Die Another Day
Review by Clint Morris
Believe
it or not James Bond is on his 20th outing. Yep, theres
been a change of Windsor Smiths, a graying of the hair, a
revision of the doohickeys and a change of sentry.
But one thing remains the same, the vital fun that a Bond
movie brings.
Unlike Bond himself, the producers of Ian Flemings
commended series didnt see their latest menace coming.
Gushing in like a flurry of noxious air stream has been a
posse of imitators determined to knock the balanced martini
twirler off his roost.
Luckily, the memo got to the EON productions stable in time
and they were given a nice heads up on proceedings.
Now, instead of just classic Bond gadgets, girls and
gunfire Bonds got a few more exhilarating tricks
up his sleeve, and everything from the playful pop theme to
the striking women, devilish villains, cars and cataclysm
smells fresher than detergent sodden goblets.
Pierce Brosnan returns for the 5th time as Bond and
its a sure bet youll be claiming him one of the
preeminent 007s to don the tux after this latest episode.
This time hes joined by the gorgeous Rosamund Pike
and Halle Berry, compelling as the indispensable Bond girls,
and Rick Yune and Toby Stephens as two of the most ominous
villains Bond has faced in quite some time.
In a sort of superior interweave of License to Kill,
events in Die Another Day take a very un-Bond like
coil, with our ostensible straight-shooter having his license
to bleed and bunk revoked.
But typical of the urbane superman, he wont be restrained
and sets out after the twosome who made his new class
so, evil megalomaniac Gustav Graves (Toby Stephens) and his
callous right-hand man, Zao (Rick Yune).
Assisted by outwardly casual super heroine Jinx (Halle Berry)
and in due course his dependable band of MI6 comrades
the renegade Bond sets out to unmask a traitor, and
ultimately roll out the stop sign to their all-evil sketch
of globe domination.
The thing with the Bond films is that you always know what
youre going to get - plenty of action, plenty of sexual
insinuation, plenty of searing women, a couple of rampant
lunatics and some grand stunts. Once again, youve got
all that, but the stimulation factor is turned up to 11.
The villains are more credible than before, the women are
many-sided, the stunts
better than ever. In some ways,
opposing fare like XXX has made the series yank up
the cool factor. Its also nice to see the Bond films
with a stronger narrative this time around, and in some respects,
targeting more of a broader audience.
Bonds have always been an event film - now theres
even more reason to celebrate, especially with such a return
to form
And possibly the best Bond yet for Brosnan.
Suffice to say, Die Another Day is the real-deal,
packed with more excitement, vigor and fortitude than an unfaltering
Magnum.
4 out of 5
Die Another Day
Australian release: Thursday December 12
Cast: Pierce Brosnan, Halle Berry, Toby Stephens, Rosamund
Pike, Rick Yune, John Cleese, Judi Dench, Michael Madsen,
Will Yun Lee, Samantha Bond.
Director: Lee Tamahori.
Website: Click
here
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