This then raises the question of what you do next after a
hit like Dr. No. Going bigger is a given, thanks to the higher budget and
greater confidence from the studio. But do you shoot for the moon with some
elaborate tale of world domination, or head in a different direction? In the
case of From Russia with Love, you head east for Turkey, the land of honey
traps and black gloves.
Tweaks to the formula laid down in the first film are
visible from minute one. The Bond theme plays over a reprise of the gunbarrel graphic,
while the producers’ credit is missing. The white circle of the sight then
shrinks into the corner of the screen and disappears, in order to give way to
the first pre-titles teaser of the series.
This is going to be a real short movie. |
Bond is being stalked around a hedge maze by an imposing
opponent, who draws a garrotte from his wristwatch and uses it to swiftly and
near-effortlessly dispatch the British agent. Unexpected. Suddenly the entire
area is lit with floodlights to reveal it as a training ground, and an
unconvincing rubber mask is peeled from the corpse to reveal it as merely a
disposable nobody.
The logic behind the sequence is somewhat elusive. Although
the audience needs a little set-up for the assassin, creating this set-piece
purely to wrong-foot viewers seems excessive. The victim wears a rubber mask
for no real reason, and if anything it would hinder his ability to provide the
killer with the sufficient challenge, if he is preparing to kill Bond.
The teaser also acts as the set-up for Grant, the killer, as
quiet, efficient and ruthless. This does contrast oddly with the book, where
the opening chapter seems to spend a long time narrating from his masseuse’s
point of view the perfection of his muscly body. In fact, the set-up for the
opponents’ side goes into more detail than any of the books.
As we segue into the titles, we are greeted first with the
brassy music of John Barry, then the title designs of Robert Brownjohn
projected onto the bodies of women. The latter is most definitely the trope codifier,
despite coming from a new title designer and not Maurice Binder, with whom such
iconic images will be indelibly associated.
The music is at first an instrumental piece, before it
smoothly slides into a version of the title number. At the end of the titles,
however, we are greeted with a full-blown orchestral version of Barry’s James
Bond Theme. This sends the unmistakable message that this is Barry’s show, and
that Monty Norman could suck it.
Norman, who wrote the score for Dr. No, had begun work on
the film with a view to providing a score with an Eastern European flavour
befitting its setting. However, it appears he was told his services would not
be required, and Barry was enlisted instead. This may the source of the enmity
between the two men, with the precise authorship of the James Bond Theme the
subject of two court cases.
The film proper opens in Venice, with a chess match being
played in opulent surroundings. This is another display of the increased
financial clout, as this set appears in this scene only before one of the
players, the vulpine Kronsteen, receives a message requesting his presence. He
calmly composes himself, moves a single piece, and immediately accepts his
opponent’s surrender. The implication is
that he’s being toying with him for some time and only breaking off the match
as he has to leave. Kronsteen so thinks he’s it.
The League of Evil Foreigners holds its AGM. |
Kronsteen arrives on a yacht, where he meets with the
mysterious Number One and a Russian defector named Rosa Klebb. They are members
of SPECTRE, the organisation for which No was working, and a new plan has been
concocted to play the British and Russian sides against each other, while also
gaining a valuable decoding device. The identity of Number One is not revealed
until the closing credits, but for anyone with an even passing familiarity with
the books it would be obvious that this is the first appearance of Ernst Stavro
Blofeld. Although the film rights to his first novel appearance in Thunderball were
held by Kevin McClory, Blofeld appears in several of the other books as well,
and it appears that this loophole is what allows the character to appear here.
Putting his name in the end credits seems like a bit of a thumbed nose in
McClory’s direction, however.
In the book, the plot originates from SMERSH, the
counter-intelligence wing of the Soviet machine, and the aim is simply to
embarrass the British intelligence services. This may have been a little too
near the knuckle at the time, thanks to the Profumo affair. The scandal, which
had exploded all over the British press while the film was in pre-production,
was in short thus: war minster John Profumo had been discovered to have been
having an affair with a call-girl named Christine Keeler, who was in turn the
mistress of a Soviet naval attaché and suspected spy, Yevgeny Ivanov. The potential
for a breach in national security lead to MI5 breaking up the relationship and the
subject hitting the headlines when another boyfriend of Keeler’s, a drug dealer
named Johnny Edgecombe, tried to shoot his way into the flat where she was
staying. At the time when the script for From Russia with Love was being
written, Profumo’s indiscretions were already the subject of gossip in some
circles, leading one to speculate on the motives for rewriting beyond simply
changing the villainous organisation’s identity.
The presence of SPECTRE also creates a neat entwining of
events, with the death of Dr. No being explicitly referred to and the targeting
of Bond for the scheme alluding to the R in the outfit’s name. They are after
revenge, and judging by the unusual choice of camera angles, the mastermind
behind the scheme is the squirming cat in Number One’s arms.
Klebb travels to SPECTRE’s special training headquarters in
the non-extraditable country of your choice, in order to formally assign Grant
the task of killing Bond. The man is an intimidating mountain of muscle, and now
that his training appears to have come to a formal conclusion, he is enjoying a
massage. His lack of reaction to the bikini-wearing lovely rubbing oil into his
rippling body is a clear indication of his coldness, as is Klebb’s briefing
that he is a dispassionate murderer and Dartmoor escapee. That’s the worst
kind.
The overall atmosphere is one of an exclusive health spa. It
appears notable, given Fleming’s fondness for high living and suspicion towards
regular exercise and balanced diet, that such retreats should be a continued
source of danger, with smock-wearing killers putting arsenic in the wheatgrass
juice – enhancing the flavour in the process.
An interesting element arises when the SPECTRE functionary
attempts to take Klebb’s elbow to direct her. The look on her face is one of
barely-concealed disgust at the touch of another, but visually this is quickly
overwhelmed by the sight of SPECTRE men running and jumping through the organisation’s
training area. They seem to be well versed in avoiding flamethrowers and
dodging sharp-shooters, useful additions to anyone’s skillset that still appear
on the timetable at the posher private schools.
Katina Paxinou as Rosa Klebb. "You are very fortunate to have been chosen for such a simple, delightful duty. A real... labour of love, as they say." |
Klebb’s next stop is Istanbul, where she reassumes her old
office of spymaster to recruit a beautiful but less than assertive cypher clerk
from the Russian embassy. Tatiana Romanova, Tania to her friends, is the
subject of some fascination for Klebb. Have read through her brief wearing the
most over-the-top milk-bottle glasses outside the Bash Street Kids, she carries
on the meeting with the creepy air of a predatory philanderer. At one point,
she rests her hand on Tania’s knee, leaving the younger woman visibly
uncomfortable.
Not for the first time, this raises the difficult question
of the evolution of sexual politics. Whether or not it was acceptable for a man
to act this intimidating a fashion in 1963 is not the true issue, although one
does wonder how Tania would react if her superior was a man. Klebb starts the
briefing with orders and threats, before adopting a softer tone and addressing
Tania in more cooing terms. Under other circumstances, the scene might resemble
a seduction performed by a seasoned pick-up artist, but the additional element
of it being performed by a woman strongly implied to be a lesbian makes the
scene a little queasy. Fleming had some odd views about homosexuality – which,
remember, would be a crime for another four years – including the inability of
gay people to whistle, and this strangely predatory portrayal fits with these
opinions, despite already being significantly outdated. Remember also how
frequently this film is shown in the daytime, when this scene passes without
comment.
After all this set-up, which in the book accounts for the
first 100 pages, we finally get to see what Bond is doing. He’s hanging out by
the river with Sylvia, the girl he picked up at the casino at the start of Dr.
No. In the previous article, the astonishing security risk of Bond handing out
business cards with his unguarded home address was noted, and far from
suspecting that Sylvia was a potential honey trap, Bond is still spending time
with her. Which means he chose her over Ursula Andress. Let that sink in.
She mentions that it has been months since his trip to
Jamaica, and seems just that little bit too patient for comfort, as Matt Munro’s
rendition of the title song finally appears on the soundtrack on a passing
punt. Bond gets a call on his carphone – which sadly is not the size of a
warehouse – summoning him to the office, so he gives Sylvia the brush-off
again. No doubt she then reports to her superiors that Bond’s behaviour,
combined with her never having heard him whistle, makes him ideal for
blackmail. She is never seen nor heard from again.
Bond arrives in his Bentley – his car in the books making
its only appearance in the films – and performs the famous
throwing-the-hat-onto-the-hatstand trick for the first time. M is less than
impressed, and starts to brief Bond about what has come over the wire.
Apparently a Russian cypher clerk at the embassy in Istanbul
has seen Bond’s photograph and fallen in love with it, and is offering to
defect with the cypher machine, the Lecktor, if Bond acts as courier. M and
Bond immediately think it’s a trap, and Bond in particular is suspicious.
Teenagers fall in love with pictures of film stars, he says, “but not a Russian
cypher clerk with a file photo of a British agent. Unless she’s mental”.
Sylva Koscina as Tatiana "Tania" Romanova. "I think my mouth is too big." |
With this ringing in the audience’s ears, Bond’s reaction
upon seeing a picture of Tania proves interesting, demonstrating that Wee Jimmy
is probably in charge as Bond takes the assignment to see where it goes.
Hopefully to underneath her counterpane, he thinks. M seems quite happy with
the idea of pimping Bond out, almost acting out parts of the Profumo scandal
with the plot.
Bond is also handed a new piece of field equipment in the
form of a briefcase containing various handy items and a self-assembly sniper
rifle. Although the character of the quartermaster had appeared in Dr. No, this
scene marks the first appearance of Desmond Llewellyn in the part. He is brisk
and businesslike, as he indicates that Bond can simply carry the rifle through
customs inside the case, making the audience wonder why there were so few
hijackings. Another sign of the times is the inclusion of concealed strings of
gold sovereigns to act as international currency, all hidden inside Bond’s
first true “gadget”.
On his way out, Bond stops again to flirt with Miss
Moneypenny, and the atmosphere suddenly takes a turn for the heavy, as he is
about to whisper “the secret of the world” in her ear when M rings through and
effectively tells Bond to stop that and get a move on. Yes, it looks very like
Bond is going to seduce Moneypenny at her desk while his boss is in the next
room. I’ve said it before and I’ll probably say it again. Bond is a serious
security risk. He even pauses to write the film’s title on the picture of Tania
before he hands it to Moneypenny and leaves. It looks rather like Klebb isn’t
the only one who’s been reading tips for pick-up artists.
Bond’s plane lands in Istanbul, as the strains of the James
Bond Theme fire up. This is used with irritating frequency during the film, and
contrasts sharply with the more generic mood music scored by Barry. However,
much is made of the melody from the theme song, written by Lionel Bart.
Bond identifies his driver with a call-and-response code
phrase, which shows that he has smartened up since the last time he was picked
up from an airport, and the drive to meet his contact sees an interesting discussion
about how the Western and Eastern powers have their local assets constantly
following each other. A neat metaphor for the Cold War in general, as Bulgarians
and Turks engage in squabbles that pay off on the world stage.
Bond is taken to Kerim Bey, British Intelligence’s local
contact. He is clearly going to be the inspiration for a many a boisterous ally
in future films, with his womanising ways, army of sons and cheap cigarette
holder. Bond continues to his hotel, followed again by the Bulgarians, except
now it’s Grant behind the wheel and the Bulgarian in the back seat. Grant
starts to put on black gloves...
Bond has a look at a bathroom, as his theme tune plays. |
The theme gets another airing after all of ten minutes as
Bond examines his hotel room. He hesitates before dropping his hat onto the
bed, something modern non-hat-wearing viewers may not realise is an omen of bad
luck. Having found some rather chunky hidden microphones, Bond requests another
room. He gets the bridal suite. In more than one sense, the staff have seen him
coming.
Grant helpfully drops off the car outside the Russian
embassy, and the staff are a little concerned to find a garrotted body in the
back seat. This, we are told, will lead them to suspect the British, although
the reasons for this are uncertain. Tensions will mount in the city between the
two powers, although one wonders in retrospect why this does not lead to
increased security on the embassy building.
Nevertheless, reprisals are taken in the form of a bomb
attack on Kerim Bey. Surprised at the heating up of the Cold War, he takes Bond
on his secret underwater punt to spy on the embassy from beneath. The scenes
shot in the cavernous underwater reservoir remind one of the travelogue scenes
of Dr. No. The street scenes in the city sadly do not, focussed as they are on
foreground action rather than background detail.
Kerim Bey has had a periscope fitted through the floor of the
embassy, letting him spy on the secret intelligence meetings. You read that
correctly. How a full size naval periscope isn’t noticed is left unexplained,
but the slight masking of the scope’s point of view suggests that it is peeping
through a mousehole. Their security may well be worse than ours. Kerim recognises
one man in the meeting as an old adversary - a professional killer named
Krilencu – and decides that he must be behind the bombing.
As a means of sidestepping the authorities for the night, Kerim
takes Bond to a gypsy camp populated by old friends. The camp is vast – another
sign of the production’s conspicuous wealth – but is clearly filmed on a
backlot rather than on location. This is perhaps the first sign of a shift away
from travelogue and into spectacle, as the gypsies engage in every possible
cliché for the audience’s edification. There are belly dancers, everyone is
carrying a musical instrument, old Romany caravans covered in laundry, little
old ladies trying to sell Bond lucky heather and a couple of hold-blooded women
fighting to the death over a man. Even Channel 4 would draw the line before
this.
Rather than changing into more practical clothing, the women
simply start stripping off before going one-on-one, and the resulting fight,
though excitingly shot and performed, manages to be entirely irrelevant to the
story, merely marking time until it is interrupted by gunshots.
Krilencu has somehow found his way to the camp and launches
an attack with his men. The result is the first mass fight of the series, with
Bulgarians vs. Gypsies providing plenty of opportunities for people to fall
from high walkways or get set on fire. All of this is accompanied by the first
sounding of the 007 theme, Barry’s alternative tune to accompany large scale
action scenes. Bond meanwhile spends the fight ambling around, causing chaos wherever
he goes - shoving people into ponds, cutting guy ropes on tents and seeming to
pay no attention as to who wins.
"Why don't you two cool off? He he he, I'm hilarious." |
As he tries to spot another opportunity for indiscriminate
mischief, a Bulgarian takes aim at his back, only for him to be dropped to the
ground by a shot from Grant. The attackers then withdraw, ending another
thrillingly pointless sequence. Kerim wonders why Krilencu would want to kill
him and the audience too is scratching its collective head at the plot’s logic.
With the cat fight undecided, the gypsy chief says that Bond should decide the
matter, so in time-honoured fashion he takes them to his tent. Logic evaporates
with a whisper as the lead character’s reputation as a womaniser is bolstered.
Having been up all day and all night in more ways than one,
Bond and Kerim depart the gypsy camp the following evening, with the
less-than-sensitive stereotypes waving them off. The two men head back into
town, with Kerim determined to assassinate Krilencu to end their feud. Exactly
what this feud pertains to is never specified, but Bond simply goes along with
it. Kerim mentions that many debts are settled by shooting a man in the back
from a street away, and although Krilencu had spearheaded the attack the
previous night, it seems odd that this detail is not expanded in any way,
especially since it plays right into SPECTRE’s hands and makes the situation
worse still.
Having had a busy few evenings, Bond arrives back at his
hotel. Suspicious that someone has been waiting for him, he bursts into his
bedroom to find Tania waiting for him. He immediately sleeps with her. I mean, immediately. There is less than 60
seconds between their first setting eyes on each other and Bond going in for
the kill. Despite his having spent 18 hours entertaining two hot-blooded gypsy
girls. This man isn’t a role model; he’s a walking public information film.
Meanwhile, it appears that the mirror over the bed is
two-way glass, and Klebb is filming Bond and Tania. So it turns out to be a
honey trap after all, exactly as everyone suspected and Bond apparently forgot
as soon as he was within sniffing distance of an available woman. No one ever
listens to me.
Bond and Tania later meet at a mosque to exchange
information, with a gap in a pillar functioning as a dead drop. The scene gives
another opportunity to see some of the sights of Istanbul, especially since the
papers could have been handed over in the hotel room, assuming Bond wasn’t too
exhausted and hadn’t gone blind. Another of the Bulgarians, having been
observing the exchange, tries to get to the drop before Bond, but fails to
content with a black-gloved chop to the neck.
Kerim and Bond examine the papers in the former’s office,
and find a detailed map of the embassy and where the Lecktor is stored. As they
compare Tania’s plan with the building’s blueprints to make sure they are real,
they joke that maybe the whole thing could be a honey trap. By this point, it
can’t be accidental that the main characters are acting in a deliberately
ignorant manner. To go back to the Hitchcock connection, he once described a
scene involving a bomb under the hero’s table in a restaurant. If the audience doesn’t
know the bomb is there, there will be a moment’s shock when it detonates, but
if they do know, that offers a degree of tension that can be extended for minutes.
Thus, the viewer is being allowed to see behind the curtain
as Bond falls further and further into SPECTRE’s trap, but the mere fact that
he keeps acknowledging that it seems an awful lot like a trap undermines the
tension. He doesn’t even seem especially concerned on the subject. Probably
because he’s exhausted.
Tania meets Bond again on a ferry across the Bosphorus, where
they pretend to be a couple as he records her detailed description of the code
room and the Lecktor’s design on a reel-to-reel tape recorder disguised as a
camera. This allows a few more beauty shots of historic Constantinople, as we fade
across to M and company listening to the tape on the largest tape deck in
history. Tania’s descriptions keep wandering off the point to questions about
their life together in England that make her sound like a deluded groupie, but
this eggs Bond into starting an anecdote about a time he and M were in Hong
Kong. The crusty old chief quickly shuts off the tape and dismisses Miss Moneypenny,
but the damage is already done. It’s an interesting attempt to give a little
background to the M-Bond relationship, but it seems somewhat out of character
for him to have anything to want to keep quiet. Nevertheless, Moneypenny
listens in outside on the intercom, in case there are any more exciting
titbits.
Word gets back to Istanbul that M has given the go-ahead for
the mission, leading Kerim to suggest the 13th as the day for the
operation. Bond instead opts for the 14th – remember the hat on the
bed? At the embassy, Bond casually drops by, somehow getting past the security
at the front gate, and asks a clerk whether the clock on the wall is accurate.
Assured that it is, he asks again a moment later, just as the building is
rocked by a terrific explosion. There really isn’t a more effective way of announcing
one’s status as a spy.
"Excuse me, I wonder if you can help me? I'm a spy." |
It appears that it is in fact the 13th after all –
Tania notes the change as Bond tells her that “it’s a hell of a time to be
superstitious”, the patronising sod. Together they take the Lecktor and escape
into the sewers, emerging across the street from the embassy before heading for
the train station. When they get there, they are in the nick of time to board
the Orient Express before it leaves with Kerim already aboard. However, a
Russian agent named Benz is at the station and boards the train too. Less
explicably, Grant is also on the train. Exactly how he knew to be there,
especially since it would have been too late for him to disembark if Bond and
Tania didn’t turn up, isn’t explained – once again, logic is sacrificed for the
exciting image or escalation of intrigue. Or Kronsteen is a very lucky guesser.
That’s probably why he’s so good at chess.
On board the train, Kerim outfits Bond and Tania with their
cover documents. Bond thus takes on his first alias in the film series, that of
David Somerset accompanying his wife Caroline. Tania’s enquiry as to whether
they have any imaginary children prompts Kerim to remark that “my whole life
has been a crusade for larger families”. It’s hard to know where to start
dissecting all the ways in which that line has problems, but let’s just stick
to assuming that a Turk probably wouldn’t use the word “crusade” so casually if
they knew to what it referred.
Whilst preparations for the Lecktor theft were underway, Bond
appears to have also bought a new wardrobe for Tania, which consists entirely
of identical nightdresses in a range of colours. Sometime later, after she’s
been through a few of them for Bond’s pleasure – again, there’s a whole lot
world there – Bond tells her to answer a knock at the door. It’s Kerim, who quietly
tells Bond that Benz is on the train and that he will keep him busy. Meanwhile,
the black gloves go on... Bond seems to still not trust Tania at all, telling
her to do as she’s told and giving her a little slap for her trouble, just in
case she forgets that she’s only a woman.
Bad news comes from the back of the train later on, when the
bodies of Kerim and Benz are found, having apparently killed each other. The
shock appears to hit Bond hard. He clearly liked the rascal, as did we. It’s an
impressive and memorable performance by Pedro Armedariz, all the more with the
knowledge that he was dying of cancer during shooting and forced himself to continue.
From Russia with Love was his last acting job; he committed suicide before the
film was released.
The train passes the planned rendezvous with one of Kerim’s
sons as Bond tries to rethink their plans, and a figure is visible by the side
of the tracks, watching the Express rattle by. Apparently, this is none other
than Fleming himself, who regualely dropped by shooting locations and chatted
to those bringing his stories to life. It also continues to demonstrate the subliminal
influence of Hitchcock, as the story echoes North by Northwest use of train
travel and the use of the Lecktor as the “MacGuffin”, a plot element defined by
Hitchcock as the item that drives the story – for example, the top secret
microfilm both superpowers are after – but the inherent nature of which is not important
to the story. We know what the Lecktor does, and why it’s important. That’s all
we need to know.
Back on the train, Bond tells Tania that Kerim is dead and
make little secret of his suspicion that she knew about it. His interrogation
of her is strangely reminiscent of Klebb’s briefing of her earlier in the film.
First he tries the hard approach, then he softens his tone and tries to tease
the truth out of her. Again, it’s uncomfortably like a seduction, as Tania
breaks down in tears and tells Bond that she really does love him and that her
defection is now for real. Bond’s response? A weary sigh as he pulls down the
bedclothes. I’ve met people like him when I’ve gone speed-dating. They would
creep me out almost immediately.
If women didn't like getting slapped around a little, then they'd stand up for themselves, wouldn't they Sean? |
The train travels by map as far as Belgrade, where Bond is
able to briefly disembark and make a call for new back-up. He mentions that
Kerim and Benz killed each other, even though Kerim died from being stabbed in
the back. Maybe Bond’s still tired.
Further up the track in Zagreb – that’s in Croatia now –
Grant neatly intercepts the arriving MI6 man before pulling out the black
gloves. Bond dawdles on the platform, and is approached by Grant, now carrying
his hapless victim’s luggage. Not only does this scene reveal that Bond’s
contact, Nash, carries business cards of his own, but this is the first time
that we here Grant speak. Bear in mind that the film is nearly three-quarters
of the way through.
Once on their way, “Nash” outlines his plan. They will jump
off the train when they get to the Yugoslav-Italian border, which would not
only be the first crossing of the Iron Curtain in the series, but also raise
the question of exactly how porous the border is intended to be. There is a
beautiful little detail in this scene, when Grant says that he knows the
country around there like the back of his hand. At that line, Robert Shaw
actually manages to steal a glance at the back of his hand, as though Grant is
subconsciously assuring himself.
As Grant and Tania head for the dining car, Bond has a look
through Nash’s case, because he’s nosy. It’s a standard issue case like his
own, but such is his lack of rigour that he fails to notice that Nash hasn’t
brought any spare socks. In the dining car, the dinner companions order fish,
just like in Airplane!, and like in Airplane! someone soon feels ill. Grant has
drugged Tania’s wine to get her off their hands for a while, as well as referring
to Bond as “oh-oh-seven” – another first.
Taking a close look at a map in their compartment, Grant
knocks Bond out cold. This is a key moment. This is the point where a cliché is
born. Grant could have killed Bond then and there, taken the Lecktor and got
away. Instead, he decides to stick around, becoming what for him must qualify
as chatty as he plans to humiliate Bond before killing him.
The Ghost of James Bond Future? |
As Bond recovers, Grant explains that he and Tania are both
expendable, now that the Lecktor is in their hands. This does not explain why
it could not be taken earlier. Once Kerim was out of the way, there was nothing
to stop Grant forcing his way into the compartment, killing both of them and
taking the Lecktor. That would require little more finesse than the over-complex
disguise act for which they settle.
Grant reassures Bond that Tania was just as much a pawn in
the scheme that he was, and that the film of them in the bridal suite in
Istanbul will be found on her body, along with a forged letter implying a
blackmail plot. Bond will have been judged to have killed her and then himself,
destroying his credibility and delivering a shattering blow to British
intelligence. It’s almost as though the entire scheme was a honey trap. If only
someone had thought of this in the first place and made some sort of
contingency plan.
Grant is an interesting figure. Having been established as a
cold-blooded professional killer, he is only a few rungs below Bond himself in
the scheme of things. He won’t be the first of the ‘dark mirror’ versions of
Bond who have appeared throughout the series, since the most effective nemesis
a character can have is usually a skewed reflection of themselves. Batman has
the Joker, Sherlock Holmes has Professor Moriarty, and even Harry Potter has
Lord Voldemort. Think about that one, you’ll see I’m right.
Grant is the prototype of this concept in cinema, however,
even going so far as to dress in similar style to Bond and having equally ruthless,
hardboiled dialogue. Compare the scene in Dr. No when Bond tells Professor Dent
that, “You’ve had your six”, before emptying his gun into the luckless geologist
with the dialogue here. “The first won’t kill you, nor the second, not even the
third...” Grant is clearly Bond gone wrong, a shadow of the man he could be,
and the film’s makers are already confident enough in their characterisation to
play with conventions to this extent already.
As Grant gets out the black gloves, a move that neatly shows
the audience that time is running out for Bond, the latter discovers that he
can still be bribed with the gold sovereigns in the case. This sudden and
hitherto-unsuspected attack of greed is Grant’s undoing, as he fails to open
Nash’s case correctly and the booby-trap explodes in his face. Seizing the
advantage, Bond goes on the attack.
The fight sequence in the railway compartment may be another
major first in almost as many minutes, prefiguring as it does the future of
action movies. The set piece is shot in a close, hand-held style, using a
mixture of fast cutting and the speed-up editing trick that Peter Hunt coined
in Dr. No. This sequence however really lets him go to town, as he defines the
forerunner of the brief fad for speed-ramping that would sully action films
nearly 40 years later. This will become relevant again, trust me. The lack of
music and brutal, crunching sound effects really sell the fight as two men
fighting to the death, coming to an end only when Bond manages to turn Grant’s garrotte
against him, wrapping it around his windpipe and snuffing him out. Then, easy
as you please, he straightens his tie, buttons his jacket, pockets the film and
leaves the mess for the porter to clear up.
Bond drags the semi-conscious Tania from the train as it
slows for Grant’s rendezvous. This may simply be Bond taking advantage of the
opportunity, but it does look as if he has managed to correctly guess the
location. He catches the driver of the waiting truck and ties him up anyway,
just to be on the safe side. The driver had already called out for Grant, after
all, though Bond had no way of knowing that was “Nash’s” real name. In fact,
since Bond never finds out “Nash”’s [trying out some punctuation variations]
real name, for all he knows he’s just kidnapped an innocent man and stolen his
truck.
If Bond did have any doubts on the matter, they may have
been dispelled when the truck comes under attack from a helicopter. Again, the
mind is cast back to North by Northwest for the sequence is which Cary Grant’s character
is harassed by a malevolent crop-duster, as we as a similar set piece in The 39
Steps when Robert Donat is chased across the highlands by a biplane. These
happy memories may displace the realisation that the helicopter must have been
dispatched before Grant’s body was found, unless it was intended as a pick-up.
This would not explain why the co-pilot starts throwing grenades as the truck
winds its way through wildest Cumbria Slovenia. Bond manages to shoot
the co-pilot, who drops his live grenade inside the cabin, making the
helicopter go bang. “I’d say one of their aircraft is missing”, quips Bond. It’s
no “They were on their way to a funeral”, is it?
He just loves pushing people into the water. I bet he's the life of the party wherever he goes. Probably drinks WKD when no one's looking. |
Arriving at a deserted quay with a single boat tied up,
which Bond assumes to be Grant’s escape route should the helicopter have accidentally
crashed or something and been unable to pick him up, Bond pops on a sailor’s
hat he finds their and sets off for Italian waters. As a parting gift for the
Iron Curtain, he cuts the truck driver’s bonds before cheerily pushing him into
the sea. What a total dick.
Meanwhile, Blofeld is livid. Kronsteen’s supposedly perfect
plan has been foiled, despite Bond doing everything possible to get himself killed.
The chessmaster is right to deliver the line I’ve used as a title, since he’s
managed to get everyone to whistle to his tune. The weak link was Grant – who was
selected for the job by Klebb. She looks like she’ll be for the chop, but a
quick kick from her poisoned shoe spike means it’s curtains for Kronsteen.
Vladek Sheybal’s death acting at this point is of particular note.
Blofeld has a new plan – SPECTRE will recapture the Lecktor
and sell it back to the Russians. As he warns Klebb, “SPECTRE always delivers
what it promises”, which certainly gives them the edge over Nick Clegg.
[NB This joke was topical when I wrote it seven months ago.
By the way, I have moved house since then, settling in a converted shop on the
southern fringes of Greenwich. I spent the summer in the attic room, where I
would spend my time pressing my face against the window to convince passersby
that it was haunted by a goblin.]
SPECTRE launches its fleet of smallish ships to catch Bond,
and they open fire almost as soon as they see him. However, if they are trying
to avoid hitting them, since it might damage or destroy the Lecktor, why are
they shooting? Are they just overexcited? As a means of escape, Captain Bond
dumps spare fuel in the water and lights it with a flare gun, setting the
entire SPECTRE regatta ablaze. “Where there’s smoke, there’s fire”, he says,
describing things that are happening in front of him.
Later on, Bond and Tania are settling into their hotel in
Venice with James on the phone making arrangements for the trip home when the
maid comes in to do a little light dusting. Bond’s instincts should have been
set off when the maid fails to react to Bond wearing his gun in a shoulder
holster. Tania realises that it’s really a poorly-disguised Klebb. She pulls a
gun on Bond, and seems to be looking forward to the prospect of shooting him.
After all, she might get Tania to herself then, like the evil lesbian that she
is. Tania knocks the gun out of her hand, though, leaving Klebb with her
poisonous shoe as her only weapon. She and Bond struggle before a shot rings
out – and Tania is holding a smoking gun. Fulfilling what appears to be a
contractual obligation, Bond mutters, “She’s had her kicks.”
Before travelling back to the UK, or even doing anything at
all, Bond takes Tania for a gondola ride in front of some very poorly projected
footage of Venice. Bond pulls out the film, and comments that Grant was right.
Exactly what it was he was right about was lost to the censor’s knife, or
garden hoe if the quality of the edit is anything to go by, but it appears to
have been complimentary about their “performance” in the bridal suite. Bond
seems to like constructive criticism on the one subject from which he cannot
take his mind. Bond and Tania hunker down in their gondola for a snog and who
knows what else as James apparently forgets there’s a girl waiting for him at
home who thinks he’s gay and might be a bit surprised by him bringing a beautiful
Russian defector home. The title song fades up over the end credits, which
reveal that Blofeld was played by a question mark and that, for the first time,
James Bond Will Return.
From Russia with Love is clearly the film that creates and
codifies many of the tropes most associated with the Bond films, and its status
as this early example, combined with the echoes of Hitchcock’s works, its
genera fidelity to Ian Fleming and its overall grounding in realistic spy
fiction might explain why it remains so highly thought of, but there is already
a sense of settling into routine. The dialogue is blunt and lacking in wit,
there are contradictions in the characterisation and Bond himself is, by 2010s
standards at least, a repulsive and patronising moron. Adding in the garbled
plot that is already favouring spectacle over coherence and one gets the sense
that changes need to be made to keep the series creatively on track. Perhaps
something more outré, more outlandish, more appealing to Americans with their culture
of gangsters and comic books would be appropriate. Yeah, how about that?
Yay!
ReplyDeleteyou RITE!!
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Wannum?