In Casino Royale, the reshaping of Bond’s image permeates every detail: Bond looks at the safety exit, neatly installs a pistol silencer, tears a shirt and treats the wound with bourbon, and pulls out from the villain’s wife. After the intelligence, the lingering stops abruptly...These little details are silently telling you that this is a different bond, a humanized bond. The code 007 first means a killer, and secondly it is romantic. The suave Eaton.
For this role, the protagonist Craig found the former Mossad and MI6 agents who had served as consultants for "Munich" for basic training, so we can see this agile and resolute Bond, a convincing actor. Screen killer. Craig also personally modified the script. The original scene where Bond comforted Vesper in the shower was a completely glamorous setting-Bond wearing a white tie wet and hugged the naked Vesper... But Craig thought so. The filming is not only against logic, but also completely against the unique relationship between Bond and Vesper in the script: from disgust to trust, love is born from trust. Vesper is the only woman Bond in Fleming's novel who has truly devoted himself to feelings. Her death and her double agent status are also a watershed in the later formation of Bond's personality. Such a labelled and gendered treatment of this scene is undoubtedly the destruction of this important role... so we can see the most romantic scene in the entire 007 series.
In addition to actor Craig, Campbell's retro shooting method is also the key to the 007 series' survival. In the Casino Royale and Le Chiffre's card game gambling, the cross-dissolve effect (Cross-Dissolve), which has been rarely seen in contemporary movies, was used. After 24 hours, a big bet involving hundreds of millions of dollars in bets was handled in this way, giving people a prosaic and lengthy feeling, but it can also vaguely smell the psychology and spy war behind the gaming table is suffocating. Achieving this kind of undercurrent turbulent effect requires an excellent villain. The villain Le Chiffre is called the most pitiful villain in the history of 007. He is not a madman who can launch a laser to the ground on a spaceship, nor is he strong enough. Being able to secretly manipulate the global political landscape, he was just a banker who helped the bad guys all over the world launder money. He owed a lot of debt before he was forced to come to the Royal Casino to make a desperate move. Danish actor Mickelson has also successfully created a flesh-and-blood opponent for Bond. You rarely see a villain with such complex emotions in an action movie.
Bond: ON Vodka Martini
Bartender: Shake or STIR?
Bond:? The I look like the Do A Damn give
information of three lines, Bond return with the most fundamentalist most deviant way. The perfect 5-point movie.
——Written before the premiere of the Ghost Party, after the fourth review
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