Film Review
Roger Moore's silky smooth debut as agent 007 helped to re-energise the Bond series
in the early 70s but did a pretty good job of alienating its most loyal
fans. Despite its success at the box office,
Live and Let Die was reviled by the
critics, who saw Moore (known at the time for playing Simon Templar in
the TV series
The Saint) as a
poor substitute for Sean Connery. The film's imperfections have
been amplified by the passage of time, so that today its toxic
concoction of racial stereotyping, sexual innuendo and seriously bad
jokes is really hard to swallow (spitting is preferable).
One suspects that the decision to cast Roger Moore as Bond had
less to do with his suitability for the role and
more to do with with the implied connotations in his name...
Live and Let Die suffers from
the fact that it was made when blaxploitation was at its height.
Whilst not intentionally racist, the film's portrayal of African
Americans is hardly flattering. Even the black villain of the
piece is a walking cliché, having none of the menace and depth
that we expect of even a half-decent Bond villain. Of course, at
the time,
black did not mean
cultural diversity but voodoo witchcraft, and so we have to endure the
sight of black natives dancing half-naked around a totem pole.
Sorry folks, this is not Bond. This is a white supremacist's
version of
Tintin,
spiced up with some unimaginably tacky low-grade eroticism.
Guy Hamilton, the director of
Goldfinger (1965), one of the
absolute best Bond films, had clearly lost the Midas touch by this
stage. It's not a good sign when the action sequences, which are
usually intended to accelerate the pace of the narrative, merely slow
things down to an unendurable crawl. Throw in a comedy sheriff
who is on day release from
The Dukes
of Hazzard, a load of black actors who have yet to be issued
with their Equity cards and enough sexual innuendo to fuel a few
hundred really bad
Carry On
films, and what you end up with is this fiasco masquerading as a
Bond movie. And as for that theme song by Wings... If
you're going to scrape the bottom, you might as well do it in
style.
The fact that
Live and Let Die
was such a huge commercial success meant that there was unlikely to be any
appreciable upswing from this artistic nadir in the short term. In fact, this
bargain basement monstrosity served as the template for the next half
dozen or so Bond films, providing Roger Moore with plenty of
opportunity to arch his eyebrows and knock out the kind of suggestive
quips which nowadays would send a budding Don Juan headfirst into the
nearest accident and emergency ward. In this latest incarnation,
agent 007 not only had a licence to kill; he also had free reign to
dish out as much camp silliness as his audience could stomach. In the
1970s, not the most culturally discriminating era in human history,
that was one helluva lot of camp silliness. Now, Mr Bond, is that a Walther
PPK in your holster, or are you
extremely pleased to see me..?
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Guy Hamilton film:
The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)
Film Synopsis
When three British agents are assassinated whilst spying on Dr Kananga,
the president of San Monique, a small island in the Caribbean, James
Bond is sent to New York to investigate. Kananga has great fun
playing the benign dictator but he is in fact the head of a drugs
trafficking operation that threatens to swamp the entire western
world. For want of something better to do, Bond follows Kananga
to San Monique, where he encounters the beautiful fortune teller
Solitaire, a marsh filled with hungry crocodiles, dark voodoo
ceremonies and a man with a nasty right hook, of the metal variety...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.