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  2. 2 days ago · 99% #1. Critics Consensus: Goldfinger is where James Bond as we know him comes into focus - it features one of 007's most famous lines ("A martini. Shaken, not stirred.") and a wide range of...

    • No Time to Die

      In No Time To Die, Bond has left active service and is...

    • Diamonds Are Forever
    • The Man with The Golden Gun
    • Die Another Day
    • A View to A Kill
    • Quantum of Solace
    • Spectre
    • Octopussy
    • For Your Eyes only
    • Moonraker
    • No Time to Die

    Panic set in following a mixed critical reception to the sublime On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, with Bond producers Albert R Broccoli and Harry Saltzman not only going to great lengths to convince their departed leading man Sean Connery to play 007 again following George Lazenby’s one-off stint but also ditching the straight-laced tone and emotio...

    Roger Moore’s second outing as 007 actually boasts one of the finest ever Bond villains in Christopher Lee’s expert assassin Francisco Scaramanga, not to mention one of the all-time-great final face-offs, with Bond taking on the titular bad guy in a spooky funhouse. But these saving graces aside, TMWTGG feels tired and uninspired – a franchise reva...

    Though it has a reputation for being the frothiest Pierce Brosnan outing, Die Another Day does make an attempt in its first hour at pushing agent 007 into unexplored territory – something the Daniel Craig movies would later do to far greater critical acclaim – as Bond is held captive and tortured, emerging physically and emotionally scarred. But al...

    It’s something of an odd trend that a Bond actor’s final outing as 007 is often their weakest and it comes into play again with A View to a Kill, a lightweight outing that’s not without its good points – Christopher Walken giving a typically offbeat performance as Nazi super-soldier Max Zorin, Grace Jones eating up the screen as his henchwoman MayD...

    Daniel Craig’s debut as Bond had stunned audiences with its more grounded, complex portrayal of 007 and his previously fantastic world – but its sequel got off to a rocky start. No, we’re not talking about that head-scratcher of a title – taken from one of Ian Fleming’s short stories – but the fact that, due to a writers’ strike, QoS started filmin...

    Star Trek fans used to swear by a rule that all odd-numbered films in that franchise disappointed and something similar applies to the Daniel Craig Bond movies, with the Casino Royale/Quantum of Solace double being followed first by the sublime Skyfall and then the bloated Spectre, which stumbles in its efforts to implausibly link the events of the...

    Only a handful of Bond films are truly disappointing and while we remain in the lower stretch of this ranking, Octopussy is a thoroughly entertaining romp, offering up a memorable villain in Louis Jordan’s suave, sinister Kamal Khan, a formidable performance from Maud Adams as the film’s title character, an absolutely wild turn from Steven Berkoff ...

    Bringing Bond back down to Earth – literally – after the Star Wars aping exploits of Moonraker, For Your Eyes Only is perhaps Roger Moore’s most straight-laced entry in the series and while he’s traditionally associated with the frothier fare, this (slightly) grittier entry actually works a treat, with Carole Bouquet mesmerising as revenge-seeking ...

    It gets a lot of stick and while Moonraker is at points Bond at its absolute silliest – for all the ludicrous outer space antics, the ruthless killer Jaws falling in love and seeing the error of his ways is the film’s nadir – it’s actually far more substantial than many give it credit for. The film’s first half is excellent, on a par with its immed...

    Perhaps the most controversial entry in the franchise's history, with fan reactions to its explosive ending ranging from outrage to those who felt killing off Craig's 007 provided a fitting send-off to his tragic take on the hero, No Time to Die didn't quite reach the heights of the actor's very best outings as Bond but was a marked improvement on ...

    • Morgan Jeffery
    • Skyfall (2012) The James Bond series has always been about aging; it just was never acknowledged. For Sean Connery and Roger Moore, it was business as usual in their final outings.
    • On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969) Famed film critic Leonard Maltin once said that, if Connery weren't recast in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, it would be the best of the Bond films.
    • Goldfinger (1964) Three movies in, Bond reached a perfect synthesis of the straight-faced silliness of Dr. No and the ultra-cool spy thriller of From Russia With Love.
    • Casino Royale (2006) One of the many pleasures of a Bond rewatch is to experience the effect of how much of a pivot Casino Royale was for the series.
    • From Russia with Love (1963) Bond at its very best. Sean Connery is on top form as 007, delivering some magical lines, particularly declaring: "She had her kicks" after the demise of knife-kicking baddie Rosa Klebb.
    • Goldfinger (1964) Auric Goldfinger is our favorite villain, and he has the honor of delivering the best line in the whole series. As Bond has a laser beam heading for a very uncomfortable place, he pleads with Goldfinger: "Do you expect me to talk" to which Goldfinger smirkingly replies: "No Mr. Bond, I expect you to die."
    • The Living Daylights (1987) OK, this might be controversial. But The Living Daylights is brilliant! And we reckon it deserves to be this high on our best James Bonds films list!!
    • Casino Royale (2006) Before its release there was some grumblings over whether Daniel Craig would be any good as Bond, well he gave his critics an emphatic answer!
    • Ryan Heffernan
    • 'The Spy Who Loved Me' (1977) Rotten Tomatoes Score: 82% Universally heralded as the best of Moore's Bond movies, The Spy Who Loved Me presented a riveting, globe-trotting adventure as 007 investigates missing submarines carrying nuclear warheads.
    • 'On Her Majesty’s Secret Service' (1969) Rotten Tomatoes Score: 81% Marking Australian actor George Lazenby's only appearance as Bond, On Her Majesty's Secret Service is an often-overlooked addition to the franchise.
    • 'GoldenEye' (1995) Rotten Tomatoes Score: 80% While some of his ensuing films were lackluster, to say the least, Pierce Brosnan's long-awaited Bond movie debut breathed new life into the franchise which many thought would become obsolete after the resolution of the Cold War.
    • 'Licence to Kill' (1989) Rotten Tomatoes Score: 79% Timothy Dalton's second Bond film delved even deeper into the character's dark intensity which made his portrayal of the character so unique.
  3. In No Time To Die, Bond has left active service and is enjoying a tranquil life in Jamaica. His peace is short-lived when his old friend Felix Leiter from the CIA turns up asking for help.

    • (434)
    • Action, Adventure, Mystery & Thriller
    • PG-13
  4. Mar 20, 2024 · James Bond movies ranked: Every 007 film from worst to best. As reports claim that Aaron Taylor-Johnson has been chosen to succeed Daniel Craig as Bond, Adam White and Alexandra Pollard...

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