Skyfall will probably be the best Bond film ever; why? While other critics would disagree with me on this, I believe it's because meticulous care has been taken by expert film makers to build up the character of Bond for the audience to dive into; Bond has been re-made into an icon--not only of action heroes--but of metaphysical and cultural identity reflecting the dramatic changes in global events and norms. It's because Bond has become human, then risen above his human boundaries, that we both believe everything he does and willingly suspend our disbelief to believe everything he does, and this is character success when the audience wants them to succeed and identifies with them in their pain.![]() |
| Judi Dench as M in Skyfall. Please note, in this shot, how her stance reflects the image of the little English bull dog on (our) left, atop her desk. Any and every detail about M we can gather in the film will be imperative to understanding what has happened and why. |
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| The point of the film at which this scene takes place will be important for Bond's character because bathing/swimming/raining, etc., is usually sacramental for a rebirth so that they are cleansed of previous wounds (emotions and physical) so they can complete their task, fulfill their destiny. Don't believe me? Remember, Silva has Bond captured and Bond says, "Everyone needs a hobby." Silva asks, "What's yours?" and Bond replies, "Resurrection." The swimming scene pictured above may be the actual moment of psychological resurrection for Bond or this may be one of the "minor" moments of resurrection, as every day of our lives we have to validate decisions we have made or decide to alter our lives. Up to the point of this "resurrection" scene, Bond is depleted and needs rejuvenation; what has depleted him? The scene following this swimming scene will probably be the key to Bond's entire being, i.e., what makes James Bond James Bond, because whatever he does after he swims (the significant action) will be his inner-most motivation, what he sees as his purpose in life. |
Whenever a character dies, it is a metaphysical/cultural judgment upon whatever that character represented/symbolized. Being an older woman, M symbolizes Great Britain, specifically, the "old order" of Great Britain and the way things have been done, the values the UK has stood for and fought for; what changes all that? That has to be seen in the film, but my thesis going into Skyfall is that the film makers are critical of the enemies England has fought in the past mistaking the enemies for the friends, and the friends for enemies (China and communism).
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| These are the shots that make my heart swoon! Light and darkness will be major characters in Skyfall (as we can tell from the shot above) and probably any other dichotomy (inside & outside, man & woman, light & dark, evil & good, etc.). In this clip, the darkness covers Bond but his eyes are illuminated, meaning that his world is dark (something has happened and he's confused or the world is no longer the place he thought it was) but his inner eyes, that is, his wisdom and experience, are "lighting" the way for him to track the real enemy, so he's still able to "see" through the darkness that is symbolic of whatever is going on within this scene. |
Where are they and what are they looking at?
We know by the paintings in the room they are in London, the National Gallery, specifically in Room 34, south end, facing the west wall (being an art history major has finally paid off,...); let us now compare those specific coordinates of Bond's exact location to this clip when M (Judi Dench) tries to "locate" Bond:
Why would his boss (a long acquaintance) have little knowledge of Bond's location, yet Q (who Bond has just met) knows 007's exact location? Such a grand, polemical comparison in Bond's relationship to M and Q will be constant throughout the film and this is only one of several dichotomies upon which the characterizations will hinge. Why should we care about that? Because if the characters demonstrate such highly dramatized polarizations, the villain and the hero will exhibit ever greater diametrical opposition--that vastness in-between good and evil--and identifying those poles will not only be the key to understanding what the film wants to say and why it needs to say it, but where we enter into that discussion.The reason this scene in the museum is so important is because this is the scene wherein Bond gets the gun that fits to the palm of his hand, so only he can fire it: a work of technological art within a setting of cultural art.
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| Ben Whishaw as Q. |
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| The Fighting Temeraire Tugged To Her Last Berth To Be Broken Up, 1838, by JMW Turner, 1839, National Gallery of Art, London. Please, click upon the image and open it at full viewing capacity because that will bring the painting into an entirely different perspective for you. Turner is one of the best known--and best loved--English painters of all time, so it's not the least bit surprising that a painting by the Royal Academy member would be included in the ultimate film about the ultimate British superhero; what is surprising is the choice of painting. I mean, why not go with one of the far more abstract ones, or one of the more intimate ones? One of the more famous ones? (Simon Schama has a fab part on Turner in his Power Of Art series, which is available through Netfilix). This one was chosen for a reason, this one over other possibilities within Room 34 of the NG, or any other painting in that enormous museum (or the Tate, or the Grosvenor Gallery, for that matter). |
Or is it?
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| This is complex. Bond has just seen a man fall to his death while a woman in yonder window has just seen Bond send a man to his death. Here are the important dichotomies again: the darkness of the night (where Bond is) and the light of the room (where the woman is); the vertical space of where the man has just fallen to his death and the horizontal space between Bond and the woman; Bond is outside, the woman is inside. Note how nearly everything in this shot is vertical or horizontal: the buildings all going up , and the tidy, neat lines going across the apartment as window frames, like a grid. This order may reflect the order within Bond at this moment of action, but it might also serve to heighten the disorder within him, we will have to see, but it's one more thing to look for in the film. |
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| Mr and Mrs Hallet (The Morning Walk) by Gainsborough. |
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| Another fabulous shot; why? There's darkness, but it's being illuminated by "false lights," the neon and florescent, which will make for an interesting mirror of what Bond is going through at this point in the film. Please note the beard Bond wears, which is unusual for him. It means either one, he has given into his appetites (facial hair usually symbolizes the base appetites because civilized man shaves his face, that is, he disciplines his appetites because hair makes us like the animals, I'm just explaining the logic of the symbol) OR it means the exact opposite: Bond has been an ascetic. Holy men who would go off into the desert would grow long beards because they were taming the inner-passions and appetites, leaving the world behind in favor of the inner-world of the spirit, so that, too, will make for an interesting insight into Bond's struggles and weaknesses at this point of the story. |
Is this the side that Skyfall takes?
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| "Mommy was very bad," Silva tells Bond, and why would such a big bad villain refer to M as "Mommy?" Because she is. She symbolizes the order and the state which gave birth to both Silva and Bond. The question is, what does Silva symbolize? We know he dresses up like a cop and in that guise tries to attack M while she is on trial for her letting the drive with British spies on it be stolen. So Silva is a "false arm" of the law accusing her, meaning that there is both legitimate accusations against her and illegitimate accusations. Silva will represent a class or a theory and what he represents will be the ill-borne fruit of Great Britain's past that must pass away with Great Britain. |
Again, I have no doubt that Skyfall (the name of Bond's childhood home being given the title of the film alerts us that the whole film is geared towards what happens at Skyfall Lodge) will be the best Bond film ever, maybe even the best film of the year. I am off to see it now and will be tweeting my initial response and working on this post to get it up asap because it's so important! Go see the film and enjoy it and we'll discuss it!Eat Your Art Out,
The Fine Art Diner






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