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Just missing the cut were Diamonds Are Forever, Octopussy, The Living Daylights, Licence to Kill, and Spectre. They’re not great, but they fall just short of being able to truly rank amongst the worst.
5) Quantum of Solace

Spectre gets a half-pass for two reasons. One, it wasn’t lacking in ambition. Two, Léa Seydoux’s Madeleine Swann was a wonderful addition to the 007 canon.
Quantum of Solace has neither of those elements and its failure to be so much as coherent is even more painful considering Casino Royale is one of the best Bond movies. To some it flat-out is the best. Quantum of Solace doesn’t even feel much like a Bond movie, it feels like a Jason Bourne movie with it’s too-quickly-edited fight sequences. The film was made during a Writers Guild of America strike and boy does it show.
Stream Quantum of Solace on Prime Video.
4) Moonraker

Roger Moore’s fourth Bond movie, Moonraker, isn’t sure what it wants to be. If any installment of the franchise has an issue with tone, it’s this one.
This is a movie where the villain, Hugo Drax (Michael Lonsdale, very good in the role), sends a pack of teeth-gnashing dogs to chase down and rip apart a young woman used by Bond to get sensitive information on her employer. It’s also a movie where a villain from the previous adventure stops trying to break Bond’s back and instead links up with a Pippi Longstocking type. Oh yeah, and it’s also a movie with laser gun battles. It’s the 007 version of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi, which went through a long sequence at a dimly lit drug and sex den before ultimately ending up on a planet inhabited by space teddy bears.
Stream Moonraker on Prime Video.
3) The World Is Not Enough

GoldenEye was a perfect mixture of old and new and exactly what the franchise needed after two dour Timothy Dalton movies. Tomorrow Never Dies was a step down but still fun and had solid performances by Michelle Yeoh and Jonathan Pryce.
From its opening sequence, The World Is Not Enough announces itself as simply too much. It’s all style no substance. That trajectory would continue to its absolute breaking point with the next and final Brosnan Bond adventure, but this was the beginning of the problem right here. Also, casting Denise Richards as a doctor was an odd enough decision but calling her Christmas Jones? Come on, take yourself at least a little bit seriously. That said, The World Is Not Enough deserves some credit for putting so much focus on Judi Dench’s M, which was a tactic that worked here and worked even better in Skyfall.
Stream The World Is Not Enough on Prime Video.










