Movie Notes: Tomorrow Never Dies


= 2 stars
Starring Pierce Brosnan, Jonathan Pryce, Michelle Yeoh
Directed by Roger Spottiswoode
It’s not a good sign when you’re part-way into a movie and realize you’ve seen it before, but forgot. I can’t recall exactly where I first saw Tomorrow Never Dies - probably on cable or an airplane ride. Overall, it’s an entertaining flick, but not anything to write home about - and if my experience is any indication - forgettable.
I find Pierce Brosnan a capable but bland Bond. He’s great looking, but lacks that Sean Connery “heat” (used for female wooing) or Roger Moore’s slightly confused look (added tension as it seems his survival was really in doubt). Brosnan as Bond has all the right moves, but behaves almost too capably for me to worry about his mortality.
That said, many other Bond elements are in decent form. We have an amusing villain, the sinister media mogul Elliot Carver (Jonathan Pryce), who controls the world through manipulative lies and fabrications. Judi Dench as “M” lends gravitas, and there’s even the same “Q” from the sixties films, who supplies a great bond gadget - a cell phone controlled automobile. There’s a funny scene where baddies try to damage the extremely tough vehicle without success, and a tense car chase ensues with Bond lying down in the back seat to avoid a hailstorm of bullets, yet still navigating the car via his cell phone wielded like a Game Boy.
As for the Bond women: Paris Carver (Teri Hatcher) is mildly entertaining old Bond flame now married to the villain. Better is Wai Lin (Michelle Yeoh), fiesty and contrary enough from the typical Bond woman to hold my attention for a while.
Unfortunately, as things move towards an expected battle with Carver aboard a huge ship near Vietnam, things get surprisingly dull fast. I had to stifle a few yawns as the various arrows clearly pointed to expected conclusions.
To sum up, Tomorrow Never Dies is one of those films that’s perfectly enjoyable if happened upon while flipping channels, but I certainly wouldn’t seek it out. It’s decidedly average, and in comparison with the better Bond films, it suffers terribly.
IMDB: Tomorrow Never Dies


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