LarsenOnFilm by Josh Larsen
Brosnan is excellent, wearing Bond more lightly than any of his predecessors.
Director
Arief Budiman
Cast
Fransisco Edwardo Kamisopa,
Muhammad Dzulqornain
Genre
Documentary
Two friends, one Papuan, one Javanese, make a film together. Going through the footage they shot, they end up discussing the conflicted relationship between Papua and the rest of Indonesia.
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LarsenOnFilm by Josh Larsen
Brosnan is excellent, wearing Bond more lightly than any of his predecessors.
Variety by Todd McCarthy
Most crucially, Brosnan makes the grade as 007. He handles the action capably and gets the standard quips out in a commendably straightforward way that's wry but not dismissive.
Empire by Staff (Not Credited)
This is the best bond movie since "On Her Majesty's Secret Service".
Chicago Reader by Jonathan Rosenbaum
There's something a mite pathetic about our culture still clinging to 007, but it's hard to deny that this is one of the most entertaining entries in the Bond cycle, which started with "Dr. No" (1962).
Washington Post by Hal Hinson
And yet, Goldeneye proves the character's viability as a pop icon: It isn't a great movie, but it's great, preposterous fun.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
The writers get the mix just about right, and first-time Bond director Martin Campbell moves things along fairly briskly.
San Francisco Examiner by Edvins Beitiks
It is both the best-looking James Bond film and the best-looking James Bond.
San Francisco Chronicle by Peter Stack
When the action is extreme, GoldenEye is supercharged with spectacular, thundering, brain-numbing fun.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
Also, there's more action in Goldeneye than in previous 007 entries -- enough to keep a ninety-minute film moving at a frantic pace. Unfortunately, this movie isn't ninety-minutes long -- it's one-hundred thirty, which means that fully one-quarter of Goldeneye is momentum-killing padding.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
This is the first Bond film that is self-aware, that has lost its innocence and the simplicity of its world view, and has some understanding of the absurdity and sadness of its hero.
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