Film Review
The James Bond films are a ripe target for parody, but whilst
Casino Royale manages
to pull off some of the obvious jokes, it is far from satisfactory overall. The
film suffers obviously from talent overload, with no less than five directors and five script
writers and a veritable cavalcade of star names, including Peter Sellers, David Niven,
Woody Allen and Ursula Andress. As a result, the film is totally directionless,
a confused, disorganised mess, which many Bond enthusiasts are keen to forget. Also
unpardonable is the fact that leading French actor Jean-Paul Belmondo should end up with
such a small part in the film: star billing for a twenty second appearance, right at the
end of the film!
Despite its obvious faults, this is a film which it is actually quite difficult to dislike.
From the start, the film almost seems to realise it is going to fail, and so it soon ends
up laughing at itself. It is this typically British self-deprecatory sense of fun
which gives the film sufficient charm for it to be watchable. There are also
a few genuinely funny moments, although these tend to get lost in the rambling, confused
plot. (The first thirty minutes of the film is almost totally unfathomable).
The film's strongest selling point has to be Burt Bacharach's racy score, played Herb
Alpert and his Tijuana Brass band, somewhat over-used but always a pleasure to listen
to. If the whole film had been of a similar calibre, Casino Royale would
probably be regarded as a classic, rather than a clumsy attempt to parody one of British
cinema's most popular film series. Still, scrappy though it is, it's a worthier
entry in the Bond series than Moonraker (1979),
which is just plain silly. The film has virtually nothing to do with the Ian Fleming
novel it is named after, allowing the same book to be adapted 'properly'
forty years later, for Daniel Craig's first outing as agent 007.
© James Travers 1999
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Val Guest film:
Confessions of a Window Cleaner (1974)
Film Synopsis
Against his will, the original James Bond is brought out of retirement to foil a dastardly
plot by SMERSH, an enemy organisation run by the evil Dr Noah. In a desperate bid
to thwart their enemies, the British secret service renames its remaining agents 007,
including Bond's daughter, Mata. They also recruit a fumbling baccarat expert Evelyn
Tremble to take on the villainous Le Chiffre at the Casino Royale. Where will it
all end?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.