Cast: Daniel Craig, Judi Dench, Javier Bardem, Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris, Berenice Marlohe, Ben Whishaw
Direction: Sam Mendes
Genre: Action
Duration: 2 hours 22 minutes
Story: Espionage becomes leaner, meaner and shadowy. Can James Bond still make the earth move — or the sky fall?
Movie Review: The first thing Bond (Craig) blows to bits in Skyfall is all those cracks about mid-life crises. Despite flunking his fitness test, Bond reveals how he’s fab at 50, making his vintage his most powerful weapon. As espionage changes from competing nations to individuals spreading violence for money and thrills, Bond grapples with ‘Silva’ Rodriguez (Bardem), former MI6 agent determined to destroy department head M (Dench) for having left him to Chinese mercy after he overstepped his brief. As Bond and Silva race with whistle- out-loud (WOL) action towards an edgy M, those watching Skyfall have a ball.
Right away, Skyfall is a love-bite to London, celebrating all that’s Brit and Bond-branded – clever since it leaves those younger Yankee spies looking a little plain. Realising history’s cash-worth, Skyfall plugs everything beautiful about the British — Tubes, tunnels and Tennyson, damp, rainy skies, humour sharp like a Savile Row suit, china bulldogs, even manual shaving kits — smoothly blended with explosive American pace. Plus Iberian charm, expressed oh-so-silkily by a beaming Bardem, perfect as the campy Silva, unbuttoning Bond’s shirt to go lovingly where no man has been before. Although Bond does rasp at him, “What makes you think this is my first time?” Well, well, Commander.