15-05-2025
Halle Berry Disagrees With Female James Bond Casting
Since Daniel Craig departed the role in 2021, there's been a lot of chatter about who might be the next James Bond.
Over the years, the 007 frontrunners have included British stars like Idris Elba and Aaron Taylor-Johnson. However, a portion of fans have long wondered about the possibility of a woman stepping into the role, which, for context, was initially written as a man by Ian Fleming, whose novels and short stories inspired the movies.
There aren't yet any solid plans for the next James Bond movie; however, at the Cannes Film Festival this week, Halle Berry — who famously played Jinx in Die Another Day alongside Pierce Brosnan as Bond in 2002 — gave her totally honest thoughts on the prospect of a woman being cast as the elusive spy.
'I don't know if 007 really should be a woman,' she said in response to a question from Variety. 'In 2025, it's nice to say, 'Oh, she should be a woman.' But I don't really know if that's the right thing to do.'
You can find the clip here.
You might expect some to feel disappointed by what Halle said, however, it seems the majority of fans are in complete agreement with the Oscar-winner. Many have pointed out that if we want to see women in roles like these, let's leave Bond to the men and create some original female-led stories. One X post with over 170,000 likes read: 'hot take but i agree with her. we need more roles written for women, not more women in roles written for men,' while someone else suggested there's 'absolutely nothing in the name of feminism in gender-swapping the characters of existing IPs.'
Proving that there's plenty of appetite and appreciation for female-led spy movies written for women, people brought up popular titles like Jennifer Lawrence's Red Sparrow, Charlize Theron's Atomic Blonde, and Angelina Jolie's Salt, which, believe it or not, was reportedly meant to star Tom Cruise, but was rewritten for Angie.
Interestingly, Halle isn't the only woman from the Bond franchise to refute the idea of a female Bond. Rosamund Pike, who was also in Die Another Day, told Uproxx in 2018: 'Why should she have once been a man and now it has to be played by a woman? Why not make a kick-ass female agent in her own right?'
She said that to gender-swap the character after all these years would 'underestimate a woman entirely,' explaining: 'There's nothing really about the James Bond character as written by Ian Fleming that resembles a woman. It's a very masculine creation. So sure, make an unexpected, unapologetic, kick-ass, amazing female agent, and yes, I'll play her.'