No Time To Die

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No Time to Die (2021)
No Time to Die poster Rating: 7.3/10 (443,390 votes)
Director: Cary Joji Fukunaga
Writer: Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, Cary Joji Fukunaga
Stars: Daniel Craig, Ana de Armas, Rami Malek
Runtime: 163 min
Rated: PG-13
Genre: Action, Adventure, Thriller
Released: 08 Oct 2021
Plot: James Bond has left active service. His peace is short-lived when Felix Leiter, an old friend from the CIA, turns up asking for help, leading Bond onto the trail of a mysterious villain armed with dangerous new technology.


The 25th entry in the official Bond series, and the fifth outing for Daniel Craig, No Time To Die draws upon the threads of the previous four films to tie up loose ends and give a final outing for Craig before the franchise is given another makeover with a new lead.  

Starting with a flashback to Madeline Swann’s childhood, we see the events mentioned in a throwaway line when she first met Bond in the previous film – a home intruder who killed her mother, who Swann shot – and we discover there is more to the story than she previously revealed.  The film then shifts to the events immediately following Spectre, with Bond and Swann in Matera, Italy – James visiting Vespa’s grave before he can fully move on with Swann.  However the pair are ambushed by Spectre agents, leaving Bond to mistrust Swann and separating.  5 years later, events start to transpire that draw the pair, as well as Felix Leitner, Blofeld, and a new 007 into a conspiracy and major threat to the world.

To say more would be packed with spoilers, and this film has a variety of twists and turns throughout.  The oft-commented on run time flies by, feeling much less than it actually is – certainly the sign of a strong film.  From the opening moments right to the final act, I was immersed in the rich splendour of the adventure, which plays on themes of all of Craig’s run, as well as echoes of earlier films in the series.  Parallels are drawn at times with On Her Majesty’s Secret Service – even if the story isn’t the same – and the score by Zimmer reflects on those early themes to great effect.

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Sumptuous locations are shot exquisitely by Linus Sandren, who won awards for his work on La La Land, making this a beautiful film to experience – and it is an experience, one which I relish the chance to explore again.

Most of all, though, this is Craig’s film – his final outing in the role – and he owns it from start to finish.  Tears were shed, and stories were wrapped up, and whilst you can enjoy this film on its own, the recent revisit of the whole Craig era in the days leading up to the release made me pick up on so much story detail and thematic elements, making even the weaker films (Quantum and Spectre) seem better as a result.  The five films together play out as one long tale, a genuine first for the franchise which usually plays each film as a lone event.

I could talk about the cast, but we already know how good everyone is from previous outings.  Craig is on finest form, Jeffrey Wright is a marvellous Leitner, Ben Whishaw makes a fabulous Q, Ralph Fiennes encapsulates the early essence of M, and so on.  New to the series is Rami Malek who is eerie and menacing, yet subdued.  A somewhat classic Bond villain, with a lair on a remote island, again drawing upon the earlier film series.  If anything bad could be said it is that I wanted more of him in the film – but he was just one piece on this majestic chess board of a film.

No Time To Die is easily within my top 5 Bond films of all time, sitting perfectly alongside Casino Royale and Skyfall as the pinnacles of Craig-era, and indeed far better than the final outing for previous Bond actors.  See it now on the biggest screen you can find.

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