Netflix Just Added Every James Bond Movie, So We Ranked All 25

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Skyfall – Gun Barrel Imagery Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

For more than 60 years, James Bond has been one of cinema’s most durable institutions, surviving shifting tastes, cultural reckonings, and constant reinvention. From Cold War fantasy and globe-trotting excess to post-9/11 realism, Bond has doubled as both blockbuster escape and a snapshot of its era. Few franchises have lasted this long across six leading men and 25 official films.

Now, for the first time, the entire mainline Bond canon is streaming in one place. Major streaming service Netflix has added all 25 Eon-produced James Bond movies, from Dr. No (1962) through No Time to Die (2021). With the series finally unified for a mass audience, here’s how these films stack up when watched side by side today.

What Makes a “Bad” Bond Film

This ranking isn’t about punishing big swings. Bond has always indulged in exaggeration. The real failure is sloppiness: movies that feel embarrassed to be Bond, collapse into muddled plotting, lean too hard on weak villains, or mistake grim self-seriousness for depth. I’ll forgive lunacy if the film commits to it. But a Bond movie still has to move, entertain, and feel like it knows what it is.

Pierce Brosnan’s Bond teams up with Halle Berry’s Jinx in the effects-heavy Die Another Day (2002). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

25. Die Another Day (2002)

The worst Bond film, hands down, Die Another Day, mistakes noise for imagination. The CG tidal-wave kite-surfing, ice palace, and “invisible” Aston Martin push the movie into glossy sci-fi gimmickry, while early-2000s effects and a nonsense plot drain tension. Its most significant legacy is forcing the franchise to hit reset and clear the path for Casino Royale.

Roger Moore’s final turn as 007 opens with a daring Eiffel Tower chase in A View to a Kill (1985). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

24. A View to a Kill (1985)

Roger Moore’s final outing suffers from timing: he’s visibly too old for the role, and the film mostly pretends otherwise. Walken commits, Grace Jones is memorable, and the Duran Duran theme is an all-timer, but the story feels worn, and the overall effect is more tired than triumphant. This is a bit of a sad swan song for the longest-serving Bond

Moonraker (1979) sent James Bond into space, embracing late-’70s spectacle at the height of the franchise’s excess. Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

23. Moonraker (1979)

“Bond in space” remains the film’s defining issue. Chasing pop trends, Moonraker leans into excess and scale so aggressively that suspense often evaporates, and the tone drifts toward parody. Lavish and ambitious, yes, but it still feels like a franchise experiment that never fully justifies itself.

Pierce Brosnan’s Bond faces betrayal and obsession in The World Is Not Enough (1999). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

22. The World Is Not Enough (1999)

This one should work, but it never quite clicks. Elektra King and Renard sound compelling on paper, yet the villain pairing doesn’t build real menace, and the busy plot feels oddly inert. It’s remembered less for its intrigue than its misfires, especially Denise Richards’ much-mocked Dr. Christmas Jones.

Quantum of Solace (2008) continued Bond’s emotional arc as a direct sequel to Casino Royale. Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

21. Quantum of Solace (2008)

A rare Bond film that feels rushed and incomplete. The choppy editing and frantic action flatten the geography and personality of its set pieces, while the villains barely register. Craig is committed, but the tone is grim, and the story lacks the clarity that made Casino Royale so thrilling.

No Time to Die (2021) delivered a bold, definitive conclusion to Daniel Craig’s tenure as James Bond. Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

20. No Time to Die (2021)

For a while, No Time to Die is artful and engaging, with genuine emotion and a sense of mystery. But it ultimately buckles under self-importance, mistaking finality for profundity. The closing decision leaves the franchise in a place Bond films rarely belong: mournful, sealed shut, and oddly joyless. This was the final Bond film to star Daniel Craig

Pierce Brosnan’s Bond teams up with Wai Lin for one of the franchise’s most kinetic partnerships in Tomorrow Never Dies (1997). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

19. Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)

Slick, loud, and disposable, this feels like Bond by numbers. Brosnan is comfortable, and Michelle Yeoh is the standout, but the media-mogul-villain concept turns cartoonish, and the action overwhelms the tension. It’s watchable, but rarely essential.

Spectre (2015) attempted to unify Daniel Craig’s Bond era by tying together its lingering narrative threads. Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

18. Spectre (2015)

The Craig era’s continuity obsession finally backfires here. Spectre starts strong but sinks under retcons and over-explanation, trying to stitch prior films into one grand conspiracy that feels smaller, not bigger. Immaculately made, but strangely hollow.

Sean Connery returned as 007 for the glossy, camp-leaning adventure Diamonds Are Forever (1971). Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

17. Diamonds Are Forever (1971)

Connery’s return plays less like a victory lap than an obligation. The tone leans into camp, the plot drifts, and the film feels like a collection of bits rather than a coherent thriller. There are pleasures, including Wint and Kidd, but it’s Bond on autopilot.

The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) pitted Bond against Christopher Lee’s assassin Scaramanga in a sleek, duel-driven thriller. Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

16. The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)

A near-miss elevated by its villain. Christopher Lee’s Scaramanga is a perfect Bond foil, but the film around him is tonally scattered, with awkward comedy and a meandering story that undercuts what should have been a lean duel—great ingredients, mixed poorly.

For Your Eyes Only (1981) grounded Roger Moore’s Bond with harsher action and stripped-down stakes. Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

15. For Your Eyes Only (1981)

A respectable “back to basics” entry, but restraint alone doesn’t make it great. Moore is solid, and the Cold War stakes are credible, yet the movie often feels muted and lacks a defining spark. Competent, even admirable, but not electric.

Roger Moore made his debut as 007 in Live and Let Die (1973), blending blaxploitation energy with supernatural-tinged menace. Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

14. Live and Let Die (1973)

An energetic debut for Moore and a clear tonal shift for the franchise. Some of its era-specific influences have aged poorly, but the film has strong pacing, memorable set pieces, and one of the best Bond themes. Uneven, but essential and often very fun.

GoldenEye (1995) introduced Pierce Brosnan’s modern Bond with one of the franchise’s most iconic action set pieces. Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

13. GoldenEye (1995)

A reboot that proves Bond still works in the modern era. Brosnan arrives fully formed, the post–Cold War update feels natural, and the film balances classic pleasures with a fresh sheen. Sean Bean’s villain helps, and the movie’s confidence sets the stage for everything that follows.

The underwater spectacle that defined an era, as Sean Connery’s Bond dives into danger in Thunderball (1965). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

12. Thunderball (1965)

A cornerstone entry that’s often admired more than loved. Its scale helped cement Bond as a blockbuster force, but the underwater sequences drag and dilute tension. Connery is excellent, and the espionage bones are strong, yet the pacing keeps it from top-tier status. Also, jetpacks. 

Timothy Dalton debuts as a colder, more hard-edged 007 in The Living Daylights (1987). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

11. The Living Daylights (1987)

A quietly strong introduction for Timothy Dalton. It brings a tougher, more disciplined Bond while keeping the formula intact, blending grounded spycraft with big action and Cold War intrigue. Dense at times, but purposeful, smart, and far better than its old reputation.

Octopussy (1983) balanced Cold War intrigue with globe-trotting spectacle during Roger Moore’s later Bond years. Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

10. Octopussy (1983)

Long reduced to clown-suit jokes, Octopussy is actually a first-rate entertainment machine. It’s packed with practical stunts, memorable villains, and relentless momentum, anchored by a fully comfortable Roger Moore. Chaotic and indulgent, sure, but it’s also one of the series’ most purely fun entries.

Timothy Dalton pushed Bond into darker, revenge-driven territory with Licence to Kill (1989). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

9. Licence to Kill (1989)

A misunderstood favorite that was ahead of its time. Dalton’s revenge-driven Bond strips away the usual safety nets for real menace and emotional stakes, and the violence, while shocking for 1989, feels purposeful. It’s lean, coherent, and unusually grounded, with a heart beneath its mean streak.

One of the series’ most iconic gadgets, the Lotus Esprit “Wet Nellie,” dives beneath the waves in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

8. The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)

The Roger Moore Bond that makes the case for his era. Grand, confident, and impeccably paced, it delivers classic spectacle without tipping into parody. With a strong villain, Jaws as an indelible presence, and scale that feels earned, it’s one of the most satisfying Bond movies to simply throw on and enjoy.

The first full reveal of Bond’s greatest nemesis, Ernst Stavro Blofeld, in You Only Live Twice (1967). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

7. You Only Live Twice (1967)

Bond iconography at full boil. The volcano lair, the henchmen army, the grand pulp scheme, this is the franchise’s mythmaking engine firing on all cylinders. Connery is slightly weary, but the imagination, scale, and production design make this endlessly rewatchable.

A modern reimagining of Bond’s most iconic visual motif in Skyfall (2012). Photo credit: MGM / Eon Productions

6. Skyfall (2012)

The Craig era at its most accomplished. Beautifully shot and impeccably acted, Skyfall folds legacy and aging into a sleek blockbuster with a memorable villain and enormous confidence. It can be too self-serious for my tastes, but as a craftsmanship and cultural moment, it earns its high placement.

George Lazenby’s lone Bond outing, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969), is now praised for its emotional weight and grounded action. Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

5. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969)

A film that proves Bond can change faces and keep its soul. Once dismissed for Lazenby playing 007 only once, it’s now rightly seen as bold, emotional, and formally daring, with muscular action, one of John Barry’s best scores, and Diana Rigg giving Bond real stakes. Imperfect, but essential.

Daniel Craig redefined James Bond with raw intensity in the high-stakes poker showdown of Casino Royale (2006). Photo credit: MGM / Sony Pictures

4. Casino Royale (2006)

The franchise’s most successful reinvention. Craig’s debut reintroduces Bond as reckless and dangerous, with tension-driven storytelling and an emotional throughline that actually matters. Eva Green’s Vesper is among the series’s best characters, and the film’s confidence makes the reboot feel inevitable rather than desperate.

Cold War paranoia and espionage thrills defined From Russia with Love (1963). Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

3. From Russia with Love (1963)

Bond at peak spycraft. Before the series leaned fully into spectacle, this is a tightly wound espionage thriller built on paranoia, betrayal, and human-scale menace. Connery is sharp and dangerous, the villains are grounded, and the movie trusts tension and atmosphere over gimmicks.

Style, swagger, and spectacle collided in Goldfinger (1964), often cited as the quintessential Bond film. Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

2. Goldfinger (1964)

The film that turned Bond into an institution. Nearly every franchise pillar clicks into place: the larger-than-life villain, the swagger, the sense that Bond movies are events. Connery is at the height of his powers, and the film moves with clarity and confidence that later, bigger entries often struggle to match.

Sean Connery made his iconic debut as 007 in Dr. No (1962), launching the Bond franchise. Photo credit: United Artists / Eon Productions

1. Dr. No (1962)

The purest expression of James Bond. Lean, confident, and unburdened by mythology, it introduces 007 as a working spy with quiet menace and total authority. Connery is fully formed from the start, and the film’s restraint is its strength: atmosphere, tension, and certainty. Strip Bond to his essence, and you end up right here.

With all 25 James Bond movies now streaming on Netflix, there’s never been a better time to revisit the full 007 canon and see how the franchise has evolved across six actors and six decades. Whether you’re rediscovering early Sean Connery classics or revisiting the Daniel Craig era from start to finish, this ranking shows why James Bond remains one of cinema’s most enduring—and endlessly debatable—icons.

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