![]() It was beautiful, and light years away from the suave sophistication of Brosnan or the cocked-eyebrow ham-and-cheese of Roger Moore. Before the opening credits even rolled, Craig’s 007 was beating the shit out of a Euro-goon in a Prague men’s room. It took about three minutes-tops-to get past whatever prejudicial baggage audiences brought to the multiplex in his inaugural outing as MI6’s license-to-kill agent, 2006’s Casino Royale. (Well, no one who isn’t named Sean Connery at least.) And the evidence was right in front of our eyes from the very beginning. ![]() ![]() In fact, you could make a pretty air-tight case that no one has done more for the double-o franchise than Daniel Craig. This week, as the actor’s fifth and final 007 installment, No Time to Die, finally arrives in theaters, the Craig-as-Bond controversy couldn’t seem more absurd. Jay Maidment/Eon/Danjaq/Sony/Kobal/Shutterstock Here, he’s pictured in Casino Royale, his first Bond film. At 37 and somewhat waffling in his career, Craig was initially hesitant to take on 007.
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