The most prominent issue that presents itself is how inferior Christoph Waltz' Franz Oberhauser is in comparison to Skyfall's brilliant, calculating, mentally disturbed Raoul Silva. Skyfall made me fearful of this man. I felt as if he was around every corner, always a step ahead. It portrayed him as an absolute monster, and created depth and personality to his violent and criminally insane exterior. Waltz just feels so much more... muted. Oberhauser has little, if any reasoning for going after Bond and MI6 besides "ahhaha, I'm the bad guy, and I have been behind it all!". It's genuinely disappointing.
Secondly, Spectre refuses to innovate upon anything or build on the strong character study provided in its predecessor. Bond barely seems to care that M died at the end of the last one, and simply is strung along, raring to go on a new mission. Where is the emotion? Where is the pained, weathered 007, struck numb from the death of his mentor, acting to deliver on her final wish? Craig does not show a single iota of feeling for the events of Skyfall in the film, and it severely dampers his character.
Not to mention overall, Spectre doesn't at any point do anything new. It's filled to the brim with the old 007 tropes that have been around forever: Bond fighting thugs without recieving a scratch on him, Bond seducing lovely ladies at the drop of a pin, Bond racing down staircases in sports cars, Bond at the end of the day never actually seeming in danger. It's tiresome and a huge step backwards from Skyfall's sense of foreboding conflict and actual possibility that someone could die at a certain point.
That all being said, this is not to say that Spectre is a poorly produced film. Mendes brings back the miles-high sense of production value that he so wonderfully provided in the previous flick. The sound design is spectacular, each scene expertly synchronizing the sights and sounds of the locales, the strong soundtrack providing tension and creating depth depending on Bond's actions. I repeatedly found myself marveling over this specific facet, as so many films fail to make wonderful sound and fast-paced action play off each other. The cinematography is spot-on as well, each scene feeling like a beautiful, effortless setpiece. These make me respect Mendes as a director despite his decision to take it easy this time and ease off on the weight in favor of a more carefree 007 story. (This is also not discounting the performances of the supporting cast, Fiennes is wonderful as ever, and Léa Seydoux's Madeleine is one of my favorite Bond girls ever.)
So, to conclude, if you're looking for a Bond film that does what it says on the tin, look no further, Spectre has you covered. If you're after a more mature, visceral spy film, I would look elsewhere.
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