That same impulse—to hire all the best people available and give them some room to work— seems to extend to the stuntmen. The stunts in Skyfall are spectacular, and they're especially impressive when you consider that most blockbuster-makers of the day would've just used computers to simulate most of what they pull off. There's plenty of CGI in Skyfall—there's a bad Komodo dragon and a worse scorpion—but it wouldn't be a Bond movie without at least a few dubious effects. And when a body falls from a train or a subway car plows through a big, empty room, you can tell that there are actual objects falling through space. That makes a difference.

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Historically, Bond movies have often treated their action scenes as inconvenient necessities, things that just get in the way of watching a British man be suave. Likewise, Skyfall wants to say things about the wages of war and the moral calculations that you have to take if it's your job to send people to their deaths: There's a moment near the end where Bardem tells Craig, "All this jumping and fighting, it's exhausting." But there's nothing perfunctory about the way the movie approaches its action set pieces. When Bardem pulls a Joker/Loki and escapes from captivity, or when Craig trails an assassin by hanging from the bottom of an elevator, the movie crackles to life. And Craig, with his pitbull face and his makeup scars, projects a grizzled intensity that we never got from any other Bond. He spends a big chunk of Skyfall trying to remember how to be an effective secret agent; it's not a problem his predecessors ever had.

Skyfall, of course, has some big problems. Like any Bond movie, it has too many long, talky scenes about some vast criminal conspiracy currently underway. It doesn't have any memorable bad-guy henchmen, and those guys are usually a prerequisite. Even amid all the smart filmmaking, it has bits of movie fakery that just drive me nuts, like the computers that go bloopity-bleep when letters are scrolling across the screen. Albert Finney shows up at the end in a role written for Sean Connery, a notion nobody rethought when they decided it would be too distracting to just give it to Sean Connery. The ending is off-brand Straw Dogs—it's the least impressive set-piece of the whole movie.

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All that said, though, this is more of a primal ass-kicker than any other film in the series. Big, sweeping, unpretentious studio action movies hardly get made anymore unless they have the words fast or furious in their titles. Skyfall sometimes seems like a preexisting action script retrofitted into the Bond universe, and that's a good thing. I have a lot of confidence in the franchise's future as an action powerhouse now. The trailer for SPECTRE, the next installment, showed up online earlier this week, and it makes the new movie look like a brooding espionage-driven affair about Bond's past. It can't fool me: SPECTRE also cast the pro wrestler Batista as an evil henchman. You don't cast Batista as an evil henchman unless you're planning on making an action movie, and hopefully another great one.


Tom Breihan is the senior editor at Stereogum; he's written for Pitchfork, the Village Voice, GQ, Grantland, and the Classical. He lives in Charlottesville, Va. He is tall, and on Twitter.

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Netflix Instant doesn't have to feel like a depleted Blockbuster in 1990, where you spend half an hour browsing hopeless straight-to-video thrillers before saying "fuck it" and loading up another Archer. Streaming services can be an absolute treasure trove, particularly if you like action movies, and especially if you like foreign action movies. Every week in this space, we'll highlight a new one.

Previous installments: Chocolate | Dirty Mary Crazy Larry | Iron Monkey | XXX | Headhunters | The Running Man | Project A | Homefront | Drug War | Robocop | Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon | Blood and Bone | Man of Tai Chi | Bloodsport | Battle Royale | Total Recall | Django Unchained | El Mariachi | Tombstone|Fearless | Red Dawn | Blue Ruin | The Man From Nowhere | Face/Off | The Chinese Connection | Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning | District B13 | Uncommon Valor | The Heroic Trio | Safe | Mad Max | Ip Man | Big Trouble in Little China | Sonatine | Mission: Impossible—Ghost Protocol | Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior | Charley Varrick | Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky | Dredd | 13 Assassins | Death Wish 3 | The Legend of Drunken Master