Fortunately for us, that stubble is as easily cured as Bruce Wayne's broken leg was in The Dark Knight Rises, a film that this one echoes to a surprising degree.) (The-44-year-old Craig's frequently uncovered body still appears to be chiseled out of marble, but we understand that he's a mojo-depleted, pill-popping wreck for part of the movie because he grows a little stubble. It reintroduces the some of the series' iconic-but-lately-absent tropes and characters while preserving Daniel Craig's fresh take on the role, even as it asks whether he's already over the hill. I assume he formed this habit after people began showing a quite sensible reluctance to accept his business card. I am pleased to reaffirm what you've already read about it if you care at all about James Bond movies: The film is good and occasionally great, restoring the character to his rightful station as the grandest of screen spies - or at least the one most likely to take time to introduce himself to the targets of his spycraft by his last, then his first-and-last, names.
Skyfall, the 23rd canonical James Bond movie, came out in the U.S. Daniel Craig stars as James Bond in Skyfall.