The triple-layered UHD100 disc sits comfortably opposite a Region Free, BD50 disc inside a black, eco-elite case with a glossy, lightly-embossed slipcover.
#DOLBY ATMOS DEMO DISC 4K CODE#
When redeeming said code via Apple iTunes, owners are granted access to the 4K UHD edition, presumably in Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos audio. Universal Studios Home Entertainment brings No Time to Die to 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray as a two-disc combo pack with a Digital Copy code. Nevertheless, No Time to Die is a fittingly satisfying close to Daniel Craig's performance as James Bond, which should rank as iconic and memorable as Connery's original portrayal.įor a different take on the film, check out Bryan Kluger's theatrical review HERE. Only issue is the rather lackluster villian Safin (Rami Malek), a terrorist leader who frankly, fails to pose much of a threat outside of his fixated vengeance, convenient ability to battle Spectre and resources to create a bioweapon. The explosive action is met with as much tense drama in equal measure, making for surprisingly moving espionage thriller that is thoroughly enjoyable with a well-earned conclusion to both the film itself and Bond's overarching journey. Director Cary Joji Fukunaga, who cowrote the script with three others, raises the emotional stakes for Bond and love-interest Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux) while still keeping in line with the sort of visual spectacle expected of the franchise. Since then, this grittier, edgier and more realistic take on the character - at least, in comparison to its goofier campy predecessors - has also been on a five-film story arc culminating in a tale that's largely satisfying yet somewhat wanting. Craig's iteration, however, is an austere, hardened hero who is emotionally and physically vulnerable, a man held accountable for his actions while carrying the traumatic weight of his decisions when they go wrong but struggles to keep them at bay. Connery's version was a confident, smooth-tongue womanizer with an undoubtedly debonair charm who rarely showed remorse or any misgivings, and little changed over the course of four decades except for the actor simply playing another variant of this familiar archetype. Unlike previous entries that date back to Sean Connery as the infamously suave and devilishly sophisticated superspy, Craig's Bond, which opened with Martin Campbell's Casino Royale, is a man of the twenty-first century. Daniel Craig's tenure as the legendary MI6 agent James Bond concludes with unexpectedly poignant results in No Time to Die, the twenty-fifth installment in the long-running 007 series.