Magzter GOLDで無制限に

Magzter GOLDで無制限に

10,000以上の雑誌、新聞、プレミアム記事に無制限にアクセスできます。

$149.99
 
$74.99/年

試す - 無料

Yesterday Never Dies

Mint Bangalore

|

August 30, 2025

James Bond is dead. Not only on screen—although the last of the Daniel Craig outings, No Time to Die, was indeed a weepie that killed him—but the character himself is now a perfectly lacquered fossil: aesthetically pleasing in a showcase, but dead as disco, and flagged with cautionary labels for young, impressionable visitors.

- RAJA SEN

007, for all his glory, is incapable of actually evolving, and to drag James into 2025 appears not merely futile, but a little uncouth. Placing a trigger-warning on a man licensed to kill is like driving an Aston Martin to a vegan food-truck.

Thus I urge Amazon, the new owners of the franchise, not to cast a new Bond. The best one-liners have long since detonated, the martinis have been shaken. What remains is a genteel spectre, smelling of aftershave and anachronism. "He manages to combine uniquely, I think, violence and sexism with a sort of weird camp fussiness about everything he eats and drinks and does," Victoria Coren Mitchell brilliantly ranted on Room 101, "and yet women are supposed to find him irresistible because he has special pens."

Brutally speaking, Bond is too toxic to live amongst us, and too iconic to kill off entirely. Who, then, should play him? Here is my bulletproof, gold-fingered argument: Nobody. (Insert Monty Norman's theme music in your head as you read ahead.) There is only one who always ran while the others walked. I say let Bond be played, henceforth and forever, by the one and only Sean Connery, resurrected by the necromancy of AI and the black magic of deepfakes.

If cultural baton-passing is inevitable, then surely the only safe hands belong to a digital ghost. Why not give the role to the original, and still the supreme, Commander Bond?

Mint Bangalore からのその他のストーリー

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

'Germany needs new partners as trusted alliances crumble'

Germany must seek new partners in the light of a changing global order, that country's economy minister said on Tuesday, referring to deteriorated relations with US that have resulted in painful import tariffs.

time to read

1 min

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

Fed set to pause rate cuts, with no clear path to resuming

Federal Reserve officials this week are expected to stop cutting interest rates for the first time since September, holding steady after three consecutive reductions.

time to read

3 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

Budget session to see motor vehicles, agri, IBC legislation

FROM PAGE1

time to read

2 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

State demography isn't destiny but still matters

RBI’ latest study of state finances offers valuable insights. Indian states are at different stages of their demographic transition and this will shape their finances and policy options

time to read

2 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

Impasse to end as ESMA, RBI renew pact

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the European Union’s financial markets regulator, on Tuesday said it has entered into an agreement with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to exchange information for the recognition of Indian central counterparties (CCPs), more than three years after a standoff began over domestic clearing houses.

time to read

1 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

MANAGING INVESTMENTS IN 2026 AMID VOLATILE MARKETS

POWER POINT

time to read

3 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Axis Q3 beat, margin test looms

Axis Bank's Q3FY26 profit surpassed estimates, despite continued margin-compression.

time to read

2 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

The India-EU deal opens up big opportunities for both

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government deserve applause for concluding a landmark trade deal with the European Union (EU).

time to read

3 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

India-EU FTA opens up import route for European carmakers

India’s free trade agreement (FTA) with the European Union, announced on Tuesday, will allow European carmakers such as BMW, Mercedes-Benz India and Volkswagen Group to use imports more strategically to introduce newer models and test demand in India, without committing upfront to local manufacturing.

time to read

2 mins

January 28, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Hindalco announces ₹21,000-cr aluminium push

Hindalco Industries Ltd, the metals flagship of the Aditya Birla Group, on Tuesday announced a ₹21,000-crore plan to expand its Odisha aluminium smelter.

time to read

1 min

January 28, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size