The savviest and most exciting Bond adventure in years, and that's because there's actually something at stake in it.Read Full Review »
75
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
Die Another Day is still utterly absurd from one end to the other, of course, but in a slightly more understated way. And so it goes, Bond after Bond, as the most durable series in movie history heads for the half-century.Read Full Review »
75
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Brosnan, in his fourth time up at the Bond bat, hits this one out of the park.Read Full Review »
70
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
Tamahori's Die Another Day is an imperfect Bond movie. But for every patch where it's dull and lifeless or just plain stupid, there are also sections that are significantly different from anything we've seen before in a Bond movie.Read Full Review »
70
The New York Times: Dana Stevens
Perhaps the most satisfying Bond movie since "The Spy Who Loved Me."Read Full Review »
Dead-on as entertaining eye candy, a bona fide guilty pleasure -- for the first hour. But the movie loses steam and the sequences that dazzled in the beginning get overshadowed by the excesses of later scenes.Read Full Review »
63
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
Die Another Day is still as professionally mediocre as its predecessors.Read Full Review »
60
Washington Post: Desson Thomson
Surely it will not be giving things away to tell you there's absolutely nothing new about the latest episode.Read Full Review »
50
Washington Post: Ann Hornaday
Beginning to creak not only with age but with the strain of constant self-one-upmanship in giving us exotic locales, explosive geopolitics and unbelievable stunts.Read Full Review »