No Time to Die poster

YES, there be spoilers. So if you're spoiler sensitive, stop reading now. This is your last warning. To make what seems like an obvious point to me, spoilers are necessary for this post. I gave this post the most bland title to avoiding giving things away.

No Time to Die wraps up a five-movie arc featuring Daniel Craig as James Bond. It's a self-contained Bond universe that (mostly) doesn't concern the previous 20 Eon Productions movies.

Eon Productions got the idea in the middle of the arc (in between Skyfall and SPECTRE). Still, it's now official these films are their own thing. That's much the way that Christopher Nolan's three Batman movies are their own thing, not related to any other Batman films.

Whether Eon wants to admit it or not, the makers of the Bond film series are following the same path set by Fox and Marvel movies featuring Marvel comic book characters

With 2015's SPECTRE, Eon specifically adapted interconnected storytelling featured in movies made by Walt Disney Co.'s Marvel Studios. With No Time to Die, Eon has doubled down on that concept.

2017's Logan (made by Fox before it was absorbed by Disney), we had the final Hugh Jackman adventure as Logan/Wolverine. In 2019's Avengers: Endgame, we had the concluding tale of Tony Stark/Iron man (Robert Downey Jr.), ending an arc of more than a decade.

The concept, of course, is The Hero's Last Stand. The hero falls, but falls heroically. The audience weeps.

When executed well, it works.

To be clear, The Hero's Last Stand goes back a long time. It was included in genres as diverse as Biblical epics (Samson and Deliah) and Westerns (Ride the High Country and The Shootist). But Bibical movies and Westerns aren't popular anymore.

But comic book films are.

For example, Tony Stark makes the ultimate sacrifice to save those who matter the most to him. Sound familiar?

Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark/Iron about t to make the ultimate sacrifice in Avengers: Endgame (2019)

You may respond that's a coincidence. No, it's not.

The tabloids ran stories in 2018 and 2019 speculating about whether Bond 25 would kill off Craig's Bond. They also had stories asking whether Eon or Danny Boyle, No Time to Die's original director wanted to kill Bond off.

The Sun said in August 2018 that Boyle quit because he did not want to kill off Bond. The Daily Star said in April 2019 that it was Boyle who " to die in the arms of returning Bond girl Lea Seydoux in the 25th spy movie Shatterhand." (Oops.)

Regardless, we now know that somebody did. The notion of Bond dying has been in plain sight for more than three years.

To be sure, movies can have similar themes and still be good. High Noon and Rio Bravo featured western lawmen who were outnumbered by the bad guys. But the two movies had considerably different takes on the same notion.

Many Bond fans despise Marvel films. Many fans are in denial that Bond has been adapting Marvel film concepts (including Eon boss Barbara Broccoli).

Of course, it also works the way around. Both Nolan's Batman movies and Marvel's film output have been influenced by Bond. Example: Look at casino scenes in 2012's Skyfall and 2018's Black Panther, for example.

Regardless, all still comes down to execution. So how does No Time to Die's version of The Hero's Last Stand compare?

When I finally saw it, I'd have to say very well. The ending had been spoiled for me. Not in a, "I stumbled it while surfing the internet" way but hearing it presented to me full on. Nevertheless, watching it for the first time, it felt genuinely emotional.

You may disagree. And that's fine. The thing is, Bond's exit in No Time to Die is not brand-new territory.