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    Best Ever Bond

    2002 · Action · 1h 26m

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  1. Pierce Brosnan brought back the sophisticated sex appeal, as the best Bond in the not-so-greatest movies. GoldenEye was intoxicating Certified Fresh fun, while the three that followed are all...

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  3. Jon Skillings. Joal Ryan. Feb. 23, 2023 3:28 p.m. PT. 13 min read. There have been a lot of James Bond movies over the years. The most famous secret agent on the planet has been a pop culture...

    • Overview
    • 7. David Niven
    • 6. George Lazenby
    • 5. Timothy Dalton
    • 4. Roger Moore
    • 3. Daniel Craig
    • 2. Sean Connery
    • 1. Pierce Brosnan
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    By Samuel Roberts

    last updated 29 September 2021

    Which 007 comes out on top?

    (Image credit: EON / MGM)

    Your pick for the best James Bond actor will depend on a few factors: when you were born, what you like in a Bond film, and how your version of 007 is supposed to behave. 

    Doomed to sit at the bottom of these lists forever, David Niven was considered Ian Fleming's ideal James Bond – and he certainly looks and sounds the part in the spoof-like 1967 Casino Royale, where several actors play the role. As an older take on the character, he had a ton of potential and feels like a good fit for the 007 Fleming put on the pag...

    A one-hit wonder, it's hard to argue that Lazenby is the best part of the single Bond movie he starred in – 1969's On Her Majesty's Secret Service features better turns from Telly Savalas as an intimidating Blofeld and Diana Rigg as Bond's doomed partner, Tracy di Vicenzo. Lazenby is charming and looks like Bond, but he's no Connery, even if the movie's notoriously bleak ending brings greatness out of him. 

    Still, the Australian actor's association with that movie, which has grown in standing over time thanks to praise from the likes of Steven Soderbergh, means he's far from overlooked these days. Like Dalton, he makes you think of the subsequent Bond films that never were, but his legacy remains surprisingly tight almost five decades later.

    A sort of proto-Daniel Craig, Timothy Dalton's turn as James Bond results in two somewhat serious but mostly solid outings in The Living Daylights and License to Kill. Following the borderline-Carry On vibe of Roger Moore's films, Bond needed to get more dramatic again, and Dalton imbued the British spy with an intensity and romantic edge that made him memorable. 

    The Living Daylights definitely looks and feels like a Bond movie, though License to Kill is more up for debate, instead having the violent flavor of an '80s action flick. It's just a shame he didn't get more movies to grow into the character.

    Roger Moore's Bond films are mostly synonymous with innuendo, silly comedy and preposterous side characters like Jaws and Sheriff John W. Pepper. This is an important era of James Bond as a pop culture figure, though, and Moore's films are raucously entertaining and full of great action when they're at their best. Yes, the tonal shifts go too far in the likes of Moonraker, but For Your Eyes Only is still one of the best Bond movies of all time. Moore definitely put his comical stamp on the character.  

    Moore played Bond for 12 years next to Daniel Craig's 15, but was more prolific, starring in seven movies total. His age in the role became more obvious over time – he was 45 when he filmed Live and Let Die, and in his late 50s in A View to a Kill – but he was a great custodian of 007, and remains a decent choice for younger Bond fans getting into the series (the occasionally lewd jokes aside).

    Daniel Craig gave the film franchise the gritty reset it needed after Die Another Day – and over time, his version warmed up and got closer to the Bonds of old as the films brought in Q, gadgets and more humor. The Craig films are wildly inconsistent: you've got two duds in Quantum of Solace and Spectre, alongside two genuine classics in Casino Royale and Skyfall. We'll need to let the dust settle on No Time to Die before making a call on that one. 

    Craig brings to the role a sort of cold masculinity and brutal physicality, landing the part after starring in the excellent British crime thriller Layer Cake. The films around Craig have formed a vague serialized plot, if not a satisfying one – but he's brought credible depth to 007, and will likely cast a long shadow on the role for decades to come.

    Who is the best James Bond? Ask any dad, and they'll probably say Sean Connery. That he ranks only second on our list shows how interest in 007 is generational, to a large extent, with fans opting for 'their' Bond rather than an objective choice based on the quality of the movies. 

    Still, Connery makes a fine showing in our list, and why wouldn't he? Everything the role is now lives in the actor's shadow: the suaveness of it, the violence just below the surface, the wry humor. In some ways, Bond feels shackled by these elements, but it's also what makes him such an appealing movie icon. Connery's turns in Dr No, From Russia With Love and Goldfinger transformed Bond into an immortal silver screen hero, even if some parts of his movies inevitably don't stand the test of time.

    A great Bond with only a single classic movie to his name, Pierce Brosnan's passion for the role was obvious. He was a perfect '90s Bond, bringing humor back to the character along with charm and a terrific head of hair. The actor waited so many years to get the part – he initially missed out back in 1987, when a TV show contract for NBC's forgotten Remington Steele stopped him from becoming 007. 

    His performance throughout his four movies is consistent, but the films are not. GoldenEye is a post-Cold War classic and a top five Bond movie, while Tomorrow Never Dies and The World is Not Enough are middling by comparison. Finally, Die Another Day means Brosnan is forced to bow out with a true dud, weighed down by product placement and silly imagery like an invisible car, which is a little unfair. You almost wonder what he'd have made of starring in Dalton's more dramatic and violent films. Either way, he remains our favorite.

    Side note: Brosnan's popularity among TechRadar's editors is surely, in part, driven by playing too much GoldenEye 007 on N64. We love that game.

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    • 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.
  4. Dec 8, 2021 · Best James Bond movies. 1. Casino Royale (2006) Film. The Bond franchise was in need of a shot in the arm after the retirement of Pierce Brosnan and an over-reliance on wonky effects and bad...

  5. Mar 4, 2024 · Nobody does it better – but which did it best? Ranking all 25 official James Bond movies, from Dr. No to No Time to Die.

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