IfJames Bondwere born today, he’d be algorithmically generated — a hot guy with PTSD in a three-piece suit, trying to defuse both a bomb and his childhood trauma before the autoplay countdown ends. Long gone are the Cold War chess games and dry martinis — today’s spycraft is content-aware, morally unstable, and almost always filtered through some kind of neon grit. Bond’s new training ground wouldn’t be a classified MI6 facility; it’d be the Netflix action tab, where covert ops and identity crises blur into one continuous stream of gorgeously over-choreographed chaos.
These films aren’t canon, but they are calibration. Each one feels like a simulation: trials in improvisation, trust issues, and the kind of steely charisma that only works when you’re bleeding internally and still somehow making it fashion. From bodyguard gigs in collapsing governments to memory-wiped assassins doing Parkour through plot holes, these movies offer more than adrenaline — they offer a vibe check for the postmodern spy. Bond might not survive all of them, but watching them? That’s the first mission.

14’The Gray Man' (2022)
The Gray Man
Directed by the Russo brothers,The Gray Manis the cinematic equivalent of a creatine protein shake chased with a flashbang. Ryan Gosling stars as Sierra Six, a CIA black ops assassin recruited from prison, trained to be disposable, and haunted by both his past and Chris Evans. And yes — Evans, in the year’s most deranged mustache, plays Lloyd Hansen, a sadistic former operative who treats international manhunts like improv theater. Ana de Armas is the film’s moral center and tactical ballast, operating somewhere between handler, partner, and the only person in the movie who looks like she’s read a Geneva Convention. It’s shot like an Instagram reel of destruction: neon lights, drone spirals, and Gosling bleeding through his shirt like it’s stitched from existential dread.
The Gray Manisn’t just Bond-coded — it’s Bond accelerated, remixed, and deep-fried in franchise oil. Gosling’s Sierra Six is closest to Daniel Craig’s tenure: wounded, taciturn, and allergic to clean exits. But where Craig’s Bond was grappling with a crumbling empire, ‘The Gray Man’ trades MI6 polish for CIA rot — no old-world elegance, just outsourced ethics and tech billionaires with private armies. It’s lessSkyfalland moreQuantum of Solacereimagined by a Red Bull marketing team, but the core remains: one emotionally compromised man doing ethically shaky things for people who might not deserve his loyalty. If early Bond was cool under pressure, Six is pressure embodied — stylish, savage, and just brittle enough to break.

13’Extraction' (2020)
Extraction
Chris Hemsworth plays Tyler Rake (yes, Rake), a mercenary-for-hire who spends most ofExtractioncarrying a kidnapped boy through Dhaka while accumulating blunt force trauma and a surprising amount of pathos. Directed by Sam Hargrave — a former stunt coordinator — the film is built around long-take action sequences that move like bodycam ballet: brutal, intimate, and spatially immersive. Hemsworth is perfectly cast as a soldier whose grief has calcified into recklessness; he’s not trying to survive so much as atone. Supporting turns by Randeep Hooda and Golshifteh Farahani, who is brilliant as always, give the film an unexpected emotional counterweight, while the city itself becomes a character — kinetic, hostile, unforgiving.
License to Grieve: Bond as Blunt Instrument
Extractionfeels like Bond if you stripped away the tuxedo and left only the trauma. It’s Craig-era in spirit — thinkCasino Royale’s bathroom brawlstretched across 90 minutes — but emotionally closer to a Bourne-style existential reckoning. Tyler Rake doesn’t charm or seduce; he endures. His mission isn’t glamourized — it’s soaked in guilt, sweat, and moral ambiguity. What connects it to Bond is the mythology of the lone operative with just enough humanity left to bleed for a stranger. And in that way,Extractionfunctions as a sort of raw training module: a crucible in which old-school espionage polish burns away, leaving a haunted man and a target he refuses to let die.
12’Red Notice' (2021)
Red Notice
Red Noticeis what happens when the spy genre eats itself and asks for dessert. Starring Dwayne Johnson as an FBI profiler, Ryan Reynolds as the world’s most sarcastic art thief, and Gal Gadot as the slinky wildcard who keeps stealing the frame, the film is less a thriller and more a Bond movie trapped in a rom-com’s body. The plot — involving ancient Egyptian eggs, Interpol chases, and too many double crosses — is largely decorative. What matters is the chemistry: Johnson’s straight man, Reynolds’ punchline machine, and Gadot’s forced smirking chaos create a cocktail that’s fizzy, fast, and unashamedly artificial.
The Brosnan Era, Reimagined by the Algorithm
Red Noticeis pure Pierce Brosnan-era Bond: glossy, maximalist, and uninterested in whether the logic checks out. It sharesTomorrow Never Dies’fixation with media spectacle andDie Another Day’sallergy to subtlety — but instead of invisible cars, we get NFTs and meta-humor. If Craig’s Bond is existential, this is Bond as lifestyle brand. Still, the spirit is there: globe-trotting, charisma-first espionage with banter as foreplay and danger as set dressing. It’s not a training sim for a field agent — it’s one for a Bond learning how to survive 2020s Hollywood, where branding beats bullets and escape plans come with product placement.
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11’The Night Comes for Us' (2018)
The Night Comes For Us
Directed by Timo Tjahjanto,The Night Comes for Usis an Indonesian action thriller that doesn’t pull punches — it launches them at your face in kinetic waves of blood, broken glass, and bone-crunching choreography. Joe Taslim plays Ito, a Triad enforcer who betrays his organization to save a young girl, unleashing a chain of increasingly brutal fights that double as emotional reckonings. Iko Uwais — ofThe Raidfame — plays Arian, his brother-in-arms turned pursuer, and their final showdown is less a duel than a symphony of violence with a heartbeat. There’s almost no pause: the film moves like it’s fleeing something, every room another trap, every fight a confession. What makes it great isn’t just the gore or spectacle — it’s how it frames action as penance, each body blow a form of prayer.
From License to Kill to License to Bleed
If this is a Bond training sim, it’s for theLicense to Killera — the Dalton phase, when Bond was stripped of charm and handed raw vengeance. There’s no casino inThe Night Comes for Us, no tuxedoed détente — just moral fatigue and loyalty torn apart by conflicting codes. Ito is a Bond who’s lost his queen and chosen a child instead of empire. The film swaps espionage for survivalism but shares Bond’s foundational dilemma: when the mission becomes personal, the fallout is nuclear. In tone and temperament, it’s Bond without MI6 — pure, rogue energy, channeled through a camera that never blinks, even when the knives come out.
10’Beckett' (2021)
John David Washington stars inBeckettas an American tourist who, after a tragic car crash in Greece, finds himself the target of an international manhunt with no idea why. What unfolds is a conspiracy thriller that trades high-octane escapism for something more grounded — a protagonist who limps, bleeds, and never quite understands the rules of the game he’s been dropped into. Washington gives Beckett a worn-in vulnerability — he’s not a trained killer or suave infiltrator, but a man grieving in motion, forced to outrun grief and gunfire in equal measure. The cinematography is sun-bleached and unflinching, and the paranoia grows not through gadgets or tech, but through bodies, faces, and silence.
A Spy Who Was Never Supposed to Be One
Beckettechoes early Cold War Bond — specifically theFrom Russia with Loveera, when the spy world was less explosion, more tension. But Beckett himself is the anti-Bond: untrained, unarmed, and emotionally transparent. Still, the connective tissue is there — a man caught in geopolitics, racing across borders, forced to learn trust by betrayal. The thrills in ‘Beckett’ come not from style but survival, and that makes it its own kind of test: less about charisma under pressure, more about how long a man can run before ideology catches up. If Bond is who you call when things go sideways, Beckett is who you get when they already have — and no one’s coming to save you.
9’The Red Sea Diving Resort' (2019)
The Red Sea Diving Resort
Loosely based on a true Mossad operation,The Red Sea Diving Resortstars Chris Evans as Ari Levinson, a charming Israeli agent who uses a defunct tourist hotel in Sudan as cover to smuggle Ethiopian-Jewish refugees to safety. The tone toggles between espionage drama and high-stakes heist movie, with a supporting cast that includes Haley Bennett, Michael K. Williams, and Alessandro Nivola. Evans plays Levinson with pre-Captain-America swagger, mixing rogue-boy confidence with moral resolve. The visuals — dusty compounds, candlelit briefings, late-night extractions — are striking, and the pacing leans into thriller territory while staying tethered to historical weight.
Operation Bond: Brosnan With a Conscience
The Red Sea Diving Resortfits into the Bond canon like a lost Brosnan entry with a moral spine. ThinkThe World Is Not Enoughwithout the oil barons and with slightly more ethical stakes. Ari is Bond at his most improvisational — charming border guards, bluffing diplomats, planning undercover ops with nothing but nerve and a bad blazer. But where classic Bond often saves the world for queen and country, Ari is driven by something heavier: a belief that espionage, at its best, can still serve people over power. This is Bond with humanitarian stakes — a training sim for agents who don’t just seduce and destroy, but evacuate, protect, and rebuild. It’s not flashy, but it’s the kind of mission that leaves legacy instead of rubble.
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8’Kate' (2021)
Directed by Cedric Nicolas-Troyan,Katedrops Mary Elizabeth Winstead into neon-lit Tokyo as a poisoned assassin with 24 hours to live and nothing left to lose. Winstead plays the title character like a cracked katana: elegant, deadly, and increasingly brittle. The plot — part revenge, part redemption — moves at a clip, blending pulsing shootouts, Yakuza double-crosses, and a surprising bond with a teenage girl (Miku Martineau) whose father Kate assassinated. The visuals hum with neon fatigue and pulsating dread, and Winstead’s performance keeps it grounded, mixing exhaustion with precision. Every punch feels earned. Every moment hurts.
Craig-Core With a Hit ofKill Bill
Katebelongs squarely in Daniel Craig Bond territory — particularlySkyfall, where decay and vulnerability become part of the weapon set. Kate’s skill is undeniable, but what makes her compelling is how little she believes in her own survival. Like Craig’s Bond, she’s more ghost than hero, stitched together by guilt, rage, and muscle memory. There’s no MI6 or Aston Martin, just raw desperation wrapped in blood and Tokyo static. If old Bond asked for a shaken martini, Kate grabs the bottle and breaks it over your head. It’s a training sim for the era where charm won’t save you — only precision, pain tolerance, and the willingness to die before the credits roll.
7’Close' (2019)
Based loosely on real-life bodyguard Jacquie Davis,Closestars Noomi Rapace as Sam Carlson — a private security expert hired to protect a wealthy heiress from a series of increasingly vicious attacks. Rapace plays Sam like a tightly wound spring — all tension, instinct, and wounded restraint. The film’s action is intimate, brutal, and almost inconveniently realistic: fistfights that feel like they might actually break your ribs, shootouts with consequences, and a protagonist who can disarm you with a pen and still look emotionally wrecked afterward. It’s a thriller that prioritizes grit over glamour, and Rapace sells every beat of exhaustion and fury with cold efficiency.
From MI6 to HR: Bond Without the Mythology
Closeis like if Bond had to file an expense report and still fight off three attackers in a bathroom stall. It trades espionage fantasy for logistics — this is spycraft with split ends and trauma flashbacks. Sam doesn’t have gadgets or a government behind her; she has training, rage, and a Blackberry that won’t stop ringing. The energy is early Craig —Casino Royalestripped of MI6’s infrastructure — or even Fleming’s literary Bond: the guy who knows the job will kill him, but does it anyway. InClose, the spy genre becomes small-scale and highly pressurized, a test not of how cool you look in a tux, but whether you can stay alive long enough to collect the wire transfer.
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6’The Guilty' (2021)
The Guilty
Directed by Antoine Fuqua and starring Jake Gyllenhaal in a one-location, one-man pressure cooker,The Guiltyis less a thriller than a psychological extraction mission conducted through a headset. Gyllenhaal plays Joe Baylor, a demoted LAPD officer manning a 911 call center during a California wildfire. When a kidnapped woman calls in, Joe takes the case personally — and recklessly. The entire film unfolds through calls, breathing, and facial tremors, with Gyllenhaal delivering one of his most tightly wound performances. The tension is almost unbearable, and the unraveling is inward: every breath laced with shame, every decision a moral landmine.
Bond on a Time-Out — and Still Dangerous
This isn’t the globe-trotting Bond — this is Bond post-breakdown, stuck at a desk, trying to save the world with no license and a Bluetooth headset. In tone, The Guilty reflectsSkyfall’sintrospective chill — that moment when the weapon looks at the man holding it. Joe is stripped of glamour, title, and even physical space — what’s left is instinct, control, and accountability. Like Craig’s Bond in his quieter moments, Joe must learn that action without reflection is ruin. This sim isn’t about car chases — it’s about what happens when the car is gone, the gun is locked up, and all you’ve got is a voice, a gut, and an overwhelming sense that you’re the villain in your own story.
5'6 Underground' (2019)
6 Underground
If Michael Bay directed a Bond film after downing four energy drinks and deleting all emotional subtext, you’d get6 Underground.Starring Ryan Reynolds as a billionaire vigilante who fakes his own death to lead an elite squad of international operatives, the film is pure chaos-as-aesthetic. Mélanie Laurent and Manuel Garcia-Rulfo add texture to the supporting cast, but this is Bay’s playground: slow-motion acrobatics, drone camera chaos, parkour gunfights, and lines like “Let’s go ghost” delivered with zero irony. The plot is secondary to vibe, and the vibe is: every building explodes, and no one ever reloads.
When Bond Becomes a Brand
6 Undergroundis Bond reimagined as social media spectacle — Brosnan-era excess dialed to 12 and reprogrammed for the TikTok algorithm. There’s espionage here, technically — covert ops, high-tech heists, villainous dictators — but it’s all pixelated and curated, designed less to tell a story than to sell you the fantasy of elite autonomy. Reynolds is a Bond who quips through the trauma, dodges accountability, and believes anonymity is its own moral justification. If Craig’s Bond is burdened by history, Reynolds’ “One” is freed by forgetting it. This sim doesn’t train agents — it trains influencers who happen to carry guns.


