Film Review
The second of the James Bond films is easily the best. Spared the
tight budgetary constraints that impaired the first Bond film,
Dr No
(1962),
From Russia with Love
exhibits the stylish design and lavish production values which
audiences loved and which would become
de rigueur for every subsequent
film in the series.
This is where the Bond movie formula
solidified, although regrettably it would prove to be an artistic
straitjacket that would prevent the Bond films from progressing much
beyond what we see here.
Dr No had already established
many of the conventions for the series.
From Russia with Love completes the
job by introducing the pre-titles sequence, Bond's reliance on clever
gadgets and an arresting (and slightly silly) theme song. The
film also marks the first appearance of Bond's arch-nemesis, the
cat-loving Ernst Stavro Blofeld (referred to as Number One in this
film), here played by Anthony Dawson and voiced by Eric Pohlmann.
Oh, and Desmond Llewelyn plays Q, the gadget man, for the first time.
Sean Connery is at his best in his second outing as agent 007, a tad
more charming and slightly less sadistic than he was in his first Bond
film, but still rougher and moodier than any of his successors in the
role to date. Connery cited this has his favourite of the Bond
films he starred in, not surprising given the calibre of the cast and
technical crew he was working with. After this film, the actor
would soon become complacent as he grew increasingly tired of the role
and the attention it brought him.
The honour of playing the second Bond girl (after Ursula Andress) went
to Daniela Bianchi, an Italian actress who had won the Miss Rome beauty
contest and was runner-up for Miss World in 1960. Owing to her
imperfect command of English, she was dubbed by another actress,
Barbara Jefford. Bianchi may be pleasing on the eye but audiences
were far more likely to remember Lotte Lenya in the role of the
villainous SPECTRE agent Rosa Klebb. A renowned Austrian singer,
Lenya first found fame in the original 1928 production of
The Threepenny Opera, for which the
music had been composed by her husband, the celebrated German composer
Kurt Weill. The sequence in which Klebb attacks Bond with a
deadly switchblade shoe is one of the most iconic in the series.
No Bond film would be complete without a Bond villain and
From Russia with Love gives us one
of the best, in the guise of Red Grant, played to perfection by Robert
Shaw. This is the part that effectively launched Shaw's career in
Hollywood; he would win acclaim for his performances in films such as
A Man for All Seasons (1966),
Young Winston (1972) and
The Taking of Pelham One Two Three
(1974). Shaw is rarely as compelling as he is here, a chilling
physical presence that makes a worthy adversary for Connery's seemingly
indestructible Bond.
On a sadder note, the instantly likeable Mexican actor Pedro
Armendáriz (who plays Bond's helpmate Ali Kerim Bey) was
diagnosed with terminal cancer whilst filming in Turkey.
Armendáriz struggled to keep working but in the end the pain of
his illness overwhelmed him and he returned home to take his life
before his work was completed. His remaining scenes were filmed
using a stand-in. From his performance in this film, no spectator would suspect for
a moment that Armendáriz was not in perfect health.
The first of the Bond theme songs was composed by Lionel Bart, who had
recently scored a notable West End hit with the musical
Oliver! The popular singer
Matt Munro provided the vocals to which is assuredly one of the least
memorable theme songs in the series. (Can
anyone remember anything after the
first line?) John Barry turns in another of his great Bond
scores, including frequent snatches of the Monty Norman Bond theme
which was first heard in
Dr No.
From Russia with Love is the
most visually alluring and sophisticated of the Bond films. Not
only is it beautifully shot, with some stunning location photography in
Istanbul, it is also intelligently scripted and directed with immense
flair by Terence Young. The action sequences (which include
an obvious homage to Hitchcock's
North By Northwest, as well a
memorable tussle on the Orient Express, alas without Hercule Poirot)
are exceptionally well realised
- far more realistic, less contrived and hence more convincing that in
later films. The tongue-in-cheek humour (which Connery is
particularly adept at delivering) effectively offsets the tension without undermining the
realism of the drama.
From
Russia with Love is what every Bond film aspires to be, but
sadly rarely is. Here, the formula was fresh and exciting; it
would soon become stale and predictable, with subsequent films far too
dependent on the three Gs - girls, gadgets and gimmickry.
On its first release,
From Russia
with Love won widespread critical acclaim and was a major box office hit.
Made on a budget of two million dollars, the film grossed 78 million dollars
worldwide, a remarkable achievement for a British film at this
time.
Work on the third Bond film,
Goldfinger,
was well underway when this film was released, and it must have looked
to the films producers, Harry Saltzman and Albert R. Broccoli, that
they had suddenly acquired the Midas touch. They had.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Terence Young film:
Thunderball (1965)