1997
A pre announced snow day
allowed the viewing of another James Bond adventure when God intended them to
be seen, on a Sunday evening.
Brosnan’s second
portrayal was why we started watching the franchise in the first place. Given that it is his best outing, that
shouldn’t be too surprising.
We were flipping by one
of the near infinite Bond film marathons on cable and the handcuffed motorcycle
chase scene caught my daughter’s eye.
The fact that it is an
amazing stunt scene filled with practical effects is to be expected from these
movies. What pushed it over the edge to
generate her interest is something excessively rare for a Bond film:
The only reason the
scene works, is that Bond and Wai-Lin are shown to be equals.
This highly unusual
state for a female character dealing with Mr. Bond was a key area of
appeal. It was also why she was more
upset than usual when upon the viewing of the whole picture in sequence with
the other films. When Michelle Yeoh’s
Chinese super-agent finally succumbed to Jamesbonding at the end:
“And…there it is. She was awesome the whole time and then- mwah…bleah.”
The only kiss she was
more upset with in any of these movies was in this one as well:
The “dead kiss” with Paris,
because…”ew.”
That one kind of upset
me as well. Not for the same reason, as
it was a powerful, character driven, quiet emotional scene in the middle of all
the chaos that worked excellently. My
issue was having Teri Hatcher as a Bond girl, and wasting her like that. Can she come back as her own twin, Marseille
McKenna or something?
My daughter also had fewer
complaints about the title sequence this time around because:
“The x-ray images make ‘naked
watch’ harder.”
The action kept her and
my wife interested throughout, leading to both of them laughing and cheering at
the violence.
That’s my girls!
She though Elliot Carver
was whiny and “Anakin like” sometimes, yelling, “Who cares?” after one of his
monologues. The whole concept that he
was manipulating the world into the brink of war and killing a great many
people only for broadcasting rights offended her sensibilities a great deal.
She also found his weird
little Kung Fu demonstration at Wai Lin, “Disturbing.”
However, none of this
ever took her out of the film. She viewed him as a threat and a worthy opponent
to 007.
Because calling up
Jonathan Pryce when you need a villain is always rewarding for everyone
involved.
She did continue to
laugh at Brosnan’s sounding like a “leprechaun.”
However, this time
around she was more accepting of Joe Don Baker’s Wade as “Felix’s replacement.”
Though, she had some
issues with his briefing before the HALO jump detailing the multiple ways it
could kill James.
“Well, that’s nice and
not creepy at all.”
Other interesting
observations:
After he breaks free of
Wai Lin handcuffing him to the pipe, (which caused her to proclaim one of many
times, “She’s awesome!”) my daughter pointed out how out of place he looked.
I asked, “Because he’s
not Chinese?”
She replied,
“No, because he’s all
wet.”
My wife and daughter
both called the remote controlled BMW crashing into the rental car place.
OK, maybe these things
do follow patterns, but we all still laughed.
Finally, my daughter was
truly upset with the upgrade of James Bond’s standard sidearm.
It had nothing to do
with tradition, concealment, or knowledge of handguns.
It was simply that with
the Walther P99, she was unable to make the
“Pee Pee Gun” jokes she
made about the Walther PPK.
That’s my girl!
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