Where have all the Bond Girls gone?

 Posted by on February 10, 2013
Feb 102013
 

istock_000019279012small-300x199-7289370James Bond movies have never been known to represent women’s rights or champion gender equality, but at least lately they have seen an uprise in stronger and more positive female roles. That’s why Skyfall comes as such a surprise – a swift and definitive return to the days of Octopussy, one that may signal, I’m afraid, a new wave of main stream cultural oppression of women and women’s sexuality.

In Skyfall, women are punished for every inch of betrayal against their socially established feminine roles. They die gratuitously: “what a waste of good whiskey,” Bond exclaims after his lover is shot in front of him. Their masculine skills are undermined — “I, for one, feel safer without you in the field,” Bond tells Moneypenny after she wounds him, having followed orders and taken a very difficult shot. But even more brutal is their punishment for taking on power —  “mommy has been bad,” Silva says about M as he tries to kill her for making a rational decision that men in her position have to make all the time.

In the end (spoiler alert!), Silva’s mistress is shot moments before Bond finally decides it’s time to take down the bad guys, Moneypenny is relegated to the role of a glorified secretary, and M is killed by her “prodigal son” Silva in an Oedipal complex scenario gone wrong, and then conveniently replaced by her male alter-ego, M(allory). More than that, youth is punished, its arrogance and lack of foresight revealed (it’s young Q who lets the bad guys into the network system), while old cars, old houses, and old secret agents save the day, not through abundance of talent or dexterity, but their manly solidity and brute stubbornness. Even without his super-agent skills, Bond is able to kill Silva by stabbing him in the back with a knife (I love Silva’s reaction to such a crude death — he seems more annoyed at the method than upset by the fact that he lost). And Daniel Craig, though my favorite eye-candy, is a perfect actor for the part — his Bond is not the suave, elegant super-agent of Pierce Brosnan, but the rough, un-aristocratic, manly man.

However, this superficial return to good old-fashioned gender roles for some reason doesn’t bring back the sexuality of older Bond films. Skyfall, in fact, is completely devoid of sex. There are three sexually suggestive scenes Bond has with women, which last all of 2 seconds and lack any erotic qualities. The sexiest one of them by far is his shaving scene with Moneypenny, which shows no skin, but has just enough of the BDSM tint to make it kinky. Naomie Harris plays Moneypenny with quite a bit of quick wit and feisty sexuality, but in the end, the power dynamic of this scene is blatantly obvious — while she may be the one holding the razor, he is most definitely the one in charge.

No, the female lead and latest Bond girl of Skyfall is no other than Silva, played by the sexy Javier Bardem. As my favorite review of the film stated, Silva is both “a babe and a Bond villain to boot who wants to fuck Bond and kill him.” He is compelling in his sexuality — the way he flirts with 007, the seductive ways that he touches him, his eroticized silver voice…. He is a man confident in his skin, both masculine at times and flamboyantly gay, witty, playful, brilliant, strong. Of course he must be a psychopath and a super-villain. Feminine sexuality, even in a male body, must be punished and contained, lest it disturb the Old Boy’s Club of our hetero-normative society.

  One Response to “Where have all the Bond Girls gone?”

  1. Interesting interpretation of events. I’m not sure I agree with all of them – for example, “I feel safer without you in the field” was not to my mind anything about gender but rather about talking with an agent who shot him, and would have been banter regardless of the sex of the agent involved.

    I’m also not sure that personal assistants to powerful figures – such as the male assistant to M in the last several Bond films – would appreciated being denigrated to “glorified secretary” (not sure how that’s supposed to be insulting in the first place, to be honest – competent secretaries run the world).

    I also interpreted the “…waste of good whiskey” as a defense mechanism, because of the horrific situation of seeing his lover shot (after he tried very hard to make sure he didn’t kill her) and realizing that he would have to spare Silva. It was more a British affectation than a masculine one – M herself has several similar quips in the past few films.

    Lastly, I think that a lot of gay and bisexual men would object to Silva as being characterized as “feminine.” I know I do. He was indubitably masculine, as was Bond – and defiantly pansexual and gay. I have to also disagree that “witty, playful, brilliant, strong” is the realm of “female sexuality”. Men can be comfortable in their body and with their seductive eroticism. It’s rarer in our culture in the west, I agree, but it’s certainly not any more “female” than taking that difficult shot under orders was “masculine.”

    OK, I guess I disagree quite a bit with most of what you said here – except, “disagree” is not the right word. I interpreted it differently, which is certainly the way any good story will work things out. And, let’s face it – for either of us to really expect anything other than heteronormative values in a Bond flick is silly.

    I do appreciate your perspective, though – it made me want to watch the movie again to see if I could see it from your pov, and why I didn’t see those things the first time I watched it.