This is a Bond who needs naps. A Bond who struggles to pull himself up a rope. A Bond who relies on wit and cunning rather than raw physical dominance. When he fights the massive, silent henchman Lippe (Pat Roach) in a kitchen, he wins not by karate chops, but by encasing the man’s leg in concrete and jamming a parsnip into his neck.
The results were a statistical draw. Octopussy grossed $187.5 million worldwide. Never Say Never Again grossed $160 million. Given that the renegade film cost less to make and Connery took a massive upfront salary, it was considered a financial success. Critically, reception was mixed. Critics loved Connery’s charisma and the novel “aging hero” theme but decried the sluggish pacing and cheap-looking production design (the film feels more like a 70s TV movie than a lavish Bond epic). Never Say Never Again -James Bond 007-
Along the way, Bond encounters the (Barbara Carrera), a gleefully sadistic SPECTRE agent who rivals Rosa Klebb for sheer unhinged sexuality and violence. Carrera’s performance is a masterclass in camp villainy—she kills a man with a flick of her poisoned earring and seduces Bond while piloting a horse. The official Bond girl is Domino Petachi (Kim Basinger in an early, luminous role), Largo’s kept woman and the sister of the stolen warheads’ pilot. The “Old Man Bond” Theme: A Midlife Crisis at 10 Megatons What distinguishes Never Say Never Again from every other Bond film is its unflinching focus on mortality. By 1983, Sean Connery was 52 years old. He looked fantastic, but he was no longer the fluid, violent brute of From Russia with Love . The film weaponizes this. This is a Bond who needs naps
In 2013, after decades of litigation, the rights to Never Say Never Again reverted to MGM (the studio behind EON’s Bond). For the first time, the “rogue Bond” was officially allowed to sit alongside Dr. No and Skyfall in the home video box sets. Today, it is legally recognized as a valid part of the 007 filmography, albeit the black sheep of the family. For modern audiences raised on Daniel Craig’s brutal, emotional Bond, Never Say Never Again feels surprisingly prescient. Craig’s Bond in No Time to Die (2021) is also an aging warrior, weary of the game, facing irrelevance. Connery did it first, in a cheap wig, with a video-game-obsessed villain. When he fights the massive, silent henchman Lippe
By the late 1970s, McClory decided to exercise that right. Simultaneously, Sean Connery—who had famously sworn he would “never again” play James Bond after the exhausting shoot of You Only Live Twice (1967) and the disastrous The Shaws of Kilbride fiasco—was offered a king’s ransom. The offer was a staggering $5 million (over $15 million today) plus a percentage of the gross, making him the highest-paid actor in Hollywood at the time.
Look at the famous “Riding the Bomb” sequence in Dr. No ? Never Say Never Again reverses it. Bond is forced to ride a nuclear warhead on a test drive through a missile silo, but it’s not heroic; it’s terrifying. The camerawork is shaky, the lighting is harsh, and Connery’s face is a mask of genuine panic.