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Armed with a licence to kill, Secret Agent James Bond sets out on his first mission as 007, in which he faces a mysterious private banker to world terrorism and poker player. The boss of MI6, known simply as M sends Bond, along with Vesper Lynd to attend a poker game and prevent Le Chiffre from winning. 007 will not only discover the threatening organization behind his enemy, but the worst of all truths: to not trust on anyone.
This is a Bond movie, and everything comes back to him and the actor who plays him. The filmmakers took a big gamble on Daniel Craig and on a script that updates everything. This time, the gamble paid off.
Craig's humanised, more flawed interpretation of the role balances Campbell's physical direction and co-writer Paul Haggis's sparing wit, while Eva Green provides an alluring love interest.
This is a much more serious Bond than we've seen in many years. Daniel Craig inhabits the dark side of the secret agent really well, he is absolutely the best Bond since Connery.
Unlike recent Bonds, whose kills had no more weight than the one-liners that generally accompanied them, Craig's tend to be intimate, bloody, and devoid of glamour.