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Ranked

Top Ten Films of 2021

We can all agree that by and large 2021 was not a good year. Thankfully, in one aspect, particularly the movies, it was a rousing success. We had everything from terrifying horror films and boundary-pushing animation to heartstring-pulling dramas and top notch action flicks. After a year at the movies and at home glued to every streaming service under the sun we’ve come up with a list of our personal top ten films of the year. Granted we didn’t get a chance to see everything and while we recognise some films here have their problems, these are the ones that made us the happiest to escape to from the scourge that was 2021.

But first, some honourable mentions. Godzilla vs. Kong brought the long awaited earth-shaking showdown of Kaijus on the scale they truly deserved. Jungle Cruise was the spiritual successor to 1999’s The Mummy we never knew we needed, anchored by the terrific chemistry of Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt. The Suicide Squad was the hilarious, action-packed retcon of the abysmal 2016 instalment that proves James Gunn a master of the superhero (or in this case antihero) film. Nobody created an unlikely action hero out of veteran character actor Bob Odenkirk; a quirky, white-knuckle thriller from the creators of John Wick. Finally, the well overdue screenwriting return of Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, The Last Duel, proved a thrilling, at times harrowing follow-up; an awful subject matter told in a non-conventional, always engaging way.

10. King Richard

Warner Bros, 2021

Will Smith gives the performance of the year as the Williams’ patriarch; a deeply flawed yet deeply caring character who has carefully structured a plan to ensure his daughters dominate the game of tennis. Reinaldo Marcus Green’s film succeeds by focusing not on the successes of Venus and Serena throughout their competitive lives, but through its examination of the adversity and struggles they underwent to get where they are today. Saniyya Sidney and Demi Singleton quickly vault to the top of the pack as two of the most promising talents working today, but it’s Jon Bernthal who is the MVP supporting player, with an unusually quirky performance as coach-to-the-stars Rick Macci. An emotionally stirring sports biopic filled with heart, King Richard hits with all the force of a Williams’ sister serve.

9. Boiling Point

Ascendant Films, 2021

A kitchen caper that quickly moves beyond its one night in one location shot in one-take gimmick (no sneaky cuts here either, just one incredibly well choreographed 90 minute shoot) thanks to a carefully measured and constantly rising sense of tension, Boiling Point is, as well as an incredibly effective slow-burn thriller, a showcase for the talent that is Stephen Graham; a veteran English character actor who finally gets his time to shine here. Playing an overwhelmed chef on the busiest night of the year, Graham becomes superbly unhinged as problems are heaped on his shoulders, as a constantly roaming camera that moves from one disaster to the next contributes to a constant sensation that something is going to tip the scales here. When things do reach their peak and Graham self-destructs, it isn’t in a loud, overly melodramatic way, but a sad descent into the inevitable; a final gut wrenching piece of acting that cements Graham as a truly talented actor more than capable of carrying features like this.

8. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings

Marvel Studios, 2021

It’s not easy to break into a franchise as established as the MCU, but Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings manages to introduce martial arts to the long-running Marvel series and make it look easy, with director Destin Daniel Cretton delivering some of the most exhilarating hand-to-hand combat since The Winter Soldier. What really cements Shang-Chi as a top-tier origin story is the deeply tortured, unconventional father-son relationship at its heart, thanks in no small part to Hong Kong cinema legend Tony Leung as Shang’s father Wenwu. He gives a gut-wrenching performance as a man who has returned to a pursuit of power after the death of his wife, tarnishing the relationships with his children in the process and stopping at nothing to obtain the power to resurrect his true love. Wenwu is one of the few MCU villains with a genuinely compelling driving force behind him and Marvel’s first Asian-starring superhero film is all the richer for it, even if Simu Liu isn’t given the material he deserves in his debut.

7. No Time to Die

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2021

Daniel Craig’s final outing as James Bond was a far more poignant affair than most had expected; a typical thrilling, action packed blockbuster sure, but one that gave Bond (and by extension Craig) time to reflect on his legacy. Cary Joji Fukunaga’s film feels like such a satisfying conclusion for Craig; his genuinely compelling romance with Léa Seydoux’s Madeleine reflecting the shift in Bond from macho-man cliché of old to a flawed, fully formed person craving a quieter life with someone he loves. The combat is a return to the crunchy, gritty hand-to-hand combat of Casino Royale that gives every bout the sense of life or death stakes; brutally violent and dangerous for a Bond that has stepped away from the game for so long. While Rami Malek’s villain falls short of being impactful or compelling, No Time To Die succeeds as a giant, multi-million dollar ride off into the sunset for one of the greatest Bonds to do it. Whoever is up next will have a tough time dethroning Daniel Craig.

6. The Mitchells vs. the Machines

Sony Animation Studios, 2021

Phil Lord and Chris Miller continue to push the envelope when it comes to animation, following up Oscar-winner Into the Spider-Verse with the arguably even better The Mitchells vs. the Machines; a frenetic, endlessly entertaining apocalyptic family road trip. On a purely animation level there’s simply nothing else like the Mitchells, a vibrant and unique style that feels alive in the doodlings and cutaway gags that appear on-screen borne out of the mind of film-obsessed Katie Mitchell (Abbi Jacobson). That creative energy is in stark contrast to family patriarch Rick (Danny McBride), making for some heartwarming and emotionally shattering moments as Rick fails to understand his daughter’s interests, struggling to connect with her where once they were as thick as thieves. The Mitchells is also extremely funny, which should come as no surprise given the comedy all-star voice cast (alongside Jacobson and McBride are SNL alumni Beck Bennett, Fred Armisen and Maya Rudolph), delivering mile a minute laughs that perfectly complement the frantically-fast pace set by the constantly evolving animation. A step forward in animation that never forgets to have fun along the way.

5. Candyman

Universal Pictures, 2021

Reviving a decades-old horror franchise proved to be the right move for Nia DaCosta’s Candyman reboot/sequel, an atmospheric nightmare that creeps its way into your brain and sends shivers down your spine with each terrifying revelation into the mythology of Candyman. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II gives an unhinged performance as Anthony, a painter who feels a particularly sinister connection to the legend and its effects on the neighbouring Cabrini-Green projects, losing himself the further he investigates. Coming from Jordan Peele (co-written with DaCosta and Win Rosenfeld), it should be no surprise that Candyman packs a good amount of social commentary into its gentrification-focused horror but it never feels forced, with DaCosta letting the commentary flow from the situations that the characters find themselves in, rather than bombarding you with preaching messages. When things lean into the horror they do so with reckless abandon; a gory, balls-to-the-wall crazy finale capping everything off and reminding viewers why they shouldn’t be saying the Candyman’s name five times.

4. Dune

Warner Bros, 2021

Denis Villeneuve’s return to the world of sci-fi is nothing short of a masterpiece in big-budget filmmaking. A visual spectacle from start to finish, Villeneuve’s adaptation of Frank Herbert’s seminal novel about the political treachery and war between the Atreides and Harkonnen families for control of Spice (a precious mineral) amazingly never gets lost in the enormity of the source material, adapting a small portion of the books and doing it extremely well. Every planet is distinct, with production design that is, ahem, out of this world and Villeneuve uses scale to create some of the most jaw-droppingly impressive set-pieces in recent memory, whether that be the arrival of a giant sand-worm or the mass planetary evacuation of giant starships. At its core, Dune is a story about family legacy and with an all-star cast led by Timothée Chalamet and Rebecca Ferguson that grounded, relatable story shines through the spectacle, immediately investing you in Paul Atreides’ plight. The only negative is that we have to wait two years for the next instalment!

3. Spider-Man: No Way Home

Marvel Studios, 2021

Not only did Tom Holland’s third Spider-Man film live up to the hype that had been heaped onto it in the months up to release, but it flew past it; delivering a dark, more mature outing that never took the focus off Peter whilst juggling fan service and a complex story involving returning villains from different Spidey franchises. Alfred Molina and Jamie Foxx are a ton of fun reprising their roles here, but it’s Willem Dafoe’s Green Goblin that is the standout, the veteran actor slipping right back into where he left off in 2002, contorting his face to denote the different personalities at play in his head and bringing a chaotically evil energy to go up against Spider-Man’s youthful innocence. It’s the third act that truly cements No Way Home as a top-tier Spider-man film however, a rousing finale that brings together more than 20 years of on-screen history for a showdown that rivals Avengers: Endgame in terms of sheer unbelievable spectacle. If you haven’t seen it at this point, then you must be one of about three people – what are you doing?

2. Belfast

TKBC, 2021

A slice-of-life examination of a youth lost during the Troubles in Ireland in the late 60’s, Kenneth Branagh’s semi-autobiographical Belfast is a refreshingly intimate film from the usual blockbusters he directs. We follow young Buddy (Jude Hill) as he navigates the everyday problems associated with school and crushes, whilst struggling to comprehend the riots and political upheaval that have his mother (Caitriona Balfe), father (Jamie Dornan) and grandparents (Judi Dench & Ciarán Hinds) so shaken. As uplifting as it is harrowing at times, Branagh strikes the perfect balance between the childlike wonder which Buddy (Jude Hill) views the world through and the shocking realities of the uprising happening around the young boy, harsh lessons he must learn at an age far too young to truly comprehend them. But it’s the exploration of the people around Buddy, his family and friends that make Belfast such a special film; a celebration of Irish spirit, the collective humour of the place and the struggles that the people have gone through. Branagh’s best work in years.

1. Malignant

New Line Cinema, 2021

The best film of 2021 also might be its weirdest; a shocking departure from James Wan’s usual horror efforts that makes for one of the most refreshing, off-the-walls crazy films you can experience this year. What could be mistaken for another Conjuring or Insidious instalment from Wan takes a dramatic turn in the third act, with a reveal you won’t see coming that completely changes the tone and outcome of the film. That might sound like a jarring shift but Wan pulls it off so masterfully, slowly building up the tension of the events unfolding around Madison (Annabelle Wallis) through his usual carefully controlled scares and atmosphere of pitch-black dread that that twist feels like a relief, a punctuation of camp amidst reminiscent of 70’s giallo horror. This bold embrace of the weird combined with the tried and tested Wan-ism’s might not be to everyone’s taste, but there’s one thing you can’t argue: you’ve never seen anything like Malignant before.

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Ranked

RANKED – Daniel Craig Bond Films

The seventh actor to play the iconic 007, Daniel Craig has cemented himself as one of the greatest over the course of 5 films. Borne of a post-Bourne era of action films, Craig’s contributions to the franchise feel completely different from what has come before; less focused on the gadgetry and gaudy cars and more so on no-holds-barred action and a deconstruction of what makes James Bond tick as a person, rather than the mythical, infallible spy of decades prior. With his final turn as the super spy No Time to Die hitting cinemas, we’ve assembled the definitive ranking of Craig’s Bond films, as well as a little something about each film’s theme song, arguably as important to the franchise as a shaken, not stirred martini. Let’s get into it.

5. Quantum of Solace (2008)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2008

Quantum of Solace is a perfect example of why you don’t make a movie without a script. Notoriously rewritten as shooting was underway, Craig’s second outing as 007 is for the most part a confusing mess. Picking up straight after Casino Royale and following Bond as he attempts to unearth the organisation responsible for Vesper’s (Eva Green) death – Quantum – the film struggles to find a story worth telling; constantly referencing Vesper and Bond’s attachment to her but never furthering that exploration of character.

There’s a vaguely investing storyline involving Olga Kurylenko’s Camille exacting revenge on a corrupt colonel that wronged her family and the film sets the board effectively for Quantum to eventually morph into the iconic Bond organisation Spectre, but nothing that invests you in Craig’s portrayal of Bond any more than the phenomenal groundwork laid by Casino Royale. Still that opening fifteen minutes is something else; a visceral, pulse-pounding spectacle that the film never manages to top.

Theme Song: Another Way to Die – Jack White and Alicia Keys is a pairing almost as confusing as the film’s script, but somehow the warring sounds of White’s grungy guitar and Key’s silky piano come together to form a theme song that is incredibly rousing and energetic, even if it isn’t the most memorable.

4. Spectre (2015)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2015

Sam Mendes’ second Bond outing, Spectre marked a shift in the Craig films, embracing the franchises storied history where it had previously been largely ignored in favour of a gritty realism. That meant more gadgets, a more cocksure, smarmier Bond than ever and the introduction of Christoph Waltz’ Blofeld, leader of Spectre. When it works it works well, but more often than not Spectre crumbles under the weight of everything it is trying to accomplish, unsure of the tone it is trying to establish and resulting in the rare Bond film that feels strangely anaemic and bereft of excitement, even during huge set-pieces.

The way Mendes ties Spectre into Bond’s history – all 3 previous film’s villains were on his payroll – is interesting and certainly adds instant weight to the threat of Blofeld, but doesn’t do much to change the fact that Bond is still carving his way through an endless supply of henchmen, none of whom feel particularly more dangerous thanks to the Spectre moniker. The exception here is Dave Bautista’s Hinx; a physically imposing mountain of a man that is easily the best right-hand man of any of Craig era villain and who makes for some downright brutal hand-to-hand fight scenes.

Theme: Writing’s on the Wall – The sweeping orchestral hook in Sam Smith’s Bond contribution is incredible, rightly forming a major backbone of the rest of the film’s score. The rest of the song is an appropriately smokey, hazy trip through elements of Bond’s character that hint at the spectre (see what I did there?) of death looming large in the form of Blofeld.

3. No Time to Die (2021)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2021

Craig’s final outing as Bond might not send him out on as high a note as he deserves but it is nonetheless a thrilling, emotionally compelling ending to James’ story. After a failed attempt on his life leaves James questioning the loyalty of lover Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux), he retreats from the world for 5 years, only reentering for a chance at eradicate Spectre once and for all. The pivot from Spectre – the be all and end all of Bond foes and throughout Spectre very much built up as the end of the road – to an underwhelming new villain, Rami Malek’s Safin, doesn’t exactly feel organic, but given the (at one time) finality of Spectre, you can’t give director Cary Joji Fukunaga too much trouble for the attempt.

Other than that and a few hiccups in the humour department, everything else about the film is peak Bond. Chunky, hard-hitting fist fights bring the action back to the intimate level of Casino Royale and the relationship between Swann and Bond gives the film an unexpectedly emotional core; one that allows Fukunaga to reflect on the character of Bond and just how much he has changed from machismo cliché to a flawed, fully formed person craving an exit from his life of loneliness under Craig’s guidance.

Theme: No Time to Die – Like Adele before her, Billie Eilish’s skyrocketing career perfectly intersected with Bond, and her talents are put to good use here with an ominous, sombre piece that feels appropriate to wind down Craig’s tenure as 007. Like the film, it isn’t the best song to come out of Craig’s run but it is a solid addition to the playlist nevertheless.

2. Skyfall (2012)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2012

Skyfall is neck and neck for the number one spot here, a beautifully shot deconstruction of the character of Bond and the loyalty he holds for his country and M (Judi Dench). After a mission goes awry and Bond is presumed dead, MI6 is thrust into chaos when the identities of all undercover agents are threatened to be leaked by Silva (Javier Bardem), a former agent himself with close ties to M. Forced to reenter the fray, Bond more than meets his match in Silva – a spy of the same vintage from a different time – forcing him to confront his own demons in order to come out on top.

Sam Mendes brings such a rollicking pace to proceedings – beginning with a white-knuckle chase that moves from foot to motorcycle to train – and doesn’t stop until the credits roll; always beautifully shot (the Shanghai fight) and laser focused on Bond in a way that Spectre isn’t, favouring spectacle over how the action affects the character. And that character is a far cry from his youthful, energetic debut. This is a beaten down, ageing Bond that struggles to get back into the swing of things. The charming taste for vodka martini’s has turned into an almost crippling alcohol addiction and the swagger and bravado has turned to world-weariness. This is where Skyfall truly earns its place; in going beyond those surface level Bond tropes and looking at the man beneath, what is important to him and why he does what he does. The result is a touching, breakneck rollercoaster only narrowly beaten out by…

Theme: Skyfall – The undisputed best theme of Craig’s Bond filmography, Skyfall is a throwback to classic Bond songs; a grand, foreboding opus that slowly builds to a catchy, instantly recognisable hook that has yet to be passed since. It says a lot that the song also ranks among Adele’s best, a superstar performer who has an extensive body of fantastic work behind her.

1. Casino Royale (2006)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2006

It’s hard to imagine a time when Daniel Craig wasn’t universally praised as 007, but back in 2006 he was anything but the favourite choice to take on the role. That might be that little extra push that nudges Casino Royale past Skyfall into the number one position: how massively it overcomes the hurdle of audience expectations. Within minutes you’re sucked into this grounded, post-Bourne retelling of Bond’s rise to 00 status. Gone are the shiny trinkets and cheesy ice cap melting plots of Pierce Brosnan’s heyday, replaced with brutal bare-knuckle brawls and a not confident, but cocky Bond, eager to prove himself and earn respect. It’s a refreshing lens through which to view a cinematic hero as storied as Bond, especially the fresh take on his romantic relationship with Vesper Lynd (Eva Green), the result of which inches him that little bit further towards becoming the James Bond we know.

Chronicling his first mission with the infamous licence to kill, freshly instated 007 finds himself hot on the trail of Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen) – a financier for terrorist cells around the world – leading him to a high-stakes poker game in Montenegro, where Bond must keep his wits sharp if he is to survive the game and its deadly outcome. Mikkelsen’s Le Chiffre is the series’ best villain, a conniving, unscrupulous weasel of a man who plays the part of arch-villain well, but is really on the hook to those more frightening men financing his lifestyle. A Bond villain doesn’t get more menacing than a man who cries blood, yet Le Chiffre isn’t defined by this scary idiosyncrasy; a snivelling, scared man who has bitten off more than he can chew but must act the part if he hopes to survive his predicament.

The action similarly feels layered, only there where it furthers the story of Bond. Luckily for audiences, Bond is a particularly violent man and that means the action flows steadily throughout; a flurry of close-quarters encounters that Bond scrapes through by the skin of his teeth more often than not. That inexperience creates for some fascinating interactions between Bond and series staples like M (Judi Dench); unusually terse and tense scoldings that perfectly stage the adoptive mother-son relationship so brilliantly built upon in Skyfall. The poker scenes drip with tension; full of long, drawn out shots that have the audience looking for tells in the same way as Bond, before director Martin Campbell whips us away to a brutal staircase fight-scene and back to the table; exhausted and overstimulated in the same way as Bond. This is all after Campbell and Craig had silenced the doubters with the most thrilling action sequence of all 25 films: a frantic scramble through construction yards and up cranes that firmly established Daniel Craig as a new kind of Bond. James Bond.

Theme: You Know My Name – What better way to signal a shift in direction for the franchise than with the deafening guitar riffs from Soundgarden and Audioslave frontman Chris Cornell. The veteran rocker goes all out, with a soaring orchestral support backing up an already exhilarating hook. The perfect introduction musically to a totally different kind of Bond.

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Movie Reviews

No Time to Die

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2021

It’s hard to hear the name James Bond and not think of Daniel Craig at this point. The longest serving Bond at 15 years in the role, Craig’s entrance into the role ushered in a new era of gritty, post-Bourne action; less focused on gadgets and more focused on beating his target into submission. What really set his 007 apart from the rest was Craig’s willingness to play with the machismo of the role, creating a Bond that felt familiar in the ways he needed to while adding a vulnerability and emotional rawness that previous iterations of the character lacked. Bloated and convoluted at times, No Time to Die is nevertheless a worthy send-off to Craig’s Bond; a visceral, action filled romp that, despite a lacklustre villain, strikes a perfect balance between Bond old and new.

Following his capture of Blofeld (Christoph Waltz), Bond (Craig) has now left MI6 to start a life with psychiatrist Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux). When their travels lead them to Italy and an ambush laid by Spectre, Bond suspects Swann of a double cross, abandoning her and seeking out a life of isolation in Jamaica. After five years of this simple life, Bond is thrust back into the swing of things with the arrival of CIA operative and longtime friend Felix (Jeffrey Wright), who offers him a chance to take down Spectre once and for all. When things inevitably go awry, Bond and new 007 Nomi (Lashana Lynch) – along with usual allies Q (Ben Whishaw), M (Ralph Fiennes) and Moneypenny (Naomie Harris) – find themselves embroiled in the plot of a new villain; one with a particular link to Bond and Madeleine’s pasts: Lyutsifer Safin (Rami Malek).

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2021

Where the previous film Spectre struggled to maintain a serious tone while introducing classic Bond elements – the gadgets, the smarminess – into the grounded world of Craig, new director Cary Joji Fukunaga has better luck, albeit not without its problems. It is well known now that wunderkind writer Phoebe Waller-Bridge (of Fleabag fame) was brought in late in production to punch up series scribes Neal Purvis and Robert Wade’s (along with Fukunaga) script. While we can’t be sure what her contributions were specifically, there is a good amount of humour here that feels tonally jarring compared to previous entries, particularly in regards to David Dencik’s Russian scientist, who plays like every bad joke from a Marvel film roles into one character.

For the most part however, this humour works well to emphasise the “fish out of water” scenario Bond now finds himself in. Five years removed from his time in MI6, things have continued to move forward, even if he hasn’t, and nowhere is this more evident in the brilliant back and forth pissing match between Bond and newly instated 007 Nomi. Lashana Lynch is great as the sneering new 007 who does things by the books, ripping into James about his infamous charm with women and constant consumption of alcohol, but also delivering when it comes to the action; a legitimately strong candidate for Craig’s replacement should the series go that route. Ana de Armas also shines as Paloma, a CIA operative assisting Bond over the course of a mission. Despite only being present for one scene, she absolutely steals every frame; a wide-eyed, fresh-faced newbie who is more than capable of holding her own in an electric fight scene.

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2021

If Spectre was Sam Mendes pushing the franchise into bigger and bigger set-pieces, then No Time to Die is Fukunaga bringing it back to the basics that began with Casino Royale in 2006. That means a lot more close-quarters, bone-crunchingly violent fight scenes that shake the camera with the impact of each punch. Every fight feels life-or-death in stakes, and despite Bond’s pedigree as the action hero to end all action heroes, Fukunaga dials the intensity up so high that you forget this and become completely enthralled in the chaos unfolding, always on edge that one stray bullet or punch could bring Craig’s tenure as Bond to an abrupt end. When the action does stray into larger spectacle, the camera is always focused on Bond and his positioning within it and these sequences always serve to further the story rather than existing to justify blockbuster status.

In a film this massive (clocking in at close to a whopping 3 hours) there are bound to be weak links and unfortunately for No Time to Die that comes in the form of Rami Malek’s villain Safin. Fukunaga is given the unenviable task of wrapping up five film’s worth of story and in doing so finds little time to focus on the character of Safin; a facially scarred, creepy man with a shared history with a particular interest in Madeleine Swann and a clichéd plan for world domination. Malek gets by on his trademark blank stares and an uncomfortably softly spoken voice but lacks the quiet fury of Javier Bardem’s Silva or the cunning of Mads Mikkelsen’s Le Chiffre from previous films.

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2021

Thankfully Craig more than makes up for any of the film’s shortcomings in his final outing. After the notoriously difficult shoot of Spectre, he seems rejuvenated here, relishing the chance to flesh out Bond as a human rather than through his violent work. He comes to the action scenes with the intensity you would expect but it is the more humorous elements this time around that go a long way toward showing Bond’s development over the years. After all that time as the self-serious, suave spy he is finally softening into a man that wants more from his life and who is ready to tackle that with Madeleine.

No Time to Die is an appropriately epic end to Daniel Craig’s tenure as 007; a sprawling, globe-trotting adventure with the intense action and debonair charm that you would come to expect, but with a surprisingly emotional, reflective centre that wraps things up for Craig in a cathartic, impactful way. Rami Malek might get short-changed in his role as the villainous Safin and some narrative bloat slows things down at times but the good far outweighs the bad; not even to mention the terrifically moody theme song from Billie Eilish. A bittersweet end to a fantastic run as Bond, it’s understandably hard to swallow the fact that there will be no more time spent watching Craig cheat death as the super-spy.

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 2021

No Time to Die stars Daniel Craig, Rami Malek, Léa Seydoux, Lashana Lynch, Ana de Armas, Ben Whishaw, Naomie Harris, Christoph Waltz, Jeffrey Wright, Rory Kinnear, Billy Magnussen, David Dencik, Dali Benssalah & Ralph Fiennes – In cinemas now.

Rating: 8.5 out of 10.

8.5/10