Instead, audiences met a blunt instrument: a newly-minted “00” agent who is arrogant, brutal, emotionally reckless, and—most shockingly—fallible. Directed by Martin Campbell (who had previously relaunched the franchise with GoldenEye in 1995), Casino Royale rebooted Bond from the ground up, stripping the character to his literary origins in Ian Fleming’s 1953 novel.
Many fans and critics rank Casino Royale as the best James Bond film ever made. It honors Fleming’s original novel while forging a new path for 21st-century spy cinema. It has the brains of a thriller, the heart of a tragedy, and the brawn of a bare-knuckle brawl. Most of all, it answers the question: Who is James Bond? A man with a license to kill, but no license to feel—until, for one film, he allows himself to. And it’s devastating. James Bond- Casino Royale
The film’s centerpiece is an hour-long poker sequence. Through tense, close-quarter direction and sharp editing, Campbell makes shuffling cards and reading “tells” as thrilling as any car chase. The game becomes a psychological chess match, revealing character through every bluff and call. Instead, audiences met a blunt instrument: a newly-minted