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Though uneven, much of new Bond film is brilliant

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Released on the 50th anniversary of the James Bond films, “Skyfall” is simultaneously one of the series’ most rousing entries and one of its most vexing.

Delayed several years by studio bankruptcy, Daniel Craig’s third 007 outing doesn’t sustain its high points as elegantly as the magnificent “Casino Royale,” but it is miles better than the ADD-afflicted “Quantum of Solace.”

In many ways “Skyfall” is the movie “Quantum” should have been, particularly in the way it ends. The final scene of “Quantum” reiterated the final scene of “Royale” – the new guy is James Bond now! – but the final scene of “Skyfall” gives the series room to grow. The deck has been cleared, the table reset.

It’s too soon to talk about the ending, though. You want to hear about the beginning, right? “Skyfall” opens with a stunner of an action sequence, an open-throttle chase through Istanbul that starts in cars, switches to motorcycles and winds up on a train with a crane.

This robust and audacious set piece, 007’s best since the “GoldenEye” tank chase, gets more inventive and hair-raising as it plows ahead. It showcases Craig’s pugnacious athleticism and finally allows him a moment of quintessentially Bond savior faire when he straightens his cuffs after a daredevil leap.

Craig recruited Oscar-winner Sam Mendes, who directed him in “The Road to Perdition,” to take charge of “Skyfall.” Mendes is not the genius the industry proclaims him to be (for reasons I don’t have time to go into, he got lucky with his first film, “American Beauty”), but he was a childhood Bond fan and hasn’t lost his enthusiasm for the character.

That is a promising situation. Over in British television, wonderful things happened with the revived “Doctor Who” when writers Russell T. Davies and Stephen Moffat were given the reins of their boyhood hero. Mendes follows their lead. “Skyfall” is a more sophisticated, more knowing and more adult Bond movie while remaining true to the character’s essence.

Even more than “Casino Royale,” this story delves into Bond’s emotional and personal life. After a computer drive containing the list of all undercover British operatives goes missing (shades of the first “Mission: Impossible” movie), the secret service comes under assault on two fronts. M (Judi Dench) is called before Mallory (Ralph Fiennes), the politician in charge of intelligence oversight. Then an unknown villain with a grudge against M detonates a bomb in MI6 headquarters.

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