Girls News
Casino Royale (2006) DVD Review You Are Here » Home » DVD » DVD Review Index C... Casino Royale (2006...
James Bond's first "007" mission leads him to Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen), banker to the world's terrorists. In order to stop him, and bring down the terrorist network, Bond must beat Le Chiffre in a high-stakes poker game at Casino Royale. Bond is initially annoyed when a beautiful British Treasury official, Vesper Lynd (Eva Green), is assigned to deliver his stake for the game and watch over the government's money. But, as Bond and Vesper survive a series of lethal attacks by Le Chiffre and his henchmen, a mutual attraction develops leading them both into further danger and events that will shape Bond's life forever.
It takes two kills to become a 00 and M's (Dench) candidate has just made the grade. When his first mission to capture a bomb-making terrorist, goes disastrous wrong in the eyes of his superiors, he discovers a trail that takes him to the Caribbean and onto the radar of Le Chiffre (Mikkelsen), banker to the world's terrorists. After averting an incident that should have made Le Chiffre and his backers a large amount of money, the terrorist is forced to enter a high stakes poker game at Casino Royale in Montenegro and M has no option but so assign the best cards player in MI6 to stop him winning. Bond, James Bond (Craig).
After four extremely successful outings as 007, Pierce Bronson was forced relinquish his licence to kill as the Broccoli family decided to leave the formula that had served them so well for twenty movies. The last remaining Ian Fleming novel that hasn't been officially adapted by the spy franchise gave them the chance to, in essence restart Bond from the very beginning. Before he was suave and sophisticated and jetsetted around the world becoming the bane of every evil genius intent on world domination, Bond was a completely different kind of MI6 agent.
Described by M as a blunt instrument, this is James Bond as he is just been promoted to 00 status and is still too become the super agent that we know he will become. His fighting technique is rough and brutal, he takes unnecessary risks, he has little experience of the finer things in life and is brash and distant with everyone. This is definitely not the Bond have seen twenty times before, which is a good thing.
Here we discover the answers to many of the questions that have plagued fans since Sean Connery first donned the tuxedo and picked up his Walther PPK. What makes him treat women the way he does, when did he drive his first Aston Martin, did he always drink vodka martinis and why is he so distant from everyone? This film finally answers all of questions and more as Bond is (re)defined for a new generation.
The supporting cast is also makes a real impact. Mads Mikkelsen's Le Chiffre is a classic Bond villain but one that has his own agenda to save his own skin. Answering to a higher power, this poker playing genius who shed's tears of blood is an excellent nemesis for the rookie Bond and one that pushes him into becoming a true 00. Judi Dench returns as M, which for some was a puzzling choice when she was involved so prominently in the Brosnan era and now she turns up to make Bond a 00. She is as good as ever and even more commanding in her role as usual however. Giancarlo Giannini is his usual classy self as Mathis. Jeffrey Wright introduces himself to CIA agent Felix Leiter. It is the Bond girls that always cause a stir however and Caterina Murino and Eva Green are no different. Bond's first romantic encounter is Solange, played by the beautiful Caterina Murino who is your more traditional Bond girl but it is Eva Green's Vesper Lynd that is very different. She is a very talented actress in her own right and she makes the HM treasury agent a believeable counterfoil to Bond's advances.
Bond would be nothing without the action and the stunts and fights see a return to the more realistic style of the earlier films. Here we see Daniel Craig get his hands dirty and come out with cuts, bruises and injuries as the series moves away from computer assisted super explosive stunt sequences that plagued ‘Die Another Day'. The action is still amazing and exhilarating, as you'd expect but with everything happening in camera and Daniel Craig performing many of his own stunts, this is more believable than anything that appeared during Brosnan's tenure.
‘Casino Royale' restarts the Bond franchise with a bang. This is a very different 007 than what we have been used to. He is raw, brutal and uncompromising in his approach to his first mission as a 00 but it is a welcome one. The big thing is that Daniel Craig doesn't disappoint as the world's most famous secret agent and quickly makes the role his own. This is the best Bond since ‘Goldfinger' and one of the best action movies of all time. Bond, James Bond is back.
Director Martin Campbell, special effects supervisor Chris Corbould, stunt coordinator Gary Powell, producer Michael G. Wilson, art director Peter Francis and stars Daniel Craig and Sebastien Foucan reveal how the stunts of the film returned to the reality of the early films when everything was done with stuntmen and the stars.
The DVD Treatment for ‘Casino Royale' is good but not as good as some of the previous Bond releases. There is no commentary track and it would have been great to see Daniel Craig's audition tape. Fans will be pleased but they might have been expecting more.
This is cache, read story here
