The ethereal final scene: best Bond ending ever!
From Russia With Love is my favorite Bond movie for many reasons, but the final scene in the canals of Venice completely seals it for me. Bond and Tatiana are in the back of a gondola in the tranquil blue waters. There's an amusing attempt at light-heartedness with the tourist and his movie-camera. Cue one very passionate embrace, Bond non-chalantly tosses the incriminating film into the canal and exaggeratedly waves goodbye. The camera pans to the sun-dappled Venetian skyline, the haunted (both beautiful and sad) theme song comes to the fore, and the end credits roll. No matter how many times I watch this scene, I am still absolutely blown away: it epitomizes and encapsulates not only the whole movie, but also the entire world of James Bond in just a few magical minutes.
So what's so ethereal about this scene? In some ways, even though it's only the second film in the series, it's also the end of an era. Not only would Bond creator Ian Fleming die shortly after this movie's release, but the Bond character would begin to change from an old-world British spy to a high-tech superhero/household name. Bond's wave goodbye is a goodbye to not only the ancient Venetian buildings, but also to the past and to a world that was/is radically changing. Which is definitely NOT to say that this was the last good Bond movie, but that the series would become very different after From Russia With Love. The movie does have its faults, but the ending remains, for me, transcendent.
1) Has anyone else noticed a significance to this enraptured, enlightened final scene?
2) What are the Venetian buildings the camera focuses on in the final shot?
Always distrust a consensus.