London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony: Isles of Wonder (2012) Poster

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9/10
Magical Night
srfusao1 August 2012
It was one amazing show both for the audience in the stadium (believe I was there) and audience at home watching it on TV. I think this ceremony had great/key moments that will be talked for years to come in the TV/Olympics history. Such as the Industrial Revolution, the power of the visual of it and the Olympic rings being forged was amazing. The Queen and Mr Bean scenes were brilliantly funny and greatly filmed, memorable TV moments. And the torch what an amazing idea putting it all together. The soundtrack of the ceremony was amazing and powerful as well.

For people who don't understand it... stop being lazy and pay the deserved attention to the ceremony, watch it again if you need and everything makes sense.

It was Britain at his best. In my opinion the best Olympics Opening Ceremony so far. Beijing was good but London was brilliant!
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9/10
Grand Isles
Prismark101 October 2013
The organisers of the London 2012 had a problem and it has been over 30 years in the making.

Ever since Moscow 1980 when you had all the choreographed banner changing and then LA 1984 when it went all space age. The opening ceremonies have become grander and wildly more expensive culminating in Beijing 2008 with the money no object even though part of the country is backwards and underdeveloped with people starving.

London 2012 had an Oscar winning director leading a creative team and a wildly cut down budget and a seismic creative shift from the past.

What we had was a history of Britain moving from its agrarian past into the Industrial Revolution to the rise of social welfare including the NHS, celebration of arts and culture and leading into the computer age.

We had Kenneth Branagh reciting Shakespeare, Music for a host of performers and James Bond meeting The Queen.

It was very untypical, rather surreal, edgy and smart. In fact it was nice to see the end of the synchronised banner switching.
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9/10
London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony: Isles of Wonder
jboothmillard18 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
London hosted the Olympic Games in 1908 and 1948 (cancelled in 1940 and 1940 due to World War II), and in 2005 Great Britain made the bid for 2012 (against Paris), the 30th Olympiad, with "Proud" by Heather Small as the official theme, it was successful, being British myself I watched this opening ceremony on the BBC with great pride and excitement, directed by Danny Boyle (Trainspotting, 28 Days Later, Slumdog Millionaire). Highlights of the sections Green and Pleasant Land and Pandemonium included the English rural countryside (with brief live broadcasts from Northern Island, Scotland and Wales) turning into the Industrial Revolution, Isambard Kingdom Brunel (Sir Kenneth Branagh) from the Victorian era reciting The Tempest by William Shakespeare, and five rings made from hot metal rising above the stadium to form the five interlocking Olympic rings, representing the five continents of the world: Africa, Asia, America, Europe and Australia. The Happy and Glorious section sees James Bond 007 (Daniel Craig) escorting Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II (as herself), then celebrating her Diamond Jubilee, by helicopter, including over Trafalgar Square, with Nelson's Column, to the Olympic Stadium, the Queen apparently jumps and parachutes from the helicopter, followed by her arrival with Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinborough, and the raising of the Union Flag by representatives of the Royal Navy, Army and the Royal Air Force. Highlights of the Second Star to the Right and Straight on Till Morning included celebration of the great work of the National Health Service (NHS) and Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH), Mike Oldfield performing "Tubular Bells" (The Exorcist theme) and "In Dulce Jubilo", J.K. Rowling reading from Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie, villains from British literature appearing: The Child Catcher (Chitty Chitty Bang Bang), Captain Hook (Peter Pan), Voldermort (Harry Potter) and Cruella De Vil (101 Dalmatians), and dozens of Mary Poppins. The Interlude was Sir Simon Rattle conducting the London Symphony Orchestra, performing "Chariots of Fire" by Vangalis, a tribute to the British Film Industry (BFI), with Mr. Bean (Rowan Atkinson) playing the synthesizer, and dreaming of running on the beach, like the film. Highlights of the section Frankie and June Say...Thanks Tim included the celebration of British popular music and culture, the family house projecting various British TV programmes, music videos and films, the celebration of four decades of British music, Dizzee Rascal singing "Bonkers", the crowd forming the CND (Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament) symbol, and Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web appearing. The Abide with Me section saw highlights from the Olympic Torch relay across the United Kingdom, lasting 70 days and 8,000 miles, famous torch bearers included: Ade Adepitan, Absolutely Fabulous (Jennifer Saunders and Joanna Lumley, Amitabh Bachchan, Melanie "Mel C" Chisholm, Diversity, Sir Bruce Forsyth, Rupert Grint, Lewis Hamilton, Dame Kelly Holmes, Eddie Izzard, Jedward, Amir Khan, Patrick Kielty, John Legend, Denise Lewis, James McAvoy, Billy Mitchell (Perry Fenwick) in a live segment of EastEnders, Andy Murray, Muse, Jamie Oliver, Mark Ronson, Matt Smith, Sir Patrick Stewart, Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean, David Walliams, The Wanted, will.i.am and Venus Williams, David Beckham in a speed boat on the River Thames carried the Olympic flame, and there is a tribute to the victims of the '7/7' 2005 London bombings (the day after London was awarded the Games). Then the athletes entered the stadium from 204 nations, competing in 302 events in 26 sports, Emeli Sandé singing "Abide with Me", the Arctic Monkeys performing "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor" and "come Together", "Caliban's Dream" by Underworld, Sebastian Coe, Chairman of the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, and Jacques Rogge, President of the International Olympic Committee, made speeches, Muhammad Ali appeared to momentarily hold the Olympic Flag, Sir Steve Redgrave was the final torch bearer, finally promising young athletes nominated by British Olympic heroes lit the cauldron, designed by Thomas Heatherwick, more than 200 copper petals converged into one great flame of unity, the evening ends with Sir Paul McCartney singing "The End" and "Hey Jude". Narrated by Huw Edwards, Hazel Irvine and Trevor Nelson, stars who appeared and are seen included Bradley Wiggins, Dame Evelyn Glennie, Princess Anne, Usain Bolt, Prime Minister David Cameron and wife Samantha, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Tom Daley, Sir Chris Hoy, Maria Sharapova, Novak Djokovic, Michelle Obama and Nicola Adams. This was one of the best things that was ever going to happen in my lifetime, I myself saw the Olympic Torch passing through Winchester, this ceremony had brilliant special effects, fantastic use of music, and many colourful and memorable moments, it made me really proud to be British, a superb live sport entertainment event. It won the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Art Direction for Variety or Nonfiction Programming, and it was nominated for Outstanding Lighting Design or Lighting Direction for a Variety Special, Outstanding Directing for a Variety Special, Outstanding Special Class Programs and Outstanding Picture Editing for Short-Form Segments and Variety Specials, and it won the BAFTA for Best Director: Multi- Camera, and it was nominated the Audience Award (TV). Very good!
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10/10
Stunning and Outstanding. Original and epic
A-G-P-Goodman-473-30341711 September 2012
Simply put, not only was this ceremony a total surprise that worked to the highest possible effect but it was I think the best Olympic opening ceremony. It was certainly the best live event show/ceremony I have ever seen. Firstly, it was informative, totally original and had a huge amount of texture, depth and personality to it. Whilst I thought that Beijing's opening ceremony was amazing and lively and colourful,the first section of Danny Boyle's opening ceremony was I think quite literally like being inside the action of a motion picture. The portrayal of the 'green and pleasant land' into the state of Industrial Revolution was on a purely epic scale. To think that so many performers, volunteers and actors such as Kenneth Branagh in a very true portrayal of Isambard Kingdom Brunel contributed to such an effective telling of the story and history of Great Britains Industrial change was itself a truly impressive spectacle. Even watching it from a television perspective was still the same as feeling the atmosphere, vibe, tension that rose to an epic crescendo with the arrival of the drummers. From that point on the music that accompanied the pandamonium act was epic in parallel play against the very realistic performances and whole act. There was a huge amount of character personality conveyed. You could identify with each character especially Branagh as Brunel and the many workers, women of the revolution, the arrival of the Chelsea Pensioners and the army of 'Brunel' characters. With a strong personality trait there was also the use of some stunning effects,lighting and set design. Everything looked very realistic; from the chimneys and smoke to the fire and spark effects of the forging of the Olympic Rings to the forged rings themselves which is the most stunning use of lighting, design and special effects I have ever seen in live event shows. To actually smell the forged rings and see their formation against the backdrop of the Industrial Workshop was stunning. The whole Industrial Revolution Act alone was simply epic and true. A 10 out of 10 section. The arrival of the Queen via escort by her top agent was utterly suiting both realistically and in a comedic sense. The sequence's short film entitled 'Happy and Glorious' was fun, lively and very royal benefited by a stunning arrival of Her Majesty to the stadium via parachuting, even though this was done by stuntmen. It was very interesting and surprising to see Mr Bean make an appearance in the stadium playing a single repetitive note of Chariots of Fire on a keyboard, looking board, sneeze, play the keyboard with an umbrella then dream of himself running on the beach in the famous Chariots of Fire opening scene from which actual footage from the film was used in conjunction with specifically shot sequences by the BBC. It was even more interesting because after Mr Beans Holiday, Rowan Atkinson mentioned that he nay never play Mr Bean again so it was great fun to see him return for maybe one last time. The ceremonies other acts including hundreds of nurses, beds, children and a portrayal of the NHS, a 60ft or so inflatable Lord Voldemort, 70's culture and Paul McCartney, accompanied by a fascinating arrival and lighting of the torch after its journey down the river to the stadium by David Beckham on boat were well deserved and waited for. The whole ceremony had an incredible poingnacy and vibe about it. It was fresh, dramatic and was on a scale outside of many peoples expectations. It certainly surpassed my own. A fantastic experience. Britains best show ever. Danny Boyle's hard work birthed London 2012 and by so doing birthed a very memorable legacy of the London 2012 Olympic Games. The BBC's Opening ident featuring a virtual timlapse of the outskirts and central London with reference and homage made to Wind in the Willows and a clever incorporation of the all famous Eastenders opening logo seemed rather an unexpected yet suspense building countdown before the actual ceremony commenced. We as a nation haver seemed to be able to offer what is probably a very remarkable contribution to sport. Whereas other host countries have shown a very spectacular and conscious based games, I believe that we have shown a definition of what Britain is and in turn what is means to be British. If there is one thing the opening ceremony of the Olympics achieved it was a very included sense; in other words,it brought everyone as a nation together to tell the story . Although every host country has successfully done this, I think that we, hosting the games in our own nation have brought an all home type of games to the world. We cannot of course dspute an other host countries efforts and achievements in hosting the games but with London, there did seem to be a very strong special presence that absorbed in many of us. In saying this, it is probably thus fair to say that when your own country is chosen to host and be part of something so legengardy, special and backed by many many years of remarkable legacy's then there is always something that feels even more specifically special and a lot of us would have felt this effect.
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10/10
Britain, Britain, Britain
amillionbytes11 August 2012
Wonderful choreography, music, and theme tell the story of Britain from its green roots to dark industrial might. A recognition of the country's emotional, cultural, and physical wealth.

Engaging and enthralling people of every nation with intelligence, whit, and charm; a moment of self-deprecation and self-praise, properly delivered with an all-rounded English-ness.

Music from every corner of every type, culturally relevant the ceremony throws out a message of turmoil, of arrogance (perhaps), and of success.

The Baby Boomers, the elderly, the young are enthralled and moved; they get the light, the sound, the message:

"We've done it; we did it brilliantly; I'm bloody proud to be a Brit. (And all those moaning buggers can get back where they belong: in their Early Graves)."
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10/10
An iconic national moment and one that reinvents Olympic Opening Ceremonies
DesbUK25 January 2014
Just as Los Angeles in 1984 invented the Olympic Opening Ceremony, then Danny Boyle's London 2012 reinvented it in so many ways. The first to have an all-star cast (Kenneth Branagh, Daniel Craig, Mike Oldfield, JK Rowling, Rowan Atkinson, Dizzy Rascal, Tim Berners Lee, the Arctic Monkeys, David Beckham, Paul MaCartney). The first to have filmed sequences (the thrilling opening journey up the Thames, James Bond meets the Queen at Buckingham Palace, Mr Bean dreams he's in Chariots of Fire, David Beckham delivers the Olympic torch by speedboat). The first to tell a story (the industrial revolution, the founding of the NHS, the digital revolution).

Like the Coronation in 1953, the World Cup Final in 1966, Live Aid in 1985 and Diana's funeral in 1997, it is one of those iconic British national moments that's likely to be remembered for decades to come.
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9/10
Spice up your life!
Calicodreamin26 July 2021
A fun and vibrant opening ceremony! The UK celebrated its iconic culture in style. That James Bond intro? The spice girls?! Absolutely amazing.
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9/10
A classic opening ceremony - and even better in 3D
Anton_Klink25 April 2022
I just rewatched the opening ceremony 10 years later in 3D (a TV capture from BBC back when they still broadcast in 3D) and it was even better than I remembered, and also better in 3D. A beautiful colorful production full of surprises and happy emotion, it just put a smile on my face. It also made me nostalgic for a few reasons. First is the sad demise of 3D broadcasting. Even in the era of UHD 4K HDR, the 3D broadcast from ten years ago looks absolutely fantastic on the right screen. Second is that in hindsight 2012 feels like the happy pinnacle of modern times. No hint of Brexit, or bitter partisan politics, or populist leaders, or fake news and misinformation, or Covid, or war in Ukraine. Just looking at the opening ceremony makes me want to teleport back in time into that happy place, where everybody and every nation celebrates together as one. Since there's no actual way to do it, rewatching the London Olympic games opening ceremony in 3D is probably the next best thing.
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6/10
Pretty boring
andrescabral28 November 2012
I almost fell asleep watching this ceremony, and I loved every single opening before this one. I guess the Chinese set a new standard with Beijing's opening ceremony that will not be easy to surpass. London's ceremony lacked intensity and was mostly focused on promoting social issues and in being 'cool'. I don't even want to comment about all the fuzz about the queen, because it was really lame and the rest of the world don't give a damn about her. It's amazing the amount of money they spent on this show and how little they accomplished. That's it, if you are looking for a great Olympic ceremony, look the one from Beijing or maybe Athens, because this one is pretty boring.
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