Sam Mendes's Skyfall (UK, 2012) - Variety called it Stunning Skyfall in their headline: Putting the "intelligence" in MI6, "Skyfall" reps a smart, savvy and
incredibly satisfying addition to the 007 oeuvre, one that places Judi
Dench's M at the center of the action. It's taken 23 films and 50 years
to get Bond's backstory, but the wait was worth it. In Sam Mendes'
hands, the franchise comes full circle, revealing the three-film Daniel
Craig cycle to be both prelude and coda to the entire series via a foxy
chess move that puts these pics on par with Christopher Nolan's "Dark
Knight" trilogy as best-case exemplars of what cinematic brands can
achieve, resulting in a recipe for nothing short of world domination. Screen Daily also gives the film glowing review: Fifty years on from the release of Dr No, the twenty-third official James Bond film refreshes a formula which seemed flagging in Quantum Of Solace,
the last entry, by keeping on Daniel Craig, who has grown into the role
of the secret agent but brought his own distinctive take on the
character, but bringing in top talent, including director Sam Mendes
(unwinding after weightier things, but taking the assignment seriously),
script-polisher John Logan (working over a screenplay by series
regulars Neal Purvis and Robert Wade) and (perhaps in a masterstroke)
cinematographer Roger Deakins, who finally provides a Bond film with a
visual sophistication that matches the credits sequence. |
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