Agreed. Great review. I was dizzy the first few minutes with the hyperactive 
camera, dulled after a while by one action scene after another, and a bit 
unengaged. Bond as man on a mission is okay, but it didn't work well for me 
either.

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "ravenadal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
http://blackplush.blogspot.com/

If the first MISSION IMPOSSIBLE was Brian De Palma's Mission 
Impossible and MI-2 was John Woo's Mission Impossible, QUANTUM OF 
SOLACE is unquestionably Marc Forster's James Bond movie. In fact, 
with its international cast of corporate, military and intelligence 
operatives, ogres, trolls and troglodytes, Quantum could be easily 
subtitled "Ian Fleming's MONSTER'S BALL." Mathieu Amalric, award 
winning French actor and film director - perhaps best known in America 
for his lead role in the 2007 film THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY - 
plays the chief monster, gimlet-eyed Dominic Greene, an effete 
megalomaniac masquerading as a deep pocketed green warrior while 
Joaquin Cosio and Fernando Guillen Cuervo play cruel and sadistic as 
would-be tin-pot dictators and Jesper Christensen reprises his role as 
a chief cog in the sub secret evil cabal which shall not be named 
(Quantum).

Filmed in Panama, Chile, Italy and Austria, the movie begins where 
CASINO ROYALE left off with Bond hurtling toward Sienna, Italy, the 
captured Mr. White (Christensen) in the boot of his car, and gun 
wielding henchmen in hot pursuit. Weaving in and out of heavy traffic 
on tight thoroughfares while his sleek Astin Martin is perforated with 
machine gun fire, Bond dispenses with his pursuers in typical Bondian 
fashion and delivers Mr. White to his boss "M" (Judi Dench) and her 
interlocutors. The wily and unrepentant Mr. White escapes and this 
sends Bond careening around the world in hot pursuit. 

QUANTUM OF SOLACE is also co-screenwriter Paul Haggis' James Bond 
movie. Quantum explores a CRASH of competing world interests 
intersecting where Daniel Craig's emotionally wounded 
government agent seeks mortal revenge for the death of his lost love. 
It is not coincidence that linchpins of the story take place in such 
hot spots as Haiti and Bolivia, poor bereft countries with little to 
recommend them besides their utter defenselessness in the face of 
further exploitation. 

While CASINO ROYALE was full of surprises, ripe with rebirth and 
reinvention QUANTUM, for all its gorgeous vistas, dazzling car chases, 
roof top gamboling, explosive denouements and BOURNE-like close 
quarter hand-to-hand combat, feels derivative – as if cobbled together 
from twenty other action-adventure movies. The movie is blunt and 
ruthless and there is much precision and artistry in its execution. 
Yet, you don't feel exhilarated by Craig's remorseless reckoning as 
much as you feel pummeled by it. 

~rave! 


 

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