La critique de James Berardinelli (1)
Skyfall can take its place alongside From Russia with Love, Goldfinger, and On Her Majesty's Secret Service as the best Bond can offer. With an Oscar winner at the helm and Oscar winners in two prominent roles, Skyfall overflows with talent but, as always, it's the man with the tux and the Walther PPK that makes the difference. With his piercing blue eyes, Daniel Craig saunters into this endeavor to his rousing two-note introduction with confidence. Now eight years and three movies into his tenure, Craig has gotten through the teething stage that was Quantum of Solace and has found his stride. He's the best Bond since Connery, and that's perhaps because there's so much of the first 007 in his performance. Gone is the silliness that defined Roger Moore's period (Vraiment NAZE!!)and the superhero dimension that enfolded Brosnan. Although Skyfall spends equal time looking back and setting up the future, it never loses sight of the present and, in the process, gives us the best 007 adventure in more than four decades.
Sam Mendes, gleeful at the opportunity to helm an entry into the most successful motion picture franchise of all-time, proves himself as adept at escapist fare as at more "serious" material. (Although one could argue those credentials were previously established with Road to Perdition, in which he also worked with Craig.) His staging of Skyfall's action sequences are expertly done with an occasional hint of artistry (such as the scintillating confrontation between Bond and bad guy Patrice with the electrified backdrop of Shanghai's skyline in the background). He also causes elements of drama and pathos to percolate through the suspense and pyrotechnics. Skyfall is the complete package, at least to the extent that any Bond adventure could make such a claim. It challenges perceptions without breaking the formula.
It has often been mentioned that Craig's first two outings showed Bourne influences. With that in mind, Mendes opens Skyfall with Bond still in Quantum of Solace mode then gradually transitions him back in time, bypassing Brosnan, Dalton, and Moore - all the way back to the Golden Age of Connery. By its end, Skyfall has brought us full circle and long-time fans will feel as if they've come home. The closing scene is just about perfect and, if the world ended tomorrow and there was never another Bond outing, a better conclusion to the franchise would be hard to imagine.
Skyfall begins with a rousing pre-credits sequence set in Istanbul that climaxes with a fight on top of a moving train. Bond is left for dead by MI6 but, when he resurfaces, it's to a nonchalant "Where the hell have you been?" from M (Judi Dench), who returns him to active duty before he's ready and sends him on a global trek to locate a hard drive containing the names of all embedded field agents before it can be decrypted. The bad guy, Silva (Javier Bardem), isn't your usual 007 megalomaniac, however. He's not interested in world domination - conquering a small island is enough for him. His goal is more personal and his backstory recalls that of Sean Bean's 006 in Goldeneye. (Pour moi le meilleur James Bond)Along the way, Bond tussles with a younger (but no less cranky) Q (Ben Whishaw) and beds two Bond girls - fellow agent Eve (Naomie Harris) and exotic, sophisticated sex slave Severine (Berenice Marlohe). He also meets M's boss, Gareth Mallory (Ralph Fiennes), whom he dismisses as a "bureaucrat."