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Analysis Of Quantum of Solace.


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#1 Iroquois

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Posted 04 April 2011 - 09:11 PM

I have realised lately that I seem to be responding to a lot of criticisms to Quantum Of Solace with the same points, therefore I decided to write an in depth analysis of the movie in order to prevent repeating myself and boring everyone else further haha. I shall separate this analysis into chapters so that there can be discussion on specific parts of my ‘essay’ and also simply because I’m having a bit of software trouble which makes the process of writing this fun little project rather draining unfortunately. Anyway, without further ado, let’s begin:

Fans of 007 left cinemas in 2006 with arguably the most triumphant “Bond, James Bond” of the series ringing in their ears along with the iconic theme music. They had just witnessed how James Bond came to be, as Daniel Craig’s Bond successfully reinvented the character for the 21st Century in the film ‘Casino Royale’.

However, the success of Casino Royale set audience’s expectations sky-high for the following film; Quantum of Solace. They weren’t sure what they were getting, but judging by the development of the Bond character, many assumed that they would be getting a more formula based James Bond film.

Cut to 2008 and the Columbia pictures logo appears with a rather ominous soundtrack playing over it. Fans are probably starting to wonder when the Bond theme will start playing so they can see the new gun barrel. But the music keeps a steady pace and the film opens, building up the tension into a hectic car chase between Bond and Henchman of the mysterious Organisation that he faced in the previous film.

It was clear that this certainly wasn’t going to be another formulaic Bond adventure, and this was a fact that many were taken aback by. But before I begin, I would like to point out that the majority of people who have seen Quantum of Solace actually like it, it’s even ‘Certified Fresh’ on Rottentomatoes.com. Regardless of whether that really means anything, it’s certainly a way of judging the audience’s reaction to the film, so it shouldn’t be overlooked in my opinion.

I would also like to say that James Bond is like comedy; it’s entirely subjective. What I mean by that is that since Bond has had so many different interpretations throughout his incredibly long life span, everyone has their own ideas as to what Bond should be. As such, I’m not going to say that those who dislike what is in my opinion one of the greatest Bond films are wrong, but rather, give my own interpretations on the film.

I will do this in by going through some common criticisms of the film, and giving my own view on these in relation to the film. I will format these criticisms in chapters which of which will be posted individually.

PART 1: Quantum of misunderstanding

I feel that the film in general is misunderstood. This is perhaps because of the exceptionally fast pacing of the film and the fact that it expects the audience to be able to keep up with it, which was indeed asking a lot since most people expected this to be a straight-forward adventure. This had lead to the following misconceptions.

1)James Bond is still ‘earning his stripes’.

2)That Bond is on a revenge mission.

Even I thought this for a while, and it’s an easy mistake to make. In Casino Royale, Bond was earning all of his ‘Bondian’ attributes as the film progressed, such as the Gun barrel, theme, tuxedo and whatnot.

Then Quantum of Solace begins just moments after Casino Royale, there is no gun barrel or full Bond theme until the end and the betrayal of Vesper is a sub-plot for the entire film. Not just that, but there is a lack of trust between Bond and M, as she isn’t sure whether he is (as she puts it) ‘Blinded by inconsolable rage’ as he ends up killing a lot of potential leads on Quantum.

So if these features aren’t here to show that Bond is still incomplete, as in the previous film, then what are they there for? What is the film really about? Why did it take the direction it did when everyone was expecting a standard Bond film?

Well to begin with, Casino Royale left behind some rather big questions.

1)People obviously responded well to Bond being the focal point of CR, but how can we keep the focus on him now that he is the finished article, with a key predicate of being emotionally detached from the mission?

2)Why should M trust Bond? She had problems with his rather unorthodox way of dealing with situations he found himself in and his rebellious nature (including him shooting up an embassy and breaking into her house to apologize). Then Bond resigns to be with the love of his life who betrays him and kills herself. It would make her character seem really stupid if she had full faith in him after a phone call from him where he is audibly angry and eager to get back on the job.

Quantum of Solace answers these questions by letting one serve the other. The film is about the relationship between Bond and M, and builds upon it by putting us in the position of M and having us question the motives of Bond, once
again putting the focal point on the Bond character rather than all the things that come with him.

Why else would M bring up the fact that Yusef is still alive unless she is testing Bond? As she says directly after mentioning him: ‘I need to know I can trust you Bond’. She uses the one thing she knows will emotionally provoke 007 to try and find her definitive answer, which she gets at the end of the film.

In the meantime, we are meant to question whether Bond is indeed the character that we were hoping to see in this film, which makes for a much more engaging story than just giving us what we expected.

Most of the confusion as to Bond’s motivation simply comes from the concerns of M herself, and since we are put in her
shoes the concerns carry over to us, until he utters the films final line ‘I never left’.

You see, when you look closely, there isn’t actually anything to say that the character is incomplete. Physically he looks more like Bond, his hair is slightly longer and smarter, he is slimmer, he’s dressing less casually, and ultimately Craig looks just like Connery did in the 60s. He’s even back to using a Walther PPK.

Character wise, he is more emotionally detached and focused. He never mentions Vesper, and when characters try to remind him of the trauma that has happened to him, he is quick to change the topic and focus on the mission at hand. He even directly says that he is ‘Motivated by his duty’, we just don’t know whether to believe it. There is a moment where we catch him with the photo of Vesper, but this serves as another thing to have us question his motivation. Besides, Fleming’s Bond thinks about Vesper throughout the course of his novels (i.e. A moment in Goldfinger, visiting her grave in OHMSS etc.) and it’s a movie device to show the introspective side of Bond as seen in the novels, without making him moan about his feelings uncharacteristically.

He is also not out for revenge as M is concerned. Most of his kills are in self defence, especially the ones that M is so concerned about (such as Mitchell, slate and the member of special branch who grabs onto Bond’s jacket in an attempt to pull him over the edge). It is implied that he does have feelings for revenge, but these he lives through Camille, as he guides her through her own revenge story throughout his mission. This theme is epitomized is the wonderful scene before Bond and Camille’s assault on the Eco Hotel where Bond gives Camille advice on how to kill.

Bond does say, however, that he’s “using Greene to get to someone”, but when Camille asks Bond to tell her how it feels when Bond gets the revenge she assumes he’s after, he only replies with “We should go” and continues on. That someone could very well be the head of quantum. In the Casino Royale novel, after Vesper’s death Bond is described as wanting to work his way up till he gets his hands on the people who make spying necessary in the first place.
One of the scenes I think is particularly important is the scene in which Bond and Camille stumble upon Greene’s plot and see the implications it has on the innocent people. Though it is usually described as a ‘Babel ripoff’, it certainly has an effect on Bond’s character as he confronts M with disgust that the British government is in bed with Greene. It shows that Bond’s motivation isn’t as one sided as M initially thinks, and serves to be the basis for her trust for him.

We also don’t know what specific information Bond got from Greene. Greene says that he answered Bond’s questions about ‘Quantum’, not ‘Yusef’. We just know that he found out about Yusef as part of that information, and used him as a lead to finding out more information about Quantum, and in turn establishes trust between M and the audience. With the ‘I never left’ line also establishing the trust Bond had in himself.

To support all of these points, here is an interview with Daniel Craig on his portrayal of Bond in the film:



If Casino Royale is about the development of James Bond, Quantum of Solace is about Bond finding his place in the world, and in doing so it shows us how he's still relevant.

Thus concludes part 1. Part 2: Individuality and the Bourne comparison shall be posted soon.

Thoughts on Part 1?

Edited by Iroquois, 04 April 2011 - 09:36 PM.


#2 Mr. Blofeld

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 12:07 AM

*looks around*

Well, I for one...

*stands up and applauds*

#3 Matt_13

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 02:07 AM

Excellent job.

#4 Jim

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 08:30 AM

Splendid; most thought-provoking.

#5 Dustin

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 09:08 AM

Fantastic piece! I never thought about taking QOS from M's POV. Interesting also Bond's motivation at the end of CR, to go after the people making espionage necessary in the first place. It looks as if Fleming picked that up again in Bond's speech to M in TMWTGG, when he accuses him of being a warmonger before firing the cyanide gun. KGB seem to have found Bond's basic motivation and just turned it.

Anyway, splendid job!

#6 blueman

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 10:18 AM

Totally agree, always liked Bond never directly addressing all the critiques against him especially from M, just getting on with the job at hand. Much better scenes between Craig and Dench in QOS than in CR IMO, they feel so much more intelligent, lots of subtext to chew on.

Nice write-up, looking forward to the next part of it.

#7 Napoleon Solo

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 12:37 PM

However, the success of Casino Royale set audience’s expectations sky-high for the following film; Quantum of Solace. They weren’t sure what they were getting, but judging by the development of the Bond character, many assumed that they would be getting a more formula based James Bond film.


Did they? The production during publicity concerned Marc Forster and his resume and Paul Haggis and his resume. Articles discussed how they were serious artists bringing their touch to the franchise. The only bit of publicity that at all hinted in the more formula direction was Michael G. Wilson's comment at the press conference that QoS would have "twice the action" of Casino Royale. But that was outweighed by the attention paid to Forster and Haggis.

I agree expectations were high but not necessarily because it'd be a more formula film.

(UPDATE: adding the following)

This article was fairly typical:

http://www.usatoday....d-quantum_N.htm

An excerpt:

<<Director adds humanity

Director Marc Forster says setting the climax in the wasteland of Chile's Atacama Desert fuses the plot with the internal life of Bond.

"I chose the desert because it's isolated, you feel lonely, and that's what Bond is struggling with himself," Forster says. "In the desert, it's unforgivable. You're out there, and you might die."

He's an unusual choice to direct a big-budget Bond action film; his previous films, such as Finding Neverland, Monster's Ball and The Kite Runner, all were intimate dramas.

"I was very surprised," Forster acknowledges. He was persuaded to join because the producers saw value in adding depth to the crowd-pleasing flick.

"Heart might be the wrong word, but it's human," he says.
>>>

<<<More changes to the traditional formula are in store for Quantum of Solace, among them the notion of a true sequel. Bond has always been ageless, and the previous 21 movies stand largely independently of each other, but Quantum of Solace picks up where Casino Royale ended, with Bond working his way up the chain of command of the terrorists who blackmailed his lover, Vesper Lynd.

"We set something up in motion in the last one that we need to keep in touch with in this one," Craig says.
>>>>>

<<<<Another curious twist is the hint that there may be less romance this time for the notorious ladies' man. "We felt Bond could not immediately fall into another relationship. And we needed someone who had her own agenda and probably could not form a relationship either because of her situation," Wilson says.
>>>>

None of those quotes (and the article is not atypical of what was being written, all with the cooperation of the movie's publicists) suggests more formula Bond.

Sorry if this is going off on a tangent, but I think it's important to remember what fans were being told about the film while it was in production.

#8 Iroquois

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 01:23 PM

Sorry if this is going off on a tangent, but I think it's important to remember what fans were being told about the film while it was in production.


No it's okay, you make good points, however I was merely recollecting a lot of posts I saw on forums around the time CR was out which had many fans assuming the next film was going to be more formulaic, considering Bond had earned the Gunbarrel, tux, theme and so on. I mainly reference this because people use it as a criticism against the film which I personally feel is unfair. I certainly don't think that people were expecting to have to question the motives of Bond in this film, since he is the finished article at the end of CR, and as such this expectation caused a lot of confusion about Bond in QOS.

#9 Napoleon Solo

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 03:28 PM


Sorry if this is going off on a tangent, but I think it's important to remember what fans were being told about the film while it was in production.


No it's okay, you make good points, however I was merely recollecting a lot of posts I saw on forums around the time CR was out which had many fans assuming the next film was going to be more formulaic, considering Bond had earned the Gunbarrel, tux, theme and so on. I mainly reference this because people use it as a criticism against the film which I personally feel is unfair. I certainly don't think that people were expecting to have to question the motives of Bond in this film, since he is the finished article at the end of CR, and as such this expectation caused a lot of confusion about Bond in QOS.



Understood, no problem. And, as I said, that was a tangent, not a comment on your analysis of the film.

#10 Matt_13

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 05:48 PM


However, the success of Casino Royale set audience’s expectations sky-high for the following film; Quantum of Solace. They weren’t sure what they were getting, but judging by the development of the Bond character, many assumed that they would be getting a more formula based James Bond film.


Did they? The production during publicity concerned Marc Forster and his resume and Paul Haggis and his resume. Articles discussed how they were serious artists bringing their touch to the franchise. The only bit of publicity that at all hinted in the more formula direction was Michael G. Wilson's comment at the press conference that QoS would have "twice the action" of Casino Royale. But that was outweighed by the attention paid to Forster and Haggis.

I agree expectations were high but not necessarily because it'd be a more formula film.

(UPDATE: adding the following)

This article was fairly typical:

http://www.usatoday....d-quantum_N.htm

An excerpt:

<<Director adds humanity

Director Marc Forster says setting the climax in the wasteland of Chile's Atacama Desert fuses the plot with the internal life of Bond.

"I chose the desert because it's isolated, you feel lonely, and that's what Bond is struggling with himself," Forster says. "In the desert, it's unforgivable. You're out there, and you might die."

He's an unusual choice to direct a big-budget Bond action film; his previous films, such as Finding Neverland, Monster's Ball and The Kite Runner, all were intimate dramas.

"I was very surprised," Forster acknowledges. He was persuaded to join because the producers saw value in adding depth to the crowd-pleasing flick.

"Heart might be the wrong word, but it's human," he says.
>>>

<<<More changes to the traditional formula are in store for Quantum of Solace, among them the notion of a true sequel. Bond has always been ageless, and the previous 21 movies stand largely independently of each other, but Quantum of Solace picks up where Casino Royale ended, with Bond working his way up the chain of command of the terrorists who blackmailed his lover, Vesper Lynd.

"We set something up in motion in the last one that we need to keep in touch with in this one," Craig says.
>>>>>

<<<<Another curious twist is the hint that there may be less romance this time for the notorious ladies' man. "We felt Bond could not immediately fall into another relationship. And we needed someone who had her own agenda and probably could not form a relationship either because of her situation," Wilson says.
>>>>

None of those quotes (and the article is not atypical of what was being written, all with the cooperation of the movie's publicists) suggests more formula Bond.

Sorry if this is going off on a tangent, but I think it's important to remember what fans were being told about the film while it was in production.



I agree with Iroquois I'm afraid. Sure, we were told in the press that this wouldn't be a run of the mill Bond adventure, but we're always told that. Judging by the way Casino ended, with the line and the theme blaring over the end credits, I think everyone safely assumed we would be back to the ways of old. That's why Quantum was such a nice surprise. Whereas a Brosnan era film wouldn't have continued an emotional plot thread (Bond got the girl at the end of ALL of those films so there wasn't even the opportunity to do so), it was wonderful to see the character of Bond, who has undergone minimal changes in personality of the years, actually grow based off of his experiences in the previous film. It really is quite unique and exciting. It makes me wonder what Logan, Mendes, and co. have in store for us next year. No doubt we will be told that it will be vastly different than anything we have seen before, but after Quantum, that will be a tough sentiment to live up to.

#11 TheREAL008

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Posted 05 April 2011 - 10:13 PM

Finely done, Iroquois. :D

#12 Iroquois

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Posted 07 April 2011 - 09:15 PM

Thank you all for the nice comments. I shall be uploading both parts 2 and 3 together as it seems they will probably both be shorter than part 1 and it'll probably be easier to flow one into the other. Expect to see them within a week :)

#13 I never miss

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Posted 08 April 2011 - 06:33 AM

Fascinating stuff Iroquois - you have made me rethink my opinion of QOS. Perhaps I should watch it again right now.....

I agree that QOS wasn't the film that we were expecting after CR. CR is possibly the best film in the series, but it isn't as earth-shatteringly ground-breaking as some might think. There's a lot of the traditional Bond formula in there - any why not, it's a Bond film after all?!

QOS stands out with LTK as being something quite different - more of an experiment. Neither are 100% successful IMO, but QOS is closer to achieving what it set out to do. LTK is a little more schizophrenic in its make-up of broad humour and tension.

#14 Mr_Wint

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Posted 08 April 2011 - 09:00 AM

PART 1: Quantum of misunderstanding

Do you mean that there is an infinitesimal small amount of misunderstanding?


I feel that the film in general is misunderstood. This is perhaps because of the exceptionally fast pacing of the film and the fact that it expects the audience to be able to keep up with it, which was indeed asking a lot since most people expected this to be a straight-forward adventure.

Really? I do not believe that people had problems to follow this film, especially not Bondfans. I think the plot in QOS is too simplistic and I wouldn't mind a more meaty, convoluted, storyline. I agree that the the first act of the film is fast-paced. Hell, even James Bond himself has too cool down on his bike for a few minutes to catch up (while spying on the supervillains of course). But the middle and final act feels rather slow. The bewildering editing is still there, but it cannot hide the fact that the villain's caper is underdeveloped and that all characters are so extremely shallow. Eventually, the lizard on the rock becomes more interesting than everything else.

#15 Guy Haines

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Posted 10 April 2011 - 11:03 PM

I watched QoS recently, and thoroughly enjoyed it. Which was not quite the reaction I had when I first watched it at the flicks in 2008. I would still champion it over some of the Bonds that preceded it, simply because it presented Bond as the "blunt instrument" he is supposed to be. Also, I picked up on some of the stuff I missed in previous viewings. (Call me dense, or just distracted by the dodgy camera angles, which I still take issue with.)

Take the scene when Bond, as "Slate", is chided by the man on the motorbike - "You were supposed to kill her". Bond: "Well, I missed". How could you miss at point blank range in the front seat of a car? That made me chuckle.

And M's comment later on about the CIA's trumped up evidence against Bond. Funny how every time someone died, it was supposedly at Bond's hands (the special branch man in Bregenz, Mathis in Bolivia - he didn't kill either yet M is told he did). Was that bureaucratic buffoon Gregg Beam setting Bond up? The inference from M's comment about "evidence" is that he was.

QoS is, I think, destined to be in the same category as OHMSS and LTK - causing controversy at the time of release, but re-evaluated favourably later.

#16 jamie00007

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Posted 15 April 2011 - 01:01 PM

Was that bureaucratic buffoon Gregg Beam setting Bond up? The inference from M's comment about "evidence" is that he was.


Yes, remember the scene on the plane with Greene and Beam? Greene says he has a problem (Bond) and Beam says he'll take care of it.

#17 Messervy

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Posted 15 April 2011 - 02:31 PM

Very well said, Iroquois. Great in-depth analysis of the characterisation in QoS.

This is also the way I feel. To me, QoS is very good at bringing us closer to Bond's "soul" through glimpses here and there.
Much more efficient, I think, than the "That's what keeps you alone" or "Did I get too close? Yes" kind of lines.

QoS throws us straight into these conflicts between Bond and M and within Bond himself. And it delivers quite brilliantly.
This is also why I think quick pace and fast editing do work here: we need to lose balance, we have to be shaken to and fro, if we are to feel involved in this soul-searching shattering quest. We have to feel a little dazed and confused. Otherwise it would be too simplistic.

Besides, cinematography wise, I think QoS is one of the greatest Bonds (at least, it's in my top 5). The very beginning, flying us above the water and getting us closer to the road with just the music overheard, interspersed with quick shots of the Aston before we're actually thrown into the action, is one of my favorite scenes in all Bond movies. Just bloody perfect.

Long live QoS!

#18 blueman

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Posted 15 April 2011 - 09:25 PM

What may be off-putting to some is the almost complete lack of dialogue explaining anything Bond does in QOS. As situations present themselves to him, he acts. Then M misinterprets what he does, not new in the series but QOS is uniquely free of (usually) clumsy explanation dialogue. I like the choice as it reinforces the first-person feel of the film, Forster seems to want the viewer to be Bond more than to watch him. Very thrilleresque and why I think Fleming would approve even while grumbling about them young whipper snappers and their new-fangled ways of doing things. :cooltongue:

#19 cpt. sir dominic flandry

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Posted 16 April 2011 - 06:24 PM

I'll have a pint of what everyone has been drinking here please if it's going.

#20 Capsule in Space

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Posted 16 April 2011 - 08:46 PM

I'll have a pint of what everyone has been drinking here please if it's going.


A serving of Diamonds Are Forever and A View to a Kill will cleanse the palate.

I think Fleming would have not enjoyed this film, nor its star, especially when considering Fleming wanted David Niven as Bond for Dr. No. QOS lacks charm and sophistication. Two necessary qualities for a Bond film.

I appreciate the efforts taken to explicate this film, especially such a disjointed one.

From what I can gather Forster presents to us a morality tale conjured up by Paul Haggis. The viewer isn't meant to be Bond; the viewer is meant to receive Paul Haggis' message. Bond's sole purpose is to serve as a conduit to get Haggis' message across. That message being that we should look down upon Western Civilization for its exploitation of the world's resources, and hold countries like the U.S. and U.K. in contempt for presenting themselves as heroes when in reality (or at least Haggis' reality) these countries and their corporations are the reason for most of the world's problems.

Edited by Capsule in Space, 16 April 2011 - 08:47 PM.


#21 blueman

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Posted 16 April 2011 - 09:59 PM

Haters gonna hate. :cooltongue: And if DAF and AVTAK are "sophisticated," I'm a banana! :D

#22 The Shark

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Posted 16 April 2011 - 10:15 PM

Tom Mankeiwitz and Charles Gray alone provide more than an enough of a reason to deem DAF "sophisticated."

#23 Capsule in Space

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Posted 19 April 2011 - 05:39 PM

Tom Mankeiwitz and Charles Gray alone provide more than an enough of a reason to deem DAF "sophisticated."


Absolutely, and how can you get any more sophisticated than James Bond in a white tuxedo at Max Zorin's upscale cocktail party in AVTAK?

#24 blueman

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Posted 19 April 2011 - 07:34 PM

You guys got funny ideas of what's sophisticated. :cooltongue:

#25 Zographos

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Posted 20 April 2011 - 03:35 AM

You guys got funny ideas of what's sophisticated. :cooltongue:

In The Shark's defence, he used the requisite quotation marks around the word.

I mean, Diamonds Are Forever certainly is "sophisticated" (...in the Dame Edna sense).

#26 The Shark

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Posted 20 April 2011 - 02:22 PM


You guys got funny ideas of what's sophisticated. :cooltongue:

In The Shark's defence, he used the requisite quotation marks around the word.

I mean, Diamonds Are Forever certainly is "sophisticated" (...in the Dame Edna sense).


Well, in that way too.

But I meant that the screenplay is very erudite, clever and witty - more so than any Bond film in the last few decades.

#27 SecretAgentFan

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Posted 20 April 2011 - 02:54 PM



You guys got funny ideas of what's sophisticated. :cooltongue:

In The Shark's defence, he used the requisite quotation marks around the word.

I mean, Diamonds Are Forever certainly is "sophisticated" (...in the Dame Edna sense).


Well, in that way too.

But I meant that the screenplay is very erudite, clever and witty - more so than any Bond film in the last few decades.


I agree. DAF is really underrated. I regularly put it at the bottom of my list - until I re-watched it and was pleasantly surprised how much fun it really is.


I'll have a pint of what everyone has been drinking here please if it's going.


A serving of Diamonds Are Forever and A View to a Kill will cleanse the palate.

I think Fleming would have not enjoyed this film, nor its star, especially when considering Fleming wanted David Niven as Bond for Dr. No. QOS lacks charm and sophistication. Two necessary qualities for a Bond film.

I appreciate the efforts taken to explicate this film, especially such a disjointed one.

From what I can gather Forster presents to us a morality tale conjured up by Paul Haggis. The viewer isn't meant to be Bond; the viewer is meant to receive Paul Haggis' message. Bond's sole purpose is to serve as a conduit to get Haggis' message across. That message being that we should look down upon Western Civilization for its exploitation of the world's resources, and hold countries like the U.S. and U.K. in contempt for presenting themselves as heroes when in reality (or at least Haggis' reality) these countries and their corporations are the reason for most of the world's problems.


Could it be that you just dislike Haggis? I did not get the supposed "message" of his. I do agree, however, that QOS is not "fun" in a way that earlier films were. It is a revenge story, after all, a continuation of CR with Bond at the fringe, trying to stay afloat and getting to the bottom of a very dark pit of crime and moral decay. Yet, I found it very entertaining, different and fun in another way: Bond seen through another prism.

I do understand that one could dislike that. But I don´t understand why Bond should be denied to try out different things. After all, every Bond film tried those. And it has to in order to stay interesting.

#28 Capsule in Space

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Posted 03 May 2011 - 03:05 AM

No, I don't "dislike" Haggis. However, I dislike his work for the Bond films because of the reasons I posted above.

#29 Robert Watts

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Posted 04 May 2011 - 10:24 AM

PART 1: Quantum of misunderstanding

I feel that the film in general is misunderstood. This is perhaps because of the exceptionally fast pacing of the film and the fact that it expects the audience to be able to keep up with it, which was indeed asking a lot since most people expected this to be a straight-forward adventure. This had lead to the following misconceptions.


No. The film is misunderstood because the plot is riddled with ridiculous leaps in logic, non-sensical scenarios that are extraneous by even this series' standards and plenty of arbitrary and meaningless plot twists in the sake of "drama".

I would like to point out that the majority of people who have seen Quantum of Solace actually like it,


There is no way on earth that you could claim to know this with any authority. EON couldn't claim to know this with any authority.

it’s even ‘Certified Fresh’ on Rottentomatoes.com. Regardless of whether that really means anything, it’s certainly a way of judging the audience’s reaction to the film, so it shouldn’t be overlooked in my opinion.


An extremely limited sampling of the audience that is no less representative of the wider audience than any of the countless Bond forums on the net (probably even less so, if you're talking both about sample size and a variety of viewpoints, backgrounds and education levels). Sure, it collates them and averages them based on a rather unscientific criteria, but even that is dubious. Here is the televised version of a review that is rated as "Fresh" on RT.com:

Something’s happened to James Bond since CASINO ROYALE, and it isn’t good. Although DANIEL CRAIG is back, tougher and steelier than ever, and JUDI DENCH again has all the best lines as M, it seems that someone made the decision to speed things up – with nearly fatal results.

The oddly titled QUANTUM OF SOLACE is almost 40 minutes shorter than CASINO ROYALE. What’s missing is plot, dialogue, atmosphere – all the things that made the Bond films better than average.

Maybe director Marc Forster is to blame, though his previous films, including THE KITE RUNNER and MONSTERS’ BALL, were quality items. With the plot pared down to the absolute minimum, MATHIEU AMALRIC, a fine actor, is given little chance to make an impact as the latest Euro villain to confront 007.

The policy seems to be – when in doubt, cut to the chase, and there are chases galore – all of them over-edited to the point of utter confusion – it’s as if the producers wanted another Jason Bourne film, god forbid, rather than a James Bond film.

Let’s hope this is a one-off aberration, because though it’s all very efficient it lacks heart and soul and substance.


Hardly positive wouldn't you say?

Now I can't blame RT for being so lazy because I certainly can't be bothered to search the other 22 Top Critics views on the film when it was release to judge. But you can't consider the percentage in anyway empirical. On it's own the value is rather useless unless comparing it to another RT percentage - of which Casino Royale's the only other Bond film that was released to a comparable internet environment - in which case it has something like a 30% drop off amongst all critics and a 40% one with top critics.

On a more subjective note, given these people were so receptive to "breaking the formula" in Casino Royale (as were the general public - for the most part) I don't think it's the most effective argument to say people just weren't comfortable with it this time around because they suddenly expected something else.

All that said, looking forward to part two!

Edited by Robert Watts, 04 May 2011 - 10:29 AM.