Film Review
Roger Moore takes his final bow as James Bond in this, the fourteenth
entry in EON's officially syndicated Bond series - and by all accounts
the actor was glad to see the back of the part. Widely regarded
as one of the weaker Bond films,
A
View to a Kill suffers from a dearth of original ideas, weak
characterisation and some unimaginative direction. Moore disliked
the film for two reasons: he felt he was far too old for the role
(which, at 57, he certainly was) and
he considered the level of violence needlessly gratuitous.
Despite this, the actor gives a respectable performance, aided by the
fact that the screenplay is somewhat less riddled with the
inappropriate camp humour seen in previous Bond movies. Moore may
not have been everyone's favourite Bond, but he left the series with
his professional reputation intact, despite the best efforts of his
screenwriters. It was also farewell to Lois Maxwell, who takes
her leave after appearing as Miss Moneypenny in every single Bond film
since the series' inception.
On the plus side,
A View to a Kill
has a decent villain (Christopher Walken's Zorin is the epitome of the
deliciously cool psychopathic genius), a handsome leading lady (Tanya
Roberts, a corker if ever there was one) and some great supporting
artistes (Patrick Macnee and Grace Jones, both excellent). The
action sequences are, as ever, exciting and slickly staged,
particularly the final showdown on San Francisco's Golden Gate bridge.
Unfortunately, these positives are hardly enough to counteract the
film's central killer weakness, which is the absence of an original
plot. The storyline (a bland reworking of
Goldfinger)
is predictable, stale and essentially just consists of a series of
action scenes seemingly strung together without any real thought.
By the mid-1980s, the Bond franchise really did look as though it had
run its course. The series had been stuck in a grove for over a
decade and had become repetitive and formulaic. A change of
director had not, as had been hoped, lead to a change in direction, as
John Glen was happy merely to rehash old story ideas for fear of trying
something new. The problem was that the Bond films were still big
box office winners and there was no incentive to change. The
series had become a victim of its own success. The question is:
would a change of lead actor provide enough momentum to take the series
in a new direction, or would it merely be more of the same...?
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When it is discovered that the Soviets have managed to duplicate a
revolutionary microchip capable of withstanding a nuclear explosion,
British Intelligence suspects that the chip's manufacturer, Zorin
Industries, has been infiltrated by Russian agents. James Bond is
assigned to investigate the activities of the company's
multimillionaire owner, Max Zorin, and soon finds he is implicated in a
horse racing scam, fitting his horses with microchips to improve their
chances of winning at racing tournaments. This turns out to be
small beer compared with Zorin's master plan, which is to gain control
of the world's microchip industry by destroying Silicon Valley...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.