Quantum of Solace: Movie, DVD, Blu-ray Review (2009)
Movie, DVD, Blu-ray Review
"Quantum of Solace"
Directed by Marc Forster, written by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and Paul Haggis, 106 minutes, rated PG-13.
“Quantum of Solace” overcomes its bum title and risible theme song by offering audiences one of most intense, satisfying action movies of last year.
Bond purists likely will miss those old Bond staples--Q and his kitschy gadgets, the passing presence of Moneypenny, the lighter tone. But others will appreciate the film's inward shift to a darker, more substantial core, which continues to prove a fine fit for these darker, more dangerous times.
Working from Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and Paul Haggis’ script, director Marc Forster deepens the work done before him by Martin Campbell, whose smashing 2006 film, “Casino Royale,” was based on Ian Fleming’s 1953 novel, the first in the Bond franchise. As such, “Royale” was an origins movie designed to take a fictional figure made popular by Sean Connery, Roger Moore, Pierce Brosnan and others, and infuse him with a back story meant to explain how, in this case, Bond became Bond.
That’s still true here, with Forster’s movie literally picking up where “Royale” left off in this, the franchise’s first sequel. As the movie opens, we’re in Northern Italy, and Bond (Daniel Craig) is caught in the throes of one gripping car chase in an effort to nail those who killed the love of his life, Vesper Lynd (Eva Green), in the last film.
And yet in spite of his stoic appearance, Bond can’t fully conceal his confliction--he is so certain that Vesper betrayed him, it haunts him. Still, onward he pushes in a tale that involves not only his efforts to bring down those who murdered Vesper, but also a larger story that finds him working overtime to cripple one Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric), a phony environmentalist seeking to secure his future by leading a terrorist ring determined to corner a major stake in one critical world resource. No, not oil. Water.
To do so, Greene and company will need to take down governments and corrupt officials. To stymie them, Bond, looking ridiculously fashionable even when covered in blood, will need to be ruthless while trying to handle a furious M (Judi Dench, marvelously marching in an out of rooms, usually with an entourage), whose trust in him is waning.
Two other women enter into the picture. First is Camille Montes (Olga Kurylenko), whose relationship with Greene goes deeper than the sex they shared, and Strawberry Fields (Gemma Arterton), an MI6 agent who allows the film an image that might become as iconic as one from “Goldfinger.”
More so than in “Royale,” which gave Bond a fleeting moment of happiness, it’s rage that drives this movie, little else, barely even wit. While there are a few flashes of the latter here, particularly when M aggressively slathers night cream on her face while she barks at Bond, “Quantum of Solace” otherwise is a serious movie whose focus is on revenge and the superlative action that stems from it.
Roaming the world, this is a movie pressed with urgency, and while sometimes the action is a bit muddled due to the chaotic editing, that’s a quibble. Those who come away from this movie bored might want to have their pulses checked.
Grade: B+
View the trailer for "Quantum of Solace" here:
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