Will The Real Bond,
James Bond Stand Up- Sean Connery’s “You Only Live Twice” (1967)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sandy Salmon
I am not sure what to
say right now after reading Leslie Dumont’s scathing polemic cum review of one in
the apparently never-ending series of James Bond films which new manager Greg
Green went out of his way to have her write even though young Alden Riley and I
have been running the rack on this series. The film, Tomorrow Never Dies with the lovely delicious Pierce Brosnan going
through the paces of the legendary indestructible MI6 agent in the 1990s. That “apparently
never-ending” no joke despite the fact that the original creator of the character
Ian Fleming has long passed the shades (they were diddling with the plots when
he was alive in any case including on the film I will attempt to review). James
Bond, although I am not sure either party will like the comparison, now joins
Bob Dylan in the never-ending category (for concerts still performed and Bootleg
CD series never finished).
All of that though is
not the beef today since Leslie whom I knew for a short time when she was a
stringer for the American Film Gazette after
she left her stringer job on this site and before she finally, finally landed a
by-line at New York Today has thrown
down the gauntlet. Leslie in that review of hers took on the whole James Bond male
chauvinism bullshit mystique. (Although the fact that he is never really
scratched despite an armada of weaponry thrown his way by every bad ass in the world,
male or female, apparently does not bother her or the not so veiled battles between
the good British Empire and the heathen commies of whatever designation.) But
what has me in dither is that she went after the little pseudo-battle that Alden
Riley, the former Associate Film Critic under the previous management and I, the
former Senior Film Critic under that same management about who was the epitome
of the James Bond character. When the deal went down it came down to two contestants-subtly
handsome Connery or pretty boy Brosnan. She took us apart for not dwelling on the
obvious 1950s sense of the male-female relationship. Seemingly the woman that I
knew, even if slightly, with the wicked sense of irony has ditched that persona
for the crusading third-wave feminist.
And Leslie might be
right. No, not right about Alden and my little fisticuff but in light of the
sexual harassment and sexual crimes of Harvey Weinstein and a now long trial of
powerful Hollywood power brokers, Washington heavies, media hotshots, and hell
the guys next door against women maybe this is a time to shed some light on the
way business was done in the old days. Maybe the way the female eye candy in
the various Bond films are portrayed aids and abets those real life situations
but I believe that is Leslie’s place to speak about. And she did.
Look I have spent a
zillion years doing freaking film reviews here and at American Film Gazette (according to the new site manager here Greg
Green who also came over from that publication it has racked up forty thousand
plus reviews in its long hard copy and on-line history). The angle I was
looking at, Alden too except he wanted to look at it from the view of the more
recent Bond films, was in the context of the silly plotlines, the improbable
escapes and the silly concept of sexual allure developed in those films. It
would have been false, and maybe that is wrong but that is the way it comes down,
for me, Alden can speak for himself, if I started going on and on about the
sexploitation inherent in the romanticizing of what after all in real life is a
pretty dull and unrewarding profession-covert spying. This is probable not the last of the dispute between
Leslie and me on the social issues as she called thet but let’s fight that out on
more serious looks at what is wrong with the still prevalent sexually unequal society
that we live in. As we have found very graphically in the immediate past we do
not live in a post-racial society and now we know we have been living in a “bubble”
as well about living in a post-sexual inequality world.
It almost seems silly to
go through the plot now except there is no heavy lifting once you have seen a
few of these formula films and can do a quick, very quick, summary since we have
already hit Leslie’s male chauvinist pig aspect, my hero unscathed aspect, and
that anti-communist angle as well. All we really have left is whether Sean Connery
is the real Bond, James Bond or is that sniveling pretty boy the champ.
An American spaceship is
dragooned in space whereabouts unknown except it was probably brought down
somewhere near Japan. Naturally in anti-communist, pre-Soviet meltdown times that
country would be the number one fall guy. But the Bolsheviks don’t figure
although not for trying since before long a second space almost goes missing and
the POTUS (you know what that means today in text-speak) is ready to rain hell
and damnation on Moscow and Leningrad if the caper goes off. Not to worry because
not only is WWIII avoided but private citizen bad guys are put to the screws (although
not forever since, as usual, the mastermind bad guy makes his escape to fight
another inevitable day).
The whole caper was an outsourced
job by the infamous SPECTRE organization that knows no limits, no boundaries
and will do whatever is necessary for the highest bidder. Here the Reds, Red
China, People’s Republic. After ten million kicks, about six millions rounds of
ammo fired his way, a few new techno-toys driven escapes, some cavorting with
women after a hard day’s work Bond, James Bond, once again saves the world. As
Leslie quoting mad monk Phil Larkin, another wild man writer here, WFT. And
maybe that is really what we should all take out of this stuff.
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