Hollywood star Daniel Craig says he has grown too old to play super spy James Bond as he is required to perform demanding stunts in the “Bond” movies.
The actor makes his fifth and final appearance as 007 in “No Time to Die”, the release of which was postponed several times during the Covid pandemic, and he has now overtaken the late Sir Roger Moore's record as the longest-serving Bond.
Craig realised he was aging for the part after struggling with injuries while playing the very athletic spy.
He lost two teeth on his first outing as Bond, in 2006's “Casino Royale”, sliced off a fingertip filming 2008's “Quantum of Solace”, and fractured his ankle on “No Time to Die”.
"I still do as many stunts as I can because I enjoy the physicality of it - I always have, even before Bond. But I have grown older and don't bounce back as well as I did. I've hurt myself on every single Bond movie since I started, it's just par for the course," Craig told British magazine Candis.
The actor confirmed, again, that “No Time to Die” will be his last 007 film.
"It's absolutely the last. It's time for somebody else to have a go now," he said, admitting that he has mixed feelings about handing in his licence to kill because there has been "no downside to playing Bond."
Craig, who is currently filming the sequel to his hit film “Knives Out”, added: "(Playing James Bond) has afforded me so many amazing things as an actor that I am extremely grateful to him and always will be."
"If I had any ambition as an actor, it was to work with the best people, and that is what I've been doing."
Craig concluded: "Look, I've been lucky enough to land one of the best roles in movie history, and I decided that if it turned out to be the only thing I ever did, I'd be happy. There's been no downside to playing Bond. None at all."