Will The Real James Bond
Stand Up-Part II-Sean Connery’s “Thunderball” (1965 )-A Film Review
DVD Review
By former Senior Film Critic
Sandy Salmon
[I personally do not
like the new regime, under Greg Green’s steady guidance, policy of getting rid
of titles which were the hallmark of the now safely departed and exiled Allan
Jackson who used to run the show here. It took many years for me to get that
Senior Film Critic title having come over from the American Film Gazette under the Jackson regime when former
Associate Film Critic Alden Riley decided to come over on retiring Senior Film
Critic Sam Lowell’s say so and I resent being thrown on the dung heap and
placed with everybody else with just their names on the by-line line. For now I
will use my old title in the past tense until we go back to titles or Greg make
a big deal out of my moniker and tries to shut it down. Then I will go back to
being an Everyman like Alden Riley and Si Lannon have mentioned elsewhere. Sandy
Salmon]
**********
Readers who have read
Associate Film Critic Alden Riley’s recent review of Goldeneye posted on this site on December 5, 2017 (and on the
on-line American Film Gazette the
same day) the first of four films where well-known action actor Pierce Brosnan
plays the legendary super-spy Ian Fleming-created Bond, James Bond know that he
and I had a dispute over whether to review that film or not. I had insisted
that he finish up the original James Bond part of the long running series
starring Sean Connery started in the early 1960s of which I had reviewed the
first three efforts. He balked saying that being significantly younger than I
by a generation that he could not see Sean Connery as his idea of the Bond
character and argued that he would prefer to do the Pierce Brosnan series which
he felt epitomized the Bond role. Since this dispute underscored a storm which
has been brewing among the writers on this site (and to a lesser extent at the
on-line Progressive American and American Film Gazette respectively) I
conceded the point and challenged him to a “duel” to argue in the public prints
over who was the “real” James Bond-Connery or Brosnan. The other post-Connery
Bonds like Roger Moore and Timothy Dalton interested neither of us so the chase
was on.
[Since this concession
by me to a younger writer is of some importance to the future direction of this
site I should explain my view about the real deal which has produced this
continual tension (something Sam Lowell, the film critic emeritus on this site
and all around gadfly who while surprisingly siding with the younger writers against
his old regime site manager friend has called a “tempest in a tea pot” and
maybe he was right). This site (and to a lesser extent Progressive American, American
Film Gazette and the American Music
Annals which all of the older writers have written for at some point) had
been tilted as might be expected toward the coterie of writers who came up the
ranks with Jackson, a coterie of men which is a separate issue, who were formed
one way or another by the turbulent 1960s. Although I have only recently taken
over Sam Lowell’s position as film critic, now senior film critic with the
addition of Alden and a couple of other stringers I too am of that generation
and the “dispute” over the Sean Connery James Bond series with Alden has reflected
both my preferences and my sense of where we should put our collective
energies.
According to Sam, and
the former site administrator, they saw nothing wrong with tilting toward the
1960s which they saw above all as a defining cultural, political and social
moment which has been reflected even now in the long rear-guard actions to
fight against what Jackson calls the night-takers. Then several years ago when
Markin brought in younger writers like Alden, Zack James, Lance Lawrence, Brad
Fox and a few other stringers he, and the older writers, expected somewhat
rigidly and erroneously that they would “keep the ‘60s alive” for the next
generation. Naturally those younger writers balked not so much about having to
cover the 1960s history stuff which they knew was a key the site’s existence
but that all subsequent nodal points which informed their lives were
down-played if not dismissed.
It was in that content
that the Connery-Brosnan fight represented a prime example of the “Old Guard”
stifling (Zack James’ word) the “Young Turks.” Alden reminded me during this
argument though that it had really come to a head when during an expansive,
some said seemingly endless, commemoration of the 50th anniversary
of the Summer of Love, 1967 San Francisco-based explosion when Allan asked everybody
to hone in on those events when taking up writing projects. I, and looking back
on it, the other older writers took up the cause in a heartbeat. The younger
writers with the exception of Zack James whose older brother Alex started the
whole thing in 2017 and had been out there in 1967 balked for the most part.
The firestorm really
came when I mentioned to Alden that I had done a review of a documentary about
the first Monterey Pops Festival also in 1967 where Janis Joplin among others
won their spurs in the rock pantheon and he told me that he did not know who
Janis Joplin was. I let that pass but somehow Allan heard about it and in a fit
of pique ordered over my head Alden to do a review of a bio-pic of Janis: Little Girl Blues. Alden did it
but the past several months as I said have been a tug-of-war among those whose
sensibilities were established during the 1960s and those whose sensibilities
were essentially formed by the Reagan years. Two very different epochs. The net
effect though is that now Alden can write about Brosnan’s James Bond and
anything else he wants. Allan had decided to retire soon and had brought in
Greg Green from American Film Gazette to act as administrator so a different
focus should be expected.
I would like to add
since Lance Lawrence of the younger writer set snidely brought something of the
dispute up in a round-about way when he was doing a light commentary, posted
December 5, 2017 here (and on the 6th on the on-line American Folk Gazette and Progressive American websites) on a
recent book by a Harvard professor about 1960s folk king icon Bob Dylan arguing
that he, Dylan, belong right up there in the Western Civilization literary
pantheon with the classic lyric poet like Homer and Virgil. In his public take
on this internal site storm Lance mentioned that Dylan was another one of the
causes for the bad feelings among the staff since Allan had assigned him to do
a review of Volume 12 of what even I consider never-ending the Dylan Bootleg
series.
Lance balked after
listening to the six CD set and accompanying booklets saying that it was just
mishmash of bullshit and outtakes and not worthy of consideration. Allan flipped
out and this too brought matters to a head. Allan after heated arguments about
direction and emphasis on the site told the collective audience that he was
bringing in Greg Green as acting administrator and that he planned to retire.
Lance’s implication: Allan had been purged, “purged like his buddy Trotsky” is
the way he put it. Yes, a vote of confidence was taken and Allan was on the
short end of the stick when Sam Lowell unexpectedly considering they had grown
up together sided with the “Young Turks” but he was not purged, was not in any
way in put in Trotsky’s position of having to defend his place in the Russian
Revolution, in the Bolshevik Party when Uncle Joe pulled the hammer down, and
eventually laid down his head for his belief when all was said and done. Allan will
have like Sam emeritus status and can write, or not write, whenever something
interest him.]
Alden is right that in
the now 20 something Bond, James Bond, films whether directly inspired by Ian
Fleming’s novels or merely on the developed character that a certain familiar
formula has kept the series running through several Bonds. Everybody knows that
there will be plenty of high tech gadgetry provided by the ever present and
resourceful Q who really should retire if he has not already, plenty of
physically over-the-top action and plenty of sexy women either chasing or being
chased by any actor who plays Bond. Additionally something that Alden did not
pick up since he was a baby during the heyday of the big Cold War rivalry
between the West, America centrally and the now long gone Soviet Union, that in
the fight against the bad guys by British intelligence although they are given
names like SPECTRE and Janus they are really stand-ins for the opponent bad guy
countries of the moment like Russia and China.
All of this goes with
the territory even though this first Pierce Brosnan Bond vehicle was not
created out of Fleming’s stockpile. It most clearly in present in the early
Connery films as he is something of a dashing one man avenging angel for the
good guy Western values that guys like Doctor No and Gold-finger threaten. Connery
uses his handsomeness, not “pretty boy” demeanor as a way to make his work
easier since there is a toughness that shows whether he is in stilted work suit
or casual clothes. Brosnan only brings a
“pretty boy” charm and over the top, and at times unbelievable physical
manifestation to the role against Connery’s dashingly handsome demeanor. Sean
also plays the role with more cheek, more sense that this whole thing is just
an arduous task to get through to keep the lights burning.
As to the actual
plot-line of Thunderball here as Sam
Lowell likes to say the short skinny since as has already been suggested about
other parts of this long-running Bond series there is a certain set formula.
The bastards at SPECTRE are at it again as they as per Number One are
responsible for hijacking through the usual nefarious means two atomic weapons
to be used as bargaining chips for a big payoff of $100 million a lot then but
chicken feed now for not destroying a major city. The city turned out to be
Miami which now has its own problems to confront with climate change but then
was a mecca for the sun-drenched tourists and plenty of mobster and ex-pats
from all over Latin America after being giving the boot from their home
countries. Bond is put on the case first to find the hiding place of the two
bombs and then shutting down as much of the SPECTRE operation as possible for a
single avenging angel to do. Along the way he snags the inevitable beauty who
turns up in his path, succumbs to his charms and helps get the bomb situation
under control. I wish I could say that would be the end of the bad guys but the
world and slew of future Bond movies including ‘Pretty Boy” Brosnan’s portion
tell us otherwise.
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