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Die Another Day |
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Die Another Day marks the 20th
installment—and the 40th anniversary—of the
longest-running, most successful film
franchise in Hollywood history. The formula is
as simple and straightforward as the
preparation of 007’s signature vodka martini
(very dry, shaken not stirred). Start with a
completely amoral British secret agent who
has a license to kill and a magnetic charm
with the ladies. Add a volatile political
situation, usually involving a megalomaniac
with a twisted plan for world domination.
Manipulate the agent’s pursuit of said
megalomaniac (and his evil, often freakish
right-hand man) for maximum action, mayhem
and the eventual destruction of the villain’s
lair. Toss in expensive cars, high-tech
gadgets, fashionable formalwear, sly sexual
innuendo, exotic locales, shapely women in
various stages of undress, casual sex, and
violence that produces a substantial body
count.
Shake, don’t stir.
The series’ latest concoction opens with
James Bond in the demilitarized zone
between North and South Korea, trying to
unmask a traitor tied to diamonds and a
satellite/weapon of mass destruction.
Immediately, Bond’s cover is blown. A
hovercraft chase across a mine field ends
with his capture. After 14 months in an Asian
prison, Bond resumes his search by traveling
to Hong Kong, Cuba, London and, finally,
Iceland. Along the way he encounters the
ethically dubious practice of transplanting
DNA for genetic therapy, beds two fellow
agents and makes full use of his license to
kill.
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positive elements: The good guys
value loyalty and patriotism. Bond risks life
and limb to save the civilized world, as well as
the life of a fellow agent. Terrorism is
condemned, and it’s implied that harvesting
DNA from "people who won’t be missed" is a
heinous practice.
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sexual content: When Bond first
meets Jinx (she emerges from the surf in a
skimpy bikini), they exchange sly innuendoes
before it is suggested they spend some
"down time" together that evening. The very
next shot shows the pair engaged in
passionate foreplay in bed. Later, a
masseuse named Peaceful Fountains of
Desire prepares to work on Bond until he
exposes the encounter as a set-up. Cool to
Bond’s come-ons at first, Miranda Frost melts
in the agent’s arms and winds up in his bed.
Miss Moneypenny uses a virtual reality gadget
to have a fantasy fling with 007. Several
women are shown in lingerie or bikinis.
There’s a shot of a well-endowed nude
female ice sculpture. The opening credits are
accompanied by fire-and-ice silhouettes of
naked women, made all the more
inappropriate by the way they’re interspersed
with shots of Bond being tortured in a Korean
prison. Elsewhere Bond punches out a man
as the victim’s barely clothed bedmate lingers
in the background. That subtle blend of sex
and violence has come to be expected in
Bond films, but its familiarity makes it no less
insidious.
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violent content: Torture and murder
are portrayed as evil when coming from the
villains, but simply a necessary means to an
end when the violence comes from Bond and
other "noble" characters. Scores of soldiers,
guards and other faceless pawns get blown
up or mowed down in gun battles. On a more
personal level, people go toe-to-toe with
swords, beat each other senseless with
martial arts moves and pull guns in a
threatening manner. Jinx puts two slugs in a
doctor at close range. A man on a hovercraft
crashes through a stone wall and plummets
over a waterfall. When an airplane’s cabin
loses pressure, several passengers get
sucked out of the hole. Bond escapes from a
hospital by using a defibrillator as a weapon.
The villain uses a computerized glove to
administer crippling electric shocks. A fistfight
amid runaway laser beams ends with a man
being shot through the back of the head by
one (the beam emerges from his lifeless
mouth). Bond and Jinx use a laser to cut off
the dead man’s arm in order to trick a security
panel with the handprint. Other villains are
knifed in the neck, stabbed in the chest,
impaled by falling objects or sucked into a jet
engine. Going mano a mano with heavily
armed cars, Zao and Bond get into a dogfight
on ice. Men on snowmobiles get mercilessly
run down, their bodies hurtling into a building.
An exploding briefcase full of diamonds
leaves Zao scarred (and wearing very
expensive "face studs"). Jinx nearly drowns. A
"simulated" shootout in the offices of the
British Secret Service yield many
casualties.
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crude or profane language: Sexual
innuendo notwithstanding, there are fewer
than 10 profanities (the worst examples are a
use of "g--d---," and one woman calling
another a "b--ch" as she kills her).
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drug and alcohol content: Alcohol is
the beverage of choice for Bond. He’s shown
drinking in a half-dozen scenes. He also visits
a cigar factory in Havana and is later shown
puffing on one.
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other negative elements: Vengeance
plays into Bond’s motivations. Also, Jinx says
she was named that because she was born
on Friday the 13th, and it is implied that she’s
superstitious.
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conclusion: The action is wild and,
occasionally, innocent fun. A scene in which
Bond dangles from the edge of an icy cliff face
that lets loose from a glacier is really clever.
But all too often Die Another Day spoils
the ride with glamorous violence and immoral
sexual antics. The movie may be a rush, but at
what cost to fans who continue to have Bond’s
warped values (namely that promiscuity is
cool and merciless bloodshed heroic)
pounded into their psyches?
Could I be overreacting? Can an action
franchise that has made a fortune selling
amoral sex and violence really influence the
way viewers think and behave? If it can’t, why
have critics objected to scenes in which Bond
smokes cigars, complaining that they
glamorize dangerous behavior? And why did
25 corporate "partners" pony up a reported
$100 million of the film’s $140 million budget
just to be associated with the 007 brand?
Because movies are a powerful means of
communicating messages, and for many
filmgoers, James Bond is a role model.
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