Hawke's Bay Today

Connery: The king is dead

A charismati­c movie star, Sean Connery was more than just James Bond says Jake Coyle

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A Ac charismati­c movie star, st Sean Connery was w more than just James J Bond says Jake Coyle

Writing an appreciati­on of Sean Connery feels inevitably inadequate compared to experienci­ng the real thing. To glimpse his magnetism, you might turn to a photograph of him in a tailored suit, leaning against an Aston Martin. You’d probably get more of his menacing charisma by pulling up the “Chicago way” scene from The Untouchabl­es.

It might be enough simply to say: The king is dead.

As a lion of movies for half a century, Connery’s talent was manifest. He was famously cast as James Bond without a screen test. It was that obvious. And from then on, in even the lesser films, Connery, who died Saturday at 90, was never out of place on screen. His presence was absolute. Noting his supreme confidence, the late film critic Pauline Kael once wrote, “I don’t know any man since Cary Grant that men have wanted to be so much.”

As a more earthy, macho movie-star ideal, Connery was so beloved that he was shared, like folklore, between generation­s. It helped that he never seemed to be appealing to the audience, or to anybody, for anything. With raised eyebrows and roguish wisecracks, there was little that Connery (nearly always the lead) didn’t command. And to a certain extent, that cocksurene­ss shaped his career, too.

Connery, 32 when Dr. No came out, had already lived through World War II. Born into poverty in Edinburgh, he left school at age 13 during the war and worked as a labourer and a bricklayer before he donned the tuxedo. He saw Bond, too, as a product of the war.

“Bond came on the scene after the war, at a time when people were fed up with rationing and drab times and utility clothes and a predominan­tly gray colour in life,” Connery, who served in the British Navy as a teenager, told Playboy in 1965. “Along comes this character who cuts right through all that like a very hot knife through butter, with his clothing and his cars and his wine and his women.”

Long after achieving fame, Connery contentedl­y gave it up. He spent his final two decades cheerfully retired in the Caribbean, often playing golf with his wife, unimpresse­d and little tempted by more modern Hollywood production­s. (He said he was “fed up with the idiots”.)

There was irony in that. Connery, as the original cinema Bond, did much to make the style and tone of today’s movie franchises — even if few carry a lick of Connery’s danger. His Bond heir Daniel Craig on Saturday credited Connery with helping “create the modern blockbuste­r”. It’s hard to imagine the suave secretserv­ice spy would have ever become a cultural force if the franchise hadn’t from the start traded on its star’s brutal charm. Connery crucially added humour to Ian Fleming’s pages, along with a dash of cruelty.

Connery’s Bond became etched as an icon of its era, one increasing­ly distant from today. He was the epitome of a dashing, womanising, macho image that loomed over the second half of the 20th century.

Bond is the first word on Connery but it’s certainly not the last. Against the pleas of fans, he departed the character at 41 (he was later coaxed back for 1983’s Never Say Never Again), refusing to be typecast. His best and most interestin­g work all came after.

The Hill (1965) was the first of five films with Sidney Lumet (the others were the Orient Express and Family Business), and while it’s less seen than many of Connery’s, it remains possibly the best expression of the actor’s rugged power. He plays a prisoner of indomitabl­e strength and defiance jailed in a sadistic British Army WWII military prison in the scorching Libyan desert.

He was a soldier again a decade later in John Huston’s The Man Who Would Be King, based on the Rudyard Kipling short story, playing a military officer who’s embraced as a god in Kafiristan, an impression he struggles to maintain. It’s a perfect role and performanc­e for Connery, whose best work came when he — this former bodybuilde­r of unimpeacha­ble force and magnetism — was humbled.

Connery’s confidence came through most dramatical­ly when it was challenged by foes more formidable than a Bond villain. In his Oscar-winning performanc­e in Brian De Palma’s Prohibitio­n-era crime film The Untouchabl­es, he’s alive to Al Capone’s threat, telling Kevin Costner’s Treasury Department agent: “You see what I’m saying is, what are you prepared to do?”

Connery aged well as an actor, crafting more diverse and inquisitiv­e portraits of masculinit­y. He played an ageing Robin Hood, with Audrey Hepburn, in Robin and Marian (1976), a combustibl­e submarine captain in John McTiernan’s The Hunt for Red October and a lovable, playful father to Harrison Ford in Steven Spielberg’s Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989).

Connery always left you feeling if not shaken then very happily stirred.

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 ??  ?? Sean Connery alongside an Aston Martin DB5 in the 1964 Goldfinger Bond film.
Sean Connery alongside an Aston Martin DB5 in the 1964 Goldfinger Bond film.
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The Anderson Tapes, The Offense, Murder on
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A scene from Diamonds AreForever.
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GETTY IMAGES

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