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Posted: 2020-03-04T18:27:58Z | Updated: 2020-03-04T18:27:58Z New James Bond Film Release Delayed Following Fans' Coronavirus Fears | HuffPost

New James Bond Film Release Delayed Following Fans' Coronavirus Fears

"No Time To Die" apparently has time to be delayed.

In 26 movies, James Bond has fought off obsessive autocrats, crazed plutocrats and various vicious nemeses, despite a lifestyle that puts him at serious risk for alcoholism and STDs.

But apparently, coronavirus is too strong for the British super-spy.

On Wednesday, the producers of the iconic film series announced that they have decided to delay the release of the next Bond film, “No Time To Die,” until November.

The film had been scheduled to hit theaters on April 10 in the U.S.

The announcement of the delay came via Twitter:

A subsequent tweet shared the film’s new release dates in North America and the U.K.

The decision to delay “No Time To Die” came a day after Bond fans posted an open letter asking that the film release be pushed back to the summer “when experts expect the epidemic to have peaked,” and urging the filmmakers to “put public health above marketing release schedules.”

The letter, written by James Page and David Leigh, the founders of two Bond fan sites, tried to speak a language they figured any person involved in making a film franchise can understand: box office receipts, citing stats for the 2015 Bond film, “Spectre.” 

“China and Japan have closed theatres for weeks. The Chinese box-office in January and February 2019 combined to $1.5b. The same period this year has netted just $3.9m - a 99.7% drop.

“Of the countries with large public gatherings banned or restricted, their combined ‘SPECTRE’ box-office was $313m, or 38% of the global haul.”

The letter then reasonably suggested that delaying the film wouldn’t be the end of the world, while appealing to producers’ sense of duty.

“It’s just a movie. The health and well-being of fans around the world, and their families, is more important,” the letter said. “We have all waited over 4 years for this film. Another few months will not damage the quality of the film and only help the box-office for Daniel Craig’s final hurrah.” 

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Before You Go

Ranking Every Single James Bond Villain
50. Aristotle Kristatos (For Your Eyes Only)(01 of50)
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A more serious direction for the series doesnt mean the villain has to have such a boring get-rich-via-the-Cold War scheme, but thats the case with this double-crossing informant. Being partly foiled because of a talking parrot makes him the worst main villain of them all. (credit:Everett)
49. Colonel Moon/Gustav Graves (Die Another Day) (02 of50)
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Were not sure what the worst thing about this villain is: that he owns an ice palace, that he had impossible facial reconstruction, or that he created a cockamamie overdone plot to reunify Korea with the power of sunlight? (credit:Everett)
48. General Georgi Koskov (The Living Daylights)(03 of50)
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One of the many villains who is just a stooge working for another, more powerful figure. He also repeats the whole pretending-hes-a-good guy angle. Theres so much thats stale about this character and nothing to like about him. (credit:Everett)
47. Dominic Greene (Quantum of Solace)(04 of50)
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Among the many reasons the film was a huge disappointment following the first Craig installment is this screeching weasel of a man. He is one of the most cowardly of all Bond villains and has nothing to make up for it. Hes not even worthy of a good death. (credit:Everett)
46. Osato (You Only Live Twice)(05 of50)
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Not only does this henchman devise awful ways in which to kill Bond, he doesnt even execute them himself. With such incompetence comes his own death at the hands of his employer, Blofeld. (credit:James Bond multimedia)
45. Professor Dent (Dr. No)(06 of50)
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Bond movies are well known for villains trying to kill our hero with elaborate devices rather than simply shooting him. Dents (and really Dr. Nos) idea is even worse: slipping a tarantula, which wouldnt even kill 007, into his room. Really, why not just stab him or shoot him or something else quick? After all, when Bond gets his chance, hell easily shoot you down in cold blood. (credit:Everett)
44. Kronsteen (From Russia With Love) (07 of50)
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SPECTREs man with the plan, but not only is he unable to make his plans work, he cant convince his boss, Blofeld, that hes not even the real one to blame. Also, nobody should ever be able to be killed by poisonous shoe spike. (credit:Everett)
43. Morzeny (From Russia With Love)(08 of50)
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Hes not given much, but this henchman comes back into the film late in the game, gets to kill a superior SPECTRE agent with a poisonous shoe spike and heads the climactic boat chase.
42. Helga Brandt (You Only Live Twice) (09 of50)
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Shes a failure at being a proper Bond girl by only pretending to be seduced by 007 and then staying loyal to Blofeld by trying to kill the secret agent. Shes a failure as a henchwoman because she doesnt succeed in killing him. When youre fed to piranhas by your evil boss, youre just not good -- or bad -- enough. (credit:Everett)
41. Fiona Volpe (Thunderball) (10 of50)
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Similar to Brandt, Volpe allows herself to get some pleasure out of Bond before having him killed. If she enjoyed it, and it appears she did, she should have switched to 007s side. Instead, she got to be used as a human shield by the secret agent, which is even worse than how he usually uses women. (credit:Everett)
40. Karl Stromberg (The Spy Who Loved Me)(11 of50)
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It takes a lot more than just being extremely wealthy, devising a world domination scheme and possessing a shark tank to be a Bond villain worthy of his own film. You also need a long-barrelled under-the-table gun that doesnt shoot bullets that move slower than your foe. Stromberg also doesnt have that. But he does have the henchman Jaws (who ranks a whole lot higher), so hes not a complete fool. (credit:Everett)
39. General Orlov (Octopussy) (12 of50)
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By the time you find out the true nature of this Soviet generals plot, you cant help but think there must have been a simpler way to carry it out. (credit:Everett)
38. Elliot Carver (Tomorrow Never Dies) (13 of50)
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Similarly, this media mogul weasel goes way overboard with his plans to set off a major world war just for the sake of accruing broadcasting territory. Hes totally insane, and not in a fun, eccentric way like many of Bonds other villains. (credit:Everett)
37. Stamper (Tomorrow Never Dies)(14 of50)
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Not much better than Carver is a henchman who would work for Carver. His strange senses that reverse pleasure and pain are a bit ridiculous, too. (credit:Everett)
36. Brad Whitaker (The Living Daylights)(15 of50)
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You gotta love Joe Don Baker, as bad an actor as he is. Hes one of those character actors who just exudes a villainous aura. But this true villain of Daltons first film isnt in the movie enough to have too much of an opinion of him. Also, he has the worst Bond villain name of all time. (credit:Everett)
35. Gobinda (Octopussy) (16 of50)
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As Kamal Khans bodyguard, hes basically a henchmans henchman. Hes not a very memorable one at that, either. Mostly, though, he shouldnt have been so loyal to his boss, especially when he knows his final fight against Bond atop a flying plane is a bad idea. (credit:Everett)
34. Miss Taro (Dr. No)(17 of50)
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An early double-crossing Bond girl, this secret employee of the titular villain is an attractive femme fatale but not a very fatal one. Shes so uninteresting that 007 just has her easily arrested after he has no more use for her. (credit:Everett)
33. Tee Hee Johnson (Live and Let Die) (18 of50)
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Didnt anyone tell Tee Hee that metal arms, as cool as they sound, always bring certain doom? See Dr. No. (credit:Everett)
32. Kamal Khan (Octopussy) (19 of50)
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Its hard not to like Louis Jourdan as the slithery exiled prince, but hes hardly the true villain. And even if he were, the scheme for which hes employed is so convoluted it doesnt even sound like it would work. (credit:Everett)
31. Elektra King (The World Is Not Enough)(20 of50)
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Its also hard not to like Sophie Marceau taking her role seriously as the first female Bond villain. Shes a neat twist on the usual bad-turned-good Bond girl to be friend before foe. But her oil pipeline plot is a bit much, making us think of Mr. Burns from The Simpsons, and shes the epitome of spoiled rich girls. (credit:Everett)
30. Miranda Frost (Die Another Day)(21 of50)
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As a double-agent who sides with Gustav Graves, her deal is basically a lite mash of main villains from Goldeneye and The World Is Not Enough. Shes gotta be crafty, though, to have had Bond locked up and tortured in North Korea for over a year. Too bad he doesnt get to fight her in the end. (credit:Everett)
29. Katanga/Mr. Big (Live and Let Die)(22 of50)
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Fast food restaurants are decent covers for drug operations, but theyre also probably more lucrative in the long run if you dont turn your customers into junkies by giving them free heroin with their fish dinners. And not just because it obviously ruins the front. He also had some of the sorriest henchmen and suffered the most embarrassing death in the whole franchise. (credit:Everett)
28. Hugo Drax (Moonraker)(23 of50)
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He gets points for boldly going where no other Bond villain had gone before -- that being outer space, not his unoriginal plan for world domination. If hes looking to repopulate the world with a master race, whats he doing with a freakishly large henchman with metal teeth? Does he plan to kill the offspring of Jaws and Dolly? Not cool. There goes more points for him. (credit:Everett)
27. Boris Grishenko (Goldeneye)(24 of50)
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The nerdy computer hacker henchman has to be a staple of villainy these days, and in Skyfall the Grishenkos of the world actually get promoted to the main villain. You cant go wrong with Alan Cumming, though the character himself is irritatingly cocky. (credit:Everett)
26. Renard (The World Is Not Enough)(25 of50)
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Hes one of the closest things to a superhero movie villain there is in the Bond movies, having a sense of invulnerability brought on by a bullet lodged in his head. And he kind of looks like a zombie Blofeld. Too bad that metal in his brain has made him crazy enough to work with Elektra King. (credit:Everett)
25. Col. Rosa Klebb (From Russia With Love)(26 of50)
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To be fair, she looks pretty badass for a woman who is technically a senior citizen. Yet she never really displays the proper brains or brawn to make her a worthy No. 3 or even any higher on this list. She underestimates Bonds ability to seduce and his capability with a chair, both very basic among 007s skills, and both enough to (credit:Everett)
24. Zao (Die Another Day)(27 of50)
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If creepy looks were all you need, this North Korean agent would be number one. But his deformity, having a face embedded with diamond fragments, is also too unbelievable to accept. (credit:Everett)
23. Dr. Julius No (Dr. No)(28 of50)
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He may be the first Bond villain on the big screen, but that doesnt make him the first name in Bond villainy. His strong metal hands seem cool at first, but they wind up costing him his life. And he has the dishonor of being the first Bond villain to make the stupid mistake of not killing the spy immediately when he refuses to join S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Also, his evil plan to anonymously mess with U.S. rockets winds up being rather paltry compared with those that followed.
22. Emilio Largo (Thunderball) (29 of50)
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Like No, hes just another henchman disguised as a true villain. He works for Blofeld and hes tasked with a nefarious plot -- to extort the world through nuclear threat -- that is sort of laughable even without all the parodies it has inspired. The eye patch will always make him look awesome, though. (credit:Everett)
21. May Day (A View to a Kill)(30 of50)
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Some may not like this combination of henchman and Bond girl, but we think Grace Jones kills it. At last, they bring a female henchman back into play and shes more frightening than the old ladies of the past while also serving as a love interest. (credit:Everett)
20. Dario (License to Kill)(31 of50)
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This henchman to the drug lord Sanchez is more notable now because actor Benicio Del Toro eventually went on to great things. Hes memorable, regardless, for taking no issue with shooting a woman in the back, cutting a mans heart out with a switchblade or attempting to shove Bond into a grinder. (credit:Everett)
19. Patrice (Skyfall) (32 of50)
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An assassin who we barely get to know, he does at least give Bond a run for his money in the new films incredibly exciting opening sequence, in which, after leading a great chase, he also does pretty well at hand to hand with 007 atop a train. (credit:Columbia)
18. Mollaka (Casino Royale) (33 of50)
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The chase Patrice puts on in the new film calls to mind the even better construction site chase at the opening of the first Craig installment. Parkour may be a joke to some, but the stunts this character pulls off are amazing. (credit:Everett)
17. Francisco Scaramanga (The Man With the Golden Gun)(34 of50)
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He would rank high just for being played by Christopher Lee, and he should rank low both for how cowardly he is in direct opposition and how easily he is killed. But this wealthy assassin is an especially enjoyable villain for all of his toys. In another life he might have made an interesting gadget-dependent superhero. He also earns points for killing his employer in order to take possession of the thing hes hired to acquire. Its not always cool being someone elses minion. (credit:Everett)
16. Irma Bunt (On Her Majestys Secret Service) (35 of50)
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A vast improvement on Klebb, who she is obviously modeled after, this elder redhead henchwoman has none of her predecessors awkwardness. She also had the honor of killing Bonds wife and, as far as we know, went on living in great health for decades to come with no mention of her death or capture in future films. (credit:Everett)
15. Nick Nack (The Man With the Golden Gun)(36 of50)
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Another henchman whose fate is unknown, though we like to think this diminutive assistant to Scaramanga wound up inheriting all of his bosss wealth and toys and simply had no reason to be a bad guy any longer. (credit:Everett)
14. Baron Samedi (Live and Let Die) (37 of50)
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Is he truly immortal? This entertainer and cohort of Katanga/Mr. Big, who gets points for having one of the most distinct looks of all minor villains, could in fact be a voodoo god, as the end of his film indicates. Whether or not hes the one supernatural villain in the Bond series remains up for debate after nearly forty years. (credit:Everett)
13. Max Zorin (A View to a Kill) (38 of50)
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Theres no denying hes just a Lex Luthor wannabe with his earthquake-based real estate scheme, but its Christopher Walken. And man, is he ruthless with a machine gun. Given that Walken is the only real reason to watch the film pulls Zorin up a lot, but is he really one of the greatest villains or is this just one of the greatest performances? (credit:Everett)
12. Franz Sanchez (License to Kill) (39 of50)
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Latin American drug lord villains were a dime a dozen in Hollywood at the time, yet Robert Davis is one of the few to last in our memory. Regardless of any criticisms with the film, he is at least an interesting attempt at a non-cartoony, more three-dimensional villain. (credit:Everett)
11. Red Grant (From Russia With Love) (40 of50)
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In only the second film we have this character who is being bred to be Bonds best match, a sign of things that would come many, many films later. And his mano-a-mano train fight against our hero is one of the best of its kind. He does seem a tad too cool, though, to be a henchman of a henchman, but at least hes the best example of that classification. (credit:Everett)
10. Jaws (The Spy Who Loved Me; Moonraker) (41 of50)
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It was a bit cheeky to have a henchman named Jaws in a film that also involves a shark tank so soon after Spielbergs film, and it might have been even cheekier had he been eaten by a shark. But test screenings led to the characters survival, and he returned, for better or worse, in the next installment (another blockbuster ripoff). Since he turns good at the end of Moonraker, he may not qualify for this list, but hes so popular that wed be severely reprimanded if we excluded him. (credit:Everett)
9. Mr. Wint (Diamonds Are Forever) (42 of50)
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One of a pair of assassins who are so morbidly amused by the murders they commit that they almost make it look fun. They are the most interesting, intriguing, oddball characters in the entire series. (credit:Everett)
8. Mr. Kidd (Diamonds Are Forever)(43 of50)
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The only reason Kidd (left) is better than Wint (right) is his groovy appearance, and the fact that hes played by jazz bassist Putter Smith. (credit:Everett)
7. Xenia Onatopp (Goldeneye)(44 of50)
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If you really want to put Bond to the test, you get a beautiful femme fatale who he cant turn good because shes just too darn sadistic. A nice foil for 007 and one of the many wonderful ways the film addresses the traditional Bond misogyny, even if not positively, shes a lustful and dominating Bond girl. A step above May Day, she has to go so far as to crush a man with her thighs to get pleasure. (credit:Everett)
6. Auric Goldfinger (Goldfinger)(45 of50)
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A businessman with a seemingly logical scheme, to raise the value of his own gold by rendering Americas temporarily worthless, Goldfingers relevance has always been high, especially for working with the Chinese. And while his laser execution methods are a bit dated, it still might be the most frightening near-death for Bond. He also gets a lot of credit for employing the following character. (credit:Everett)
5. Oddjob (Goldfinger) (46 of50)
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Not only is Goldfingers henchman the archetype for many others to come, but this very strong and stocky manservant-of-all-trades is mysteriously short on words and quick on the kills. Whether hes suffocating someone with gold paint or cutting them down with his razor-brimmed bowler hat, hes one of the most iconically lethal baddies in all of cinema let alone the Bond films. It takes a lot to hurt him, more to kill him and even more to make him flinch with fear. (credit:Everett)
4. Ernst Stavro Blofeld (From Russia With Love; Thunderball; You Only Live Twice; On Her Majestys Secret Service; Diamonds Are Forever; For Your Eyes Only)(47 of50)
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He is Bonds Lex Luthor, his Voldemort, his Dr. Evil. The series arch-nemesis with a cat on his lap and a trick up each sleeve. His survival over multiple films gives him plenty of points, as do his knacks for staying hidden, changing his appearance, faking his death with doubles and keeping 007 in pursuit rather than in control. And especially when portrayed by Donald Pleasance with a scarred face, hes downright creepy looking. (credit:Everett)
3. Alec Trevelyan (Goldeneye)(48 of50)
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If Blofeld is Bonds arch-nemesis, Trevelyan is his counter-nemesis (his General Zod, perhaps). Hes like an evil doppelganger who, as a former MI6 agent, has all the same powers as 007. Also, his twofold scheme mixing revenge with robbery is impressive and well-rooted in tragic backstory. Recalling Pleasances Blofeld, he too has a scarred face, which is more meaningful if not as creepy. (credit:Everett)
2. Raoul Silva (Skyfall)(49 of50)
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Its as if hes a Frankensteins monster of Bond villains, something that has been built upon to his arrival. Most importantly, like Trevelyan, hes ex-MI6, and so he makes another terrific match for Bond, even if hes obviously not meant to physically appear his double. Okay, so he goes a long way with an elaborate scheme and then some just for seeking revenge on one person, but he almost seems to also just be doing it all to have some crazed, anarchistic fun, like the Joker but more brilliant. (credit:Columbia)
1. Le Chiffre (Casino Royale) (50 of50)
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Probably the only Bond villain to give us nightmares. Between his bleeding eye and the torture scene, which frankly could have been our heros end were it not for happenstance, this terrorist financier is the perfect balance of being strange yet not ridiculous. (credit:Everett)