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You could say is the Bond movie to end all Bond movies. Available to stream , the ends Daniel Craig’s 15-year tenure as with a bang and leave you wondering where the espionage series can go next. You don’t need to stick around for a post-credits scene, but there’s a nice Easter egg if you wait until the credits are done rolling.
“In Daniel Craig’s final outing as the suave superspy, James Bond finally gets a life,” Richard Trenholm said in , which is out now in the US and Australia. “The result is an epic, explosive and emotional swan song that throws everything it has against the wall for a genuinely unique entry in the series.” That’s especially true of the bold and unprecedented ending.
Let’s , but be warned: the following SPOILERS should be for your eyes only if you’ve seen the movie.
Infiltration
Bioterrorist Lyutsifer Safin () drags Bond’s former lover Madeleine Swann () and her daughter Mathilde to his on an old World War II island base between Japan and Russia. Earlier, Madeleine insisted Mathilde wasn’t Bond’s kid, but those striking blue eyes suggest otherwise.
Madeleine’s father, the late Mr. White, killed Safin’s family on behalf of when Safin was just a wee lad, so he killed Madeleine’s mother to get back at Mr. White. Madeleine got trapped under ice as she tried to escape this attack, but Safin saved her and became obsessed like a big weirdo.
Safin already forced her to take part in his scheme to wipe out Spectre with , a DNA-based bioweapon containing nanobots that target specific people. Bond unwittingly completes her mission to kill captive Spectre boss Ernst Stavro Blofeld (), as part of Safin’s revenge (cue maniacal laughter). But there’s more: from his base, Safin intends to launch Heracles globally, infecting millions (laughter intensifies).
Newly reinstated as 007, Bond and fellow 00 agent Nomi () infiltrate the island and seemingly succeed in opening the silo doors for a missile strike ordered by M () to wipe out Safin’s base. Nomi escapes with Madeleine and Mathilde, while Bond sticks around to make sure the base is destroyed.
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Bond’s fate
The silo doors start to close, so Bond rushes back to reopen them. Could it be a trap? It definitely is.
Safin gets the drop on 007, shooting Bond several times and infecting him with nanobots coded to Madeleine’s DNA — meaning he can never touch her or Mathilde again without killing them. What a jerk.
Bond numbly executes Safin and re-opens the silo doors, but it’s clear he doesn’t have time to escape. Severely wounded, he climbs a ladder to the roof and calls Madeleine to tell her he loves her.
“You have all the time in the world,” he says.
“She does have your eyes,” she responds, confirming that Mathilde is his daughter.
“I know,” he says, as the missiles come down on the base. “I know.”
With that, Bond is enveloped in the explosions.
Wait, James Bond dies?
Yes, for the first time in the character’s (and ), 007 is killed. The movie’s title lied to us. It’s pretty definitive too; he’d been badly wounded by Safin and the missile strike wiped out the island. But the legendary spy also seemed at peace with his fate.
This comes after Bond became a father for the first time (that we know of) and seemed ready to settle down with Madeleine and Matilde, making it all the more devastating. Pardon me, I have something in my eye.
What happens after his death?
Nomi returns to MI6 headquarters in London and M gathers her, Moneypenny, Tanner and Q (, and ) in an emotional toast to their late colleague during which M reads a quote from author Jack London.
“The proper function of man is to live, not to exist,” he says. “I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.”
This was previously used in Ian Fleming’s , appearing in Bond’s obituary when the world thought he’d died.
The final moments take us to the spectacular Italian mountainside city of Matera, where we met Madeleine and Bond at the start of the movie. This time, she’s driving with their daughter.
“Mathilde, I’m going to tell you a story about a man,” Madeleine says. “His name was Bond, James Bond.”
The credits roll, to the tune of Louis Armstrong’s .
How is that song significant?
Longtime Bond fans will recognize that We Have All the Time in the World from 1969’s , the sixth movie in the franchise and ‘s one and only outing in the role.
The title is darkly ironic — it’s taken from Bond’s final line after his new wife, Tracy, is fatally shot by Blofeld’s goon.
No Time To Die echoes On Her Majesty’s Secret Service in that it sees Bond growing as a person and apparently willing to leave spycraft behind to settle down. In both instances, fate intervenes — and something appears to have gotten in my eye again.
When did they start planning Bond’s death?
After the Berlin premiere of Casino Royale in 2006, Craig in a Dec. 30 interview. The original plan was to kill the character at the end of Craig’s fourth movie (Spectre), but longtime series producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson wanted him to do one more.
No Time To Die director Cary Joji Fukunaga was told that Bond would die at the end of the movie when he came on board, but the circumstances of his death hadn’t been finalized. Craig noted that Savin’s weapon created “an insurmountable problem” for Bond, in that he couldn’t go on living without endangering his family.
Where in the world did Bond die?
In the movie, Safin’s base is situated on a in the Sea of Okhotsk, which lies between Japan and Russia.
However, these scenes were shot on Kalsoy, one of Denmark’s Faroe Islands. The local government next to the Kallur lighthouse to mark the character’s cinematic death, according to Timeout, with an inscription that reads “In Memory of James Bond, 1962-2021.”
If you want to see the place for yourself, there’s a “James Bond Sightseeing Tour” (plus the cost of actually getting to the island).
Is there a post-credits scene?
No Time To Die doesn’t have a post-credits scene, but if you stick around to the end you’ll see the classic words “James Bond will return.”
The phrase has never been more reassuring, but we don’t know yet who’ll be taking over from Craig.
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