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AustraliaCulture6 days ago

James Bond is missing in movies but thriving in video games

The article discusses the current state of the James Bond franchise, noting that it has been relatively inactive in recent years following Daniel Craig's departure. It highlights the sale of Bond rights to Amazon MGM Studios and explores the challenge of modernizing the iconic character. The article then shifts focus to the new Bond video game '007 First Light,' which offers a fresh take on the character's origins through a younger, more adaptable version of James Bond played by Patrick Gibson.

For a film series that once felt ubiquitous at the multiplex, James Bond has spent much of the 21 st century missing in action.

Five years after No Time to Die gave Daniel Craig a mercifully conclusive farewell, the future of the eponymous super-spy has never felt less certain. The rights to Bond have since been sold, with long-standing franchise stewards Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson ceding control over their family's empire to the newly-formed Amazon MGM Studios.

Underpinning this fallow period is a tension that was frequently lampshaded, but remained unresolved even by the end of Craig's tenure: how do you update a retrograde power fantasy into a contemporary action hero?

Daniel Craig, as James Bond in a scene from Skyfall, released in 2012. ( ©2012 Danjaq/United Artists/Columbia Pictures )

007 First Light, the first Bond video game to release in 14 years, jettisons the last two decades of baggage to craft a fresh origin for the elite MI6 agent — and finally proves that one of cinema's most impenetrable icons has a place within our current gaming landscape.

In contrast to Craig's embittered, obsolescing secret agent, the James Bond of First Light (played by Dexter: Original Sin's Patrick Gibson) is only in his mid-20s when he's recruited into MI6's rebooted 00 program. It's refreshing to play as a trainee eager to prove his mettle, and who is well-adjusted enough to have friends. He finally even gets a scar on his face, sticking true to his literary description.

Yet he's every bit as smarmy, horny and impertinent as his silver screen antecedents, to the point where you don't mind seeing him get his teeth kicked in by a henchman when you mistime a parry in any of the game's hand-to-hand brawls.

Perhaps more than any iteration of Bond since Roger Moore, this younger Bond is a man of leisure. Luxury has always been key to the appeal of the character — a masculine ideal initially sculpted by the hedonism of the Playboy era — and First Light is frequently willing to indulge players in the pleasures of his lifestyle.

007 First Light's Bond takes lessons from Roger Moore, who embodied the character from 1973 to 1985. ( Supplied )

The developers of IO Interactive (renowned for the Bond-inspired Hitman series) provide opportunities to take in the sights while trailing a mysterious assailant through the Carpathian mountains, mingle at a sprawling gala event you've gatecrashed, or enjoy a cocktail by the pool of an elite jungle resort. For die-hard fans, the opportunity to run wild in the gizmo cornucopia of Q-Lab may be the strongest temptation of all.

First Light most invigoratingly channels the spirit of Bond — specifically Daniel Craig's scrappy, resourceful incarnation — when you're giving free rein to sneak, punch, or shoot your way through a given sequence.

You'll likely find yourself scurrying around behind cover, bluffing your way through oblivious guards, and quietly picking off any henchmen in your way before one mistake launches into a frenzied scrap. There's a terrific tension to containing these unexpected skirmishes without triggering an alarm, and you can quickly gain the upper hand by tampering with an electrical system, hurling an iron at a goon's face, or charging an armoured foe down a flight of stairs — before slinking into the next area unnoticed.

Players can choose to go in guns blazing or be a bit more strategic in 007 First Light. ( Supplied )

Alternatively, you can simply operate as a one-man wrecking ball; it's not like James Bond has ever excelled at subtlety. In the best levels, the player has the flexibility to decide what kind of 007 they'd like to be.

A generation of Bonds

What fascinates most about James Bond is the way his character has been grafted onto different genre templates across the years. Moonraker shamelessly cashed in on the Star Wars craze of the late 70s; Licence to Kill entertainingly aped Miami Vice; Casino Royale set the new gold standard by borrowing from Jason Bourne.

Previous attempts at porting the character into a video game have led to even more eclectic results.

007 First Light takes influence from Goldeneye, the most successful game in the James Bond series. ( Supplied )

Bond made his gaming debut in 1982 with the unlicensed text adventure Shaken, Not Stirred, which was filled with transparent knock-off characters and the ability to replenish health with amphetamines. The official movie tie-ins that followed that decade cycled through various other forms, including a side-scrolling vehicle shooter (James Bond 007), a speedboat shooter (Live and Let Die), and a top-down shoot 'em up (007: Licence to Kill).

Looming over any new Bond game is the spectre of GoldenEye 007 for the Nintendo 64 — one of the most beloved games of its console generation. Created by a crack team of developers at British developer Rare (Donkey Kong Country) who had never made a first-person shooter, this tie-in for Pierce Brosnan's debut defied all expectations with its…

Read the full article at ABC News (Australia)

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ABC News (Australia)State / PublicCenter6 days ago
James Bond is missing in movies but thriving in video games

The article discusses the current state of the James Bond franchise, noting that it has been relatively inactive in recent years following Daniel Craig's departure. It highlights the sale of Bond rights to Amazon MGM Studios and explores the challenge of modernizing the iconic character. The article then shifts focus to the new Bond video game '007 First Light,' which offers a fresh take on the character's origins through a younger, more adaptable version of James Bond played by Patrick Gibson.

Bias read (Center): The article provides an objective overview of the James Bond franchise's current status and the new video game without taking a clear stance or using biased language. It focuses on cultural and entertainment aspects rather than political issues.