Review: No Time To Die
Daniel Craig’s final Bond outing is a little bit droopy

One of the few people definitely having fun in No Time To Die, the new Bond film, is Ana de Armas, who scurries away with the picture during her relatively brief time onscreen. Armas plays a CIA agent called Paloma, and while her revelation that she's only had three weeks' training makes Bond (Daniel Craig again) a little nervous at first, he needn't have worried—in no time at all she's dropping bad guys with a repertoire of flying head kicks and full-auto chatter-gun salvos that might constitute a successful audition for the job of 008. It's too bad she isn't allowed to stick around (although she at least gets to leave under her own power, unlike many a disposable Bond girl of the past).
Armas' sparkling presence highlights the surprising droopiness of much of the rest of the movie. Oh, there are the usual lashings of action—fists fly, snarling antagonists tangle, trashed Euro cars twirl through the air—and some of it (a mad motorcycle ascent of a flight of ancient stone steps, Bond's blind leap off a bridge tethered only by a length of guide rope) is impressive. It's just not quite up to the gloriously ridiculous standards of earlier entries in the 007 franchise. And in a picture that's said to have cost some $250 million to make, glorious is what we want, and maybe ridiculous, too.
What we get instead, in a movie that runs two hours and 43 minutes, is quite a bit of talk. Because there's quite a bit to talk about—to explain, mainly. First of all, psychiatrist Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux), back from Spectre, the last Bond film, seems now to be firmly established in the role of Bond's number-one lady. In a long and strangely flat introductory sequence, set years ago, we see Madeleine as a little girl being stalked across a frozen lake by a man in a creepy white Noh mask. This later turns out to be a demented terrorist called Lyutsifer Safin (Rami Malek, bearing perhaps the silliest Bond character name since Denise Richards' Dr. Christmas Jones in The World Is Not Enough). Lyutsifer, of course, wants to conquer the world, or maybe destroy it. Something like that.
Safin is headquartered on a remote island not unlike the ones occupied in the past by the villain of Dr. No, and by Donald Pleasence's Ernst Stavro Blofeld in You Only Live Twice. First-time Bond director Cary Joji Fukunaga has no qualms about deploying nostalgic callbacks in this movie, among them Bond's Aston Martin DB5 from Goldfinger—its retractable machine guns still fully functional—and, rather oddly, "We Have All the Time in the World," the touching farewell song for Bond's newly deceased wife in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, now repurposed for another nostril-quivering moment in this film. (Fukunaga also attempts to undo one of the indignities imposed upon Bond in the 2006 Casino Royale—Craig's first appearance in the role—in which a bartender put to him the traditional question of whether he wanted his martini shaken or stirred, and the new, more ostentatiously modern Bond replied, "Do I look like I give a damn?" Now, in another bar scene, he's back to the traditional drink-making instruction.)
As No Time To Die begins, we find Bond retired from MI6 and living in Jamaica, separated from Madeleine after an explosive vacation incident in Italy. He thinks his spying days are over until he's contacted by his old CIA buddy Felix Leiter (Jeffrey Wright), who wants him to do a job for the Agency in Cuba, where an important scientist named Obruchev has just been abducted by Spectre. Obruchev was supervising the development of a powerful biological weapon called Heracles, designed to spread disease via DNA and to be practically invincible. The evil fiends of Spectre are the last people who should be allowed to get their hands on it. Bond departs for Cuba.
As the story proceeds—and proceeds, and proceeds—many things happen. Bond learns that Spectre has business cards. He learns that he's been replaced at MI6 by a Black woman named Nomi (Lashana Lynch), and that she has inherited his old agent number, 007. And he is compelled to seek guidance from his longtime nemesis, Ernst Stavro Blofeld (Christoph Waltz), who still controls Spectre's nefarious activities from inside the London mental facility to which he's been confined (in a pointlessly elaborate and very Lecterlike glass cage). As soon as we once again savor Waltz's purring menace in this role, we realize how insufficiently interesting Malek's Lyutsifer Safin is, despite his island "poison garden" and his weird, parboiled face. Safin is the movie's most serious flaw,
Its most successful element, disconcertingly, isn't the usual abundance of gadgets (there's only a tricky new watch) or the traditional byplay with a parade of seductive women (this is a movie with not a breath of sexy in it). What's really most effective in the film is the romance between Bond and Madeleine. Craig hasn't been encouraged to express much in his 15 years in the Bond role (this is his last go-round), but Seydoux seems to have a warming influence on him. And as Bond's love story with Madeleine evolves, it's hard not to be drawn in, and in the end to be moved by it.
All of which is well and good. But this is a Bond movie, for God's sake. Where's the snappy patter, the unconquerable joie de vivre? There are only a few things we demand of James Bond, and "I love you" isn't one of them.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Heh. Just wait until the next completely politically correct 007 movie comes out.
Not gonna happen; numbers are sexist.
Sexy black woman sleeping her way through bad guys to get to the bad guy boss? Hell yes, sign me up! It's like they cloned Pamela Grier!
Gee, Brandycuck is a race-obsessed anti-masculine faggot. Who'd have thunk.
I made over $700 per day using my mobile in part time. I recently got my 5th paycheck of $19632 and all i was doing is to copy and paste work online. this home work makes me able to generate more cash daily easily. simple to do work and regular income from this are just superb. Here what i am doing. Try now… …
Click & Chang your LifeSITE== >>_________foxlineblog.Com
These are 2 pay checks $78367 and $87367. that i received in last 2 months.JHg I am very happy that i can make thousands in my part time and now i am enjoying my life. Everybody can do this and earn lots of dollars from home in very short time period. Just visit this website now. Open this web...... WorkJoin1
Seriously paycheck of $19632 and all i was doing is to copy and paste work online. this home work makes me able to fv generate more cash daily easily. simple to do work and regular income from this are just superb. Here what i am doing.
Try now… VISIT HERE
There are many many sexy black women out there. Ms. Lynch is not one of them. Ugh, no.
It will literally bother you more than climate change, and you think other people are the ones with the problem.
"Obruchev was supervising the development of a powerful biological weapon called Heracles, designed to spread disease via DNA and to be practically invincible."
Spoiler alert: It will turn out a cloth face covering will stop it.
Spoiler alert, there is an antidote, but people will refuse to take it.
Spoiler alert: your "antidote" that has resulted in 600,000 adverse reactions and 16,000 deaths is more similar to a DNA-based disease than the disease for which your antidote is the imagined cure.
designed to spread disease via DNA
So...a virus?
Bond. High interest rate T Bond.
So, equally fictional?
Bond. In our crime ridden cities, you don't have to post a bond.
Ana de Armas is 5'6" and guessing by her build, goes maybe 110. So "dropping bad guys with a repertoire of flying head kicks" seems totally, totally realistic.
Well, it is a Bond movie, I guess.
Never underestimate the lethality of stiletto heels.
Gee, Brandycuck is a cross-dressing faggot who appreciates the stronk wamen feeling of wearing stiletto heels. Who'd have thunk.
I’m shocked they haven’t already used “No Time to Die” as a title.
Just mash them up together for the spectacular “No Time to Live and Let Die Another Daylights Twice”
I just want the next installment in the Die Hard franchise to be called "Eat Shit and Die Hard".
$250M is crazy they won't make that back.
Didn't Craig say a few movies back that he'd rather be tied in a chair and have his balls beaten before he did another Bond movie?
I'm guessing he'll be back.
Not very promising; sounds like I'll be waiting 'till it's a freebe on the idiot box.
The whole franchise could have been brought to an end with "sometimes the old ways are best" Skyfall. Quit while you're winning.
I heard the Bond fill after next will return to using a man in the role by casting Elliot Page.
Franchise Direct's goal is to provide a reliable, authoritative platform where entrepreneurs can connect with franchisors seeking investors. In support of this objective, our mission is to be the leading online resource for franchise opportunities and the knowledge center of choice for anyone seeking information on the franchise industry.
haldiram franchise
With Ana de Armas in the picture - droopy is not exactly how I'd describe it...
No doubt. She has my full attention.
The first one or two Bond Movies with a new actor are usually the best and they go down hill. Both Craig and Connery were good starting but as the movies came out they went down hill. In the Pierce Brosnan set, he was not that good but Judy Dench as "M" was great. Her part also went down hill, but she was again great in the the first two Craig movies. A cold ruthless bitch that cared about her agents, but would sent then to their death for the mission without a second thought.
I think the problem is that they start out as Fleming imaged Bond a cold ruthless bastard that England keeps around for jobs that they don't talk about. After the first couple of movies they want to make Bond seem more like a nice guy, something he is never meant to be. Ask yourself this, in "From Russia with Love" Sean Connery asks that the girl fight at the gypsy camp be stopped. Would Ian Fleming's Bond have said this?
"Where's the snappy patter, the unconquerable joie de vivre?"
The cutting-room floor of Casino Royale, of course.
It seemed like innovation to make Bond "grittier," but I can't help but wonder how much simpler it is to churn out mix-and-match action and violence scenes without having to bother with wit.
Hot Take: Skyfall was all style and didn't make a lick of sense, even as Bond movies go.
Thanks for the great ride James Bond. Even some of the sillier films with Moore were worth watching.
The idea that completely changing the character of 007 is FANTASTIC!!
Just ask Ghost Busters or The Gunslinger!
Milk that franchise!