Review by Rocky Balboa
It
would have been enough just inserting a fresh face,
Daniel Craig, as 007 in "Casino Royale"
to give a whole new look and feel to the James Bond
franchise.
Yet taking the world's greatest spy back to his
roots as a raw, impressionable brute whose cockiness
at times fails him and who can lose his heart to a
woman was a keen stroke of intelligence.
"Casino Royale" may weigh in a bit lighter
than many of the 20 preceding Bond flicks on explosions,
gunplay, fisticuffs and other action.
What it does have in those regards is riveting,
clever and well-choreographed, yet the appeal this
time lays much heavier on Bond as a person, on his
development as one of cinema's deadliest killers and
most heartless womanizers.
Craig plays Bond at a crossroads, which could lead
him deeper down the loner's path of international
intrigue or into a more conventional, happier, companionable
life.
He stacks up well against his five Bond predecessors.
Craig's no Sean Connery (who is?) but he delivers
one of the finest performances ever in a 007 flick,
rich with a range of feeling we generally don't see
in the emotionally stunted Bond.
Directed by Martin Campbell — who also made
"GoldenEye," Pierce Brosnan's first time
out as Bond — "Casino Royale" is based
on the first of Ian Fleming's novels about the British
agent.
The 1950s story is updated from the Cold War era
to modern times by veteran Bond screenwriters Neal
Purvis and Robert Wade ("Die Another Day,""The
World Is Not Enough") and Paul Haggis, who no
doubt contributed much of the foreboding drama to
the action (Haggis co-wrote and directed the 2005
best-picture Academy Award winner "Crash"
and wrote the screenplay for 2004 Oscar champ "Million
Dollar Baby").
Freshly bumped up to "Double-Oh," license-to-kill
status, young Bond already is his own man, alternately
impressing and infuriating spymaster M (Judi Dench,
making a welcome return from the Brosnan era and bringing
her usual wondrous imperiousness to the role).
Bond
is assigned to play in a high-stakes poker match in
Montenegro orchestrated by Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen),
a financier of global terrorism who needs to win the
$100-million-plus stake to pay back clients' money
he squandered on an investment.
That Bond was the reason his investment went sour
makes it all the more poetic, as the card game and
its ramifications will have such a huge impact on
Bond's destiny.
A Treasury official — beautiful, of course
— is assigned to keep tabs on Bond's gambling
stake and make sure he's playing prudently with the
Crown's chips. Eva Green's Vesper Lynd is everything
most Bond girls are not — smart, sarcastic,
willful and fiercely independent enough not to give
in to Bond's charms.
And she's no sex kitten. Green looks glorious in
her various gowns, but she doesn't prance around in
a bikini or topple into bed with Bond by way of saying
hello.
Vesper is James' equal in so many ways — not
a fighter but a thinker, able to do a magnificently
witty dissection of 007's character and accept with
grace his own playfully insightful critique of her.
There's almost a "Thin Man" quality to
their banter. You can imagine William Powell and Myrna
Loy's Nick and Nora Charles started out cutely bickering
this way before they became such suave lovebirds.
Unlike past Bond films, where our hero's most important
relationship is with the villain he's trying to take
down, it's the love story that really matters here.
"Casino Royale" plays out like a grand,
doomed romantic epic in which James' callous nature
is cemented in place by the outcome of his attachment
to Vesper.
The groundwork for so many of the Bond trappings
is deftly laid here. This James Bond doesn't care
whether his martinis are shaken or stirred. He's surprised
at what a difference a finely tailored tux makes when
he looks in the mirror. By chance, a classic Aston-Martin
comes his way, and it's easy to see why it becomes
Bond's automobile of choice.
We also see his first encounter with his CIA cousin,
Felix Leiter, played by the always sly Jeffrey Wright,
who's underutilized here but hopefully will return
in an expanded role in future Bond adventures.
Giancarlo Giannini adds fine continental charm as
an Italian operative who's Bond's local contact.
When Craig was cast, much was made of his look —
the first blond Bond. The weight and grandeur Craig
brings to the role shows that superficial looks do
not a Bond make. Craig has the spirit of the character,
rascally yet dark, blithe yet brutish, amorous yet
lethal.
In a climactic showdown with Le Chiffre, Craig's
Bond is arguably more vulnerable both physically and
emotionally than we've ever seen 007 (though the tragic
end of "On Her Majesty's Secret Service,"
George Lazenby's sole, unpropitious turn as Bond,
comes close).
And at this moment, when he could be broken for
good and left a wispy shadow who never would have
become a golden boy of British intelligence, Bond's
cheeky humor and unbendable pigheadedness assert themselves,
a terrific foundation for the adventures to come.
It's a formative moment in a movie full of formative
moments that spell an ominous but productive future
for Bond, and a brilliant and even more productive
future for Craig as Bond.