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Though uneven, much of new Bond film is brilliant

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Another traditional element finally back in the fold is gadget master Q. Played by Ben Whishaw (“Cloud Atlas”), the younger Q is waspish and more computer-savvy than fusty old Desmond LLewelyn. He still hectors Bond about returning equipment intact, even though he provides only a new Walther PPK and a radio transmitter. “You were expecting an exploding pen?” Q asks. “We don’t really go in for that any more.”

You may be wondering that if Q is back, can Miss Moneypenny be far behind? Keep watching.

For the film crew, Mendes imports two of his past collaborators, cinematographer Roger Deakins (who also shoots for the Coen Brothers) and composer Thomas Newman.

Deakins gives “Skyfall” a burnished and haunting, almost gaunt, look unusual to Bond. In a gorgeously shot fight, Bond and an assassin are silhouetted by a Shanghai skyscraper’s changing neon signs.

Newman’s score doesn’t rely as heavily on John Barry’s archetypal Bond music as previous composer David Arnold did, although those brassy cues still blare at the right moment. Newman also incorporates an instrumental version of Adele’s sumptuous theme song, the best since Sheena Easton warbled “For Your Eyes Only.”

As a director, Mendes often does a fantastic job of polishing the individual pieces of his films but a poor job of assembling them into a coherent whole. The first and second acts of “Skyfall” seem to come from different movies, while the third act spins off into a different genre altogether.

A comprehensible plot has always been more luxury than necessity for Bond, so Mendes’ uneven handling doesn’t cause lasting damage. Oddly, the first half – at least until Silva appears – is built from plot points taken from three of the weakest films, “You Only Live Twice,” “The Man With the Golden Gun” and “The World Is not Enough.”

When “Skyfall” reaches the point where other Bonds would start wrapping things up, it veers into a direction new to the series. However, this very specific direction is familiar from about a dozen other movies. Naming their titles would give away too much, but if you know movies, a few will pop into mind.


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