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quantum of solace movie reviews

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OK, I'll say it. Never again. Don't ever let this happen again to James Bond. "Quantum of Solace" is his 22nd film and he will survive it, but for the 23rd it is necessary to go back to the drawing board and redesign from the ground up. Please understand: James Bond is not an action hero! He is too good for that. He is an attitude. Violence for him is an annoyance. He exists for the foreplay and the cigarette. He rarely encounters a truly evil villain. More often a comic opera buffoon with hired goons in matching jump suits.

"Quantum of Solace" has the worst title in the series save for " Never Say Never Again ," words that could have been used by Kent after King Lear utters the saddest line in all of Shakespeare: "Never! Never! Never! Never! Never!" The movie opens with Bond involved in a reckless car chase on the tollway that leads through mountain tunnels from Nice through Monte Carlo and down to Portofino in Italy, where Edward Lear lies at rest with his cat, Old Foss. I have driven that way many a time. It is a breathtaking drive.

You won't find that out here. The chase, with Bond under constant machinegun fire, is so quickly cut and so obviously composed of incomprehensible CGI that we're essentially looking at bright colors bouncing off each other, intercut with Bond at the wheel and POV shots of approaching monster trucks. Let's all think together. When has an action hero ever, even once, been killed by machinegun fire, no matter how many hundreds of rounds? The hit men should simply reject them and say, "No can do, Boss. They never work in this kind of movie."

The chase has no connection to the rest of plot, which is routine for Bond, but it's about the movie's last bow to tradition. In "Quantum of Solace" he will share no cozy quality time with the Bond girl ( Olga Kurylenko ). We fondly remember the immortal names of Pussy Galore, Xenia Onatopp and Plenty O'Toole, who I have always suspected was a drag queen. In this film, who do we get? Are you ready for this? Camille. That's it. Camille. Not even Camille Squeal. Or Cammy Miami. Or Miss O'Toole's friend Cam Shaft.

Daniel Craig remains a splendid Bond, one of the best. He is handsome, agile, muscular, dangerous. Everything but talkative. I didn't count, but I think M ( Judi Dench ) has more dialogue than 007. Bond doesn't look like the urge to peel Camille has even entered his mind. He blows up a hotel in the middle of a vast, barren, endless Bolivian desert. It's a luxury hotel, with angular W Hotel-style minimalist room furniture you might cut your legs on, and a bartender who will stir or shake you any drink, but James has become a regular bloke who orders lager. Who are the clients at this highest of high-end hotels? Lawrence of Arabia, obviously, and millionaires who hate green growing things. Conveniently, when the hotel blows up, the filmmakers don't have to contend with adjacent buildings, traffic, pedestrians, skylines or anything else. Talk about your blue screen. Nothing better than the azure desert sky.

Why is he in Bolivia? In pursuit of a global villain, whose name is not Goldfinger, Scaramanga, Drax or Le Chiffre, but ... Dominic Greene ( Mathieu Amalric ). What is Dominic's demented scheme to control the globe? As a start, the fiend desires to corner the water supply of ... Bolivia. Ohooo! Nooo! This twisted design, revealed to Bond after at least an hour of death-defying action, reminds me of the famous laboratory mouse who was introduced into a labyrinth. After fighting his way for days through baffling corridors and down dead ends, finally, finally, parched and starving, the little creature crawled at last to the training button and hurled his tiny body against it. And what rolled down the chute as his reward? A licorice gum ball.

Dominic Greene lacks a headquarters on the moon, or on the floor of the sea. He operates out of an ordinary shipping warehouse with loading docks. His evil transport is provided by fork lifts and pickup trucks. Bond doesn't have to creep out on the ledge of an underground volcano to spy on him. He just walks up to the chain-link fence and peers through. Greene could get useful security tips from Wal-Mart.

There is no Q in "Quantum of Solace," except in the title. No Miss Moneypenny at all. M now has a male secretary. That Judi Dench, what a fox. Bond doesn't even size her up. He learned his lesson with Plenty. This Bond, he doesn't bring much to the party. Daniel Craig can play suave and he can be funny and Brits are born doing double entendre . Craig is a fine actor. Here they lock him down. I repeat: James Bond is not an action hero! Leave the action to your Jason Bournes. This is a swampy old world. The deeper we sink in, the more we need James Bond to stand above it.

Roger Ebert

Roger Ebert

Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism.

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Quantum of Solace movie poster

Quantum of Solace (2008)

Rated PG-13

106 minutes

Giancarlo Giannini as Rene Mathis

Judi Dench as M

Mathieu Amalric as Dominic Greene

Gemma Arterton as Agent Fields

Jeffrey Wright as Felix Leiter

Daniel Craig as James Bond

David Harbour as Gregg Beam

Olga Kurylenko as Camille

Directed by

  • Marc Forster
  • Paul Haggis
  • Neal Purvis
  • Robert Wade

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Quantum of Solace Reviews

quantum of solace movie reviews

As always, Bond shines like a British señorito among luxury salons, good drinks, and pretty women, although in this new installment, the character allows himself to get dirty, his hair to get tousled, and he even perspires. [Full review in Spanish]

Full Review | Original Score: 6/10 | Feb 13, 2024

quantum of solace movie reviews

…a boring slog through various clichés of toxic male machismo…

Full Review | Original Score: 2/5 | Sep 17, 2023

quantum of solace movie reviews

Ian Fleming’s James Bond franchise has a notorious hit-or-miss reputation on film, and Quantum of Solace rests somewhere in the middle.

Full Review | Original Score: 2.5/4 | Sep 5, 2023

quantum of solace movie reviews

A titanic drop in quality compared to its predecessor.

Full Review | Original Score: D | Jul 25, 2023

quantum of solace movie reviews

Quantum of Solace might not reach the same highs as Casino Royale, but in the context of the entire James Bond franchise, it is hard to say that the film is not one of the better editions simply considering it is overall competent.

Full Review | Original Score: B | Aug 28, 2022

Daniel Craig remains dutiful as ever, but following the franchise zenith that is Casino Royale, this should have been a lot better.

Full Review | Oct 2, 2021

quantum of solace movie reviews

Quantum of Solace isn't a bad film but it must be watched with the understanding that it was rushed into production to avoid a potential SAG strike.

Full Review | Sep 27, 2021

quantum of solace movie reviews

Casino Royale was a spectacular return to form, so it's not wholly unexpected that this follow-up has been tagged by some as one of the low points of the franchise. Nonsense.

Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Sep 25, 2021

quantum of solace movie reviews

Starts off alright but slowly becomes less and less interesting until it suddenly ends, plus the villain is more "mildly annoying prick" than Bond's big enemy...

Full Review | Original Score: 2/5 | Sep 15, 2021

quantum of solace movie reviews

It's not the first Bond film to fall back into a rut that will require the changing of the lead actor to get out of.

Full Review | Original Score: 2/10 | Nov 28, 2020

quantum of solace movie reviews

I don't mind losing the groan-inducing puns and the gimmicky gadgets, but strip Bond down too much and he begins to resemble Jason Bourne - and I'd rather have a first-rate Bond than a second-hand Bourne.

Full Review | Nov 13, 2020

quantum of solace movie reviews

Quantum of Solace is how I imagined the sequel to On Her Majesty's Secret Service if it came to fruition.

Full Review | Original Score: 3.5/5 | Jul 16, 2020

quantum of solace movie reviews

Quantum of Solace is one of the most listless Bond films I have seen.

Full Review | Original Score: C- | Apr 6, 2020

quantum of solace movie reviews

Quantum of Solace has style, and enough pursuit and pyrotechnics to please hard-core Bond fans. But it may disappoint those hoping for Marc Forster's distinctive imprint and a return to Casino Royale's top form.

Full Review | Jan 27, 2020

Bond is being further shaped into the character we've always known, and will most definitely be back to fight another day.

Full Review | Original Score: 4/5 | Oct 31, 2019

quantum of solace movie reviews

Unfairly maligned in relation to its more colourful and emotive cousins of the Daniel Craig era, Quantum of Solace is actually the more cerebral and challenging piece of work.

Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Oct 31, 2019

A plot of an unnecessarily complex development that fails miserably in something that its predecessor did very well: offer characters that seduce us. [Full Review in Spanish]

Full Review | Sep 10, 2019

quantum of solace movie reviews

This isn't a mindless blow-'em-up thriller, this is an intelligently crafted, superbly edited, lean, mean piece of work.

Full Review | Original Score: 3.5/4 | Jun 6, 2019

quantum of solace movie reviews

While it's understandable that long-term Bond devotees may be left pining for the days when the puns were a bit more plentiful, and the punches a bit less lethal, I for one hope they don't go too far back in the other direction.

Full Review | Original Score: B | Feb 4, 2019

quantum of solace movie reviews

The angsty, truant Bond and his sulky ways get too irritating, the pout notwithstanding.

Full Review | Original Score: 2/4 | Jan 31, 2019

  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews

Quantum of Solace

Daniel Craig and Olga Kurylenko in Quantum of Solace (2008)

James Bond descends into mystery as he tries to stop a mysterious organisation from eliminating a country's most valuable resource. James Bond descends into mystery as he tries to stop a mysterious organisation from eliminating a country's most valuable resource. James Bond descends into mystery as he tries to stop a mysterious organisation from eliminating a country's most valuable resource.

  • Marc Forster
  • Paul Haggis
  • Neal Purvis
  • Robert Wade
  • Daniel Craig
  • Olga Kurylenko
  • Mathieu Amalric
  • 1.4K User reviews
  • 262 Critic reviews
  • 58 Metascore
  • 4 wins & 32 nominations total

Quantum of Solace: Trailer #2

  • Dominic Greene

Judi Dench

  • Rene Mathis

Gemma Arterton

  • Strawberry Fields

Jeffrey Wright

  • Felix Leiter

David Harbour

  • Bill Tanner

Tim Pigott-Smith

  • Foreign Secretary

Joaquín Cosio

  • General Medrano

Fernando Guillén Cuervo

  • Colonel of Police

Jesús Ochoa

  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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Spectre

Did you know

  • Trivia Daniel Craig was injured at least three times during the making of this movie. The most prominent ones included an injury to his face, which required four stitches, another to his shoulder, which required six surgical screws to be inserted in an operation, and his arm in a sling, and then his hand was injured when one of his finger tips was sliced off. He laughed these off, noting they did not delay filming, and joked his finger wound would enable him to have a criminal career (though it had grown back when he made this comment). He also had minor plastic surgery on his face.
  • Goofs In the opening chase, Bond's car door is torn off, but as it spins around not only is the door there, but there isn't a scratch on the driver's side.

James Bond : [Interrupting the opera house conversation] Can I offer an opinion? I really think you people should find a better place to meet.

  • Crazy credits The iconic "James Bond gun barrel" sequence, not seen in its traditional format since Die Another Day, is incorporated into the closing credits.
  • Alternate versions Following an advisory screening of a rough cut, the film was pre-cut on BBFC advice in the UK before official submission to the Board for a formal cinema classification, with edits made to one scene in the finale. It was subsequently passed "uncut" as a 12A. More detailed notes can be found on the BBFC's website. Worldwide versions are this same pre-cut version.
  • Connections Edited into Coca-Cola Zero Zero 7 'Quantum of Solace' Television Commercial (2008)
  • Soundtracks Another Way to Die Music by Jack White Lyrics by Jack White Performed by Jack White and Alicia Keys

User reviews 1.4K

  • LeonLouisRicci
  • Mar 8, 2014
  • How long is Quantum of Solace? Powered by Alexa
  • What is 'Quantum of Solace' about?
  • Is "Quantum of Solace" based on a book by Ian Fleming?
  • How does "Quantum of Solace" relate to "For Your Eyes Only"?
  • November 14, 2008 (United States)
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
  • Official site
  • Swiss German
  • Strada Regionale 249, Navene, Lake Garda, Italy (Opening car chase)
  • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
  • Columbia Pictures
  • Eon Productions
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro
  • $200,000,000 (estimated)
  • $168,368,427
  • $67,528,882
  • Nov 16, 2008
  • $589,593,688

Technical specs

  • Runtime 1 hour 46 minutes
  • Dolby Digital

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  • Quantum of Solace

He's back. Daniel Craig allays any fear that he was just a one-Martini Bond, with this, his second 007 adventure, the perplexingly named Quantum Of Solace.

I've got to admit that this didn't excite me as much as Casino Royale and the villain is especially underpowered. But Craig personally has the chops, as they say in Hollywood. He's made the part his own, every inch the coolly ruthless agent-cum-killer, nursing a broken heart and coldly suppressed rage. If the Savile Row suit with the Beretta shoulder holster fits, wear it. And he's wearing it.

This is a crash-bang Bond, high on action, low on quips, long on location glamour, short on product placement.

Under the direction of Marc Forster, the movie ladles out the adrenalin in a string of deafening episodes: car chases, plane wrecks, motor boat collisions. If it's got an engine, and runs on fuel, and can crash into another similarly powered vehicle, with Bond at the wheel, and preferably with a delicious female companion in the passenger seat - well, it goes in the movie.

There are plenty of references to other Bond moments. A horribly dangerous skydive recalls The Spy Who Loved Me. A pile-up in Haiti which spills a macabre lorryload of coffins recalls the voodoo creepiness of Live And Let Die. And, most outrageously of all, the grotesque daubing of a female corpse brings back Goldfinger - though Sean Connery got an awful lot more mileage out of that sort of thing.

As in Casino Royale, the famous John Barry theme tune is saved up until the end; a baffling, decision, I always think, not to use this thrilling music at the beginning of the film.

Bond has hardly got his 007 spurs, when he's infuriating M, Judi Dench , with his insolence and insubordination. Out in the field, he's whacking enemy agents in short, sharp, bone-cracking bursts of violence when he should be bringing them in for questioning.

In theory, he is out to nail a sinister international business type: Dominic Greene, played by French star Mathieu Amalric , who under a spurious ecological cover plans to buy up swaths of South American desert and a portfolio of Latin American governments to control the water supply of an entire continent. As Greene, Amalric has the maddest eyes, creepiest leer, and dodgiest teeth imaginable.

Clearly, Bond has to take this fellow down. But he also wants to track down the man who took his beloved Vesper away from him in the previous movie: he is pathologically seeking payback, and to the fury of his superiors, this is getting personal. But it hasn't stopped him cultivating female company in the traditional, fantastically supercilious manner. His companions are as demurely submissive as ever. Olga Kurylenko plays Camille, a mysterious, smouldering figure, out to wreak vengeance on the corrupt Bolivian dictators who killed her family.

Britain's Gemma Arterton plays Agent Fields; she greets 007 wearing a trenchcoat with apparently little underneath, like some sort of MI6 strippogram. And she is the recipient of his ardour in the luxury hotel suite - that quintessential Bond habitat. This movie is, in fact, a reminder of how vital hotels are in Bond films, providing the essential narrative grammar: the checking in, the fight with the stranger in the room, the messages left at reception, the luxury cars lovingly photographed outside.

I was disappointed there was so little dialogue, flirtation and characterisation in this Bond: Forster and his writers Paul Haggis, Neal Purvis and Robert Wade clearly thought this sort of sissy nonsense has to be cut out in favour of explosions. Well, perhaps that is what Bond fans want (not this Bond fan, though). But I was also baffled that relatively little was made of the deliciously villainous Amalric: especially the final encounter.

But set against this is the cool, cruel presence of Craig - his lips perpetually semi-pursed, as if savouring some new nastiness his opponents intend to dish out to him, and the nastiness he intends to dish out in return. This film, unlike the last, doesn't show him in his powder-blue swimming trunks (the least heterosexual image in 007 history), but it's a very physical performance. Quantum of Solace isn't as good as Casino Royale: the smart elegance of Craig's Bond debut has been toned down in favour of conventional action. But the man himself powers this movie; he carries the film: it's an indefinably difficult task for an actor. Craig measures up.

  • Action and adventure films
  • Daniel Craig
  • Mathieu Amalric

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Screen Rant

Quantum of solace review.

Quantum of Solace is the best James Bond film in over a decade.

Screen Rant's Niall Browne reviews Quantum of Solace

As a life long James Bond fan I always look forward to new adventures from the super-spy. My very first cinematic memory is watching Roger Moore's final outing as Bond in A View To A Kill , and my teenage years and early twenties were filled with Pierce Brosnan's daring-do.

When the Broccoli family ditched Brosnan in favor of the younger, more rugged Daniel Craig I was a bit annoyed (to say the least). Although I was a tad skeptical that Daniel Craig had what it took to slip into the tuxedo, I will admit that I was more worried about EON's idea to reboot Bond for the Bourne generation. Over the years the character of James Bond has been constantly reinvented, without having to start all over again.

In my opinion Casino Royale was an adequate beginning for a harsher and more realistic Bond, but its bloated running time; generic soundtrack and tacked-on finale left me hoping that the next film in the series would deliver the type of James Bond film that I wanted.

So... how does Quantum of Solace measure up?

It surpasses its predecessor in almost every way and delivers the best Bond film in over a decade.

Shorter and more action packed, Quantum of Solace is a James Bond film for the new millennium. Unlike Brosnan's swan song Die Another Day, the CGI is limited, and unlike Casino Royale the film doesn't try to be too hip and trendy. From the pulsating opening car chase - you know that you are watching Bond, and like the older movies in the series you feel that it is the end of another adventure (it is) and not a piece of grandstanding from the second unit and stunt departments.

Picking up mere minutes after Royale's climax the film hits the ground running (literally) and delivers action sequence after action sequence. Don't worry though, unlike many action movies today this doesn't feel like sensory overload - just damn good entertainment.

The plot is simple: Bond wants to discover more about the mysterious Quantum organization following his capture of Mr White. He also wants to get revenge for the death of his one true love Vesper from the previous film. Jet-setting across the Atlantic he finds that rogue environmentalist Mr Greene (Mathieu Amalric) has an affiliation with the evil group and whilst tailing Greene he meets Camille - a beautiful but deadly killer who wants revenge on one of Greene's associates.

It feels like Marc Forster went into directing Quantum of Solace with a checklist of greatest hits from other Bond movies: car chase - check; boat chase - check; roof top chase - check. There are a couple more I could add but I don't want to spoil the film - in any case you can bet they're in there. What's miraculous is that it all feels fresh and very real.

Forster also manages to bring back Bond's weapon of choice - the Walther PPK for the first time in years. There's even a death of a character that harkens back to Goldfinger . It's all classic Bond, but it all feels relevant, despite what Mike Myers says.

The supporting cast all fit nicely into their respective roles. Mathieu Amalric delivers one of the best performances of a Bond villain in years. While the part may not be as iconic as Blofeld or Goldfinger because he has no "gimmick," the actor does make Mr Greene real. The Bond girls Olga Kurylenko and Gemma Arterton do admirable jobs, but their roles are merely window dressing. At least the filmmakers have realized that Bond doesn't need a female partner a la Halle Berry. Having said that it would seem that Bond sees action everywhere but the bedroom. If he's not careful Craig's Bond could become as monastic as Timothy Dalton's "new man" of the 1980's -  and we all know how... ahem... wooden he was.

Judi Dench's M is much improved this time around and her relationship with Bond does show growth, but I still feel that if they were rebooting the franchise they should have dropped her too. Bond needs a father figure, not mothering. His relationship with Felix Lieter (Jeffrey Wright) is also warming up too and Leiter's character is more than Bond's one dimensional American buddy for the first time in years.

While there is much to praise about the Quantum of Solace I do have a few niggles. It wouldn't hurt to have more of that theme music in there and why switch the gun barrel opening to the end of the film? Also, if at some point they are going to have to reintroduce Q and Moneypenny - why keep holding it off? After all Moneypenny is only a secretary and Q is a piece of walking plot exposition. I'm sure Haggis, Purvis and Wade can fit them in without too much trouble.

Quantum of Solace is Bond at his best. Thrilling and entertaining, this new outing highlights yet again why this franchise has been around for over 45 years. While many will try and highlight the Bourne -ification of James Bond they seem to forget that this is the cold blooded killer created by Ian Fleming in the 1950s. Bond isn't aping Bourne - it's the other way around. While the action may be more visceral and frenetic it is still pure Bond.

Quantum of Solace puts Bond back on top. I really can't wait for James Bond to return...

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Movie Review | 'Quantum of Solace'

007 Is Back, and He’s Brooding

quantum of solace movie reviews

By A.O. Scott

  • Nov. 13, 2008

A reviewer may come to a new James Bond movie — “Quantum of Solace,” directed by Marc Forster and opening Friday, is the 22nd official installment of the series in 46 years — with a nifty theory or an elaborate sociocultural hermeneutic agenda, but the most important thing to have on hand is a checklist. It’s all well and good to reflect upon the ways 007, the Harry Potter of British intelligence, has evolved over time through changes in casting, geopolitics, sexual mores and styles of dress.

But the first order of business must always be to run through the basic specs of this classic entertainment machine’s latest model and see how it measures up.

So before we proceed to any consideration of the deeper meanings of “Quantum of Solace” (or for that matter the plain meaning of its enigmatic title), we need to assess the action, the villain, the gadgets, the babes and the other standard features.

The opening song, performed by Jack White and Alicia Keys (an intriguing duo on paper if nowhere else), is an abysmal cacophony of incompatible musical idioms, and the title sequence over which those idioms do squalling battle is similarly disharmonious: conceptually clever and visually grating. The first chase, picking up exactly where the 2006 “Casino Royale” left off, is speedy and thrilling, but the other action set-pieces are a decidedly mixed bag, with a few crisp footraces, some semi-coherent punch-outs and a dreadful boat pileup that brings back painful memories of the invisible car Pierce Brosnan tooled around in a few movies ago.

Picturesque locales? Bolivia, Haiti, Austria and Italy are featured or impersonated, to perfectly nice touristic effect. Gizmos? A bit disappointing, to tell the truth. Technological advances in the real world may not quite have outpaced those in the Bond universe, but so many movies these days show off their global video surveillance set-ups and advanced smart-phone applications that it’s hard for this one to distinguish itself.

What about the villain? One of the best in a while, I’d say, thanks to a lizardy turn from the great French actor Mathieu Amalric, who plays Dominic Greene, a ruthless economic predator disguised as an ecological do-gooder. The supporting cast is studded with equally excellent performers, including Jeffrey Wright and Giancarlo Giannini, both reprising their roles in “Casino Royale.”

And the women? There are two, as usual — not counting Judi Dench, returning as the brisk and impatient M — one (Gemma Arterton) a doomed casual plaything, the other a more serious dramatic foil and potential romantic interest. That one, called Camille, is played by Olga Kurylenko, whose specialty seems to be appearing in action pictures as the pouty, sexy sidekick of a brooding, vengeful hero. Not only Daniel Craig’s Bond, but also Mark Wahlberg’s Max Payne and Timothy Olyphant’s Hitman.

James Bond is a much livelier character than either of those mopey video-game ciphers, but he shares with them the astonishing ability to resist, indeed to ignore, Ms. Kurylenko’s physical charms.

This is not out of any professional scruple. The plot of “Quantum of Solace” is largely propelled by Bond’s angry flouting of the discipline imposed by his job, and anyway when did James Bond ever let work get in the way of sex? No, what gets in the way is emotion. 007’s grief and rage, the source of his connection to Camille, are forces more powerful than either duty or libido.

Mr. Brosnan was the first actor to allow a glimmer of complicated emotion to peek through Bond’s cool, rakish facade, and since Mr. Craig took over the franchise two years ago the character has shown a temperament at once rougher and more soulful than in previous incarnations. The violence in his first outing, “Casino Royale,” was notably intense, and while “Quantum of Solace” is not quite as brutal, the mood is if anything even more grim and downcast.

The death in “Casino” of Bond’s lover Vesper Lynd (Eva Green), along with the possibility that she had betrayed him before dying, provides an obvious psychological explanation for his somber demeanor in “Quantum.” But while the exploration of Bond’s psychology makes him, arguably at least, a deeper, subtler character — and there is certainly impressive depth and subtlety in Mr. Craig’s wounded, whispery menace — it also makes him harder to distinguish from every other grieving, seething avenger at the multiplex.

Which is to say just about every one. And here, I suppose, the deeper questions bubble up. Is revenge the only possible motive for large-scale movie heroism these days? Does every hero, whether Batman or Jason Bourne, need to be so sad?

I know grief has always been part of the Dark Knight’s baggage, but the same can hardly be said of James Bond, Her Majesty’s suave, cynical cold war paladin. His wit was part of his — of our — arsenal, and he countered the totalitarian humorlessness of his foes with a wink and a bon mot.

Are these weapons now off limits for the good guys? Or can moviegoers justify their vicarious enjoyment of on-screen mayhem — and luxury hotels, high-end cocktails and fast cars — only if there are some pseudoserious bad feelings attached? The Sean Connery James Bond movies of the 1960s were smooth, cosmopolitan comedies, which in the Roger Moore era sometimes ascended to the level of farce. With Mr. Craig, James Bond reveals himself to be — sigh — a tragic figure.

“Quantum of Solace,” a phrase never uttered in the course of this film (though it has something to do with Greene’s diabolical scheme, itself never fully explained), means something like a measure of comfort. Perhaps that describes what Bond is looking for, or maybe it is what this kind of entertainment tries to provide a fretful audience. If so, I prefer mine with a dash of mischief.

“Quantum of Solace” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). Its scenes of violence and sex are carefully edited to avoid showing too much gore or skin.

QUANTUM OF SOLACE

Opens on Friday nationwide.

Directed by Marc Forster; written by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and Paul Haggis, based on characters created by Ian Fleming; director of photography, Roberto Schaefer; edited by Matt Chessé and Richard Pearson; music by David Arnold; production designer, Dennis Gassner; produced by Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli; released by Columbia Pictures. Running time: 1 hour 46 minutes.

WITH: Daniel Craig (James Bond), Olga Kurylenko (Camille), Mathieu Amalric (Dominic Greene), Judi Dench (M), Giancarlo Giannini (Mathis), Gemma Arterton (Agent Fields), Jeffrey Wright (Felix Leiter), Jesper Christensen (Mr. White), Anatole Taubman (Elvis), Rory Kinnear (Tanner) and Joaquín Cosio (General Medrano).

The Movie Review: 'Quantum of Solace'

When the 16th James Bond film, Licence to Kill , was released in 1989, it was widely reported that its working title, Licence Revoked , had been altered thanks to a survey revealing that fewer than 50 percent of Americans knew the meaning of the word "revoked." How far we have come since then. Bond's last outing, Casino Royale , was not only his best in over three decades, it was also his smartest, and its franchise-record grosses evidently persuaded 007's custodians that we Yanks aren't quite such a load of morons after all. How else to explain Quantum of Solace , the year's most obscurely titled release not directed by Charlie Kaufman?

Like Licence to Kill , Quantum is a tale of vengeance; unlike it, the new film is also a sequel, in which the lethal debt to be paid off is held over from a previous picture. Specifically, Bond (Daniel Craig) goes off the grid to track down the shadowy villains responsible for the death of his Casino Royale lover, Vesper, who was in life a mouthwatering accountant and remains in death a mouthwatering martini . (Denied the consolations of the former in Quantum , Bond permits himself those of the latter.

The film opens with a breakneck car chase along the rocky Mediterranean coast in which British Aston outduels Italian Alfa, enabling 007 to arrive in Siena minus one car door but with the prisoner in his trunk--Mr. White (Jesper Christensen), whom we saw him shoot in the leg at the conclusion of Casino Royale --intact. Following an interrogation by M (Judi Dench), Mr. White ultimately leads Bond to one Mr. Slate, who in turn leads him to a Mr. Greene (Matthieu Amalric). That's right: The global conspiracy this time around isn't SPECTRE, but some rogue wing of the United Colors of Benetton.

Greene, it turns out, is an environmental activist whose company makes covert deals with corrupt governments and then strips their nations of natural resources. In this case, his group promises to return a deposed Bolivian strongman (Joaquin Cosio) to power ("We've already begun destabilizing the government," Greene informs him, as casually as he might report third-quarter earnings) in exchange for control of a remote desert which may contain oil or perhaps a still more precious resource. (It's not hard to guess which.) As Bond untangles Greene's plot, he crosses paths with Camille (Olga Kurylenko), a comely Bolivian pursuing her own parallel, but unrelated, mission of vengeance. (If his narrative is loosely borrowed from Licence to Kill , hers comes from For Your Eyes Only .) Jeffrey Wright and Giancarlo Giannini reprise their roles from Casino Royale as Bond allies legit and not-so, and Gemma Arterton makes a brief appearance as the Officious MI6 Handler Whom 007 Will Quickly Cajole Into Bed.

Moreover, there is evidence of backsliding toward a few of the more tired franchise tropes that Casino Royale had so sharply repudiated. Where that film made fun of the sex-pun sobriquets doled out to female characters (Bond teased Vesper that her cover identity was "Miss Stephanie Broadchest"), this one saddles Arterton's agent--herself a bit of a throwback to the 007-as-incorrigible-gigolo years--with the name Strawberry Fields. Even the title sequence brings back a hint of the PG prurience that was so pleasantly absent from Casino Royale 's stylish opener .

Yet despite such disappointments, there is solace in Quantum , and its name is Daniel Craig. Ever since Sean Connery first brought Bond to life onscreen, his successors had been imitators. Yes, Roger Moore was a little softer, Timothy Dalton a little harder, and Pierce Brosnan a little more dapper. But despite the variation, Bond had remained pretty much the same character, periodically changing faces. Craig is the first inheritor who has worn the role rather than let it wear him.

To a greater degree even than in Casino Royale , Craig's Bond is shorn of the frilly vanities and amusements that long dominated the character. His job is not to charm people, it is to kill people, and he does this not because he takes pleasure in it but because he knows he's better at it than anyone else. Creator Ian Fleming once described Bond in Reader's Digest as "an anonymous, blunt instrument wielded by a government department," and Craig's portrayal in Quantum is just that, minus the government control. This is probably the cruelest Bond of the series, and certainly the most murderous, shedding more blood during an average twenty-minute stretch than Roger Moore seemed to over the course of seven films. When, at one point, M chides him, "Bond, if you could avoid killing every possible lead, it would be deeply appreciated," she is not speaking metaphorically.

Under other circumstances, I wouldn't applaud the surfeit of brutality--which still doesn't approach what you can find elsewhere at the multiplex most nights--but, as in Casino Royale , it is a useful corrective to the flabby excesses of the franchise, which so often portrayed 007 as ass-chaser first and assassin second. Moreover, Craig is so very good as the hitman with a heart of lead that it's hard to begrudge him his lethal mandate. His blue eyes are colder than even Fleming could've imagined, and his spare but fearsome frame seems, unlike most Hollywood physiques, built more for performance than for show. (Most of the women I know will be disappointed--and most of their husbands relieved--to hear that Craig takes his shirt off a good deal less than he did in Casino Royale .)

Apart from Craig, the chief pleasure of the film is Dame Judi Dench. In her earlier collaborations with Brosnan, I could never shake the sense that she was holding back a bit, lest the quiet domination of which she (and sometimes it seems only she) is capable might overwhelm her leading man and throw their scenes together out of kilter. Craig, by contrast, can and does withstand the full-on Dench, and their scenes together crackle with amiable ferocity. Who needs Bond Girls when this Bond Woman is so much more compelling?

The film's direction, by arthouse refugee Marc Foster ( Finding Neverland , The Kite Runner ), will provoke strong reactions--positive, negative, and in some cases both at once. Following the temper of the time, Foster presents the movie's many action sequences in a wash of choppy, hyperedited shots, but he pushes the tendency to such extremes that he makes the Bourne films (on which Quantum is clearly modeled) look like Rope . The result is a near-total lack of spatial continuity--I have fifty dollars for anyone who can put salt shakers on a table and show me what took place in a particular boat chase--but an unmistakable visceral intensity. If, as it appears, this is where action filmmaking is headed, concession stands of the future will make a killing in Ritalin sales.

Quantum of Solace is not nearly as strong a film as Casino Royale , and the filmmakers seem well aware of this. It is, after all, set up as a kind of coda to its predecessor, an effort to extend its success rather than genuinely replicate it. (It's telling that Casino Royale was the longest of all 22 Bond films at 144 minutes, and Quantum is the shortest at 106. You'd think the filmmakers would understand that there's a happy medium to be found here.) Yet, thanks to Craig's ruthless performance, Quantum is still better than all but a few of the Bond offerings of the last 30 years. As Kurylenko tells 007 late in the film, "There's something horribly efficient about you." Amen.

This post originally appeared at TNR.com.

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The Critical Movie Critics

Movie Review: Quantum of Solace (2008)

  • General Disdain
  • Movie Reviews
  • 12 responses
  • --> November 9, 2008

A rejuvenated James Bond is back for his 22nd feature film: Quantum of Solace . Building upon the blocks laid down in 2006’s Casino Royale , this movie further “evolves” the Bond experience — presenting itself strictly as a kick-ass, take no prisoners action movie, leaving in the dust the nuances that set 007 apart from being a Jason Bourne replica.

It only takes thirty seconds of viewing to come to that conclusion as Quantum of Solace starts off with an intense car chase through the Italian mountainside. Details and a cool focus on Bond (Daniel Craig) are a distant memory, replaced by frantic, sharp edits pasted together from multiple camera angles. There is so much going on at such a quick clip that if you sneeze, cough or blink you may very well miss the majority of an action sequence. Adrenalin junkies are going to love it though because there is a lot of these sequences (foot chases, car chases, boat chases and airplane chases) put in place of what I believe is a lack of a fully fleshed out, stand-alone premise.

And what I mean by that is there is little attention paid to the characters and their stories (which were staples in the plots of earlier works) — everyone is merely a stepping stone en route to make someone or something explode spectacularly.

The film itself is basically a hyped-up extension of its predecessor — Bond is smarting over the loss of his lady love, Vesper Lynd, and wants to exact revenge against those he feels is responsible for her death (a secret organization known as Quantum). His adventure takes him through various countries in the Carribean and Europe before he finally ends up in Bolivia as he hunts down Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric), the head of an eco-friendly corporation Greene Planet and a fellow Quantum member. It turns out Greene is involved with securing land rights in the Bolivian desert in exchange for seeing a coup through that would put the exiled General Medrano (Joaquà­n Cosio) back in power. Involved with this subplot is Camille Montes (Olga Kurylenko), a woman who wants revenge against the General for the killing her family. Together, Camille and James form an uneasy alliance to see their outcomes met.

Back on point, whereas I would have at least expected to gain a further understanding into these main roles, very little is offered up. Mathieu Amalric brings a fair amount of harshness to the role of Greene but he was lacking a certain flair that would have made him memorable to me. Ms. Kurylenko brings the pain as Camille, popping in and out of the movie when it was convenient to write her in but I couldn’t fathom how or why she was there. Bond is more damaged and Daniel Craig does a good job straddling the line between right and wrong; he just needs to not play the man like a too tightly wound clock — Bond should never lose his refinement. “M” (Judi Dench) is the only character that comes to life on the screen. I noted when she first took on the role of head of MI6, I didn’t think she was a good fit. I take that back now — she finally brands the character as her own, mixing together the perfect amounts of motherly care with hardened decision making.

It’s clear the next Bond flick will continue down this story line (very little is answered in this installment), and while I’m not necessarily against that, I can’t help but want some of the old mainstays to somehow make their way back into the fold. Gone, just like the last film, is “Q”, the head of research and development for MI6 and the lone source for lighthearted and humorous pauses between the life and death struggles Bond found himself in. Gone also is the patent womanizing the Bond of old reveled in. It too was missing last time around but I was certain the casting of Olga Kurylenko was going to fix that. Putting her in as a Bond girl was a brilliant move, but not having her flash some skin or fall for one of Bond’s cheesy hook-up lines is criminal.

All said, I still found the film fun to watch. It was easy to overlook the storytelling blemishes because much of the action it links is some of the more entertaining I’ve seen recently — the stunt coordinators really deserve a round of applause for their work here. As a fan of the series, I’ll end by noting that while Quantum of Solace isn’t the best the franchise has to offer, it’s still a great way to spend $12 and fill 100 minutes of your afternoon. Welcome back, Bond.

The Critical Movie Critics

I'm an old, miserable fart set in his ways. Some of the things that bring a smile to my face are (in no particular order): Teenage back acne, the rain on my face, long walks on the beach and redneck women named Francis. Oh yeah, I like to watch and criticize movies.

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'Movie Review: Quantum of Solace (2008)' have 12 comments

The Critical Movie Critics

November 9, 2008 @ 5:34 pm MP

I am totally psyched to see this. Sorry to see Q left out again though – I love the toys he comes up with.

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The Critical Movie Critics

November 10, 2008 @ 11:50 am Mircea

Srsly…this was a below average James Bond film. :(

– he never ever says the quote that made him famous – The real James Bond would have banged Olga

The Critical Movie Critics

November 11, 2008 @ 6:11 am Doyle

I completely agree with your review of Solace, up until you rate it. 2 piles??

You say it yourself, the film is nothing more than action scenes linked together with minor plot reveals. It is missing everything that would make this Bond film a real Bond film.

4 piles from me – at a minimium.

The Critical Movie Critics

November 11, 2008 @ 9:27 pm General Disdain

…I love the toys he comes up with.

Can’t argue with the truth.

It is missing everything that would make this Bond film a real Bond film.

It’s missing a few key ingredients. I still like his newer, grittier persona — just needs a touch more refinement.

The Critical Movie Critics

November 15, 2008 @ 9:50 am Alex

I culdn’t agree more. The action in this movie kept me on the edge of my seat. Who cares about Q? This is the best Bond yet.

The Critical Movie Critics

November 15, 2008 @ 4:49 pm Aldo

As long as they don’t turn Bond into a fag, I’ll keep on watching.

The Critical Movie Critics

November 26, 2008 @ 4:34 am Alex

“As long as they don’t turn Bond into a fag, I’ll keep on watching.” LOL..I have some doubts about this after watching this movie. :)

The Critical Movie Critics

November 28, 2008 @ 4:16 am K

This is not a James Bond movie! Jambes Bond doesn’t ever say in the movie not for a single time “Bond, James Bond!”, it is the first movie without the appearance or even reference to Q, therefore no Bond cool gadgets, it’s the first movie, James Bond doesn’t sleep with the Bond Girl. Quite out of the frame this time.

The Critical Movie Critics

January 2, 2009 @ 1:43 pm s

Without a doubt, Connery & Brosnan were the gold standard of Bond & my darkest days where during Moore’s farcical portrayal of our favorite 00. So I am pre-disposed not to accept Craig as a bone fide replacement. But even in both movies, Craig is not the problem, the producers & directors are. OK. Perhaps my last comments were really a review of Casino not having seen QoS. Now I have seen it and there are so many problems with it I do not know where to begin. All the chases are herky, jerky, shaky staccato film clips. You can never really see what is going on. This is contrary to the traditional Bond flick replete with detail. And if Craig is gritty, moody, mean & vindictive one can still see a path by which he becomes a cooler if not a cold, uber-professional agent with a dry, sardonic sense of humor. This Bond clearly appeals to a feminine perspective that escapes me. I understood him not becoming ‘involved’ with the other women in the 2 flicks as having high standards and was at least relieved to see his response to Fields as, what we would term a normal orientation! (The women seem to love that Bond does NOT ‘hook up’ with the main girl in either film and broods ceaselessly like a forlorn Hamlet for his unrequited lover from Casino). Even the opening chase, usually one of the best, is almost visually incomprehensible. Car chase, rooftop chase, sewer chase, apartment knife fight chase, boat chase, plane chase, Chase-Morgan, certainly they all were purloined from the Bourne genre but somehow Bourne’s were more believable.

The opening graphics were not as bad as I feared, but were definitely not 007 quality. Far too much of Craig shooting his Walther PPK .380; (don’t make me go into why that is a problem). We have grown accustomed to the sultry, sexual/sensual and awesome graphical intro to the Bond films. This one was not of the same caliber. Ditto on the theme song. It was not a good as past songs but I was fearing worse and it was actually passable relating somewhat to the general theme of the film. The barrel scene was placed at the end of the film. I prefer the beginning but in either case it should be presented with high quality graphics and punctuated with 007 theme song riffs. It was not.

Lots of chases. Most are barely watchable. I actually liked the reference to the traditional 13th century Italian Palio horse race in which the riders can use their longer wooden canes to encourage their steeds or discourage their opponents; and the actual event was supposed to be occurring outside of the chase area.

The knife fight was lame. How did the baddie die anyhow? Please tell me not with the little pair of cuticle scissors Bond had. And if the death blow was to the only wounded area shown, the left jugular, where did all the blood go as Bond let him ‘bleed out’. Not to worry the details because we are soon introduced to THE BOND GIRL. Well, a little anti-climatic because she is not quite as attractive as we are used to although she has very pretty lips. The rest of her seems strangely disproportionate for some reason. It’s also strange that she would return to the baddie who just tried to have her whacked. That has little probability for success for someone who we later learn is “Bolivian Secret Service”. Oh well, not to worry, we are off on another chase, this time with boats. It is perhaps the best done but for the last scene in which the grappling hook is somehow thrown onto the rubber speed boat and flips it from the front of Bond’s boat over the top to the rear…… can’t quite figure the physics out on that one. Not to worry, we’ve docked and Bond mysteriously hands the unconscious maiden who he has just rescued over to a dock attendant…what?

Well were off to track this baddie and somehow reconnected with the GIRL in Bolivia where we eventually learn that the baddie, Mr. Greene of the evil Greene corporation in conjunction with the even eviler Quantum Criminal Consortium LLC has concocted a plot wreaking with the venom of true corporate greed, evil capitalism and nefarious financier-ship; to wit, steal all the fresh water in where? Why Bolivia of course and sell it back to them Bolivians at double the price! MUAHHAHAHAHAHA (evil laugh). We learn at a big party that times are tough in Bolivia because it is costing a weeks wages for an average Bolivian to buy a gallon of clean water! As I remember, the average Bolivian earns about $0.25 per day making the water cost about $1.75 a gallon; pretty much on par with market values in Cleveland. Perhaps this is not the best country for our get richer quicker scheme.

No matter, we are off to the evil opera where the evil baddies are meeting to plan, well, evil. This is where we juxtapose a modernistic version of the Tosca operatic bloodshed whilst Bond dabbles in the real thing dispatching the body guards of the evil biggies who, now discovered & uncovered, are making a hasty retreat for the exits faster than attendees at an Al Gore speech.

No matter, while in Bolivia we are matroned by the closest thing to a real Bond girl, agent Fields. Unfortunately we never really figure out what is beneath that trenchcoat although it appears that Bond does. Also unfortunately for Fields and us, she is quickly eliminated by the baddies in what can only be termed as a ‘crude’ theft of the Goldfinger modus operandi. I would have expected more of a mess but why waste camera time on the slickened Fields when you can spend it on bathroom scenes with….who else….M of course. Perhaps the most difficult what seemed to be15 minutes of the film (as if minutes were hours Mr. Spock) was watching M in her bathrobe apply & remove cold creme. The threat itself would have sent Mr. Greene permanently into pro bono philanthropy. Not finished with us yet, M draws her bath and the tension in the theater built noticeably as we all began to fear that we would be greeted with an au natural scene of her slipping out of the robe into the tub. Fortunately we were spared that experience (wait for the unedited version coming to DVD soon!). However, it just calls into question what fob with a mommy complex of some sort is calling the shots in these films.

M continues to demonstrate why she should not be “M” vacillating from suspecting Bond to needing him back in 00 some 4-5 times during the movie. We did get a glimpse into the possible personality of M’s hubby when he meekly announced, “the calls for you dear on your private line”. Whatever.

M may welcome Bond back with open arms or have him captured or killed, no matter, the BOND GIRL is rescuing Bond in her getaway car, a 1964 VW Beetle. I guess the Bolivian Secret Service does not get to roll like the 00’s in MI6. At least it was a 40HP!

No matter. We are now off to a hotel in the middle of a high plains Bolivian desert. Time to charter a plane…no, not the little Beachcraft Bonanza that would actually be faster and more maneuverable. Choose the DC-3 with a load of cargo on board. Watch out though, you’ll get shot down by the Bolvian Air Force in a single engine Marchetti SIA1 (which I have been corrected on and is a fast little number) I guess the BAF doesn’t get to roll like the 00’s at MI6 either.

No matter because they are both jumping out of that crate with the only parachute. Somehow everything turns out ok after wrestling for 10,000 feet with the BOND GIRL & parachute falling at 120 MPH because the chute opens 20 feet off of our LZ, a nice big soft slab of granite. BTW, the BOND GIRL walks for miles on granite stones in her bare feat…she’s a hearty lass.

It’s off the hotel to find the baddies. The hotel, located in the high plains desert of Bolivia, is called the Plaza del Sol. It is completely self-sufficient and powered by…solar….no you idiot, hydrogen fuel cells. In fact, each room appears to have its own hydrogen fuel cell and its accompanying hydrogen supply tank. The maids must make your bed and refill your hydrogen tank when they replace the shampoo in the bath, I guess. Naturally the hotel, located in the high plains Bolivian desert is made substantially of steel & stone. Unfortunately, the steel & stone in Bolivia is not quite as durable as the steel & stone you and I have grown to love as we discover when Bond causes a baddie car to crash through a wall igniting a hydrogen tank. The rest of the hydrogen tanks ignite sequentially. Darn it, I hate when that happens, you just can’t get good hydrogen tanks anymore. Again, unfortunately, the Bolivian steel & stone burns more like paper mache. Bond battles the Greene baddie but aborts to rescue the BOND GIRL who is caught up in her own subplot vendetta too trite to be explained here. Mr. Greene escapes into the desert only to meet a cryptic fate induced by other unknown baddies and Bond’s 10W-40 payback for the treatment of luscious Agent Fields.

You would be better off waiting for this to hit DVD. At least then you can slo-mo or replay the chase scenes making sense of them, spend more time with the slick Agent Fields and most importantly, FFW or skip over M’s bathroom escapades. You have been warned.

The Critical Movie Critics

August 10, 2009 @ 4:07 pm Richmond Hill

This is a great flick in the bond series. The series has seriously improved over the last couple movies into blockbuster hits.

The Critical Movie Critics

November 13, 2009 @ 4:26 pm Julie

I didn’t think that this film was as good as Daniel Craig’s debut role as Bond in “Casino Royale”. It seemed to lack some of the rawness and pace that made his first film so special. Also, there’s not many gadgets and the end disappoints. That said, I’d agree with General Disdain – it’s not a bad way of spending a spare afternoon!

The Critical Movie Critics

May 22, 2010 @ 4:13 pm Neil

Daniel Craig makes for a seriously good Bond – the most believable since Sean Connery. Like in “Casino Royale”, there’s no fooling around or many “Bond” gags. This is full-on action thriller. Strap yourself in.

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quantum of solace movie reviews

  • DVD & Streaming

Quantum of Solace

  • Action/Adventure , Drama , Mystery/Suspense

Content Caution

quantum of solace movie reviews

In Theaters

  • Daniel Craig as James Bond; Olga Kurylenko as Camille; Mathieu Amalric as Dominic Greene; Judi Dench as M; Giancarlo Giannini as Mathis; Gemma Arterton as Strawberry Fields

Home Release Date

  • Marc Forster

Distributor

  • Sony Pictures

Movie Review

Smash! Squeal! Rat-a-tat-a-tat-a-tat! Crash! Argh! Kaboom!

So begins Quantum of Solace , the 137th movie in a big-screen saga that stretches back to the year 1524. Such boy-noise largely sums up the middle of the film, as well. And the end. And it’s the way your head feels as you walk to your car afterwards.

Quantum of Solace starts about where the last Bond flick, Casino Royale , left off. Bond, mourning the death of his girlfriend/rogue agent Vesper, is hot on the heels of the evildoers he blames for her demise—claiming, of course, it’s all for the good of Queen and Country. But he’s not fooling anyone, especially not M, his boss. Bond’s vendetta is profoundly personal: His rage spatters like 400-degree bacon grease, concealed only by his tailored tux and marble eyes.

As he cuts across Europe and South America, leaving a sizable swath of dead bodies in his wake, Bond unearths a vast shadowy organization called Quantum. Quantum wants—well, we don’t exactly know what Quantum wants. But it has something to do with bringing the world to its knees. (What else could it be?)

Bond’s self-assigned to-do list? 1) Battle the bad guys—fronted by one Dominic Greene, a lank, cavern-eyed schemer posing as an environmentalist. 2) Fight off the CIA. 3) Deceive and manipulate MI6. 4) Wreck cars, boats and airplanes. 5) Rescue one woman. 6) Seduce one woman. 7) Crack the occasional dry quip.

Positive Elements

Mr. Bond is not one to be easily dissuaded from the task at hand. His methods can and should be questioned. But his desire and determination to bring the bad guys to justice is well-honed. Even when his motives are selfish, he’s all about making the world a safer place.

That grit manifests itself in some pretty negative, vengeful ways. But by the end of the film, it appears that 007 understands that revenge doesn’t supply, well, even a quantum of solace. “I don’t think the dead care about vengeance,” he says. And just when you think he can’t help but kill everyone he meets, he decides to leave one very bad dude alive.

Spiritual Elements

In the wake of Bond killing a series of potential witnesses and M scolding him for it, he makes a flippant remark about a man the Americans wanted to question. He says, “If they wanted his soul, they should’ve made a deal with a priest.”

Sexual Content

In typical Bond-movie fashion, the opening theme is “illustrated” with nude women cavorting in various degrees of shadow.

Bond, still mourning Vesper, confines his usually boundless sexual energy to one proposition: He brings a British agent named Strawberry Fields into his hotel suite and asks her, “I can’t find the stationary. Will you help me look?” In Bond-speak that means, “Why don’t you come into the bedroom, take off all your clothes and have sex with me.” They do indeed wind up in bed, where we see them chatting afterwards, sheets covering strategic spots.

A nude dead woman is (fully) seen stretched out facedown on a bed. She’s covered in black oil. Quick flashes show audiences another woman screaming as a man begins to sexually assault her. She escapes, but her female rescuer is also handled roughly by their attacker. She bites his face as he presses close and, eventually, shoots him dead. She tells Bond that this assailant “did things” with her mother and older sister before strangling them.

We learn that Camille, the film’s designated “Bond girl,” slept with Greene to get close to her own target of revenge. Their affair is mentioned often, at times augmented by descriptions of how each “performed.” Greene later “gives” Camille to a would-be South American dictator, asking him to “dump her over the side [of the boat] when you’re done.” She wears revealing clothing.

A female character in a swimsuit tells her presumed lover that she wants his hands on her body. Bond makes a sexualized quip about handcuffs. Camille kisses Bond.

Violent Content

Bond uses his license to kill so much here that he might need to get it relaminated. And, presumably because he’s so embittered by Vesper’s death, his actions feel even more cold and callously calculated than usual. Frenetic and exceedingly visceral car chases, plane chases and foot chases set the stage for him to send bad guys hurtling off a cliff, crowd a small plane into the side of a mountain, shoot scores of adversaries and stab a man just to watch him bleed to death.

“If you would avoid killing every possible lead, it would be deeply appreciated,” M tells Bond. To which the only real reply he gives is to kill again.

When Bond doesn’t end someone’s life, he makes them wish they were dead. He shoves someone off a rooftop. (Bad guys then shoot the injured man.) He leaves another guy out in the middle of the desert with only a can of motor oil to drink. (The bad guys finish him off, too—but, we’re told, not before he downs the oil.) Bond dangles folks by their hair. And he puts his fists and feet into their faces. He specializes in creating massive, fiery chaos.

And it’s not just his enemies who suffer. Corrupt cops brutally kill Bond’s only ally as Bond—possibly unintentionally—uses him as a human shield. Then Bond roughly tosses the body into a dumpster, saying that the man wouldn’t care. He treats Camille roughly, rescuing her from a petty dictator by throwing her into a boat, where she’s eventually knocked unconscious. He carries her limp form onto a dock and unceremoniously hands her off to a stray hotel attendant, explaining that she’s seasick.

He and Camille jump from a falling airplane, both of them nearly plunging to their deaths before activating a parachute in the nick of time. Then it’s implied that he considers shooting her in the head to “save” her from burning to death.

Greene shows Camille a dead body floating in the water—his handiwork, apparently. He nearly pushes Camille off a balcony. He threatens a dictator with crude and murderous words. And he orders his henchmen to fill a fellow full of bullets. Trying to decapitate Bond with a fire ax, Greene manages to bury the cold steel in his own foot.

Crude or Profane Language

There’s far more crude violence than there is rude language. But there are still two or three s-words. God’s and Jesus’ names are misused at least once each. “A–,” “b–tard,” “h—” and the British interjection “bloody” round out the tally.

Drug and Alcohol Content

Filmmakers give us the recipe for an official James Bond martini—a beverage we’re told Bond drinks six of during an evening flight to Bolivia. Not that this 007 is particularly picky about his alcohol. He drinks whiskey, shares champagne with Fields and sits with CIA agent Felix Leiter as he sips a beer. He’s also offered drugs, if he wants them. Mathis, a Bond bud, says that he has “pills for everything. Some make you taller. Some make you forget.”

Felix puffs on a cigar or two.

Other Negative Elements

Did the British government laminate up a license for Bond to steal, too? He pilfers a tuxedo. A truck. A briefcase. A boat. He breaks into a hotel with a credit card and, of course, lies almost constantly—though he doesn’t seem to much care whether anyone believes him or not.

The good-guy governments, meanwhile, dabble in moral relativism. A CIA agent tells Felix that, if the United States just worked with good guys, they wouldn’t be working with many folks at all. A British official justifies playing ball with Greene by saying, “Right or wrong doesn’t come into it. We’re doing this out of necessity.” It’s said, with a bit of resignation, that these days “the villains and the heroes get all mixed up.”

Going all the way back to 1962 (it wasn’t really 1524, and there aren’t really 137 films—yet), James Bond is pretty much the antithesis of what Plugged In likes to see at the movies. He drinks. He sleeps around. He kills people. And he jokes about it.

So is the Quantum of Solace- Bond just new or is he improved in any way? Well, he doesn’t bed quite so many women, and I guess you could say that’s a good thing. And he definitely doesn’t find a lot of amusement in his work this time around. Indeed, I don’t think we ever see him smile.

This is 007 at his most ruthless, most frightening. In the franchise’s strange chronology, Quantum takes place early in Bond’s career, before he coated himself with a Teflon sheen of invincibility and carefree “professionalism.” Here, the spy is rage dressed in a tux, an assassin who only manages to suppress his desire to kill once—at the very end.

Bond, like Batman before him, has gone dark.

“I’m happy to have done it, but I’m sad that it has turned so violent,” Roger Moore, who played a far breezier Bond in the 1970s and ’80s, told the Daily Mail . “That’s keeping with the times, it’s what cinema-goers seem to want and it’s proved by the box-office figures.”

Previous Bonds made killing look cool. Daniel Craig makes it look cold. So could it be possible that a grimmer Bond is a better Bond? Certainly the consequences of his actions are more visible. Death is more visceral. And Craig’s Bond, so obviously scarred and hardened, is as much an object of pity as he is of admiration. You don’t necessarily want to grow up and be a spy after watching his Bond.

But he’s also flooding the screen with more raw brutality, something that has its own—significant—downside. And it’s not just that it sucks all the “fun” out of the superspy world.

The Plugged In Show logo

Paul Asay has been part of the Plugged In staff since 2007, watching and reviewing roughly 15 quintillion movies and television shows. He’s written for a number of other publications, too, including Time, The Washington Post and Christianity Today. The author of several books, Paul loves to find spirituality in unexpected places, including popular entertainment, and he loves all things superhero. His vices include James Bond films, Mountain Dew and terrible B-grade movies. He’s married, has two children and a neurotic dog, runs marathons on occasion and hopes to someday own his own tuxedo. Feel free to follow him on Twitter @AsayPaul.

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Quantum of Solace (United Kingdom/United States, 2008)

Quantum of Solace Poster

"Bond. James Bond."

Once, those three words stood nape hairs on end for fans of the action/adventure genre. A lot has transpired since 1963 when Dr. No was brought to the screen, but Bond has been a great constant through all those years. One thing that has kept the series fresh has been its frequent re-invention. While the stream of actors has represented the most obvious change - Connery to Lazenby to Connery (again) to Moore to Dalton to Brosnan to Craig - there have been other, less obvious alterations. For most of Brosnan's reign, Bond was trying to go toe-to-toe with superheroes and Michael Bay-inspired plastic creations. With Brosnan's departure, the decision was made to try something a little different. Casino Royale was, therefore, a departure from what 007 had become in the '80s, '90s, and '00s. It felt new and different but it was really a return to what Bond used to be. From a personality standpoint, Craig is more like Connery than any of the actors who played the part in between. And, from an emotional standpoint, Casino Royale is a cousin to Lazenby's only outing, On Her Majesty's Secret Service . Those are the only two films in which the unflappable hero fell in love. And both lead directly into a subsequent adventure in which revenge is served cold. Quantum of Solace (the unfortunate title is taken from an Ian Fleming short story, but nothing of the narrative remains) is more of a direct sequel than Diamonds are Forever was, but both films show Bond at his coldest. Deprived of love, he has become a formidable killing machine.

Quantum of Solace meets the Bond of the Moore/Dalton/Brosnan era halfway. It is not as intentionally low-key as Casino Royale, but neither is 007 the indestructible Superman he had become during Brosnan's watch. Prick him, he will bleed. But there is no Q and therefore no gadgets. This Batman has no utility belt. The only constant between the Brosnan and Craig eras is Judi Dench as M. Her presence creates headaches for continuity fetishists, but she adds just the right mix of acid and base to keep things balanced. And Jeffrey Wright is again Felix Leiter, representing only the second time in Bond history that an actor has returned to play this role. (The other: David Hedison in Live and Let Die and License to Kill .)

The plot is standard-order Bond, albeit with less heft than one usually expects. After all, the megalomaniac bad guy, Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric), isn't out to dominate the world - he only wants to cause a few droughts and control Bolivia's water supply. Bond gets involved because he's tracking down the people who were responsible for Vesper Lynde's death at the end of Casino Royale . Clues lead him to the sexy but dangerous Camille (Olga Kurylenko). She in turn, brings him to Greene who is, of course, happy to finally make Mr. Bond's acquaintance. Meanwhile, M is getting pressure from her superior to rein in 007… or else. This gives Judi Dench an opportunity to get out from behind her desk. She hops from country to country as easily as her subordinate, and there are about six location changes.

Sadly, there's something a little hollow about the proceedings. There's no real catharsis. In fact, the whole thing doesn't feel like a complete movie, or at least not a complete Bond movie. While there are plenty of nods to previous Bond outings (such as the Goldfinger -inspired human artwork), the missing staples leave unfilled holes. For example, there is no utterance of "Bond. James Bond." There are none of the verbal puns and one-liners we have come to relish. There's no bloody iris at the beginning (it's at the end). Monty Norman's "James Bond Theme" is relegated to subtle cues in David Arnold's largely generic score, with the "full play" occurring only over the end credits. At least one of the Bond girls has a typically outrageous name: Strawberry Fields (Gemma Arterton) - but you have to sit through the credits to learn that; in the movie, she's simply called "Fields."

The film's biggest problem is its director. Marc Forster is an experienced art house filmmaker with impressive credits (most recently, The Kite Runner ), but he is clueless when it comes to action sequences. His approach seems to be to shake the camera as much as possible and, to further obscure what's going on, to allow no cut to last more than about a half-second. Most of the action scenes, including a car chase, a boat chase, and a couple of fights, are so incoherent that it's necessary to wait until they're over to figure out who's still standing. (The plane chase is a little better, but not much.) We've seen this technique before, but never with Bond. And, to be frank, it's not something I ever want to see again in a 007 movie. Why bother with so many elaborately choreographed sequences if they're going to be ruined by the way they're shot and edited? Forster seems to have taken the phrase "shaken not stirred" too literally, applying it to every scene with a pulse.

As the film's chief nemesis, Mathieu Amalric is about as weak as one could imagine. Despite the creepy sneer, Greene is neither frightening nor intimidating. Amalric, an excellent actor, is entirely defeated by the role - although, in fairness to him, he's not aided by the writing. Model-turned-actress Olga Kurylenko (recently one of the best things in Max Payne ) is a perfect Bond girl - sexy, capable, and bound to Bond by ties that have nothing to do with love. She has a forceful screen presence and meshes well with Craig. I wouldn't mind seeing her in the next installment. Giancarlo Giannini shows up again as Mathis, although his character is treated even more shabbily here than in Casino Royale , as difficult as that may be to believe.

The SPECTRE-like Quantum, an organization that has members in places no one suspects, is likely being established as an umbrella villain for future stories. Their role here is shadowy, and the way they are handled is part of the reason why the movie feels incomplete. Then again, perhaps after Casino Royale , it was too much to hope that Bond films had reached a new, higher plateau. This is the least satisfying production since The Living Daylights , and that goes back a while (and it has what may well be the worst opening song of all time, making one yearn for Madonna). But, as has always been the case with good films and bad ones, there's comfort to be found in the one thing we can rely on: James Bond will return.

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Quantum of Solace parents guide

Quantum of Solace Parent Guide

Peace is hard to find..

In Quantum of Solace, James Bond (Daniel Craig) seeks some answers to, and perhaps a little vengeance for, the betrayal of Vesper Lynd (which happened in the proceeding film Casino Royale). When his investigation leads to Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric), the secret agent begins working with a woman named Camille (Olga Kurylenko) in the hopes of uncovering the dangerous man's diabolical plot. But as the case unfolds, 007 finds himself wondering if the beautiful stranger is really a friend or a foe.

Release date November 14, 2008

Run Time: 106 minutes

Official Movie Site

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The guide to our grades, parent movie review by rod gustafson.

Picking up where Casino left off, the agent is still hurting over being double-crossed by Vesper, a woman blackmailed into stealing his hard-earned gambling winnings (which were supposed to be given back to the British government). Returning to pay Mr. Bond an unwelcome visit is bad guy Mr. White (Jesper Christensen) who reveals the organization involved in all that former nasty business is far bigger and more penetrating than anyone at MI6 can imagine. (Read that to mean the bullets are about to fly…)

Following a trail that begins in Italy, makes a stop in Haiti and eventually winds up in Bolivia, Bond also finds new allegiances with old enemies, like Mathis (Giancarlo Giannini). And, of course, there’s always a woman or two to distract him from his “official” duties. Yet, in this case, the rambling Romeo is provided with a stark lesson ? la Goldfinger about the moral consequences of mixing recreational sex with the Queen’s business.

That’s somewhat unfortunate because this is a well-constructed film, which even puts the brakes on coarse language (granted, you’ll still hear one scatological expletive and an assortment of mild profanities, along with terms of Deity). Thanks to the remarkable talents of screenwriter Paul Haggis, we are given an unusually intelligent plot and a superbly paced trip around the world. Although the movie is continually punctuated with high-octane action, at least the snippets of included dialogue are important to the storyline, as opposed to the fluffy and frequent witticisms of previous Bond scripts. However, if the more humorous Bond was your preferred cup of tea, this new direction may leave you yearning to check out some classic 007 titles in your home theater.

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Rod Gustafson

Quantum of solace rating & content info.

Why is Quantum of Solace rated PG-13? Quantum of Solace is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for intense sequences of violence and action, and some sexual content.

Rapid-fire editing and an aggressive car chase open this film and set the tone for what’s to come. More chases, shootings, stabbings and hand-to-hand conflicts continue throughout the film and although the carnage isn’t explicit, we do see blood at times. During some violent scenes, many secondary characters or “innocent bystanders” would be presumed killed or injured as a result of Bond’s determination to bring about justice. In a photograph we see a person’s mutilated face. A body is seen floating in water. Sexual activities engaged in by an unmarried couple are heavily implied (we see them in bed afterward, apparently naked but no details are shown), however a third character explains the negative consequences of these behaviors. A murdered woman is found naked and covered in oil (she is shown lying on her front). A woman is about to be raped, but the act is interrupted. Some female characters wear revealing clothing. Profanities are infrequent, but include one scatological term, a handful of mild expletives and one Christian term of Deity. Frequent social drinking is portrayed and in one scene a principal character attempts to escape from stress by drinking heavily. A comment is made about the availability of drugs.

Page last updated July 17, 2017

Quantum of Solace Parents' Guide

What do you think about the changes to the Bond franchise? Do you appreciate its more serious depictions of the characters? Has our society grown tired of “Bond women” and making jokes about criminals and terrorists? Or, do you think there is a place for lighter and comedic attitudes about these solemn topics?

The most recent home video release of Quantum of Solace movie is March 24, 2009. Here are some details…

Release Date: 15 September 2015 Exclusively available through Amazon, MGM/UA releases to home video (in Digital HD) a collection of every Bond film made up to 2015. The package includes:   - 23 films on Blu-ray from Dr. No to Skyfall plus space reserved for Spectre (Coming November 6, 2016). - Digital HD copies of all 23 films - Bond poster book Over 120 hours of Special Features including: - 2 all-new featurettes - Everything or Nothing: The Untold Story of 007 – a 90 minute documentary

Also releasing separately on 15 September 2015:

Home Video Notes: 007: The Daniel Craig Collection Release Date: 15 September 2015 MGM/UA releases to home video a collection of three James Bond films starring Daniel Craig. These include: - Casino Royale - Quantum of Solace - Skyfall

Home Video Notes:Quantum of Solace

Release Date : 22 October 2012

In honor of the Bond Franchise’s 50th Anniversary in 2012, Quantum of Solace is re-releasing to home video.

Release Date : 24 March 2009

James Bond fans will feel appeased with the home video release of Quantum of Solace. The following options are available:

Quantum of Solace: Single-Disc DVD

The movie comes with theatrical trailers and the music video, Another Way to Die.

Quantum of Solace: Two-Disc Special Edition DVD

This version comes with the afore-mentioned theatrical trailers and the music video, Another Way to Die, plus: Bond on Location (a 24-minute special feature), Start of Shooting , On Location, Olga Kurylenko and the Boat Chase, Director Marc Forster, The Music and Crew Files.

Quantum of Solace: Blu-ray:

This edition also includes all of the features found on the two-disc DVD special edition.

Related home video titles:

As well as being part of the James Bond franchise, Quantum of Solace is a direct sequel to Casino Royale . Although this movie is fictitious, it is based on some real world concerns, which are examined in the documentary Flow . A scene in this movie also pays homage to the classic Bond film Goldfinger .

Other 007 films we have reviewed include: Die Another Day , The World Is Not Enough and Tomorrow Never Dies .

On October 21, 2008, various other James Bond films were restored, re-mastered and release to Blu-ray disc. Fans of the franchise should look for Dr. No, Die Another Day , Live and Let Live, For Your Eyes Only, From Russia With Love and Thunderball.

Related news about Quantum of Solace

James bond: 50 years in the movies.

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  • Parents say (19)
  • Kids say (70)

Based on 70 kid reviews

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A great film overall with a bit too much Sex content. I would rate ages 10+ if you just skip the sex scene.

"if you could avoid killing every possible lead, it would be deeply appreciated." "yes, ma'am. i'll do my best." "i've heard that before.", why is this a 15+ while casino royale is a 14+ you cannot convince me that quantum of solace is more violent than casino royale, it just doesn't click like it should, okay movie, but the ratings on here (age wise) are too high., quantum of solace.

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COMMENTS

  1. Quantum of Solace movie review (2008)

    He is handsome, agile, muscular, dangerous. Everything but talkative. I didn't count, but I think M ( Judi Dench) has more dialogue than 007. Bond doesn't look like the urge to peel Camille has even entered his mind. He blows up a hotel in the middle of a vast, barren, endless Bolivian desert.

  2. Quantum of Solace

    Rated 3.5/5 Stars • Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 03/23/24 Full Review Adi 1 Quantum of Solace while having a good storyline turns out to be a forgettable venture. It doesn't have beautiful locations ...

  3. Quantum of Solace (2008)

    Quantum of Solace is embarrassed by the classic Bond films, ditching anything fun and anything over- the-top in favor of "gritty realism". The result is a completely joyless endeavor, and one of the worst Bond movies of them all. 30/100. 8/10.

  4. Quantum of Solace

    Full Review | Original Score: 2/5 | Sep 17, 2023. Ian Fleming's James Bond franchise has a notorious hit-or-miss reputation on film, and Quantum of Solace rests somewhere in the middle. Full ...

  5. Quantum of Solace Movie Review

    In Daniel Craig's second outing as James Bond, the brilliant British spy's mission is extremely personal. Picking up right where Casino Royale ended, QUANTUM OF SOLACE finds Bond determined to capture those responsible for the death of his beloved Vesper Lynd (Eva Green). The search leads him to billionaire Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric, so memorable in Munich), a member of an international ...

  6. Quantum of Solace (2008)

    Quantum of Solace: Directed by Marc Forster. With Daniel Craig, Olga Kurylenko, Mathieu Amalric, Judi Dench. James Bond descends into mystery as he tries to stop a mysterious organisation from eliminating a country's most valuable resource.

  7. Quantum of Solace

    Betrayed by Vesper, the woman he loved, 007 fights the urge to make his latest mission personal. Pursuing his determination to uncover the truth, Bond and M interrogate Mr White who reveals the organization which blackmailed Vesper is far more complex and dangerous than anyone had imagined. Forensic intelligence links Dominic Greene, a ruthless business man, to the mysterious organization. On ...

  8. Quantum of Solace Review

    Of course, with every movie comes a game of the same name and Quantum of Solace is no different. It takes the Call of Duty 4 engine and wraps it around the James Bond universe with a few new ...

  9. Quantum of Solace

    Quantum of Solace isn't as good as Casino Royale: the smart elegance of Craig's Bond debut has been toned down in favour of conventional action. But the man himself powers this movie; he carries ...

  10. Quantum of Solace Review

    Quantum of Solace Review. Still angered by the death of Vesper Lynd, James Bond (Craig) goes after the shadowy international organisation he holds responsible, even when M (Dench) orders him to ...

  11. Quantum Of Solace Review

    Published Oct 31, 2008. Quantum of Solace is the best James Bond film in over a decade. Screen Rant's Niall Browne reviews Quantum of Solace. As a life long James Bond fan I always look forward to new adventures from the super-spy. My very first cinematic memory is watching Roger Moore's final outing as Bond in A View To A Kill, and my teenage ...

  12. 007 Is Back, and He's Brooding

    Directed by Marc Forster. Action, Adventure, Thriller. PG-13. 1h 46m. By A.O. Scott. Nov. 13, 2008. A reviewer may come to a new James Bond movie "Quantum of Solace," directed by Marc Forster ...

  13. The Movie Review: 'Quantum of Solace'

    The Movie Review: 'Quantum of Solace'. When the 16th James Bond film, Licence to Kill, was released in 1989, it was widely reported that its working title, Licence Revoked, had been altered thanks ...

  14. Movie Review: Quantum of Solace (2008)

    A rejuvenated James Bond is back for his 22nd feature film: Quantum of Solace.Building upon the blocks laid down in 2006's Casino Royale, this movie further "evolves" the Bond experience — presenting itself strictly as a kick-ass, take no prisoners action movie, leaving in the dust the nuances that set 007 apart from being a Jason Bourne replica.

  15. Quantum of Solace

    High expectations harmed Quantum of Solace's reputation from the get-go but considering this film as the end of Casino Royale allows it to shine. Many find Quantum of Solace a disappointing entry in the Daniel Craig Bond era, but I beg to differ. When viewed as a stand-alone film, I can understand frustrations with a meager storyline.

  16. Quantum of Solace

    Quantum of Solace is a 2008 spy film and the twenty-second in the James Bond series produced by Eon Productions.It is the sequel to Casino Royale (2006). It is directed by Marc Forster and written by Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, and Paul Haggis.The film stars Daniel Craig as Bond, alongside Olga Kurylenko, Mathieu Amalric, Giancarlo Giannini, Jeffrey Wright, and Judi Dench.

  17. Quantum of Solace Movie Reviews

    Quantum of Solace Critic Reviews and Ratings Powered by Rotten Tomatoes Rate Movie. Close Audience Score. The percentage of users who made a verified movie ticket purchase and rated this 3.5 stars or higher. ... Purchase one or more movie tickets to see 'Unsung Hero' using your account on Fandango.com or the Fandango app between 9:00am PT ...

  18. Quantum of Solace

    Movie Review. Smash! Squeal! Rat-a-tat-a-tat-a-tat! Crash! Argh! Kaboom! So begins Quantum of Solace, the 137th movie in a big-screen saga that stretches back to the year 1524. Such boy-noise largely sums up the middle of the film, as well. And the end. And it's the way your head feels as you walk to your car afterwards.

  19. Quantum of Solace

    Chris Stuckmann reviews Quantum of Solace, starring Daniel Craig, Olga Kurylenko, Mathieu Amalric, Judi Dench, Gemma Arterton, Giancarlo Giannini, Jeffrey Wr...

  20. Quantum of Solace

    Quantum of Solace (the unfortunate title is taken from an Ian Fleming short story, but nothing of the narrative remains) is more of a direct sequel than Diamonds are Forever was, but both films show Bond at his coldest. Deprived of love, he has become a formidable killing machine. Quantum of Solace meets the Bond of the Moore/Dalton/Brosnan era ...

  21. Quantum Of Solace (2008)

    There's no shaken and stirred martinis, no clever quips and certainly no humour. There is, however, plenty of bloodshed, violence and action. Unlike Casino Royale, the action here leaves a lot to be desired. Quantum Of Solace is the perfect example of how not to shoot and edit a film. Every action sequence is intentionally obfuscated to ...

  22. Quantum of Solace Movie Review for Parents

    Quantum of Solace Rating & Content Info . Why is Quantum of Solace rated PG-13? Quantum of Solace is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for intense sequences of violence and action, and some sexual content.. Rapid-fire editing and an aggressive car chase open this film and set the tone for what's to come. More chases, shootings, stabbings and hand-to-hand conflicts continue throughout the film and ...

  23. Kid reviews for Quantum of Solace

    November 30, 2023. age 13+. A great film overall with a bit too much Sex content. I would rate ages 10+ if you just skip the sex scene. I would say that you probably only need to wait until your kid is 11-13 years old to watch this film. It is much darker, and there is one scene of sex. Although, I would rate this movie more towards ages 11+ if ...