If you're a Bond-ophile, you know that the iconic James Bond, Sean
Connery, quit the series after the fifth movie, You Only Live Twice,
and was replaced by George Lazenby for On Her Majesty's Secret
Service. Lazenby's agent argued against accepting the reported
seven-film contract offered by the Bond series production company, thus
ensuring his client's enshrinement on Trivial Pursuit cards everywhere.
The studio chief made it clear that Sean Connery was to be brought back,
with money as no object, and so he was offered 1.25 million pounds to
do Diamonds Are Forever, after which he reportedly said of
playing Bond, "Never again."
"Never" came in 1983, when
Connery agreed to do the "non-canon" Bond adventure Never Say Never
Again, a title suggested by his wife Micheline in light of his
earlier declaration. The movie is a second screen version of Ian
Fleming's 1961 novel Thunderball, the first being Connery's 1965
outing as Bond in...Thunderball.
Never wasn't made by Albert Broccoli and Harry Saltzman's
Eon Productions, so it lacked the gun-barrel opening sequence and Monty
Norman's iconic "James Bond Theme." Screenwriter Kevin McClory, after a
long legal battle with Eon Productions and Ian Fleming, had the rights
to film a version of the Thunderball novel based on his claims to
have supplied much of its plot. McClory won his fight and tried to make
his movie a couple of times before finally succeeding. He didn't have
the music and he didn't have the opening sequence, but he did have one
thing that the "official" Bond franchise lacked: Sean Frickin' Connery
wielding his official license to kill and unofficial license to thrill.
Given that the official franchise's 1983 entry was the tired
Octopussy, featuring the increasingly tired-looking Roger Moore,
that's a major-league head start right there.
Never also bests its competition in the form of its
villain, pitting Klaus Maria Brandauer's playful psychopathic Largo
against Louis Jordan's surprisingly small-scale Kamal Kahn. Largo is
aided by the scenery-chewing Barbara Carrera as Fatima Blush and bossed
by the sinister Blofeld, master of SPECTRE. His weakness -- Domino
Petachi (played by Kim Basinger), sister of traitorous air force
officer Jack Petachi -- proves to be the handle that Bond will use to
pry his way into SPECTRE's plan to use nuclear weapons to extort money
from NATO. Bernie Casey also uses his brief time to good effect as CIA
agent Felix Leiter.
At 52, Connery was actually three years younger than Moore and at that
point had aged much better. The Never screenwriters and director
Irwin Kershner used his slightly long-in-the-tooth status to good
advantage in the movie, highlighting Bond as something of a Cold War
dinosaur in an age of supposedly different needs and standards. Service
Director M has little use for Bond and gadget-man Q's slashed budget
can't offer him much in the way of spyware. But when it counts, the
somewhat older and wilier 007 can outsmart any would-be world-dominating
megalomaniac and still outfight most of them. The idea that Bond's time
has come and gone gives Never a kind of wry tone that Connery
carries off well, probably appreciating the fact that he was back
playing spies again a dozen years after he said he wouldn't. And
although he's 22 years older than Basinger, she was already 30 when the
movie was made -- not some 20-year-old coed -- which reduces the
creep factor for this movie, at least. That, and the fact that he's Sean
Frickin' Connery.
Never isn't flawless -- it's at least a half-hour too long
and it's one of the many movies that labors under the delusion that
murky underwater fight scenes between stunt doubles are exciting.
Basinger is kind of bland, even more so against the colorful backdrop of
Connery, Brandauer and Carrera. Bond movies had been trending towards
more active heroines, especially in For Your Eyes Only's Melina
Havelock, but Basinger was a throwback to the more passive model of the
early 1960s.
It was a splash of fun in the Bond series, though, and fun was
something that Octopussy and A View to a Kill, Moore's
final Bond outing two years later, lacked. It didn't always take itself
so completely seriously, making it a nice change of pace as well as a much better Bond finale for Connery than the jokey Diamonds. It was also a
welcome chance to see the original "Nobody does it better" guy back in
action, one last time. We might wish it wasn't the last time -- even
though Connery is 81 and officially retired from movies and Dame Judi
Dench has been spectacular as M in the last six Bond outings, it could a
hoot seeing Sir Sean glower and harumph at his just-this-side-of-rogue
agent 007 as he overstepped his authority...again.
MGM, which distributes Eon's Bond movies, bought the distribution
rights to Never Say Never Again in 1997, which means it's
included in multivolume Bond sets of DVDs and is no longer an orphan.
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