Russia and Russians in the GoldenEye
The GoldenEye is a 17th movie about James Bond. It was filmed in 1995 with Pierce Brosnan as the agent 007. Most key events of the film, except the final fight and several other moments, happened in Russia. Bond’s main enemy Janus who was his former partner Alec Trevelyan also appeared to be a Russian; or at least a Slavic man, as his parents were Cossacks. In spite of the enemy’s numerical superiority, 007 was able to win and prevent the catastrophe that could happen after the activation of the space weapon. GoldenEye looks like a classical action movie about the famous Ian Fleming’s spy: there are fights, technologies, pretty women and a happy end. But the film has intermediate layers behind explosions, Bond’s charisma and the love story. For example, the auditory has an opportunity to see how the director’s team represented Russia and Russians in the movie. The image does not look attractive.
PINCHBECK DISCIPLINE
It appears from the beginning of the movie, when Bond and Trevelyan came to the secret chemical plant in 1986. While events happened in the USSR, it was a Russian territory. The object had dozens of soldiers, gate check system and other defensive measures. However, it was destroyed just by two spies; even one, as
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But the movie provides enough information to create an impression about Russia and its citizens. The result is quite negative, but it can be explained by the real background and rules of the cinema. People’s clothes and streets’ condition looked like a real situation at a time of post-perestroika. Soldiers’ behavior could be a result of director’s decision to adhere to the classical canons of action movies mentioned above. Regardless of reasons, the movie showed Russia as a quite gloomy place with ineffective defense system that allowed a traitor to become a general, steal dangerous space weapon and kill the Defense