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Also in 1963, my father came home with a 1963 beige LeSabre Buick with a 425 cubic inch engine, custom built suspension, and woven vinyl interior bench seats that could not have been purchased off the lot at Capaletti Buick in Alexandria, Virginia - even though he said it was. The 1963 Buick was never beaten in a drag race until it was stopped in a road block in 1970 by the Maryland State Police wielding .44 caliber magnums, but that is another story. In 1964, I was 16 years old with a new driver's license, and I drove the other family car, a white 1955 Chevrolet with royal blue vinyl bench seats into Washington DC to see From Russia with Love at the movie theatre just east of the White House. I parked in front of the Department of the Treasury on 15th street, walked across the street and entered the movie theatre. I sat in the front of the balcony of the old theatre and studied the intricate designs of sculpted plaster hanging down the walls and ceiling as I waited for the film to start. The first sequence of the film came before the credits for the first time in a James Bond film. It was the scene where Donald 'Red' Grant, played by Robert Shaw, kills the look-a-like Bond. 'Exactly one minute, fifty-two seconds. That's excellent," says Morzeny, played by Walter Gotell in several of the Bond films.
The novel From Russia with Love, published in 1957, was the fifth James Bond novel published in as many years. From 1953 to 1966, Ian Fleming would publish a book a year, totaling thirteen books: two collections of short stories (totaling eight short stories) and eleven novels. Fleming actually wrote the books in his Jamaican Goldeneye retreat from January to March each year from 1952 until his death on August 12, 1964. Two of the Fleming books, For Your Eyes Only and Octopussy (also titled "Octopussy and the Living Daylights") were collections of five and three short stories respectively (note: the earlier English versions of Octopussy had only two short stories; the third short story was added to later editions.) The funny thing is that the James Bond movies almost never happened. There has been a running lawsuit concerning the rights of the "cinematic Bond" almost since the beginning. In 1954, Ian Fleming first sold the rights to his first book, Casino Royale, published in 1953, to CBS for the paltry sum of $1000. CBS ran a television movie in 1954 and later sold the rights for the 1967 spoof movie featuring Peter Sellers, David Niven, Woody Allen, and Ursula Andress. The film is a flawed illogical sequence of seemingly unrelated scenes, since Peter Sellers never finished filming his part in the movie. Ironically, Fleming had wanted David Niven or Roger Moore to play the part of Bond in the Broccoli Bond movies.
McClory and Whittingham had been clever. Instead of using the Fleming coined SMERSH crime organization, the Whittingham script used SPECTRE, which the two co-authors claimed that they had invented. Fleming had foolishly used the term SPECTRE in the novel version of Thunderball. Fleming lost any and all rights to the screenplay, SPECTRE, and the character Ernst Stavro Blofeld in a court decision on December 9, 1963. Fleming did not live out the year and died eight months after publicly apologizing for his actions in accordance with the court order.
Many lawsuits have been filed to secure rights to the 'cinematic James Bond" for McClory, Whittingham, and other production houses, such as SONY, Warner Brothers, and others. EON further complicated things by incorporating SPECTRE into the movie Dr. No. Over the years many of the times when James Bond movies did not come out yearly, it was not because of lack of interest, but due to the rights being tied up in court. McClory and Whittingham produced 'Never Say Never Again" with Sean Connery in the lead role in 1983 and hoped to do a sequel 'Warhead 2000 AD," but a counter lawsuit prevented them from beginning production on the script. While the future of the James Bond films seems somewhat uncertain even today, the future of James Bond games is bright. The original James Bond, Sean Connery, who was selected for the role after performing in Disney's Darby O'Gill and the Little People, is back. Sean Connery's voice is featured in the game. To our knowledge this is the first time that Connery's voice has appeared in a game.
The cast of this game is a very notable one and features some dead actors, who have completed their roles posthumously, such as Robert Shaw, Bernard Lee as 'M", and Desmond Llewelyn as Major Boothroyd, codenamed Q. The original cast also included (in original order of the credits) Daniela Bianchi as Tatiana Romanova, Pedro Armendiariz as Ali Kerim Bey, Lotta Lenya as Rosa Klebb, Eunice Gayson as Sylvia Trench, Francis De Wolff as Vavra, the Gypsy Leader, George Pastell as Train Conductor, Nadja Regin as Kerim's Girl, Lois Maxwell as Miss Moneypenny, Aliza Gur as Vida, Martine Beswick as Zora, Vladek Sheybal as Kronstein, and Fred Haggerty as Krilencu. Even archival footage of Gert Frobe, who played Auric Goldfinger in Goldfinger, and Joseph Wiseman, who played Dr. No, in the movie of the same name is used in the game. New people were cast for the voice work of actors who were no longer available, including J. B. Blanc as Karim Bey, Natasha Bedingfield as Elizabeth Stark, David Anthony Pizzuto as Octopus Commando and Radio Voice, Phil Proctor as the voice of Q, Peter Reneday as the voice of M, Karly Rothenberg as Rosa Klebb, Miss Moneypenny, and various party guests, to name some of the game voice cast. The game uses archival footage from the film for the cut scenes that separate the fourteen action adventure missions and four secret missions in the game. Most of the action sequences, with the notable exception of the boat chase from the film, never actually happened in the movie version of the Fleming novel.
The Aston Martin first appeared in the Goldfinger film, and was not seen in earlier the Bond films, From Russia with Love and Dr. No. The Aston Martin was created for the Bond films and never appeared in a Fleming Bond novel. The car is used extensively in the game, in four of the 14 missions and none of the four secret missions. The Aston Martin sees action in a car battle from the airport to the embassy in mission 3, driving around Istanbul in mission 5, driving to the train station in mission 10, and driving to the docks and patrol boat in mission 13. The driving missions are fun, and the control of the car using the controller takes a little getting used to. I always felt a bit out of control using the PS2 controller. There is no support for car wheel and or foot pedals. Two missions use the Bell Textron Jet pack that Bond first used in the pre credits sequence in the film Thunderball to escape from a French Chateau after killing Jacques Boiter. After using the pack it is put into the boot of the Aston Martin. The pack is an invention of Bell Labs, who make the Bell helicopters. The pack from the film is stored at Q Section and was seen again in 'Die Another Day," where Q makes some improvements. The game jet pack is an invention of Octopus, perhaps based on a Russian design, and Bond has to steal it. The game jet pack is fitted with machine guns and rockets. Bond game tactics include crouch, lean out from the wall cover, Bond focus for shooting at specific body areas, and a lock-on button that reduces the need to aim weapons, except when using the bazooka or the sniper rifle. Since the missions are timed, you will not be able to sneak around and fulfill the mission goals by stealth, except at the lowest difficulty level, where the timed mission goal is not needed to successfully complete missions. The game was designed as a 'run and gun" type affair, without the refinement of nooks and crannies to look into.
The third-person shooter has been particularly well received, with the Bond series Golden Eye (1997), and 'Everything or Nothing (2004)." One of the most successful third-person shooters is Splinter Cell with Sam Fisher. The majority of the missions in From Russia with Love are 'run and gun" third-person perspective shooter missions. You work against the clock. One of your goals is to get four awards for disables, time, Bond moment, and difficulty. It is virtually impossible to get all the awards on the same mission, so the awards are cumulative on each mission. Once you get an award and save the game, the award remains on the mission, and new awards are added as you achieve them in subsequent reruns of the same mission. Cumulative mission awards made me feel like I was accomplishing something each time I replayed a mission and added to the replay value. Disables award is for dispatching a certain magic number of enemies. Time award is by completing the mission within the minimum mission time on the running clock. A Bond moment is a specifically scripted part of a mission unique to that mission. Instead of shooting all the guys standing next to the 55-gallon drums of gasoline in the Hedgemaze, shoot the gasoline drums and let all the men surrounding the drums die in one big Bond explosion. In the first mission, if you take out the helicopter quickly, you are awarded a Bond moment. Enter a secret room in the storage area with the Q-Copter in mission 6, The Underground, and use Q-Copter to enter the Kitchen area in mission 7, Gypsy Camp.
Most shooters have a plethora of weapons that you can use and unlock, and 'From Russia With Love" is no different, with 15 weapons. The weapons include PP7 (silenced), Kronen SMG, Bosch Shotgun, Assault Rifle, Sniper Rifle, Wright Magnum revolver, Armor Piercing Rifle, Bazooka, Grenade, Bare Hands, Laser Watch, Serum Gun, Briefcase Turret, Q-Copter (explodes) and Sonic Cufflinks. Don't forget the Aston Martin and Jet pack have their own weapons complement. One neat thing to do in the game is to dress Bond for the occasion, and, no doubt about it, Sean Connery looks best in his Formal Dinner Suit. Hidden in plain sight, the formal dinner suit is found by searching filing cabinets. Once you get it you can dress formal for all James' outings, and look your best while killing baddies. Never fear - the blood spatter does not get on your pristine white jacket. You can also find a covert uniform and a classic black tuxedo, in addition to the white dinner jacket, which you can wear instead of the Bond suit Connery appears in normally. Bond Focus is by far the neatest thing added to this Bond game in the way of tactics. When you activate Bond Focus, it allows you to target specific body parts or special areas on the target. If you are shooting someone carrying grenades, one of the targeting circles allows you to aim at the grenades. Shooting grenades on an enemy's belt is far more Bond than the mundane shooting of someone in the chest or head. Head shots can kill more quickly, and are alternative aiming locations. The Bond focus points out the the "hot spots" on the enemy that will stun or kill.
The music is based on the excellent original John Barry score, with some new compositions thrown in. John Barry's music is what you hear blasting out of the speakers in the gun barrel sequence that was so popular that it appears at the beginning of most all Bond films. It was one of the most exciting things to hear in the game for me, too. Multiplayer is for up to four players, with player profiles that you can save. You can have teams with more than two players. The game can be based upon a score limit or a time limit. Sadly, the multiplayer is player vs. player and not players vs. the game. Families like to play with each other in the play-together-against-the-box mode, if done correctly. The original Atari and Arcade multiplayer split-screen version of Gauntlet was extremely popular with families. The PS2 multiplayer is split screen, and unfortunately you cannot link PS2s together to play the game like a LAN party, with everyone on their own machine. The multiplayer game types are three: classic, sabotage, and dogfight. The dogfight everyone-against-everyone and player-vs.-player classic types of play are pretty standard. Sabotage is based upon capture the flag with a twist. In sabotage you need to disarm bombs in your own base and sneak into your opponent's base to set bombs. This is a unique style of multiplayer play that I particularly liked.
Perhaps it is just my love of nostalgia. Perhaps I am just a James Bond freak. I loved this game, even when it frustrated my efforts to complete it to the point of putting it down for days until I could return with a fresh perspective. I would have preferred the old graphic adventure style of game with this subject, cast, and technical graphics engine. Unfortunately, in life you can't have everything. I highly recommend buying the wide screen version of the film and watching it while playing the game. Final Grade: B |
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