on unethically large budgets, on real artists, rather than on computers, on one of Flemings best stories ever, rather than on cliché driven scripts with a level of predictability that exceeds my home cooking and plot holes one can fly the Millennium Falcon through, FRWL is an unparalleled work of art. It oozes 007 from start to finish, it immerses us in two of James Bond’s finest hours. This film redefined the spy genre, it lifted Connery’s Bond to immortality. This is the quintessential Bond film and my love for it cannot be disputed. A toast, to one of the best Bond films ever.
Speaking of 1964, that was when Marnie was at least released so I'm guessing Dimi must mean Sir Sean actually filmed it in 1963. I always think of GF when I think of Marnie.
As we were saying on the other thread,from the moment Bond and Tatiana board the Orient Express,until the moment they leave it,for me,its one of the best sequences in the whole Bond series of films.
I use that quote all the time when something happens to someone in real life,saying it the same way ConneryBond does haha !!
James Bond: Pardon me, do you have a match?
Kerim's Chauffeur: I use a lighter.
James Bond: Better still.
Kerim's Chauffeur: Until they go wrong.
James Bond: Exactly.
I still need to find someone who would respond appropriately if I asked them for a match...
And don't forget,the chauffeur is another one of Kerim's many sons !!