Quantum of Solace Movie Review
Quantum of Solace Review

"Quantum of Solace" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Marc ForsterProducer : Michael G. Wilson,Barbara Broccoli
Screenwiter : Paul Haggis,Neal Purvis,Robert Wade
Starring : Daniel Craig,Mathieu Amalric,Olga Kurylenko,Joaquin Cosio,Jeffrey Wright,Giancarlo Giannini
When Daniel Craig was announced as the next 007, the collective groan from the
Ian Fleming faithful was almost loud enough to drown out the uniform shrug of
the post-modern moviegoer. Where once he was the mightiest of Cold War icons,
Britain's own James Bond has been marginalized by a combination of contemporary
moviemaking and PC social posturing. Every few years, producers retrofit the
franchise to match the perceived interest level of the ever-shrinking demo.
After the excellent reboot in Casino Royale, Craig's second stint as the
celebrated secret agent, Quantum of Solace, is as confusing as its title.
While still on the hunt for the people responsible for the death of his gal pal
Vesper (this installment picks up mere minutes after the end of Royale), James
Bond (Craig) discovers a plot by energy tycoon Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric)
to corner the market on the world's most precious natural resource. It is part
of a much bigger scheme by Quantum, a notorious criminal syndicate, to
influence events in the world. They include the overthrow of the current
Bolivian government, the installation of former military dictator General
Medrano (Joaquin Cosio) there, and a continued stranglehold on world
intelligence. Under the suspicious eye of MI6 director M (Judi Dench), Bond
sets out to uncover the plot, determine the purpose of Quantum, and get
revenge. He is helped by a young Russian girl named Camille (Olga Kurylenko).
She has her own personal motives for getting even with these villainous bad men.
It's finally happened. After coming close to catching the disease several times
since Jason Bourne redefined the spy thriller, James Bond has finally succumbed
to "AASS" -- ADD-inspired Action Sequence Syndrome. It's not the deadliest of
cinematic diseases, but it can often be the most annoying. Quantum of Solace is
so jam-packed with stuntwork, shootouts, and standoffs that the
conspiracy-oriented plot can barely get a word in edgewise. Everything Bond
does is followed by some battle or another. He gets a message at his hotel
desk. He chases the bad guys. He prepares to bed a babe. He fends off unwanted
assailants. M gives him yet another in a series of grand dame dressing downs.
He whips out his trusty sidearm and starts firing (at oncoming criminals, that
is, not his boss). This is one secret agent who can't just drive down the
street and stop for a bite. Instead, he must avoid helicopters, rogue hitmen,
and some equally lethal femme fatales just to get a sandwich.
Elsewhere, Marc Forster (Monster's Ball, Finding Neverland) proves that he's
not the directorial jack of all trades he pretends to be. The aforementioned
action sequences run the gamut from quite effective to visually
incomprehensible. At least Bourne's Paul Greengrass made no bones about shaking
his camera all the way to Hell and back. Here, Forster sets his lens to
"vibrate" and then allows his editing to make things even more
incomprehensible. For every scene that works, two test our visual equilibrium.
This may be the first Bond film forged with the small screen in mind. Several
of the compositions look home theater-ready, not designed for the cineplex.
And who ever thought we'd miss narrative in a 007 story? Craig is so good as
the no nonsense spy with an almost superhuman ability to anticipate and derail
danger that failing to give him some downtime destroys the thrills. Like too
much of a tasty meal, we grow bloated while waiting for a break in the
smash-bang buffet. And Mathieu Greene is an excellent villain -- suave,
seductive, and scary. With open ended elements clearly saved for yet another
continuation of this narrative, Quantum of Solace feels like the middle act of
a much larger cinematic statement. Let's hope the next section is tighter and
less hyper than this storyline space holder.
Solace indeed.
Reviewer: Bill Gibron





