Showing posts with label Guy Hamilton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guy Hamilton. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 October 2012

Goldfinger (Guy Hamilton, 1964)

"Do you expect me to talk?"/"No Mr. Bond - I expect you to die!"
 
Introduction
 
Sandwiched between Joseph Losey's The Servant and Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising sits, awkwardly, Goldfinger. The 1001 Movies To See Before You Die only lists one James Bond adventure: Goldfinger. Kim Newman finishes his brief article on the film by stating that “Ever since, the series has been recycling”. Maybe so, but what a formulae they created! Guy Hamilton, directing his first film in the series, managed to combine the cool of From Russia with Love with new, innovative elements. Gadgets that were more than a briefcase, and an introduction that was simply unforgettable. Is it a duck? No, it’s James Bond. He is wearing a tuxedo underneath his wet-suit. Is this impossible? Not for 007.
 
Iconic
 
This is the most iconic James Bond adventure – and the one film which, even at the time, critics began to realise represented more than simply ‘kiss, kiss, bang bang’. I don't believe any other 007 film has established itself with such status as Goldfinger. Indeed, Dr No started the ball-rolling, From Russia with Love, though superior to both films, is more of an homage to Alfred Hitchcock than a rule-breaker film. If the films followed in the vein of the first two films than it surely wouldn't have lasted 50 years - it would've struggled to reach the 1970's. Goldfinger has attributes that ensured Roger Moore's 8-film canon could rely heavily on comedy to pull it through - combined with stunning locations and quirky villains/henchmen. Though Red Grant (Robert Shaw) in From Russia with Love was the first 'true' henchman in the series, it was Oddjob (Harold Sakata) that paved the way for legends including Jaws, Vargas and Nic-Nac. The exceptional lengths which Goldfinger (Gerte Frobe) plans to go to corrupt the world economy isn't too far from the established SPECTRE game-plan, but in terms of the future, Goldfinger works alongside China, not the infamous Blofeld troupe.

Ian Fleming’s book openly acknowledges the lesbianism of Tilly Masterson and Pussy Galore, but the film only hints at Pussy (Honor Blackman) as homosexual. Like Tilly (Tania Mallet), in the film, she is ultimately swayed by Connery’s charm. Fleming connected Goldfinger with SMERSH (the villains which became SPECTRE in the film series), but the film detaches him and, even ignoring the Cold War element, connects him with China and the atomic bomb. Coincidentally, it was China who detonated their first atomic bomb in October 1964. Writers Richard Maibaum and Paul Dehn even corrected Fleming’s impractical end-goal of stealing gold bullion from Fort Knox and openly acknowledged it in the film – as Goldfinger reveals his ‘true’ plan of setting an atomic bomb off inside Fort Knox, contaminating the bullion itself. Talk about capturing the zeitgeist.
 
Cultural Context
 
James Chapman writes in his brilliant book, Licence to Thrill: A Cultural History of the James Bond Films, how Goldfinger even gained parallels to Godard as Penelope Houston, writing for Sight & Sound stated “… that we know the clichés and can have a little fun with them” akin to the French New Wave. This is the core of the series, as throughout the previous five decades, the James Bond series has managed to create a style and formulae that alters to suit the new generations. Though the first five films – Dr No through to You Only Live Twice, they all feel innovative and unique, until the films become almost a parody of the mood ‘of the times’. Diamonds are forever imitating The French Connection. Live and Let Die cashing in on the success of the Blaxploitation genre. But it is the formulae established here that ensured their continuing success.

The film itself remains incredible as a product of its time, including a huge dollop of sexist bravado. Connery and Leiter (Cec Linder) in the initial Miami scene smacks a girls bum – “man-talk”. But the women are much stronger than the previous films – Tilly is avenging her sister’s death, Pussy initially argues she is ‘immune’ to his charm. It may be a long way off from Barbara Bach’s Agent XXX in The Spy Who Loved Me and Sophie Marceau in The World is not Enough, but it was a start. On the other side of things, when you truly rip apart the narrative, you realise that James Bond himself is incredibly problematic in the film. He doesn’t escape Switzerland, leading to the laser in-between-the-legs. He doesn’t manage to get word to Leiter about his whereabouts – leading to the death of Solo (Martin Benson). And he doesn’t escape the jail cell, despite his efforts. It is Pussy who saves him and switches sides. The final action sequence within the terrific Fort Knox (designed by iconic set-designer Ken Adams) only concludes as a specialist defuses the bomb – not 007. Despite what the numbers on the dial tell us.

A New Market
 
This was a film which was made to draw in the international market – after capturing the European market in From Russia with Love. The budget was more than the previous two films combined and you can tell. The scale of this film is jaw-dropping – the aerial shots alone of Fort Knox, as hundreds of soldiers faint, is bigger than anything we have seen in the series so far.

This is where it truly began and we have the careful refinement by Broccoli and Saltzman to thank. We have the genius of Ken Adams and the screenplay by Richard Maibaum. Even the direction is rougher than before – handheld camerawork that Paul Greengrass must’ve seen before developing his own style that, in turn, influenced the James Bond series in 2006. After Goldfinger, everything was set in stone – but nothing would be the same, ever again. Not recycled – refined and truly outstanding.

Wednesday, 10 June 2009

The Man with the Golden Gun (Guy Hamilton, 1974)

Introduction

A fair few months ago a few friends and I were having a grand old conversation about 007 which culminated in selecting from a new briefcase loaded with all twenty pre-Daniel Craig Bond films one to watch. If I recall correctly the possible choices were 'Goldeneye', 'From Russia with Love' and then - finally - 'The Man with the Golden Gun'. Fond memories of Scaramanga and - of course - Nick Nack forced us to choose the latter but, to be brutally honest, when watching it, it was simply not as good as we all remembered. I think we even considered cutting it short. We didn't ... but the thought crossed all our minds...

Quick Synopsis

Right, real quick, James Bond (Roger Moore) is on a mission to find the "Solex Agitator" - "a device that will harness the sun's radiation and give awesome power to whomever possesses it" - but he is not the only one trying to find this. He is up against Francisco Scaramanga (Christopher Lee) - The Man with the Golden Gun. He is an assassin who is hired to kill people, which he does regularly, successfully, with his Golden Gun. But it turns out Scaramanga has been hired to kill no one other than James Bond himself. So, Scaramanga is after Bond, Bond is trying to get away. Scaramanga has Andrea Anders (Maud Adams) - his lover - and Nick Nack (Herve Villechaize) - a small but lethal character - on his side, while Bond has the clumsy, but sexy, Mary Goodnight (Britt Ekland) on his side. Eventually, they get to Scaramanga's remote island and fight it out and - stupid Mary knocks a switch nearly setting the Solex off - so Bond now, not only has to kill Scaramanga, but also has to get off the island before it blows. Luckily he does. And he wins.

What I reckon

Funnily enough, having just mentioned that 'Raiders of the Lost Ark' references Westerns (Indy's outfit) and Gangsters (Toht's outfit), while also dissing Roger Moore's later period as 007, 'The Man with the Golden Gun' uses both genres itself in the opening sequence as we see Scaramanga trying to shoot 'bad-guys' in his mirror maze, whereby Gangsters (amongst them Al Capone) and Western gunslingers turn up for him to shoot - eventually shooting a model of James Bond (shock!) to finish the sequence: cue Lulu.

I absolutely love the song and its always ignored when discussing top Bond themes. Good ol' Bassey and Tom Jones always steal hear squeaky thunder. Well it is a way better song than Garbage's 'The World is no Enough'.

One thing that I think was a choice by Guy Hamilton was to build a surrealist theme in the film. Not only do we have the strange, distorting mirrors and the blurs between reality and creating fantasy (Scaramanga's murderous fantasies of killing off the 'bad guys' in his maze), but also the MI6 base tilted, forced the perspective to be completely skewed.

We also have the Asian theme, whereby Bond visits Kowloon in Hong Kong and Bangkok in Thailand but this - to be honest - just makes me think of Connery and the days of 'You Only Live Twice' and the Japanese themes within that film. Then again, the beauty of the Gulf of Thailand is stunning - so stunning in fact that it was used in 'Tomorrow Never Dies' too.

Even now I reminisce about this film I look back thinking how brilliant it really is - but I now vividly remember the experience. Akin to Trevelyan in 'Goldeneye', Scaramanga is this fantastic contrast to Bond. They are both slick, suave and have impeccable taste but, I think Scaramanga says it himself, the difference is that Bond 'works for Queen and country', while Scaramanga does it for pleasure - and a lot of money. An interesting aspect is why Nick Nack assists Scaramanga - apparently Nick Nack will get Scaramanga's property if he is killed, so the challenges Nick Nack sets up are actually trying to kill him but, clearly, they fail. I'm sure Nick Nack could just sneak into his bedroom and saw his head off or something. And claim it was somebody else obviously.

But I think this is where we have the problem - all the plus points aside - there is one particularly brilliant part whereby Bond and Sheriff JW Pepper are chasing another car across a stretch of land and reaching a broken bridge Bond speeds over it turning a full 360 degrees around. The red car going the entire 360 looks absolutely brilliant but, mid flip, the strangest sound slips onto the soundtrack. The sound is the same you would use for a cartoon character slipping on a banana skin. I reckon this comedic tone to this film is what makes it so problematic - there is simply no need. Bond's one-liners are the comedy, the cheeky attitude he has to women is funny. We don't need dickhead Sheriff Pepper talking like a moron mid-chase.

Luckily, 'The Spy who Loved Me', I recall, as being a lot better but maybe that is the rose-tinted glasses again - Barbara Bach, The underwater base, the Lotus Esprit S1 turbo sports car that turns into a submarine ... good times ... I think ...