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Every actor who has played James Bond, ranked from worst to best

21 February 2025 at 08:51
Pictures of Daniel Craig, Sean Connery, and Pierce Brosnan as James Bond.
Daniel Craig, Sean Connery and Pierce Brosnan as James Bond.

MGM

  • James Bond is entering a new era as Amazon MGM has taken creative control over the franchise.
  • The franchise has been in limbo since Daniel Craig's last outing as Bond in 2021's "No Time To Die."
  • Below, Business Insider has ranked all seven actors who have portrayed Bond in film.

Over 60 years and 25 movies, seven actors have played the legendary spy James Bond on-screen over the past 60 years.

Daniel Craig was the latest to take on the character created by novelist Ian Fleming, bringing a darker, grittier tone to the franchise. His run came to an end in 2021's "No Time To Die," when his Bond, well, died.

Fans of the movies, which have made $6.4 billion worldwide, have been waiting patiently for a new actor to take on the role after Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, the longtime producers of the franchise, promised that would make more.

But on Thursday, Amazon MGM studios announced it was taking creative control over the franchise, and will cast a new Bond and develop new films.

Before we get a new 007, here's how the former actors weigh up against each other.

David Niven (1967 - 1967)
David Niven as James Bond in 1967's "Casino Royale."
David Niven as James Bond in 1967's "Casino Royale."

Columbia Pictures

While most audiences will automatically think of Daniel Craig when thinking of "Casino Royale," there was actually another version of the story that arrived on the big screen back in 1967. (Yes, in the same year as Sean Connery's "You Only Live Twice.")

Columbia Pictures' "Casino Royale" starred David Niven as James Bond, and it takes a much more comedic approach to Ian Fleming's book of the same name. The parody movie isn't connected to any of the other films, nor was it made by Eon Productions and Albert Broccoli. It was only made because Fleming sold the singular rights to the book before it was published in 1953.

Niven's Bond is a much older agent, who's brought out of retirement to fight a nefarious organization called S.M.E.R.S.H. The Oscar-winning actor might bring some charm to the role, but the absurd story β€” which ends with him going to heaven β€” ruins the character and sucks all the suave coolness out of 007 completely.

George Lazenby (1969-1969)
A picture of George Lansbury as James Bond.
George Lansbury as James Bond.

MGM

The Australian actor George Lazenby is on this list as another matter of courtesy. He portrayed Bond once in 1969's "On Her Majesty's Secret Service." He was drafted in by Eon Productions β€” the film's producers β€” after Sean Connery decided to step away. And he was promptly replaced by Roger Moore when the series resumed in 1973 with "Live and Let Die."Β 

Pierce Brosnan (1995-2002)
pierce brosnan 007
Pierce Brosnan filming "007" in 1997.

Markus Beck/picture alliance via Getty Images

After 15 years of Daniel Craig β€” who is eulogized later in this list β€” it is easy to forget the damage Pierce Brosnan did to the James Bond franchise, but it is important to revisit our lowest moments so we can grow. So here, I humbly ask, do we remember the unfortunate orange spray tan Brosnan sported throughout his time as 007? Or the awkward hyperpop theme songs such as Madonna's awful "Die Another Day."

Brosnan's films even have bad guns.Β 

It is important to note that "GoldenEye" β€” Brosnan's first Bond film β€” was also the first film in the franchise not produced by Albert R. Broccoli, the film series originator, who had been succeeded by his daughter, Barbara Broccoli, along with his stepson, Michael G. Wilson. But it has been reported that Brosnan was favored by Albert Broccoli, so maybe it was time for him to step down.Β 

Nonetheless, across his four-film run, Brosnan pushed Bond away from its steely, cool origins to something more Hollywood and less interesting.Β Β 

Roger Moore (1973-1985)
roger moore
British actor Roger Moore, playing the title role of secret service agent 007, James Bond, is shown on location in England in 1972.

AP Photo

Roger Moore suited up as James Bond a record seven times, and the bulk of his films were directed by the British director John Glen who had an unparalleled skill for capturing pure chaos on screen. And that is what Moore's Bond was best known for.

In his seven-film run, Moore went to space, fought off a pack of crocodiles, and defused a nuclear bomb. And while Moore's Bond was charismatic and entertaining, there was rarely any substance to what he said, and there was even less plot to hold together all the big-budget stunts. And for this reason, Moore's seven films don't make for great rewatching.Β 

Timothy Dalton (1987-1989)
A picture of Timothy Dalton as James Bond.
Timothy Dalton as James Bond.

MGM

The sole reason Timothy Dalton is not at the top of this list is that he portrayed Bond only twice, but this wasn't due to bad ratings or box-office numbers. His films "The Living Daylights" (1987) and "Licence to Kill" (1989) are two of the most beloved Bond films and Dalton's dark and often serious take on 007 is widely considered the most accurate interpretation of Ian Fleming's books.Β 

"I wanted to make him human," Dalton said of his interpretation of Bond during an interview in 2008. "He's not a superman; you can't identify with a superman. You can identify with the James Bond of the books. He's a tarnished man, really. I wanted to capture that occasional sense of vulnerability and I wanted to capture the spirit of Ian Fleming."

As many people have stated before, Dalton's grounding of Bond paved the way for the franchise's most profitable period of releases with Daniel Craig's 007. Dalton's tenure, however, was cut short due to complex legal wrangling between the film's producers MGM and Eon Productions, which halted production until 1994, when his contract expired.Β 

Sean Connery (1962-1967)
james bond
Sean Connery as the original movie James Bond.

United Artists

Sean Connery had a legendary acting career that spanned over 50 movies and included appearances in some of Hollywood's most iconic movies such as 1964's "Marnie," 1989's "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade," and 1987's "The Untouchables," for which he won a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award. But when he died last year, he was best remembered as the first 007.Β 

According to Connery, however, his interpretation of 007 managed to charm everyone but Fleming.

"I never got introduced to Fleming until I was well into the movie, but I know he was not happy with me as the choice," he said on "The South Bank Show" in 2008.

Despite Fleming's reservations, Connery played the secret agent in seven films from 1962 to 1983, and his version is remembered as not only the coolest in the franchise but one of the coolest characters in cinematic history.Β 

Connery's powers as 007 came from his own charisma. As Barbara Walters best described in a 1987 interview, the Scotsman was someone who didn't try to be sexy; he simply oozed class. Connery can also claim to be the only Bond actor who actually managed to pull off the famous catchphrase, "Martini, shaken, not stirred" and make it sound cool.

Best: Daniel Craig (2006-2021)
no time to die
Daniel Craig as James Bond in "No Time to Die"

MGM

Daniel Craig's Bond films are dark and physical and entertaining. But it is Craig's commercial success that has landed him atop this list. The numbers simply don't lie: 2012's "Skyfall," Craig's third outing as Bond, and first collaboration with the British director Sam Mendes ("American Beauty"), raked in $1.1 billion at the worldwide box office, making it the most commercially successful Bond film of all time.Β 

Craig's portrait of the top-secret British spy helped to revive the franchise, which, at the time, had been struggling to find a contemporary identity for 007 after Brosnan's thematically erratic series of films.Β 

Craig's last Bond film, "No Time To Die," hits US theaters on October 8. Early projections suggest the film could make a $90 million debut at the international box office, so by the end of his tenure, Craig might not just be the actor who saved the Bond franchise but also the actor who saved cinema.

Ayomikun Adekaiyero contributed to this article.

Read the original article on Business Insider

All 27 James Bond movies ranked, according to critics

21 February 2025 at 08:15
daniel craig james bond
Daniel Craig's replacement will have big shoes to fill.

Sony

  • Longtime "James Bond" producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli are stepping back.
  • Amazon MGM Studios will now have full creative control of the franchise.
  • There have been 27 "Bond" films over the last 63 years, ranging in quality.

Longtime "James Bond" producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli are ceding creative control of Bond, James Bond, to Amazon MGM Studios.

Wilson has been involved with Eon Productions, the original studio behind "Bond," since 1972 and Broccoli's family has had cinematic stewardship of the franchise since it began in 1962.

Amazon officially acquired MGM in 2022, but the studio hasn't produced any 007 content since then; they haven't even picked a successor to Daniel Craig after his 2021 exit. It's understood by many that the fierce protectiveness that the Broccoli family feels over the character has stalled any future franchise development, but now that Amazon has full control, that's expected to change.

In honor of the new James Bond who's certainly coming our way soon, we used Rotten Tomatoes to see how all 27 films in this storied franchise stack up, according to critics.

27. "Casino Royale" (1967)
Casino Royale 1967
"Casino Royale."

Columbia Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 26%

The lowest-rated Bond movie by critics is 1967's "Casino Royale," starring David Niven as the titular spy.

This version of "Casino Royale" is a parody of spy films, rather than a straightforward Bond caper. It's also one of two films about James Bond that wasn't produced by Eon Productions.

"Casino Royale" also starred Peter Seller, Ursula Andress, Joanna Pettet, Daliah Lavi, Barbara Bouchet, and Terence Coop in double roles β€” all of them play different versions of Bond. Woody Allen also appeared as Bond's nephew, Jimmy.

"Unfortunately, after the introductory sequences, 'Casino Royale' begins a downhill slide. It gets progressively sillier and more incoherent until it's impossible to keep any of the plot elements straight. Worse, with only occasional exceptions, the humor ceases to be funny, and the whole production degenerates into absurdity," wrote James Berardinelli of ReelViews.

26. "A View to a Kill" (1985)
roger moore in a view to kill
"A View to a Kill."

Keith Hamshere/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 37%

Roger Moore's seventh and final outing as 007 was also his worst, according to critics.

The film sees Bond travel to San Francisco to save Silicon Valley from a rogue KGB agent played by Christopher Walken. His bodyguard and lover, May Day, was notably played by Grace Jones.

The classic "Bond girl" was played by Tanya Roberts, of future "That '70s Show" fame.

"It's not double-oh-seven anymore, but double-oh-seventy, the best argument yet for the mandatory retirement age," wrote The Washington Post's Paul Attanasio.

25. "The Man with the Golden Gun" (1974)
christopher lee and roger moore in the man with the golden gun
"The Man With The Golden Gun."

Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 40%

"The Man with the Golden Gun" starred Moore as Bond, and legendary actor Christopher Lee as the titular man with the golden gun,Β Francisco Scaramanga. Meanwhile, Bond's love interest, Mary Goodnight, was played by Britt Ekland.

Bond and Scaramanga engage in a game of cat-and-mouse for much of the movie, as no one knows what Scaramanga looks like, outside the fact that he has a third nipple.

"If you enjoyed the early Bond films as much as I did, you'd better skip this one," wrote Nora Sayre of The New York Times.

24. "Octopussy" (1983)
roger moore and maud adams in octopussy
"Octopussy."

Bryn Colton/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 42%

Let's get it out of the way: Yes, this movie is really called "Octopussy." Its titular character, a successful businesswoman and jewel smuggler, was played by Maud Adams. Bond and Octopussy have personal business: Years earlier, Bond arrested her father for treason.

The two form an uneasy alliance to defeat an exiled Afghan prince, Kamal Khan, played by Louis Jourdan.

"It's an easy film to hate (and often paints a big target on its back encouraging you to do so), but it works perfectly as a piece of entertainment, where the good ultimately outweighs the bad," wrote Jake Tropila of Film Inquiry.

23. "The World Is Not Enough" (1999)
pierce brosnan in the world is not enough
"The World Is Not Enough."

Keith Hamshere/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score: 51%

Critics think the worst Bond film starring Pierce Brosnan is 1999's "The World Is Not Enough," Brosnan's third.

Bond shares the screen with an American nuclear physicist named Dr. Christmas Jones. Equally improbable, she's played by Denise Richards. HisΒ otherΒ female costar is Elektra King, an oil heiress played by Sophie Marceau.

The classic Bond villain, Renard, an ex-KGB agent who became a terrorist, was played by Robert Carlyle.

"What do the James Bond series, the Chicago Cubs, and Master P's No Limit empire have in common? All owe their considerable commercial success more to loyalty, marketing, and tradition than to quality," wrote Nathan Rabin for the AV Club.

22. "Die Another Day" (2002)
halle berry and pierce brosnan in die another day
"Die Another Day."

MGM Distribution Co.

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 56%

Brosnan's fourth and final appearance as Bond, 2002's "Die Another Day," saw him get overshadowed by Halle Berry.

"Die Another Day" plays as a classic early 2000s film: heavy on the CGI and the product placement. But it's notable for its casting of Berry as Jinx Johnson, an NSA agent, whose entrance in an orange bikini remains iconic over 20 years later.

"Die Another Day" was also the first Bond movie in 39 years to not featureΒ Desmond Llewelyn's Q as the head of the British Secret Service's fictionalΒ research and development division β€” in other words, he provided Bond with all of his nifty gadgets.

Llewelyn died in 1999, just a few weeks after the premiere of "The World Is Not Enough." He was replaced as Q by John Cleese for "Die Another Day," which would end up being Cleese's only appearance as the character.

"In a year when 'Austin Powers' has scoffed at 007 as a joke and 'xXx' has scoffed at him as an anachronism, 'Die Another Day' is a fluffed opportunity to assert that nobody does it better," wrote Nicholas Barber for The Independent.

21. "Tomorrow Never Dies" (1997)
pierce brosnan and michelle yeoh in tomorrow never dies
"Tomorrow Never Dies."

Keith Hamshere/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 57%

Brosnan suited up for his second Bond film in 1997 with "Tomorrow Never Dies," which introduced international audiences to Michelle Yeoh β€”Β for that alone, it remains an important cultural moment.

The film follows Bond as he attempts to stop power-hungry media tycoon Elliot Carver, played by Jonathan Pryce, from engineering events that will bring about World War III.

The Wall Street Journal's Joe Morgenstern criticized the film for its overuse of product placements.

"In the latest James Bond, our hero saves the world from brand-name unawareness. 'Tomorrow Never Dies' is a dramatized trade show; imagine Comdex or the Geneva Automobile Salon with a plot," he wrote.

20. "Moonraker" (1979)
roger moore and emily bolton in moonraker
"Moonraker."

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 59%

It took four movies for Moore's Bond to blast off into space, which he does by the end of "Moonraker."

He takes on an all-time Bond villain, Hugo Drax (Michael Lonsdale), who somehow wants to kill the entire population of Earth with nerve gas and use his own space station as Noah's Ark to repopulate the planet with a "master race."

"The space-age plot is spread dangerously thin, the fights all tend to slapstick, and the wanton destruction has become rather too predictable. But it's held together by likable performances," wrote Chris Auty for Time Out.

19 (tie). "Spectre" (2015)
daniel craig in spectre
"Spectre."

Sony Pictures Releasing

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 63%

Daniel Craig's lowest-rated Bond movie is 2015's "Spectre."

It was the first Bond film since "Diamonds Are Forever" to include Bond's most famous villain, Blofeld (now played by Christoph Waltz), and his criminal organization SPECTRE.

Also notable was Sam Smith's Bond song, "Writing's on the Wall," which became the second consecutive Bond theme to win an Oscar.

"'Spectre,' Sam Mendes' latest entry in the James Bond franchise, is a real oddity: the first 007 film that's more enjoyable to think about than to watch," wrote FlavorWire's Jason Bailey.

19 (tie). "Quantum of Solace" (2008)
jeffrey wright and daniel craig in quantum of solace
"Quantum of Solace."

Sony Pictures Releasing

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 63%

Craig's second outing as Bond, 2008's "Quantum of Solace," received a similar critical response.

The movie picks up almost immediately after the events of Craig's first Bond installment, "Casino Royale." He once again faces off against Jesper Christensen as Mr. White, an assassin.

Bond also faces environmental entrepreneur Dominic Greene (played by French filmmaker and actor Mathieu Amalric) who claims to want to stop deforestation but isΒ actuallyΒ trying to stage a coup in Bolivia to take control of the country's natural resources.

"Although it's not the most crushing disappointment of all time β€” finding you have won the lottery but lost the ticket is probably more crushing, I imagine β€” it is still a crushing disappointment," wrote Deborah Ross for The Spectator.

17. "Diamonds Are Forever" (1971)
sean connery in diamonds are forever
"Diamonds Are Forever."

Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 64%

After starring in five Bond films, Sean Connery left the role and let someone else take a (relatively successful) crack at the character. But he returned for Bond No. 7, which you might recall from its iconic theme song sung by Shirley Bassey.

Connery would once again leave the role until 1983 when he appeared in the second non-Eon Productions Bond movie, "Never Say Never Again."

In "Diamonds Are Forever," Bond faces his archenemy Blofeld (Charles Gray).

"The movie's momentum is such that one never has much time to react to its lack of reason, only to its sensations of speed and narrow escape, and to the splendor of its crazy gadgets and decor," wrote The New York Times' Vincent Canby.

16. "Live and Let Die" (1973)
roger moore in live and let die
"Live and Let Die."

Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 67%

"Live and Let Die" (1973) might've been Moore's first outing as Bond, but it's most remembered for the Paul McCartney song of the same name.

In total, Moore played Bond seven times, the same number of appearances as the first-ever Bond, Sean Connery.

"Live and Let Die," per IndieWire, was released during the height of the blaxploitation movement in cinema, and therefore led to a supporting cast of mainly Black actors, including the first Black Bond girl, Rosie Carver, played by Gloria Hendry

"It is good, lively, mindless entertainment, slow to warm up but once embarked upon its improbable story quick to appreciate its own absurdity," wrote The Guardian's Derek Malcolm.

15. "For Your Eyes Only" (1981)
roger moore in for your eyes only
"For Your Eyes Only."

Keith Hamshere/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score: 69%

"For Your Eyes Only" is Moore's fifth Bond movie, and a real course correction from the campier, sci-fi tone of "Moonraker."

In this installment, Bond's love interest, Melina Havelock, played by Carole Bouquet, is dead set on getting revenge for the murder of her parents. Meanwhile, Bond teams up with a former smuggler, Milos Columbo, played by Israeli actor Chaim Topol, to recover a dangerous piece of submarine tech.

"No. 12 in the phenomenally durable James Bond series. 'For Your Eyes Only' is undeniably easy on the eyes. Maybe too easy to prevent the mind from wandering and the lids from drooping," wrote Gary Arnold for The Washington Post.

14. "Never Say Never Again" (1983)
sean connery in never say never again
"Never Say Never Again."

Bob Penn/Sygma/Sygma/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 71%

"Never Say Never Again" is the result of some complicated rights issues from the Ian Fleming novels the Bond movies are based on. It's a remake of the 1965 movie "Thunderball," which also starred Connery, which was in turn based on the 1961 Fleming novel of the same name.

Due to conflicts between Fleming and producer Kevin McClory, McClory ended up with the rights to "Thunderball" and anything introduced in that story, including SPECTRE.

So, in 1983, McClory commissioned a remake of "Thunderball," titled "Never Say Never Again" starring Connery once again, for a non-Eon Bond film. The title was reportedly inspired by Connery's wife who told her husband that he couldn't say he'd "never" return to Bond again, per Screen Rant.

"In 'Never Say Never Again,' the formula is broadened to accommodate an older, seasoned man of much greater stature, and Mr. Connery expertly fills the bill," wrote Janet Maslin for The New York Times.

13. "The Living Daylights" (1987)
timothy dalton and maryam d'abo in the living daylights
"The Living Daylights."

Georges De Keerle/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 72%

Timothy Dalton's first entry into Bond lore, 1987's "The Living Daylights," was well-received.

After Moore left the role, the British actor stepped into Bond's very prolific shoes. The only constant remaining from Moore's tenure was Desmond Llewelyn as Q.

The plot, as usual, involved Bond investigating shady activities by the KGB. In this case, he was investigating suspicious deaths of KGB defectors, which put him directly in the path of Brad Whitaker, an American arms dealer played by Joe Don Baker.

"'The Living Daylights' is different; even from a quarter of a century away, there's nothing to sully the romantic air. It's no coincidence that the most recent Bond films are the closest in tone," wrote The Guardian's Les Roopanarine.

12. "You Only Live Twice" (1967)
sean connery in you only live twice
"You Only Live Twice."

Stephan C. Archetti/Keystone Features/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score: 73%

Fun fact about "You Only Live Twice": Beloved children's author Roald Dahl, the mind behind "The BFG," "The Witches," "James and the Giant Peach," and "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," wrote the screenplay.

The biggest legacy of "You Only Live Twice" is theΒ performance of Donald Pleasence as Bond's enemy, Blofeld. In just two minutes, you can see where Mike Myers got the idea for Dr. Evil in the "Austin Powers" movies.

"What I can say for sure is 'You Only Live Twice' is the Bond film I have seen most often and I have enjoyed the hell out it every single time," wrote Phelim O'Neill for The Guardian.

11. "Licence to Kill" (1989)
timothy dalton in Licence to Kill
"Licence to Kill."

MGM/UA Communications Co.

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 79%

Dalton's second (and final) outing as Bond, "Licence to Kill," was even more well-received than his debut.

The film was, at the time, the darkest Bond movie ever released β€” it followed Bond as he was suspended from MI6 in order to help his friend and CIA agent Felix Leiter, played by David Hedison, avenge the murder of his new wife … all while trying to take down a Latin American drug kingpin.

"Dalton revives the cool, ironic detachment of the Connery years, but he also allows a touch of obsession to show through Bond's surface aplomb," wrote the Chicago Reader's Dave Kehr.

10. "GoldenEye" (1995)
pierce brosnan in goldeneye
"GoldenEye."

Keith Hamshere/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score: 80%

After six Bond-less years, Irish star Brosnan brought the world's most dashing spy back to the big screen with 1995's "GoldenEye." His version of Bond began his tenure taking down a rogue M16 agent played by Sean Bean and romancing a Russian programmer played by Izabella Scorupco.

This movie also marked the first appearance of Judi Dench as Bond's boss at M16, M, who would go on to appear in the Craig movies.

The most lasting legacy of this movie, though, may be the Nintendo 64 game based on it, simply titled "GoldenEye 007," released in 1997. It became the third-best-selling Nintendo 64 game of all time, per VGChartz.

"With a dynamite opening reel that showcases the series' renewed vigor, 'GoldenEye' is two hours of well-executed thrills, high-tech mayhem and one-of-a-kind comedy," wrote David Hunter for The Hollywood Reporter.

9. "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" (1969)
george lazenby in On Her Majesty's Secret Service
"On Her Majesty's Secret Service."

Michael Stroud/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 81%

It wasn't critically beloved at the time, but George Lazenby's one and only Bond movie has been reevaluated in the following five decades. Now, it's one of the most critically admired Bond films.

Part of what makes this film so different than any other Bond movie, besides Lazenby, is that it ends in true tragedy: After Bond falls in love with Diana Rigg's CountessΒ Tracy di Vicenzo, the two wed at the end of the movie, only for Tracy to get shot by Bond's nemesis Blofeld (Telly Savalas) immediately after.

"'On Her Majesty's Secret Service' is pure poetry. It transcends the idea of a Bond film. Gorgeously photographed, thrillingly executed, and wonderfully performed, this is the franchise zenith," wrote Jake Tropila for Film Inquiry.

8. "The Spy Who Loved Me" (1977)
roger moore in The Spy Who Loved Me
"The Spy Who Loved Me."

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score: 82%

"The Spy Who Loved Me" was Moore's third outing as Bond, and his best, according to critics. It covers similar territory as other Bond movies, including a megalomaniac villain dedicated to starting World War III β€” this time a shipping tycoon named Karl Stromberg, played by Curt JΓΌrgens.

This movie was also the debut of Jaws, one of the most memorable henchmen in Bond history, played by Richard Kiel.

"The end result is unquestionably one of the Bond series' brightest spots, and includes a good deal of its finest moments," wrote Gerardo Valero for RogerEbert.com.

7. "No Time to Die" (2021)
daniel craig and ana de armas in no time to die
"No Time to Die."

United Artists Releasing

Rotten Tomatoes score: 83%

After five movies and 15 years, Craig drank his final shaken, not stirred, martini in the epic conclusion to his series, "No Time to Die."

While Craig, as usual, performed his role admirably, audiences left "No Time to Die" talking about Ana de Armas' CIA agent, Paloma, and Lashana Lynch's new 007 agent, Nomi.

The less we say about Rami Malek's performance as the film's nanobots-obsessed villain Lyutsifer Safin, the better.

"No Time to Die" also became the third Bond film in a row to have its theme β€” this time sung by Billie Eilish β€” win an Oscar.

"With this fifth and final go-round, it's clear who the best Bond is. It's Craig, Daniel Craig," wrote Mark Feeney for The Boston Globe.

6. "Thunderball" (1965)
sean connery in thunderball
"Thunderball."

United Artists/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 85%

"Thunderball" is the second-highest-grossing Bond film ever, accounting for inflation, only behind "Skyfall," per Screen Rant. At this point in history, Connery's Bond had become a full-blown phenomenon.

In the movie, Bond's mission was to recapture two atomic bombs stolen by the evil criminal organization SPECTRE. Much of the film's action takes place underwater, an impressive feat for the '60s. Bond also, of course, falls in love with the girlfriend of a SPECTRE agent, Domino, played by Claudine Auger.

"The color is handsome. The scenery in the Bahamas is an irresistible lure. Even the violence is funny. That's the best I can say for a Bond film," wrote Bosley Crowther for The New York Times.

5. "Skyfall" (2012)
daniel craig in skyfall
"Skyfall."

Sony Pictures Releasing

Rotten Tomatoes score: 92%

The highest-grossing Bond film of all time is 2012's "Skyfall," starring Craig.

"Skyfall" was Craig's third Bond film, and, to many, a high point of his Bond tenure. The film delves into Bond's past in a way that hadn't been done for many years, and introduced viewers to the super-spy's ancestral home in Scotland, fittingly named Skyfall.

Javier Bardem's performance as Raoul Silva, a former M16 agent (and now cyber-terrorist), instantly solidified Bardem as one of the top-tier Bond villains.

"Skyfall" also introduced audiences to the new versions of Q (Ben Whishaw) and Miss Moneypenny (Naomie Harris).

The film's theme, "Skyfall" by Adele, also started the three-film streak of Bond themes winning the Academy Award.

"Bond traditions haven't just been updated β€” they've been intelligently modified and rethought, giving us the franchise's inherent pleasures in a new package," wrote Tim Grierson of Deadspin.

4. "Casino Royale" (2006)
daniel craig in casino royale
"Casino Royale."

Greg Williams/Eon Productions/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score: 94%

"Casino Royale" kicked off an entirely new generation Bond after a multi-year break. The film follows a newly appointed 007 as he joins a high-stakes poker game at the Casino Royale in Montenegro, in order to bankrupt the terrorist financier Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen).

Bond is paired with Vesper Lynd (Eva Green), a British Treasury agent. Their relationship would haunt Bond until Craig's final installment, "No Time to Die."

"Daniel Craig, an excellent actor, has more than earned his Walther PPK," wrote Stephanie Condron and Sinclair McKay for The Telegraph.

3. "Dr. No" (1962)
sean connery and ursula andress in dr no`
"Dr. No."

United Artist/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 95%

The very first Bond movie, 1962's "Dr. No," is still a high bar that the franchise rarely clears.

Without the success of "Dr. No," which was released 63 years ago, it's unlikely that we would've ever gotten 26 more films about the most debonair spy on his side of the Atlantic.

"Dr. No"Β wasΒ successful, much due to Connery's iconic take on the character.

Does the plot, in which Bond teams up with a seashell diver in Jamaica named Honey Ryder (the first Bond girl ever, Ursula Andress) to take down a mad scientist determined to stop a rocket launch with a radio beam named Dr. Julius No make the most sense? No, but we love it anyway.

"[The] first screen adventure of Ian Fleming's hard-hitting, fearless, imperturbable, girl-loving Secret Service Agent 007, James Bond, is an entertaining piece of tongue-in-cheek action hokum," wrote Variety.

2. "From Russia With Love" (1963)
sean connery in From Russia with Love
"From Russia With Love."

United Artist/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score: 97%

Connery's second outing as Bond follows him as he goes up against multiple SPECTRE agents who want him dead after the events of "Dr. No." He also falls in love with a Soviet clerk, Tatiana Romanova, played by Daniela Bianchi.

Notably, this was Desmond Llewelyn's first appearance as Bond's technology supplier Q. He'd play the role until his death in 1999.

"A highly immoral film in every imaginable way but it sure is fun...," wrote Richard Roud for The Guardian.

1. "Goldfinger" (1964)
sean connery in goldfinger
"Goldfinger."

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Rotten Tomatoes score:Β 99%

It seems increasingly unlikely we'll ever have a Bond movie that tops "Goldfinger," a movie in which Bond meets a female pilot (played by Honor Blackman), investigates a sociopath obsessed with gold named Auric Goldfinger (played by Gert FrΓΆbe), and sleeps with a woman named Jill Masterson (played by Shirley Eaton) who gets painted in gold for her betrayal and dies from "skin suffocation."

Not all of it has aged well β€” specifically, the scene where Bond forcibly kisses Galore in a barn comes to mind β€” but it's still where many of the tropes we've come to associate Bond with began.

"Perfection. Farty critics may scoff, but 'Goldfinger' should take its place among the greats," wrote Ian Nathan for Empire.

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Jeff Bezos asks 'who'd you pick as the next Bond' after Amazon takes control of franchise

20 February 2025 at 11:14
no time to die
Daniel Craig as James Bond in "No Time to Die."

MGM

  • Amazon MGM Studios has taken creative control of the "James Bond" franchise.
  • The longtime producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli will step back from decision-making.
  • Amazon, in 2022, acquired MGM, which had the rights to the franchise.

Amazon MGM Studios announced on Thursday that it had taken over creative control of the beloved "James Bond" franchise after a years-long stall in naming the next bond. Jeff Bezos, however, isn't wasting any time trying to change that.

Soon after Thursday's announcement, the Amazon founder posted a screenshot of a BBC article announcing the creative change on Instagram, with the caption "Who'd you pick as the next Bond?"

It's been four years and there's been no news of who will be cast.

Thursday's announcement also said the longtime guardians of the franchise, Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, would step aside from decision-making.

"With my 007 career spanning nearly 60 incredible years, I am stepping back from producing the James Bond films to focus on art and charitable projects," Wilson said. "Therefore, Barbara and I agree, it is time for our trusted partner, Amazon MGM Studios, to lead James Bond into the future."

Broccoli said, "With the conclusion of 'No Time to Die' and Michael retiring from the films, I feel it is time to focus on my other projects."

Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson at the "Skyfall" premiere in 2012.
Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson.

Eamonn M. McCormack/Getty Images

The announcement said Amazon, Wilson, and Broccoli had created a joint venture to house the "Bond" IP. All will remain franchise co-owners, but Amazon MGM will have creative control.

In 2022, Amazon acquired MGM, which held the rights to all the "Bond" movies, for $6.5 billion. Amazon would release "Bond" movies going forward, but it didn't have creative control.

That power was in the hands of Broccoli, the daughter of the producer Albert "Cubby" Broccoli, who launched "James Bond" into a goliath. For 30 years, Barbara Broccoli β€” along with Wilson β€” has called the shots on all things 007.

However, since Amazon got involved, things have been shaky.

The Wall Street Journal reported in December that Broccoli and Amazon were at an impasse on how to move forward with the franchise since the exit of Daniel Craig as Bond with 2021's "No Time to Die."

Daniel Craig in a tuxedo and Ana de Armas in a black dress
Craig and Ana de Armas in "No Time to Die."

MGM

The Journal described it as "a clash between the 20th-century Hollywood of big screens and big swings and a new entertainment industry ruled by Silicon Valley firms that prize data, algorithms, and streaming subscriptions."

The report said Broccoli nixed spin-off ideas suggested by Amazon executives and took offense when one referred to the franchise as "content."

Business Insider's request to Broccoli for comment was not immediately returned.

"No Time to Die," the 25th movie in the "Bond" franchise, earned more than $774 million at the box office worldwide.

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Amazon Gains Creative Control Over James Bond in Shocking New Deal

20 February 2025 at 06:20
Daniel Craig James Bond No Time To Die

Longtime producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson have formed a new joint venture with Amazon MGM that will see them step back from creative control of the venerable spy-fi series.

Comulate raises $20M to help insurers work more smoothly

11 February 2025 at 05:41

Unimaginable disasters like the fires in Los Angeles cause hundreds of billions of dollars in destruction, and put a huge focus on the role the insurance industry plays in the process of rebuilding. Those events also lead to major financial losses at the insurance companies themselves, and longer term, all of this will put a […]

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CIA officer rates 9 counterterrorism scenes in movies

18 December 2024 at 10:53

The former CIA counterterrorism officer John Kiriakou looks at counterterrorism scenes in movies and TV and breaks them down for realism.

Kiriakou explains the counterterrorism efforts done to directly address the September 11 attacks β€” commonly known as 9/11 β€” such as the raid on Osama bin Laden's compound, which ultimately led to his killing, in "Zero Dark Thirty," featuring Jessica Chastain, Joel Edgerton, and Chris Pratt; and the CIA's interrogation techniques β€” such as waterboarding and sleep deprivation β€” to detainees, such as the Al-Qaeda members Abu Zubaydah and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, in "The Report," starring Adam Driver. He breaks down the plausibility of weapons used by terrorists, such as the use of weapons of mass destruction, particularly nerve agents, in "Mission: Impossible β€” Rogue Nation," with Tom Cruise and Simon Pegg; and the cyberterrorism attack in "Skyfall," featuring Daniel Craig and Judi Dench. Kiriakou looks at more counterterrorism strategies, such as the drone attack in "Homeland" S4E1 (2014), starring Claire Danes; and the collaboration of intelligence agencies in "Body of Lies," featuring Leonardo DiCaprio, Russell Crow, and Oscar Isaac. He also reacts to the depiction of other real-life terrorist attacks, such as the 2008 Mumbai attacks in "Hotel Mumbai," starring Dev Patel; the Munich Massacre, which involved the Palestinian militant organization Black September, in "Munich," with Daniel Craig and Eric Bana; and the depiction of the hijacking of the Indian Airlines Flight 814, which landed in Kandahar International Airport in Afghanistan β€” then a stronghold of the Taliban β€” in "IC 814: The Kandahar Hijack" E5 + E6 (2024).

Before 9/11, Kiriakou served as a counterterrorism operations officer in Athens, Greece; and after the 9/11 attacks, Kiriakou was appointed chief of counterterrorist operations in Pakistan, where he oversaw a series of military raids on Al-Qaeda safe houses, resulting in the capture of numerous Al-Qaeda members, including leading the raid that captured Abu Zubaydah β€” who was then believed to be Al-Qaeda's third-highest-ranking member. He left the CIA in 2004, and in 2007, he went public with his information about the CIA's "enhanced interrogation techniques," a program of systematic torture of detainees. He was sentenced to 30 months in prison, where he pleaded guilty to a charge of revealing information that identified a covert agent. He went on to become a senior investigator for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a terrorism consultant for ABC News. He has written various books and teaches and speaks around the country, focusing on the CIA, terrorism, torture, and ethics in intelligence operations.

You can follow Kiriakou on LinkedIn:

Here is a link to Kiriakou's books.

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Firearms specialist rates gun technique in 13 movies

17 December 2024 at 09:37

Firearms expert Patrick McNamara rates gun technique in movies.

McNamara talks about recovering ammo on the battlefield in "John Wick: Chapter 2," starring Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, and Common. He explains how to handle different types of machine guns in "Rambo: First Blood Part II," starring Sylvester Stallone; and "Pulp Fiction," starring John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, and Bruce Willis. He critiques James Bond's shooting form in "Die Another Day," starring Pierce Brosnan, Halle Berry and Judi Dench; and "No Time to Die," starring Daniel Craig, Rami Malek, and Ana de Armas. He breaks down how to fire at a moving target in "Deadpool," starring Ryan Reynolds. He discusses firing two guns at once in "The Bourne Identity," starring Matt Damon and Clive Owen. He describes shooting range exercises in "S.W.A.T.," starring Colin Farrell, Samuel L. Jackson, and Jeremy Renner; and "Lethal Weapon," starring Danny Glover and Mel Gibson. He looks at shooting in dark environments in "Sicario," starring Emily Blunt, Josh Brolin, and Benicio del Toro. He analyzes the reload techniques displayed in "Scarface," starring Al Pacino and Michelle Pfeiffer. He walks us through different sniper positions in "Mad Max: Fury Road," starring Tom Hardy, Charlize Theron, and Nicholas Hoult. Finally, he deconstructs Tom Cruise's shooting stance in "Collateral," also starring Jamie Foxx and Jada Pinkett Smith.

Patrick McNamara served for 22 years in Army special operations forces. He is president of TMACS, where he trains people in tactical marksmanship.

You can learn more about safe gun-handling techniques from Patrick here:

https://www.youtube.com/@patmcnamara

https://www.tmacsinc.com/

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A look back at Jaguar's history — from a sidecar company to James Bond villains, to the latest rebranding controversy

30 November 2024 at 02:52
image of old jaguar car
The first Jaguars were built in the 1930s under the name SS Cars Limited.

Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

  • Jaguar's founder started in the motorcycle sidecar business before building his first Jag in 1935.
  • The luxury carmaker is rebranding with a new logo and controversial ad campaign.
  • Here's a look back at the British carmaker over the last century.

Luxury British carmaker Jaguar has come a long way from its humble beginnings in the early 20th century.

The company's founder started making motorcycle sidecars in the 1920s before creating the first Jaguar car in 1935. Over the next few decades, Jaguar became synonymous with elegance and power. It's been used in racing, as the preferred vehicle of the British royal family, and by several villains in James Bond movies.

Today, Jaguar is preparing to launch its all-electric vehicle lineup, set to come out some time in 2026. And in preparation for its next generation, Jaguar unveiled a new branding campaign β€” complete with a new logo, redesigned leaping jaguar mark, and a promotional video that's stirred controversy online.

Here's a look back at the company over the last century, and surprising facts you might not know about its history.

Early days as Swallow Sidecar Company

In 1922, Sir William Lyons β€” who later became known as "Mr. Jaguar" β€” co-founded the Swallow Sidecar Company with a man named William Walmsley. Within a few years, Lyons had built his first car, called the SS1.

image of Lyons looking down at old car
Jaguar founder Sir William Lyons (center) looked at a 1938 Swallow Sidecar three-and-a-half liter 100 in 1972.

PA Images/PA Images via Getty Images

In 1934, Lyons bought the company out from Walmsley, renamed it SS Cars Limited.

And in 1935, the first Jaguar was born, a model named the SS Jaguar.

Lyons renamed the company Jaguar Cars Limited in 1945 in an effort to build a brand around the luxury sports cars it was making at the time.

image of old jaguar car
An SS Jaguar 100 was built between 1936 and 1941 by SS Cars Limited.

Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Mid-century success

The 1930s through 1950s were marked by a number of innovations for the company, which it touts on in corporate history.

Jaguar introduced its first four-door model in 1937 with the SS Jaguar 2Β½ Liter Sedan, and by 1948, it had created the world's fastest production car β€” the Lyons-designed XK120, which could reach speeds up to 133 miles per hour.

In 1951, Jaguar introduced its aerodynamic C-type model, which was 25% lighter than the XK120 and won first place when it debuted at the Le Mans 24-hour race.

Then, in 1954, Jaguar rolled out one of the first cars with a unibody structure, the D-type racecar. Like the C-type before it, the D-type also made history at Le Mans, scoring first place three consecutive years, including in 1957, when the car secured five of the top six places.

All this built up to 1961 when Jaguar unveiled one of the most iconic cars of all time β€” the E-type.

image of lyons with jaguar car
Sir William Lyons debuting the Jaguar E-Type at the 1961 Geneva Motor Show.

Jaguar

image of red sports car
Jaguar's famous E-type model was introduced in 1961.

Jaguar

Italian racing driver and founder of Ferrari, Enzo Ferrari, is frequently cited as declaring the E-type "the most beautiful car in the world," according to classic car auction house RM Sotheby's.

Some of the E-type's most famous owners included Frank Sinatra, Brigitte Bardot, and Steve McQueen, according to lifestyle magazine Gentleman's Journal.

The Museum of Modern Art in New York City acquired and first exhibited an E-type in 1996, becoming just the third car in the museum's design collection.

image of Steve McQueen and wife with jaguar car
Actor Steve McQueen and his wife Neile posing with one of his Jaguar sports cars in 1960.

AP Photo

"Rarely has a car inspired the kind of passion in both car enthusiasts and the general public that the Jaguar E-type has. Even today, the E-type is considered an icon of the postwar British sports car," Christopher Mount, a MoMa curator who organized the Jaguar exhibition, said in a press release at the time.

Jaguars in popular culture

Jaguars have long been a favorite of the British royal family, along with Land Rovers and Range Rovers, which are part of the Jaguar Land Rover brand, owned by India-based Tata Motors.

The family's love for the brand dates back at least to 1955, when the Queen Mother Queen Elizabeth acquired the Jaguar Mark VII M Saloon 464 HYV, which was specially made in the royal color, claret, according to historic preservation charity Jaguar Heritage Trust.

image of jaguar in front of castle
The Jaguar Mk IX formerly owned by Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.

National Motor Museum/Heritage Images/Getty Images

image of princess diana with jaguar car and horses
Princess Diana with a Jaguar XJ Sovereign at the Harrods Polo Cup in Windsor, UK in 1987.

Princess Diana Archive/Getty Images

Other members of the royal family, including Princess Diana and Queen Elizabeth II, also owned and drove Jaguars over the years.

And a number of Jaguar vehicles have been driven by villains in James Bond movies, like the Jaguar XKR driven by henchman Tang Lin Zao in 2002's "Die Another Day," the Jaguar XF featured during a car chase in 2021's "No Time to Die," and the Jaguar C-X75 driven by assassin Mr. Hinx in 2015's "Spectre."

Jaguar's next chapter

Jaguar first announced in 2021 that it would be ditching internal combustion engines to go all-in on EVs.

In November, Jaguar stopped selling new models of its cars in the UK as it prepares for its electric vehicle launch, expected to hit the market sometime in 2026.

As part of this next phase, Jaguar has debuted a new brand identity focused on the creative philosophy of "exuberant modernism," which the company defines as "imaginative, bold, and artistic at every touchpoint."

jaguar PR photo showing models walking in pink desert
Jaguar's new video ad features models in colorful, modern clothing, and doesn't show any cars.

Jaguar

Jaguar Chief Creative Officer Gerry McGovern said in a statement that the company's new vision was inspired by Lyons' belief that "a Jaguar should be a copy of nothing."

The company's new marketing campaign included a promotional video that featured models clad in colorful high fashion, with no cars in sight.

Some conservative social media users criticized the company as being too "woke" β€” partly over the look of the models it chose, while others have questioned why the ad didn't show any cars.

Meanwhile, high-profile critics of the rebranding video β€” which has been viewed more than 160 million times on X β€” included Tesla CEO Elon Musk, the influencer brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate, and the conservative personality Ian Miles Cheong.

In response to the video posted on X by Jaguar, Musk wrote: "Do you sell cars?" And Nick Freitas, a Republican member of the Virginia House of Delegates, replied to Jaguar on X: "Well … we know where the advertising team for Bud Light went," referring to the backlash to a Bud Light ad in 2023 that featured a transgender influencer.

Copy nothing. #Jaguar pic.twitter.com/BfVhc3l09B

β€” Jaguar (@Jaguar) November 19, 2024

Jaguar's managing director, Rawdon Glover, defended the British luxury car maker's rebranding campaign to the Financial Times β€” calling out some of its online critics and characterizing their reaction as "vile hatred" and "intolerance."

Jaguar said it would announce more details about its new branding strategy in December, though it's not clear whether that will include specifics about any of its forthcoming electric vehicles.

As part of the brand's positioning, the newly announced Jags are expected to be significantly more upmarket than the ones that are being phased out, Car and Driver previously reported, citing a Range Rover from the brand's corporate cousin that costs about $400,000 as where the brand wants to be. (Most 2024 Jaguar models have list prices of about $50,000 to $80,000.)

Without commenting specifically on the recent backlash to the new branding campaign, Jaguar previously said in a statement to Business Insider: "The brand reveal is only the first step in this exciting new era, and we look forward to sharing more on Jaguar's transformation in the coming days and weeks."

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