New release: Titan Books just released the third volume in their Complete James Bond Classic Comic Strip Collection! The new hardcover edition includes strips from 1960-1966: Goldfinger, Risico, From a View to a Kill, For Your Eyes Only, The Man With the Golden Gun, and The Living Daylights. I love looking at the original strips, especially the work of the great John McLusky, which pre-dated the films and drew more directly from Ian Fleming's novels. From the press release: "James Bond returns to action in six thrilling adventures, starting with 007’s encounter with the titular Auric Goldfinger, the man with the Midas touch. Also included are Risico, From A View To A Kill, For Your Eyes Only, The Man With The Golden Gun and The Living Daylights, each of which has been painstakingly restored to create the highest quality reproduction of the original Express Newspapers’ strip available." More info at Amazon. Previous volumes include 1958-1960 (Casino Royale, Live And Let Die, Moonraker, Diamonds Are Forever, From Russia With Love, Dr No) and a SPECTRE omnibus (Thunderball, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, You Only Live Twice, The Spy Who Loved Me). Enjoy! Spy Vibers, I'm writing and producing a new Spy Vibe radio segment for Cocktail Nation out of Australia! More info HERE.
Selected Spy Vibe Posts: Propaganda Mabuse, Fahrenheit 451 50th, Interview: Police Surgeon, XTC Avengers, 1966 Pep Spies, Batman Book Interview, Exclusive Fleming Interview, Avengers Comic Strips, Robert Vaughn RIP, UNCLE Fashions, Thunderbirds Are Pop!, Interview:Spy Film Guide, Lost Avengers Found, The Callan File, Mission Impossible 50th, Green Hornet 50th, Star Trek 50th, Portmeirion Photography 1, Filming the Prisoner, Gaiman McGinnins Project, Ian Fleming Grave, Revolver at 50, Karen Romanko Interview, Mod Tales 2, Umbrella Man: Patrick Macnee, New Beatles Film, The Curious Camera, Esterel Fashion 1966, Exclusive Ian Ogilvy Interview, 007 Tribute Covers, The Phantom Avon novels return, Ian Fleming Festival, Argoman Design, Sylvia Anderson R.I.P., Ken Adam R.I.P., George Martin R.I.P., The New Avengers Comics, Trina Robbins Interview, The Phantom at 80, 007 Manga, Avengerworld Book, Diana Rigg Auto Show, The Prisoner Audio Drama Review, David McCallum novel, Andre Courreges R.I.P., Who's Talking on Spy Vibe, UFO Blu-ray, Avengers Pop Art.
Showing posts with label living daylights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label living daylights. Show all posts
April 14, 2017
January 2, 2017
MI6 CONFIDENTIAL 2017
The beautifully produced James Bond magazine, MI6 Confidential, has announced pre-order subscriptions for 2017. For the cover price of four issues, subscribers receive five issues of the magazine (issues #39-43), plus advanced notice on special signed editions. MI6 will also plans to publish a 100-page special this year (more details soon). The magazine celebrates its 10th anniversary in October, and four Bond films have major anniversaries: You Only Live Twice (50th in June), The Spy Who Loved Me (40th in July), The Living Daylights (30th in June), and Tomorrow Never Dies (20th in Dec). It should prove to be a good year to reflect on 007 history and gather information about the Bond film currently in the works. Subscription info here. Enjoy!
Selected Spy Vibe Posts: Exclusive Fleming Interview, Avengers Comic Strips, Robert Vaughn RIP, UNCLE Fashions, Thunderbirds Are Pop!, Interview:Spy Film Guide, Lost Avengers Found, The Callan File, Mission Impossible 50th, Green Hornet 50th, Star Trek 50th, Portmeirion Photography 1, Filming the Prisoner, Gaiman McGinnins Project, Ian Fleming Grave, Revolver at 50, Karen Romanko Interview, Mod Tales 2, Umbrella Man: Patrick Macnee, New Beatles Film, The Curious Camera, Esterel Fashion 1966, Exclusive Ian Ogilvy Interview, 007 Tribute Covers, The Phantom Avon novels return, Ian Fleming Festival, Argoman Design, Sylvia Anderson R.I.P., Ken Adam R.I.P., George Martin R.I.P., The New Avengers Comics, Trina Robbins Interview, The Phantom at 80, 007 Manga, Avengerworld Book, Diana Rigg Auto Show, The Prisoner Audio Drama Review, David McCallum novel, Andre Courreges R.I.P., Who's Talking on Spy Vibe, UFO Blu-ray, Avengers Pop Art Interview, Fergus Fleming Interview, Avengers: Alan Hayes Interview, Jaz Wiseman Interview, Diana Rigg BFI Interview, Casino Royale Interview: Mike Richardson, Lost Diana Rigg Interview, Honor Blackman at 90, UNCLE School.
Selected Spy Vibe Posts: Exclusive Fleming Interview, Avengers Comic Strips, Robert Vaughn RIP, UNCLE Fashions, Thunderbirds Are Pop!, Interview:Spy Film Guide, Lost Avengers Found, The Callan File, Mission Impossible 50th, Green Hornet 50th, Star Trek 50th, Portmeirion Photography 1, Filming the Prisoner, Gaiman McGinnins Project, Ian Fleming Grave, Revolver at 50, Karen Romanko Interview, Mod Tales 2, Umbrella Man: Patrick Macnee, New Beatles Film, The Curious Camera, Esterel Fashion 1966, Exclusive Ian Ogilvy Interview, 007 Tribute Covers, The Phantom Avon novels return, Ian Fleming Festival, Argoman Design, Sylvia Anderson R.I.P., Ken Adam R.I.P., George Martin R.I.P., The New Avengers Comics, Trina Robbins Interview, The Phantom at 80, 007 Manga, Avengerworld Book, Diana Rigg Auto Show, The Prisoner Audio Drama Review, David McCallum novel, Andre Courreges R.I.P., Who's Talking on Spy Vibe, UFO Blu-ray, Avengers Pop Art Interview, Fergus Fleming Interview, Avengers: Alan Hayes Interview, Jaz Wiseman Interview, Diana Rigg BFI Interview, Casino Royale Interview: Mike Richardson, Lost Diana Rigg Interview, Honor Blackman at 90, UNCLE School.
March 10, 2013
IAN FLEMING MUSIC: NOEL COWARD
The era of the 'mix tape' may have evolved into that of the 'playlist', but people have been sharing their cultural tastes for generations, passing along small glimpses into their personality and times. Similarly, the top-ten lists come flooding in every new year, as do those desert island picks. This week on Spy Vibe, we look at the musical world of Ian Fleming. Series links: Noel Coward,Whispering Jack Smith, Hawaiian Guitar, Joe Fingers Carr.
First up: Noel Coward. Ian Fleming looked up to the playwright/composer and great wit, Noel Coward. Coward had famously rented Fleming's Goldeneye in Jamaica, which he christened 'goldeneye, nose, and throat' for its sparse clinic atmosphere. He later built his own home down the beach and the two became neighbors. Coward was a close family friend and Fleming biographies and documentaries are filled with wonderful and humorous anecdotes. One famous story is Coward's telling of Fleming's private wedding, in which the bride and groom had to turn their heads away from the bad breath of the officiate. At the party back home, they ate black crab, which Noel said tasted like ashes from a tin can, and then buried the remains of a green wedding cake in the yard. Noel Coward wrote a number of witty tunes about Fleming and Goldeneye, but maybe the most famous is the Goldeneye Calypso. Spy Vibers may have heard it in the Ian Fleming documentary on the Living Daylights disc. In the song, Coward captures the couple's long affair and the strange dynamics between Fleming's Kemsley Press and Ann's ex-husband's Daily Mail. Here are the lyrics as they appear in the Complete Verse of Noel Coward. The unusual image below of Ian and Ann with writer, Alan John Ross is from the National Portrait Gallery.
Mongoose dig about sunken garden
Among his many experiences in life, Noel Coward also did some spying during WWII. From Reuters: "As to his covert wartime activities, Coward was dispatched to the United States before it entered the war to gauge local sentiment, reporting to British Security Coordination chief William Stephenson about what he'd seen and heard. Later in life Coward reflected that he could have made a career in espionage, 'except my life's been full enough of intrigue as it is.'" Coward said that his cover was to just be himself, flamboyant and social, and tasked to use his celebrity to pick up useful tidbits of information.
Spy Vibers of course celebrate Coward for his memorable roles in the 1959 film Our Man in Havana (below) and The Italian Job from 1969. It has been written that Coward turned down the role of Dr. No in the first 007 movie.
I leave you with one of my favorite Noel Coward tracks, Mad Dogs and Englishmen from 1932. I've seen Coward describes as the first Brit Pop star!
First up: Noel Coward. Ian Fleming looked up to the playwright/composer and great wit, Noel Coward. Coward had famously rented Fleming's Goldeneye in Jamaica, which he christened 'goldeneye, nose, and throat' for its sparse clinic atmosphere. He later built his own home down the beach and the two became neighbors. Coward was a close family friend and Fleming biographies and documentaries are filled with wonderful and humorous anecdotes. One famous story is Coward's telling of Fleming's private wedding, in which the bride and groom had to turn their heads away from the bad breath of the officiate. At the party back home, they ate black crab, which Noel said tasted like ashes from a tin can, and then buried the remains of a green wedding cake in the yard. Noel Coward wrote a number of witty tunes about Fleming and Goldeneye, but maybe the most famous is the Goldeneye Calypso. Spy Vibers may have heard it in the Ian Fleming documentary on the Living Daylights disc. In the song, Coward captures the couple's long affair and the strange dynamics between Fleming's Kemsley Press and Ann's ex-husband's Daily Mail. Here are the lyrics as they appear in the Complete Verse of Noel Coward. The unusual image below of Ian and Ann with writer, Alan John Ross is from the National Portrait Gallery.
Mongoose dig about sunken garden
Mongoose murmur ‘Oh my- oh my!
No more frig about- beg your pardon
Things are changing at Goldeneye!’
Mongoose say to Annee
Mongoose say to Annee
Your man as shady as mango tree
Sweet as honey from bee.
Hey for the Alka-Seltzer
Ho for the Asirin
Hey for the saltfish, ackee, ganja,
Booby’s eggs, Gordon’s Gin.
Mongoose listen to white folks wailin'
Mongoose giggle, say, 'Me no deaf.
No more waffle and daily Mailin'
Annie Rothmere's Madam F.'
Mongoose say to Annee
Varlyle Mansions N.G.
Goldeneye a catastrophe
Whitecliffs too near the sea.
Hey for the blowfish, blowfish,
Ho for the wedding ring
Hey for the Dry Martinis, old goat fricassee,
Old Man’s Thing.
Mongoose snigger at Human Race
Can’t have wedding without the Bryces,
Both the Stephensons, Margaret Chase.
Mongoose say to Annee
Now you get your decree
Once you lady of high degree
Now you common as me.
Hey for the piggly-wiggly
Ho for the wedding dress
Hey for the Earl of Dudley,
Loelia Westminster, Kemsley Press.
Among his many experiences in life, Noel Coward also did some spying during WWII. From Reuters: "As to his covert wartime activities, Coward was dispatched to the United States before it entered the war to gauge local sentiment, reporting to British Security Coordination chief William Stephenson about what he'd seen and heard. Later in life Coward reflected that he could have made a career in espionage, 'except my life's been full enough of intrigue as it is.'" Coward said that his cover was to just be himself, flamboyant and social, and tasked to use his celebrity to pick up useful tidbits of information.
Spy Vibers of course celebrate Coward for his memorable roles in the 1959 film Our Man in Havana (below) and The Italian Job from 1969. It has been written that Coward turned down the role of Dr. No in the first 007 movie.
I leave you with one of my favorite Noel Coward tracks, Mad Dogs and Englishmen from 1932. I've seen Coward describes as the first Brit Pop star!
I have a spy novella coming out! Stay tuned and follow Spy Vibe by clicking the Follow link at top right of this page. Did you know that Spy Vibe has a Pinterest page? You can see collections of images of Ian Fleming's life, dynamic vintage action, cliffhanger serials, Japanese designs from the 20s, vintage mystery novels, and more! Ian Fleming board here.
Check Spy Vibe for recent posts about 1960s espionage writers, Spy Vibe's discovery of a rare Ian Fleming serialization, my review of SKYFALL, 007 at the Intnl Spy Museum, Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot, new Beatles bio from Mark Lewisohn, tributes to Donald Richie and Tony Sheridan, the Les Vampires serial on Blu-ray, Lucy Fleming, The Beatles first record session, Ian Fleming's desert island interview, new Ian Fleming book designs, Fantomas, Spy Smasher, Barbarella tv show, British spy comics, Piper Gates retro designs, Cinema Retro, and more.
Want to support Spy Vibe? Please make a small donation with our secure Paypal tip-jar link at the top left of the main page. Nothing is too small to help cover the increasing bills for the domain, web-forwarding and other costs to maintain the site. Thank you!
Want to support Spy Vibe? Please make a small donation with our secure Paypal tip-jar link at the top left of the main page. Nothing is too small to help cover the increasing bills for the domain, web-forwarding and other costs to maintain the site. Thank you!
Labels:
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February 9, 2013
SKYFALL REVIEW & BLU-RAY RELEASE
The new James Bond film Skyfall makes its way to Blu-ray on Tuesday Feb 12th! This single Hi-def disc edition, bundled with DVD and digital copy, includes a number of special features, including commentary by director Sam Mendes and with producers Barbara Broccoli, Michael Wilson, and production designer Dennis Gassner, an hour of making-of documentaries, scenes from the premier, trailer, soundtrack intro, and various 'sneak peak' features. You can now pre-order the Blu-ray edition from Amazon for $19.99. My review of Skyfall is below.
Spy Vibe’s 2012 top ten #1: Skyfall. The year was filled with major events and releases celebrating the 50th anniversaries of The Beatles and the James Bond movies. But as historic as many of those highlights were, the most memorable event of the year for Spy Vibe was the release of the next Bond film, Skyfall. For a website project that is dedicated to 1960s Style in Action it is very seldom that we get to see new content created that adds significantly to the canon of a major sixties franchise or art movement. And we didn’t just get a new Bond film, we got a modern classic.
Skyfall, more than any Bond film so far, is about character. Instead of the larger-than-life stories of baddies bent on creating new world orders under the sea or in outer space, we now have Bond paired against his shadow self- a fellow agent gone to the dark side. Skyfall is an epic contrast of two men forced to reconcile the circumstances of their lives, the nature of loyalty and relationships, and ultimately why they choose to act. The filmmakers have delivered a super-smart package that elegantly weaves action-adventure with intimate character study. From the title sequence until the last moments, we see gorgeous imagery and production design that constantly serves the characters and their development on-screen. Choices in set design, color, and props are carefully placed to support the major Theme of the story. The title sequence alone with that incredible (Oscar-nominated) song serves as a CliffsNotes edition of the whole story. Can we say that about any other Bond film?
“We wanted to really mine the relationship between Bond and M, because it is the most significant relationship he has in his life,” says producer Barbara Broccoli. “M is the only person who represents authority to him. You have two extraordinary actors, and we just thought – let’s go all the way. It’s worked extremely well. It’s a very emotional story.”
007 suffers a similar betrayal by M in Skyfall and loyalties are questioned. In order to serve a greater good, she chooses to sacrifice Bond. Unlike Silva, however, Bond makes it clear that he is not troubled by M’s decision. Bond is not hurt that M sacrificed him, he is only hurt that she didn’t have faith in him to finish his mission successfully. As the film shows, Bond is an orphaned child who bounced back from tragedy by following his own hardened path. He is not satisfied merely to face down death and experience pleasure, as we see in early scenes in Skyfall. He may say he was 'enjoying death', but his boredom away from the job is palpable. He is not simply hedonistic. Where Silva is motivated by emotion, it appears that having a target and doing the job is what ultimately motivates Bond. Perhaps this stems from Ian Fleming's own character. Feeling lost after WWII, his niece once said that Ian "needed to know what his mission was. He needed something to do." Fleming endowed Bond with 'acidie', a torpor only relieved by focus and determination. The silent gaps between cases were torture for 007. Writing provided Fleming with a mission. And for his readers, the premise of a 'solo agent against a whole army' proved to be endlessly thrilling.
007 shows some love for his boss, a character who is often referred to as a mother figure to Bond and Silva. M even reaches the climax in the story near the grave of Bond’s own mother and father. But, here’s the interesting fly in the ointment that keeps me thinking about the movie. Though he has emotional presence in the film, Bond is not motivated by emotion around present events. He doesn’t expect M’s loyalty and love, only her faith. He is not troubled by her betrayal. He understands that they are 'all about the job', and that decisions are not personal. This understanding is echoed in his own moment with Ronson, a younger version of himself, whom Bond must sacrifice for the good of the mission. The dichotomy between Bond and Silva makes them really interesting to watch. And it makes me wonder why we root for Bond. Fleming said that he gave Bond two qualities that could be seen as virtues, patriotism and courage. But surely Silva is the more human of the two? Yet, we cheer for 007 and want to see him win. Does this go back to those early reviews of Fleming’s novels, which some criticized for celebrating sadism and snobbery? A wicked pleasure? Or, as M says in her defense of the Double-0 section, men like Bond are needed in the world to keep us safe from the chaos that lurks in the shadows? Or is it the deeper understanding of Bond as a mythological hero, who has come from a life-altering wound that continues to hurtle him forward through life. Skyfall exposes that wound and forces Bond to re-live it. The filmmakers skillfully establish empathy by showing Bond as sympathetic, powerful, likable, funny, and in jeopardy- the five keys to creating a high concept success.
Oddly enough, Silva’s character reminded me of an interesting story that Leonard Nemoy told to Bill Shatner in the documentary, Mindmeld. When Nimoy first started working on Star Trek, he initially saw the cast and crew as a kind of surrogate family. But when he kept feeling disappointment about his relationships with his co-workers, he grew angrier and angrier. He couldn’t reconcile the circumstances with his need for family and community. Once he finally changed his expectations, however, he was able to make peace with the situation and just enjoy working professionally with his team on the set. In a more dramatic way, Silva’s fall from grace in Skyfall serves as an interesting mirror in which to explore Bond’s own motivation as secret agent. *Mirrors were traditionally made of silver, by the way- another point for Theme by the filmmakers! Not since On Her Majesty’s Secret Service have we had such an intimate and evocative Bond story.
“We were very hard on stuff that didn’t seem necessary, or outstayed its welcome, or in a way fetishized the action. I think there’s a great tendency to be bigger, louder, faster, and to sort of forget the story, almost as if the story stops and the action begins, and then the story doesn’t start again until the action is over. “ –Sam Mendes (about editing the action sequences that build through the opening of Skyfall)
Skyfall also delivers a fun ride. The moments of humor and panache have returned. The action is exciting without being traumatic or gratuitous. The movie is tightly organized into an essential flow of action. We are brought to some exotic locations, as 007 adventures promise. One of the most visually stunning scenes is Bond’s fight with an assassin in a glass skyscraper in Singapore. Bond faces another ‘shadow’ of himself, an opposite number, and the two men constantly merge and separate in a ballet of reflections and colorful light. Again, the filmmakers don’t miss a chance to weave in Theme.
2012 was great for its many anniversary events and releases that helped us to look back at 1960s pop culture that still looms large in our lives today. But thanks to Skyfall, we got to see that the legacy of the Bond films is actually thriving and growing, and still able to reach higher grounds in storytelling. Everything or Nothing! Thanks for making that gamble. Skyfall acts as an origin story and re-established all of the key players we often associate with the franchise (M, Monneypenny, Q). I hope that, as they embark on the next story, the filmmakers continue to keep us close to character and Theme and not go the easier road toward spectacle and parody. Keep grounded in Fleming and keep gambling!
Spy Vibe’s 2012 top ten #1: Skyfall. The year was filled with major events and releases celebrating the 50th anniversaries of The Beatles and the James Bond movies. But as historic as many of those highlights were, the most memorable event of the year for Spy Vibe was the release of the next Bond film, Skyfall. For a website project that is dedicated to 1960s Style in Action it is very seldom that we get to see new content created that adds significantly to the canon of a major sixties franchise or art movement. And we didn’t just get a new Bond film, we got a modern classic.
There is a wonderful documentary from last year about the history of the James Bond films called Everything and Nothing. Spy Vibers can now see it streaming on Netflix! The film tells the story of how 007 got to the big screen and about the many peaks and valleys the franchise has experienced over the years. One pattern that emerged can be summed up by some advice that one of the series producers gave: he said they should always go back to Ian Fleming and the novels if they are ever having trouble solving a new film. In fact, every time the series stalled due to actor changes, problems with production, money, or with the studio, they were able to rally their efforts by grounding themselves in the source material and trying to make the very best films they could. It was like raising the stakes and betting everything or nothing in order to save the series. In light of the challenges they faced during of each of those bump-periods, only the best films would help pull the series back into the kind of successful sales they had seen during the great spy boom. The high-stakes effort and that hunger to win resulted in celebrated milestones like The Spy Who Loved Me, The Living Daylights, License to Kill, Casino Royale, and after a long hiatus during MGMs recent hiccup, Skyfall. Regardless of box office returns, these betting moments have resulted in solid, literary storytelling- and that’s what satisfies me as a moviegoer.
“If you’re not engaged with the characters, the action is meaningless, however good it is,” says director Sam Mendes. “To me, you have to put the characters in a credible and believable situation – you have to make it almost impossible for them to survive – and then show how they survive. That’s the challenge.”
Skyfall, more than any Bond film so far, is about character. Instead of the larger-than-life stories of baddies bent on creating new world orders under the sea or in outer space, we now have Bond paired against his shadow self- a fellow agent gone to the dark side. Skyfall is an epic contrast of two men forced to reconcile the circumstances of their lives, the nature of loyalty and relationships, and ultimately why they choose to act. The filmmakers have delivered a super-smart package that elegantly weaves action-adventure with intimate character study. From the title sequence until the last moments, we see gorgeous imagery and production design that constantly serves the characters and their development on-screen. Choices in set design, color, and props are carefully placed to support the major Theme of the story. The title sequence alone with that incredible (Oscar-nominated) song serves as a CliffsNotes edition of the whole story. Can we say that about any other Bond film?
“We wanted to really mine the relationship between Bond and M, because it is the most significant relationship he has in his life,” says producer Barbara Broccoli. “M is the only person who represents authority to him. You have two extraordinary actors, and we just thought – let’s go all the way. It’s worked extremely well. It’s a very emotional story.”
Skyfall leaves us with some interesting questions to grapple with. Bond’s shadow nemesis, Silva, is motivated by his emotional relationship with M. Silva is highly motivated by emotion. His love for M is overwhelming and he constantly refers to her as ‘mommy.’ He is so emotional, in fact, that her decision to sacrifice him during a past mission threw him off the rails and turned him into a murderous monster. Silva was M’s ‘favorite’ before Bond, and he is a James Bond-like agent now determined use that immense power to make M and the world pay.
007 suffers a similar betrayal by M in Skyfall and loyalties are questioned. In order to serve a greater good, she chooses to sacrifice Bond. Unlike Silva, however, Bond makes it clear that he is not troubled by M’s decision. Bond is not hurt that M sacrificed him, he is only hurt that she didn’t have faith in him to finish his mission successfully. As the film shows, Bond is an orphaned child who bounced back from tragedy by following his own hardened path. He is not satisfied merely to face down death and experience pleasure, as we see in early scenes in Skyfall. He may say he was 'enjoying death', but his boredom away from the job is palpable. He is not simply hedonistic. Where Silva is motivated by emotion, it appears that having a target and doing the job is what ultimately motivates Bond. Perhaps this stems from Ian Fleming's own character. Feeling lost after WWII, his niece once said that Ian "needed to know what his mission was. He needed something to do." Fleming endowed Bond with 'acidie', a torpor only relieved by focus and determination. The silent gaps between cases were torture for 007. Writing provided Fleming with a mission. And for his readers, the premise of a 'solo agent against a whole army' proved to be endlessly thrilling.
007 shows some love for his boss, a character who is often referred to as a mother figure to Bond and Silva. M even reaches the climax in the story near the grave of Bond’s own mother and father. But, here’s the interesting fly in the ointment that keeps me thinking about the movie. Though he has emotional presence in the film, Bond is not motivated by emotion around present events. He doesn’t expect M’s loyalty and love, only her faith. He is not troubled by her betrayal. He understands that they are 'all about the job', and that decisions are not personal. This understanding is echoed in his own moment with Ronson, a younger version of himself, whom Bond must sacrifice for the good of the mission. The dichotomy between Bond and Silva makes them really interesting to watch. And it makes me wonder why we root for Bond. Fleming said that he gave Bond two qualities that could be seen as virtues, patriotism and courage. But surely Silva is the more human of the two? Yet, we cheer for 007 and want to see him win. Does this go back to those early reviews of Fleming’s novels, which some criticized for celebrating sadism and snobbery? A wicked pleasure? Or, as M says in her defense of the Double-0 section, men like Bond are needed in the world to keep us safe from the chaos that lurks in the shadows? Or is it the deeper understanding of Bond as a mythological hero, who has come from a life-altering wound that continues to hurtle him forward through life. Skyfall exposes that wound and forces Bond to re-live it. The filmmakers skillfully establish empathy by showing Bond as sympathetic, powerful, likable, funny, and in jeopardy- the five keys to creating a high concept success.
Oddly enough, Silva’s character reminded me of an interesting story that Leonard Nemoy told to Bill Shatner in the documentary, Mindmeld. When Nimoy first started working on Star Trek, he initially saw the cast and crew as a kind of surrogate family. But when he kept feeling disappointment about his relationships with his co-workers, he grew angrier and angrier. He couldn’t reconcile the circumstances with his need for family and community. Once he finally changed his expectations, however, he was able to make peace with the situation and just enjoy working professionally with his team on the set. In a more dramatic way, Silva’s fall from grace in Skyfall serves as an interesting mirror in which to explore Bond’s own motivation as secret agent. *Mirrors were traditionally made of silver, by the way- another point for Theme by the filmmakers! Not since On Her Majesty’s Secret Service have we had such an intimate and evocative Bond story.
“We were very hard on stuff that didn’t seem necessary, or outstayed its welcome, or in a way fetishized the action. I think there’s a great tendency to be bigger, louder, faster, and to sort of forget the story, almost as if the story stops and the action begins, and then the story doesn’t start again until the action is over. “ –Sam Mendes (about editing the action sequences that build through the
Skyfall also delivers a fun ride. The moments of humor and panache have returned. The action is exciting without being traumatic or gratuitous. The movie is tightly organized into an essential flow of action. We are brought to some exotic locations, as 007 adventures promise. One of the most visually stunning scenes is Bond’s fight with an assassin in a glass skyscraper in Singapore. Bond faces another ‘shadow’ of himself, an opposite number, and the two men constantly merge and separate in a ballet of reflections and colorful light. Again, the filmmakers don’t miss a chance to weave in Theme.
Throughout the story, characters express how the ‘old ways’ are often the best, and this mantra shapes the film’s use of technology and gadgets. By keeping the pressure on the characters themselves, we see them pushed to be more resourceful. Deadly gadgets are crafted. Bond uses his trademark pistol, but often needs to improvise and utilize his surroundings (One friend complained that this introduced too much MacGyver into the character, but I disagree). I don’t think I’ve ever seen 007 run so much in one movie, reminding us that BOND is the super agent, and that he will prevail on the steam of his own power. As an extra bonus during the 50th anniversary year, they also managed to add some well-placed nods to classic 007 movies that got huge ovations from every audience I was in. Look for the Aston Martin DB5 and music cues from Goldfinger, among others.
2012 was great for its many anniversary events and releases that helped us to look back at 1960s pop culture that still looms large in our lives today. But thanks to Skyfall, we got to see that the legacy of the Bond films is actually thriving and growing, and still able to reach higher grounds in storytelling. Everything or Nothing! Thanks for making that gamble. Skyfall acts as an origin story and re-established all of the key players we often associate with the franchise (M, Monneypenny, Q). I hope that, as they embark on the next story, the filmmakers continue to keep us close to character and Theme and not go the easier road toward spectacle and parody. Keep grounded in Fleming and keep gambling!
I have a spy novella coming out. Stay tuned and follow Spy Vibe by clicking the Follow link at top right of this page.
Check Spy Vibe for recent posts about our discovery of a rare Ian Fleming serialization, tributes to Donald Richie and Tony Sheridan, the Les Vampires serial on Blu-ray, Lucy Fleming, The Beatles first record session, Ian Fleming's desert island interview, new Ian Fleming book designs, Fantomas, Spy Smasher, Barbarella tv show, British spy comics, Piper Gates retro designs, Cinema Retro, and more.
Want to support Spy Vibe? Please make a small donation with our secure Paypal tip-jar link at the top left of the main page. Nothing is too small to help cover the increasing bills for the domain, web-forwarding and other costs to maintain the site. Thank you!
Check Spy Vibe for recent posts about our discovery of a rare Ian Fleming serialization, tributes to Donald Richie and Tony Sheridan, the Les Vampires serial on Blu-ray, Lucy Fleming, The Beatles first record session, Ian Fleming's desert island interview, new Ian Fleming book designs, Fantomas, Spy Smasher, Barbarella tv show, British spy comics, Piper Gates retro designs, Cinema Retro, and more.
Want to support Spy Vibe? Please make a small donation with our secure Paypal tip-jar link at the top left of the main page. Nothing is too small to help cover the increasing bills for the domain, web-forwarding and other costs to maintain the site. Thank you!
February 2, 2013
IAN FLEMING ON DESERT ISLAND DISCS
Since 1942 the BBC has hosted an interview segment called Desert Island Discs, originally created by Roy Plomley. According to the show's website: "That first Desert Island Discs was recorded in the
BBC’s bomb-damaged Maida Vale studio on 27th January 1942 and aired in the
Forces Programme at 8pm two days later. It was introduced to the
listening public as 'a programme in which a well-known person is asked the
question, if you were to be cast away alone on a desert island, which eight
gramophone records would you choose to have with you, assuming of course, that
you had a gramophone and an inexhaustible supply of needles'. " On August 5th, 1963, their guest was author Ian Fleming.
The surviving nine minutes and thirty-three seconds of Ian Fleming's appearance on Desert Island Discs is available on the series website. He chats about his career and about how his wartime experience taught him how "the intelligence machine works". When they get to the James Bond books, Fleming mentions that his newest novel had just been sent to the publishers. I must assume that, as On Her Majesty's Secret Service had already been released in April '63, that the manuscript was You Only Live Twice, to be released in April of 1964. Listening to the recording, one hears familiar sound bytes that have appeared in other documentaries. In the recent doc film Everything or Nothing, for example, we hear why Fleming began to write Casino Royale in the face of marriage. The writer admits that he was "frenzied at the prospect of this great step in [his] life after having been a bachelor for so long, and [he] really wanted to take [his] mind off the agony." He describes James Bond as a "fictional mixture of commandos and secret service agents that [he] met during the war.
The interview continues on to Fleming's need to stick to a routine as a writer, both for his own discipline and, in a broader sense, to guarantee the success of his sales. He talks about how The Spy Who Loved Me, which deviated from expectation, was not a great seller. They touch on the films and Fleming mentions his visit to the set of From Russia With Love. When asked about the criticism that his books were sadistic, he says that history itself is all "sex and violence", and how it would be ridiculous to carry on the style of boyhood adventure stories like Bulldog Drummond. He is asked how long he thinks he can keep at writing new Bond books... Ian Fleming died one year later on August 12th, 1964 (his son's birthday). Posthumous releases followed with Bond short stories, his final feature-length 007 manuscript, The Man With the Golden Gun, and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. As you would expect, Fleming is absolutely charming to hear in the interview. I am such a fan that I watch the Ian Fleming documentary special feature on The Living Daylights disc over and over again. It's cool to discover additional archive material and to hear more of this famous interview. You can listen to this surviving audio segment over at the Desert Island Discs website. Now, what would he take to a desert island?
Ian Fleming's Desert Island Discs: Celia (Whispering Jack Smith), Dinah (The Revellers), La Vie en Rose (Edith Piaf), If I Didn't Care (The Ink Spots), This Ole House (Rosemary Clooney), A Summer Place (Billy Vaughan), Harry Lime Theme (Anton Karas), Darktown Strutters Ball (Joe Carr).
Book: War and Peace by Tolstoy
Luxury Item: Typewriter and paper.
CONTEST ENDING: Only ONE day left to enter to win cool prizes in Spy Vibe's birthday give-away contest. As a thank you to all Spy Vibers, you have a chance to win a rare Academy-screening brochure for Tinker,Tailor,Soldier,Spy, as well as some vintage books for your collection: Ian Fleming, James Bond, Honey West, The Saint, and Doctor Who. Your entry must be received by the end of the day, February 3rd. Details on the contest page here.
The surviving nine minutes and thirty-three seconds of Ian Fleming's appearance on Desert Island Discs is available on the series website. He chats about his career and about how his wartime experience taught him how "the intelligence machine works". When they get to the James Bond books, Fleming mentions that his newest novel had just been sent to the publishers. I must assume that, as On Her Majesty's Secret Service had already been released in April '63, that the manuscript was You Only Live Twice, to be released in April of 1964. Listening to the recording, one hears familiar sound bytes that have appeared in other documentaries. In the recent doc film Everything or Nothing, for example, we hear why Fleming began to write Casino Royale in the face of marriage. The writer admits that he was "frenzied at the prospect of this great step in [his] life after having been a bachelor for so long, and [he] really wanted to take [his] mind off the agony." He describes James Bond as a "fictional mixture of commandos and secret service agents that [he] met during the war.
The interview continues on to Fleming's need to stick to a routine as a writer, both for his own discipline and, in a broader sense, to guarantee the success of his sales. He talks about how The Spy Who Loved Me, which deviated from expectation, was not a great seller. They touch on the films and Fleming mentions his visit to the set of From Russia With Love. When asked about the criticism that his books were sadistic, he says that history itself is all "sex and violence", and how it would be ridiculous to carry on the style of boyhood adventure stories like Bulldog Drummond. He is asked how long he thinks he can keep at writing new Bond books... Ian Fleming died one year later on August 12th, 1964 (his son's birthday). Posthumous releases followed with Bond short stories, his final feature-length 007 manuscript, The Man With the Golden Gun, and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. As you would expect, Fleming is absolutely charming to hear in the interview. I am such a fan that I watch the Ian Fleming documentary special feature on The Living Daylights disc over and over again. It's cool to discover additional archive material and to hear more of this famous interview. You can listen to this surviving audio segment over at the Desert Island Discs website. Now, what would he take to a desert island?
Ian Fleming's Desert Island Discs: Celia (Whispering Jack Smith), Dinah (The Revellers), La Vie en Rose (Edith Piaf), If I Didn't Care (The Ink Spots), This Ole House (Rosemary Clooney), A Summer Place (Billy Vaughan), Harry Lime Theme (Anton Karas), Darktown Strutters Ball (Joe Carr).
Book: War and Peace by Tolstoy
Luxury Item: Typewriter and paper.
CONTEST ENDING: Only ONE day left to enter to win cool prizes in Spy Vibe's birthday give-away contest. As a thank you to all Spy Vibers, you have a chance to win a rare Academy-screening brochure for Tinker,Tailor,Soldier,Spy, as well as some vintage books for your collection: Ian Fleming, James Bond, Honey West, The Saint, and Doctor Who. Your entry must be received by the end of the day, February 3rd. Details on the contest page here.
January 20, 2013
2012 TOP TEN: #1 SKYFALL
Spy Vibe just had a birthday- and I'm giving away the presents! Stay tuned for details about how to enter for vintage prizes. I had a chance to explore some really fun articles and new discoveries this year. As a New Year's special, I'm posting Spy Vibe's Top Ten list of favorite topics from 2012. So far we've celebrated Graphic Novelist Richard Sala, Jon Gilbert's Ian Fleming: The Bibliography, Playboy Bunny Deana, designer Dieter Rams, Danger Diabolik, British Design at the V&A, the 50th anniversaries of The Beatles and James Bond, and our collector's series, For Your Shelf Only. Scroll down to see these posts. And now, #1 from 2012!
Spy Vibe’s 2012 top ten #1: Skyfall. The year was filled with major events and releases celebrating the 50th anniversaries of The Beatles and the James Bond movies. But as historic as many of those highlights were, the most memorable event of the year for Spy Vibe was the release of the next Bond film, Skyfall. For a website project that is dedicated to 1960s Style in Action it is very seldom that we get to see new content created that adds significantly to the canon of a major sixties franchise or art movement. And we didn’t just get a new Bond film, we got a modern classic.
There is a wonderful documentary from last year about the history of the James Bond films called Everything and Nothing. Spy Vibers can now see it streaming on Netflix! The film tells the story of how 007 got to the big screen and about the many peaks and valleys the franchise has experienced over the years. One pattern that emerged can be summed up by some advice that one of the series producers gave: he said they should always go back to Ian Fleming and the novels if they are ever having trouble solving a new film. In fact, every time the series stalled due to actor changes, problems with production, money, or with the studio, they were able to rally their efforts by grounding themselves in the source material and trying to make the very best films they could. It was like raising the stakes and betting everything or nothing in order to save the series. In light of the challenges they faced during of each of those bump-periods, only the best films would help pull the series back into the kind of successful sales they had seen during the great spy boom. The high-stakes effort and that hunger to win resulted in celebrated milestones like The Spy Who Loved Me, The Living Daylights, License to Kill, Casino Royale, and after a long hiatus during MGMs recent hiccup, Skyfall. Regardless of box office returns, these betting moments have resulted in solid, literary storytelling- and that’s what satisfies me as a moviegoer.
“If you’re not engaged with the characters, the action is meaningless, however good it is,” says director Sam Mendes. “To me, you have to put the characters in a credible and believable situation – you have to make it almost impossible for them to survive – and then show how they survive. That’s the challenge.”
Skyfall, more than any Bond film so far, is about character. Instead of the larger-than-life stories of baddies bent on creating new world orders under the sea or in outer space, we now have Bond paired against his shadow self- a fellow agent gone to the dark side. Skyfall is an epic contrast of two men forced to reconcile the circumstances of their lives, the nature of loyalty and relationships, and ultimately why they choose to act. The filmmakers have delivered a super-smart package that elegantly weaves action-adventure with intimate character study. From the title sequence until the last moments, we see gorgeous imagery and production design that constantly serves the characters and their development on-screen. Choices in set design, color, and props are carefully placed to support the major Theme of the story. The title sequence alone with that incredible (Oscar-nominated) song serves as a CliffsNotes edition of the whole story. Can we say that about any other Bond film?
“We wanted to really mine the relationship between Bond and M, because it is the most significant relationship he has in his life,” says producer Barbara Broccoli. “M is the only person who represents authority to him. You have two extraordinary actors, and we just thought – let’s go all the way. It’s worked extremely well. It’s a very emotional story.”
Skyfall leaves us with some interesting questions to grapple with. Bond’s shadow nemesis, Silva, is motivated by his emotional relationship with M. Silva is highly motivated by emotion. His love for M is overwhelming and he constantly refers to her as ‘mommy.’ He is so emotional, in fact, that her decision to sacrifice him during a past mission threw him off the rails and turned him into a murderous monster. Silva was M’s ‘favorite’ before Bond, and he is a James Bond-like agent now determined use that immense power to make M and the world pay.
007 suffers a similar betrayal by M in Skyfall and loyalties are questioned. In order to serve a greater good, she chooses to sacrifice Bond. Unlike Silva, however, Bond makes it clear that he is not troubled by M’s decision. As the film shows, Bond is an orphaned child who bounced back from tragedy by following his own hardened path. He is not satisfied merely to face down death and experience pleasure, as we see in early scenes in Skyfall. He may say he was 'enjoying death', but his boredom away from the job is palpable. He is not simply hedonistic. Bond is also not hugely patriotic, yet he throws himself into action with complete loyalty. Unlike Silva, Bond is not hurt by M’s decision to sacrifice his life, he is only hurt that she didn’t have faith in him to finish his mission successfully. Where Silva is motivated by emotion, it appears that having a target and doing the job is what ultimately motivates Bond. Perhaps this stems from Ian Fleming's own character. Feeling lost after WWII, his niece once said that Ian "needed to know what his mission was. He needed something to do." Fleming endowed Bond with 'acidie', a torpor only relieved by focus and determination. The silent gaps between cases were torture for 007. Writing provided Fleming with a mission. And for his readers, the premise of a 'solo agent against a whole army' proved to be endlessly thrilling.
007 shows some love for his boss, a character who is often referred to as a mother figure to Bond and Silva. M even reaches the climax in the story near the grave of Bond’s own mother and father. But, here’s the interesting fly in the ointment that keeps me thinking about the movie. Though he has emotional presence in the film, Bond is not motivated by emotion around present events. He doesn’t expect M’s loyalty and love, only her faith. He is not troubled by her betrayal. He understands that they are 'all about the job', and that decisions are not personal. This understanding is echoed in his own moment with Ronson, a younger version of himself, whom Bond must sacrifice for the good of the mission. The dichotomy between Bond and Silva makes them really interesting to watch. And it makes me wonder why we root for Bond. He is the less-emotional man. He is not motivated by love of country or of individuals. Surely Silva is the more human of the two? Yet, we cheer for 007 and want to see him win. Does this go back to those early reviews of Fleming’s novels, which some criticized for celebrating sadism and snobbery? A wicked pleasure? Or, as M says in her defense of the Double-0 section, men like Bond are needed in the world to keep us safe from the chaos that lurks in the shadows? Or is it the deeper understanding of Bond as a mythological hero, who has come from a life-altering wound that continues to hurtle him forward through life. Skyfall exposes that wound and forces Bond to re-live it. The filmmakers skillfully establish empathy by showing Bond as sympathetic, powerful, likable, funny, and in jeopardy- the five keys to creating a high concept success.
Oddly enough, Silva’s character reminded me of an interesting story that Leonard Nemoy told to Bill Shatner in the documentary, Mindmeld. When Nimoy first started working on Star Trek, he initially saw the cast and crew as a kind of surrogate family. But when he kept feeling disappointment about his relationships with his co-workers, he grew angrier and angrier. He couldn’t reconcile the circumstances with his need for family and community. Once he finally changed his expectations, however, he was able to make peace with the situation and just enjoy working professionally with his team on the set. In a more dramatic way, Silva’s fall from grace in Skyfall serves as an interesting mirror in which to explore Bond’s own motivation as secret agent. *Mirrors were traditionally made of silver, by the way- another point for Theme by the filmmakers! Not since On Her Majesty’s Secret Service have we had such an intimate and evocative Bond story.
“We were very hard on stuff that didn’t seem necessary, or outstayed its welcome, or in a way fetishized the action. I think there’s a great tendency to be bigger, louder, faster, and to sort of forget the story, almost as if the story stops and the action begins, and then the story doesn’t start again until the action is over. “ –Sam Mendes (about editing the action sequences that build through the opening of Skyfall)
Skyfall also delivers a fun ride. The moments of humor and panache have returned. The action is exciting without being traumatic or gratuitous. The movie is tightly organized into an essential flow of action. We are brought to some exotic locations, as 007 adventures promise. One of the most visually stunning scenes is Bond’s fight with an assassin in a glass skyscraper in Singapore. Bond faces another ‘shadow’ of himself, an opposite number, and the two men constantly merge and separate in a ballet of reflections and colorful light. Again, the filmmakers don’t miss a chance to weave in Theme.
Throughout the story, characters express how the ‘old ways’ are often the best, and this mantra shapes the film’s use of technology and gadgets. By keeping the pressure on the characters themselves, we see them pushed to be more resourceful. Deadly gadgets are crafted. Bond uses his trademark pistol, but often needs to improvise and utilize his surroundings (One friend complained that this introduced too much MacGyver into the character, but I disagree). I don’t think I’ve ever seen 007 run so much in one movie, reminding us that BOND is the super agent, and that he will prevail on the steam of his own power. As an extra bonus during the 50th anniversary year, they also managed to add some well-placed nods to classic 007 movies that got huge ovations from every audience I was in. Look for the Aston Martin DB5 and music cues from Goldfinger, among others.
2012 was great for its many anniversary events and releases that helped us to look back at 1960s pop culture that still looms large in our lives today. But thanks to Skyfall, we got to see that the legacy of the Bond films is actually thriving and growing, and still able to reach higher grounds in storytelling. Everything or Nothing! Thanks for making that gamble. Skyfall acts as an origin story and re-established all of the key players we often associate with the franchise (M, Monneypenny, Q). I hope that, as they embark on the next story, the filmmakers continue to keep us close to character and Theme and not go the easier road toward spectacle and parody. Keep grounded in Fleming and keep gambling!
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