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With a license to kill, Bond faces off against various villains and criminal organizations, employing high-tech gadgets, espionage, and charm. I was becoming a star, whatever that means, and people wanted me in their films. Could there be this Bond? That Bond? You can be the fantasy. A lot remains unknown about the Bond franchise's future, but his sexual orientation is sure to remain a divisive point.
Source: THR
- Created by
- Ian Fleming, Albert R.
Broccoli
- First Film
- Dr. It would look reactionary, like I was showing my range,” and he said he wasn’t interested in the prospect of taking fans of Bond through to a different depiction of masculinity:
“It’s just not a conversation I wanted.
It’s time the franchise also had a license to grow up.
The question isn’t whether the world is ready. And even now, young actors like Taylor Zakhar Perez keep their private lives opaque, aware that one declaration could close doors.
Casting an openly gay Bond would be a cultural reset button. Incredible…
“I was so exhausted at the end of a Bond it would take me six months to recover emotionally.
Seven actors have played him since 1962, all straight — or at least all straight in the public eye. Rupert Everett has said his career stalled after he came out. Isn’t it time we let an openly gay actor slip into the tux and adjust the cufflinks?
This isn’t about rewriting 007 as a gay man (though, honestly, that would be fascinating).
Imagine the message sent to millions of queer kids (and adults) worldwide: You can be the hero. But Bond doesn’t belong to those markets alone — he belongs to the world. Check out the director's comment below, which includes praise for Craig:
“Guys, let’s be adults in the room for a second. It would tell audiences: your heroes can look like you, love like you, and still save the world before the credits roll.
Bond has a license to kill.
The point of a franchise is to grow with the times, not calcify into a museum piece.
The Talent Is There
If the producers have the courage, the shortlist practically writes itself:
Luke Evans – All the grit, style, and action experience you could ask for.
Jonathan Bailey – Romantic lead magnetism with an edge.
Ben Whishaw – Already in the Bond family as Q, and capable of dangerous charm.
Russell Tovey – Rugged, grounded, and utterly believable in a fight or a love scene.
Matt Bomer – Impossibly polished, with both warmth and steel.
Cheyenne Jackson – Tall, magnetic, and movie-star ready.
Andrew Scott – A master of intensity who could reinvent Bond’s psychological depth.
Wentworth Miller – Brains, brawn, and a quiet menace.
Any one of them could step into the role tomorrow and make it sing — or smolder.
Why It Matters Beyond Bond
Hollywood’s history here is damning.
After actor Pierce Brosnan retired as Ian Fleming's iconic British superspy, Craig became 007 in 2006 with the acclaimed Casino Royale. So anything that is going to inflame that conversation? While some popular Bond candidates are Black, such as Idris Elba and Regé-Jean Page, changing the character to a woman or re-imagining him as gay would likely be more divisive as that fundamentally changes the character.
Bond's Sexual Orientation Is Part Of A Larger Conversation
Guadagnino is right, of course, about Bond's ability to accomplish his missions being more important than his sexual orientation.
The Cold War spy became a global counterterrorism agent.