Total Film

OR IS JAMES BOND JUST AWFUL IN CASINO ROYALE?

- Asks Jordan Farley

Recently, I attended Secret Cinema Presents Casino Royale. The experience was suitably immersive, but the part of the night I was most looking forward to was re-viewing the film on the big screen. Despite once wearing out a VHS copy of Diamonds Are Forever, Royale’s been my favourite Bond since Daniel Craig burst onto the scene in his much-tootight swimwear in 2006.

Martin Campbell’s second stab at Britain’s beloved Secret Service agent was still every bit the muscular, Bourne-besting reboot I remembered, Vesper still the Bond girl to beat. But there was a rotten apple in the barrel and his name was… well, you know his name. Bond is, unequivoca­lly, a right royal shit in Casino Royale. There was a

time when I would have loved to be 007. Now I wouldn’t want to be within 100 feet of his perfectly formed arse.

I’d always accepted Bond’s licence to kill as a necessary, nay cool, part of his oeuvre; but the Bond of Casino Royale takes a perverse pleasure in death in a way I found more than a little troubling. Shooting unarmed targets is one thing, yet Bond’s self-satisfied smirk as he unflinchin­gly watches airport bomber Carlos blow himself up isn’t the reaction of a hero, but a psychopath.

And a full 11 years after Judi Dench’s M condemned Bond as a “sexist, misogynist dinosaur” in goldeneye, he’s still stuck firmly in the Triassic Era in Casino Royale. Not only is there the flagrant lack of respect for M, and his utter indifferen­ce to getting Solange killed, but every interactio­n with Vesper would be grounds for dismissal if MI6 had a functional HR department. He comes across more like a cheap pick-up artist than a secret agent trained in the art of seduction. Even the beloved shower scene turns icky when Bond sticks Vesper’s fingers in his gob.

Clearly, Bond has always been a bastard. The casual racism and sexual aggression of Connery’s era, especially, can only be viewed as products of their time nowadays. And Craig’s reign has been far from free of controvers­y; Skyfall’s Sévérine and Spectre’s Lucia among the series’ most mistreated Bond girls. I’d naïvely remembered Casino Royale as being free of such problems, but now I’m not sure I can watch it the same way again. Or is it just me? Share your reaction at www.gamesradar.com/totalfilm or on Facebook and Twitter.

 ??  ?? Still a bastard?
Still a bastard?
 ??  ??

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