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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dad.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''[[Music/{{Madonna}} ♫I think I'll find another way\
3There's so much more to know...♫]]'']]
4
5->''"So, you live '''to [[TitleDrop die another day]]'''..."''
6-->-- '''James Bond'''
7
8%% The site owner himself has discussed The One With and said they should stay. Please leave them alone.
9JustForFun/TheOneWith all that [[ComputerGeneratedImages CGI]] (and the [[CoolCar Invisible Aston and Rocket-launcher Jag]]).%% The site owner himself has discussed The One With and said they should stay. Please leave them alone.
10
11''Die Another Day'' is the twentieth ''Film/JamesBond'' film and the fourth and last to star Creator/PierceBrosnan. It is also the final film set in the original series started by Creator/EonProductions with ''Film/DrNo'' in 1962 before getting a ContinuityReboot in 2006, as well as the only one in the franchise to be internationally distributed by [[Creator/TwentiethCenturyStudios 20th Century Fox]]. It was directed by Creator/LeeTamahori and came out in November 2002. Music/{{Madonna}} performed the TitleThemeTune and has a cameo in the film.
12
13As usual, the film opens with Bond on a mission, this time, the [[UsefulNotes/NorthKorea North Koreans]] have the honor to be the adversaries. ''Not'' as usual, however, is that the mission goes awry after Bond is betrayed, and as a result is captured. Freed via a prisoner exchange after 14 months of torture, Bond is aghast to learn his freedom was purchased at the cost of his adversary, a war criminal named Zao (Creator/RickYune), walking scot-free. Discharged by [[UsefulNotes/SecretIntelligenceService MI6]] and receiving a predictably chilly reception from M, Bond [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight becomes a rogue agent]] and resumes [[{{Revenge}} hunting for his quarry]].
14
15Following Zao's trail leads him to [[BigBad Gustav Graves]] (Creator/TobyStephens), a wunderkind entrepreneur who's made a fortune in blood diamonds and is building some kind of space-based sunlight reflector [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial which in no way resembles a]] [[KillSat death ray]].
16
17The film holds many vignettes to previous Bond outings, such as Brosnan playing the "loose cannon" in the tropics (''Film/LicenceToKill''), Halle Berry [[SexySurfacingShot exiting the water]] in SlowMotion (''Film/DrNo''), a diamond-encrusted sky laser (''Film/DiamondsAreForever''), action scenes bordering on self-parody (''Film/{{Moonraker}}'') and many, ''many'' more {{Mythology Gag}}s for [[MilestoneCelebration the series's 40th anniversary]].
18
19After the film's release, Eon Productions decided a reboot was needed to bring the series back to its more grounded DarkerAndGrittier roots even going back to [[Literature/CasinoRoyale the very first]] ''Bond'' novel. Despite being in his early 50s at the time, Pierce Brosnan was still anticipated to reprise the role (Creator/RogerMoore played Bond till he was 57, after all). However, in February 2005, Brosnan was told by the producers that he would be replaced, and in October of that year, Creator/DanielCraig was officially announced as the new Bond.
20
21Preceded by ''Film/TheWorldIsNotEnough'' and followed by ''Film/{{Casino Royale|2006}}''.
22----
23!!This film provides examples of:
24* ActorAllusion: The "Ornithology" scene between Creator/PierceBrosnan and Creator/HalleBerry. While its a well known throwback to the famous beach scene in Film/DrNo, it's also a reference to Series/RemingtonSteele, which has a scene that is replicated almost beat-for-beat, complete with binoculars, blue shirt, cigar, and plenty of flirtatious [[SexualEuphemism sexual innuendos]], which adds fuel to the theory that Series/RemingtonSteele is a secret prequel to Pierce's James Bond.
25** When Creator/JohnCleese walks behind the invisible car, the light refraction makes him appear for a quick second like he's attempting a [[Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus Silly Walk]]. Another for Cleese is the just-mentioned "[[Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail only a flesh wound]]."
26* AdaptationAmalgamation:
27** Elements of the film's story were based upon Creator/IanFleming's original novel ''Literature/{{Moonraker}}''. As confirmed by Creator/RosamundPike, Miranda Frost was originally named Gala Brand, which was the name of the Bond girl in the original book. Gustav Graves, meanwhile, is based upon the original novel's version of Sir Hugo Drax.
28** Bond talking to M while separated by glass is a nod to the opening chapter of ''Literature/TheManWithTheGoldenGun'' where a brainwashed Bond attempts to assassinate M, only to be foiled by a plate of glass.
29** Colonel Moon was a nod to ''Literature/ColonelSun''. In fact, he was supposed to the same character, but legal reasons prevented this.
30* AirborneAircraftCarrier: Sort of. Graves' [[CoolPlane modified Antonov An-124]] carries a helicopter aboard which Bond manages to launch out of it in mid-air.
31* AlasPoorVillain: InUniverse; Bond has a clearly pained look on his face when he sees [[spoiler:Miranda Frost's]] corpse, even though he had tried to [[spoiler:shoot her dead the instant he had learned that she was the traitor at [=MI6=]]].
32* AlwaysSaveTheGirl: While Graves and his team are preparing to flee Iceland, Bond's priority after he kills Zao should've been to go after them, but instead he rescues Jinx, who was drowning in the melting ice palace.
33* ArtificialGill: Bond uses a rebreather when scuba-diving his way into the villain's lair.
34* ArtisticLicenceGeography: Despite the country's name, Iceland doesn't have enough frozen water to build and sustain an ice hotel; while there are consistently snowy areas of the country, they're remote and largely inaccessible. In real life the hotel was built and filmed in Sweden.
35* ArtisticLicenceSports: Miranda Frost is described as having won the gold medal in fencing at the 2000 Sydney UsefulNotes/OlympicGames by default, after the real gold medalist's death by drug overdose [[spoiler:(the later reveal of her affiliation with Graves implying that Graves played a hand in it)]]. While said substances fit a medal revoking transgression, the fact it involves death screws any veracity: either the original gold drugged herself to death before the podium, or died in the 2 years before the film's events - when the International Olympic Committee only strips medals based on the on-site drug tests, or the infractor's own admittance (such as Marion Jones). The novelisation explains this a little, stating the winner died the night of her victory.
36* ArtisticLicenceBiology: The "DNA replacement therapy" manages to top the dubious scientific accuracy of ''Film/{{Moonraker}}'', the explanation given by the doctor in charge of it being a textbook example of LegoGenetics.
37* ArtisticLicenceMilitary: Jinx claims to be an agent from the National Security Agency (NSA). The NSA is a signals intelligence agency which does not send agents into the field.
38* ArtisticTitle: An extremely kinky version in the opening credits, where Bond is being tortured in the background while naked chicks made of ice, fire and electricity are writhing around in the foreground.
39* AttackHello: Just as Zao opens the door at the ice palace, Jinx gives him this via a karate kick.
40* BaitAndSwitch: How Miranda is revealed to also be an [=MI6=] agent. We see M in her office, telling someone offscreen, "Before you leave on your mission to Iceland...". We naturally assume she's talking to Bond, until the person sits down to reveal it's Miranda, and M continues: "...tell me what you know about James Bond".
41* BatmanColdOpen: {{Subverted}} heavily. The film with Bond on a mission in North Korea... which he actually ''fails''. He ends up getting captured and spends a year and a half in a torture camp before his superiors can spring him.
42* BeamSpam: Bond fights Mr. Kil in a room full of out-of-control laser beams.
43* BeardOfSorrow: More a Beard of Imprisonment, but hey.
44* BeautyIsNeverTarnished:
45** Played with; Bond is filthy with a shaggy beard and hair after being tortured for 14 months. This is the character at his most unkempt in the entire ''series'', and audiences at the time were a bit shocked to see him in such a dishevelled state. However, Bond is still in remarkably good shape for someone who had endured that type of hell for so long. All it takes are a single shave, a hair cut, a proper dinner, and a change of clothes for him to become sexy again.
46** Miranda slashes Jinx across the stomach during their swordfight. There's no sign of the cut during hers and Bond's love scene even though it would never have healed in such a short time.
47* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: This was expected of Bond after his capture in the opening credits; M admonishes him for not dying for his country quite yet when he's recovered.
48* BigBad: Gustav Graves[[spoiler:/Colonel Moon]] is the main villain of the film.
49* {{Bizarrchitecture}}: The ice palace is made of... ice. Handwaved because it's set in Iceland; it would be cold enough for that to work at least some of the time. Graves melts it to drown Jinx inside.
50* BloodlessCarnage:
51** [[spoiler:Miranda]] gets stabbed through the ''heart'' by Jinx, and yet we don't see any blood emerge from the wound.
52** [[spoiler: When Graves is sucked into the plane's rotary blades, absolutely ''no'' blood sprays out, as if his suit alone was getting shredded.]]
53* BondGunBarrel: When Brosnan fires the gun, the bullet flies at the camera, meaning that Bond has shot up the gun barrel of his opponent.
54* BondOneLiner: Almost everyone besides Bond seems to be doing it:
55** Jinx does it twice when she kills [[spoiler:Frost]] by stabbing her in the chest with a knife stuck through a book (appropriately enough, ''Literature/TheArtOfWarSunTzu''). First, [[spoiler:Frost]] taunts her:
56--->'''[[spoiler:Frost]]''': I can read your every move!\
57'''Jinx''': ''(stabs her)'' [[ThisIsForEmphasisBitch Read this! Bitch!]]
58** Then Bond comes in and sees her, and Jinx has another quip:
59--->'''Jinx''': I think I broke her heart.
60** Bond gets the tables turned on him at one point:
61--->'''Bond''': I missed your sparkling personality.\
62''[Zao punches Bond in the stomach]''\
63'''Zao''': How's that for a punchline?
64* BondVillainStupidity: It's either lampshaded or a spectacularly bad example, albeit not involving Bond himself: Zao and Kil have Jinx at their mercy, and Zao ''actually proposes shooting her''... but Kil wants to do it with lasers, and gets his way, allowing Bond time to arrive and rescue her. Earlier in the film, Bond gets out a BulletProofVest and Colonel Moon keeps shooting it until it falls off into the ground.
65* BorrowedBiometricBypass: After Mr Kil meets his end by way of laser, Bond tries to drag his corpse over to a hand scanner. Jinx decides to cut out the middle man and laser off his hand.
66* BriefcaseFullOfMoney: Subverted when Bond adds a C4 charge into the lining of a briefcase full of diamonds which then end up buried in Zao's face when Bond sets it off.
67* BrokenAce: Gustav Graves is charming, talented, and insanely rich (from blood diamonds). However, he is really a North Korean colonel with plastic surgery building a KillSat to help his faction finally win the war. He has daddy issues too, and really really hates anything Western. He admits to having based the Graves persona partly on Bond.
68* TheCameo: Music/{{Madonna}} cameos as Verity, Miranda Frost and Gustav Graves' fencing instructor. Thus far she's the only theme song singer to make an appearance in the film, unless you count Sheena Easton singing the ''Film/ForYourEyesOnly'' theme onscreen in said film's opening.
69* CannotDream: Gustav Graves was said to be unable to dream. Specifically, he is unable to enter REM sleep, a RealLife condition. He has to use a machine to do it for him, or he'll start suffering from severe psychosis. Well, more severe than his current mental condition.
70* CarFu: Bond and Zao have a Car Fu Duel, where ''both'' characters are driving tricked-out spy cars and trying to kill each other with their various on-board weapons and gadgets. This scene ends with a (failed) ramming attempt.
71* ChameleonCamouflage: Bond's car can do this by projecting the image on one side of the car from the other, presumably adjusting for any distance difference.
72* ChekhovsGun:
73** The Aston's InvisibilityCloak. Bond attempts to use it during the car chase/duel with Zao, only for Zao's Gatling guns to disable it. It gets restored later in the scene and allows Bond to defeat Zao when Zao attempts to ram him.
74** The ultra-high frequency single digit sonic agitator unit ring given to Bond by Q. Q demonstrates it on a pane of unbreakable glass. Bond later uses it to collapse a glass floor to escape his captors and shatter the Aston's windscreen to get Jinx into it so can he revive her.
75* ChivalrousPervert: Bond's sheer panic (and later relief) when he attempts to resuscitate Jinx proves that she's not just a notch on his bedpost.
76* ClickHello: Graves enters his office, only for the screen to drop and Bond sitting at the desk pointing a gun at him.
77* CoDragons: Zao and [[spoiler:Miranda]] to Moon/[[spoiler:Graves.]]
78* ColdBloodedTorture: In the TitleSequence we see Bond repeatedly getting his head shoved into a bucket of ice water, threatened with hot pokers and welding torches, stung with scorpions, and beaten. When the sequence concludes and the movie begins, the caption tells us that Bond has endured this treatment for over a year. Once rescued, we overhear someone talking about what else James went through: he'd be injected with poison and then his torturers would watch the poison take effect for some indeterminate amount of time before injecting the antidote. Multiple times.
79* CollapsingLair: More like melting lair.
80* CompositeCharacter: Colonel Moon is a weird fusion of the [[Literature/{{Moonraker}} literary version]] of Hugo Drax with Literature/ColonelSun. In true ''Bond'' fashion, subtitles on the Region 2 DVD reveal his full name to be Tan-Sun Moon. The name Tan-Sun also appears as a caption on the Region A Blu-Ray.
81* ContinuityCavalcade: Bond visits the new Q's secret lab and discovers many of the old Q's inventions from the previous films. A quick glimpse through the scene and viewers familiar with the franchise can spot the [[Film/FromRussiaWithLove rigged briefcase, Klebb's shoe-knife]], [[Film/{{Thunderball}} the old jetpack]], [[Film/{{Octopussy}} the crocodile submarine, the AcroStar Minijet]] and [[Film/AViewToAKill the Snooper]].
82* ContinuityNod:
83** The gadgets in Q's lab, which include the jetpack from ''Thunderball''.
84--->'''Bond:''' [[WhatDoesThisButtonDo Does this still work?]] ''[switches the jetpack on]''
85** Q also notes that Bond's watch is his twentieth, and implores him to actually return this one.
86** Bond pretends to be an ornithologist, a nod to his origins as he was named after an ornithologist off a book Ian Fleming had. The book Bond picks up in the office of his Cuban contact is the same book - a Collins edition of the ''Birds of the West Indies'' by James Bond (the author's name is removed however).
87** Bond calls sex "the coldest weapon of all." He should know, because [[spoiler:Elektra King]] used it against him in ''Film/TheWorldIsNotEnough''.
88** As seen on the CallBack section, this film -- in honour of the franchise's twentieth -- references every single other Bond film at least once and several tips of the hat to the original novels.
89* ContinuityPorn: Everything from the title onwards is a tongue-in-cheek reference to other films in the series. It was a 20th film MilestoneCelebration special.
90* CoolCar: The film marks the return of Bond's ass in the seat of an Aston... but gives Zao a Jaguar XKR equal in gadgets to 007 himself. The resulting duel is considered one of the high points of the film. Meanwhile, Jinx drives a 007 Ford Thunderbird.
91* CorporateConspiracy: Gustav Graves, a billionaire diamond magnate who [[spoiler:built his fortune illegally laundering blood diamonds that were payments for arms dealing]] in order to fund a huge space project: a [[KillSat solar satellite]] that he can use to [[spoiler:cut a path through the Korean Demilitarized Zone, allowing North Korea to launch an invasion of South Korea]].
92* CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot: [[spoiler:While M and Damian Falco argue over him keeping Jinx a secret in the investigation, Falco notes that Frost TheMole would've killed her. M counters that there wouldn't have been a mole if the fact Frost and Colonel Moon being on the Harvard Fencing Team together had been brought up.]]
93* CreepyCrawlyTorture: While Bond is being tortured in a North Korean prison after his capture in the opening, his interrogators repeatedly have him stung by black scorpions and watch him squirm before administering the anti-venom.
94* CyanidePill: M asks Bond why he didn't take his pill when captured. Bond replies that he got rid of it years ago.
95* DarkerAndEdgier: The intro, bordering on NightmareFuel. The intro is used to advance the film's story rather than just hint at its theme. We get various scenes of Bond's torture, which includes waterboarding and beatings, and those customary silhouettes of nubile women aren't titillating Bond, they're either participating in the torture, soothing him, or might just be hallucinations that he's having.
96* DaydreamSurprise:
97** After Bond is reinstated back into [=MI6=] and the base is suddenly attacked. He makes his way through shooting the assailants until he gets to one holding M hostage... so he promptly shoots her to get to the assailant. Q suddenly appears and chastises Bond on his performance while taking off the VR glasses. The whole thing being a training simulator.
98** The end abruptly jumps to Bond walking in on Moneypenny in her office, where things quickly begin to get steamy... until Q shows up wondering why Moneypenny is using his virtual reality machine.
99* DeadArtistsAreBetter: Discussed. Jinx is meeting with a surgeon on the Cuban island, discussing a drastic procedure to change her looks. He says that he considers himself an artist, and she remarks that most great artists aren't celebrated until after their deaths, upon which she shoots him.
100* DeadlySparring: When Bond and Graves first meet, they decide to have a somewhat friendly fencing match. The match grows more and more competitive due to both men's egos -- and [[spoiler:the fact that Graves is actually the temperamental and vengeful Colonel Moon]] -- eventually escalating into a full-on SwordFight with the intent to draw blood.
101* DeathByIrony: [[spoiler:Graves' parachute is sucked into the turbine of his own plane. Though he manages to hold on, Bond electrocutes him with his own gauntlet, sending him into the rotary blades.]]
102* DeathByLookingUp: Bond shoots a giant chandelier, Zao looks up and screams as it crushes him.
103* DeathRay: The Icarus satellite is capable of shooting these kind of rays, made of concentrated sunlight.
104* {{Deconstruction}}: The film shows what would happen if James Bond actually got captured in enemy territory; like with most spies, he's disavowed by his government, subject to torture and brutal conditions for a year and later released in a PrisonerExchange for the same bad guy he was pursuing in the first place.
105* DefiantCaptive: Bond is captured by the North Korean military and held in prison for several months, constantly tortured for information. He is finally traded for a North Korean operative, and M tells him that they received intel that someone was leaking information to the North Koreans. They assumed Bond broke under torture, which is why they traded him. Bond reveals he never broke, even though he didn't expect a rescue.
106* DefiantToTheEnd: Noted of Bond when all he has to offer after months of brutal torture is a snarky one-liner.
107* DenserAndWackier: Madonna cameo? Check. Invisible car? Check. James Bond surfing a wave of superheated ice as a satellite's laser beam chases him around ({{a rare sentence}})? Check and mate.
108* DesignatedGirlFight: Happens when Jinx takes down Miranda Frost while Bond fights Graves. This is surprisingly the first film in the entire series where this trope is present. Most previous female villains in the series are killed in a manner that doesn't directly involve Bond ''or'' his leading lady. However, the series has featured occasions where Bond has fought and killed women.
109* DestructionEqualsOffSwitch: [[spoiler:Once the Icarus control suit is sucked along with Graves [[TurbineBlender into a turbine]], the KillSat shuts off immediately]].
110* DiabolicalMastermind: Gustav Graves, a millionaire jeweller who secretly trades in conflict diamonds, passing them off as from a diamond mine in Iceland. [[spoiler:He's actually corrupt North Korean colonel Tan-Sun Moon]].
111* DiamondsInTheBuff: Jinx is covered in nothing but diamonds as she and Bond consummate their relationship in a South Korean Buddhist temple located in a valley.
112* DiesWideOpen: All the bad guys (except Zao who dies offscreen) die with open eyes.
113* DirtyCommunists: North Korea's military eagerly supports the conquest of Japan and South Korea through Colonel Moon's plan. It's stated at least once that there was a coup by the hardliners before the invasion, presumably to avoid implicating the entire country as [[CardCarryingVillain Card-Carrying Villains]]. Downplayed/averted during the Cuba scenes, even though UsefulNotes/FidelCastro was still in charge at the time.
114* DisneyVillainDeath: Vladimir is sucked out of the plane when the side of it explodes.
115* DisposableVagrant: Dr. Alvarez provides MagicPlasticSurgery for his patients by re-writing their DNA. This process requires DNA from other people; the doctor mentions that most of this is harvested from vagrants and other people who won't be missed.
116* DisqualificationInducedVictory: Miranda Frost got an Olympic silver medal for fencing, but was upgraded to gold when her opponent overdosed on steroids. [[spoiler:Graves, knowing Miranda hated the idea of being second best, arranged for the "accident" in exchange for Miranda becoming his [[TheMole Mole]].]]
117* DownerBeginning: Bond fails his mission into North Korea; the North Koreans are able to identify him as an [=MI6=] Agent [[spoiler:because of a mole inside [=MI6=]]]. Bond narrowly manages to assassinate Colonel Moon, but at the cost of his own capture and the rest of his team being killed. He is tortured for more than a year before he is returned as part of a PrisonerExchange. M believes he cracked and is ready to force him into retirement, so Bond has to clear his name.
118* DistressedDude: Bond is captured by the North Koreans and spends the title sequence being beaten and tortured.
119* TheDragon: Zao [[spoiler:and Miranda Frost]], even though Zao kills a total amount of zero people onscreen. However, M does mention to Bond that Zao had murdered three Chinese agents at a summit.
120* DramaticGunCock: Bond is interrogating Gustav Graves with his Walther P99. Miranda Frost walks up and draws her own Walther P99, which, despite being a hammerless pistol like Glocks are, makes the hammer-cocking sound.
121* DressHitsFloor: Miranda, as she prepares to sleep with Bond. Leading to a brief shot of ToplessnessFromTheBack... and then followed by ModestyBedsheet.
122* EjectionSeat: Bond uses it as a propellant to flip his Aston Martin back onto its wheels. Oh, and dodge a missile at high speed.
123* ElectricTorture: The opening credits imply that the North Koreans also used electric torture on James Bond during his period of captivity, in addition to regular beatings, poisoning with scorpions, and WaterTorture.
124* EnemyMine: The Chinese have their own reasons for wanting Zao dead, so they are happy to point Bond in his direction so that he can do the job for them when he asks.
125* EnergyWeapon: Bond fights Mr Kil in a room full of out-of-control lasers slicing everything up. It's pretty insane and even if impractical, but it's a pretty [[RuleOfCool good visual]].
126* EstablishingCharacterMusic: Gustav Graves is introduced parachuting out of a plane to receive his knighthood at Buckingham Palace to Music/TheClash's "London Calling".
127* EveryCarIsAPinto: When the hovercraft at the beginning collide into trees, they crumple up (as if they made of cardboard and tin foil) and burst into flames. They're driving over a mine-field, so things exploding with little to no warning does make a little more sense in that scene.
128* EverybodyOwnsAFord: The producers signed Ford up as their primary vehicular sponsor and as a result, pretty much everything on screen is a Ford brand. James Bond in his Aston Martin Vanquish fights Zao in his Jaguar XKR. Meanwhile, Jinx rolls up to the big gala event in her Ford Thunderbird as Gustav Graves gets chauffeured around in a Range Rover.
129* EvilCounterpart: Gustav Graves claims to be one of Bond.
130--> '''Gustav Graves:''' When your intervention forced me to present the world [[spoiler: with a new face]], I chose to model [[spoiler: the disgusting Gustav Graves on you]]. I paid attention to details -- that unjustifiable swagger, the crass quips, the self-defence mechanism concealing such inadequacy...
131* TheEvilGenius: Vladimir Popov, Gustav Graves' personal scientist.
132* EvilGloating:
133** Having beaten Bond by electrocuting, Graves mockingly throws out one of the two remaining parachutes and brags about how Bond can't kill him, but his dreams can kill Bond. He gets close to Bond as he does this, allowing 007 to pull his parachute cord that sends him out of the plane.
134** During their fight, Miranda cockily tells Jinx that she can read her every move. Except the one that kills her.
135* EvilIsDeathlyCold: The film's second half is full of ice motifs, even taking place in ''Ice''land in a literal ice palace. Incidentally, this is the first hint that [[spoiler:Miranda Frost]] is going to be trouble.
136* EvilPlan: Gustav Graves, takes a page from Blofeld's book from ''Film/DiamondsAreForever'' and uses a diamond-powered KillSat that runs on solar energy. He sought to use it to help North Korea take over the South, as well as Japan and presumably elsewhere [[spoiler:(he is actually a corrupt North Korean colonel Faking the Dead and in disguise as a wealthy CorruptCorporateExecutive)]].
137* EvilRedhead: Graves has red hair. [[spoiler: Seems that he really wanted to ensure his transition from Colonel Moon to be drastically different.]]
138* ExpositoryHairstyleChange: Bond in the North Korean prison grows a beard, and then promptly shaves it off when he gets out.
139* FaceDeathWithDignity: Trapped on the crashing Antonov, Jinx declares to Bond, "Looks like we're going down together!", with a rueful smile that indicates that she's determined to invoke this trope.
140* FailedASpotCheck: [[spoiler:M berates Falco for not divulging to them that Miranda Frost had been on the fencing team with Col. Moon at Harvard. But it's very disturbing that [=MI6=] wouldn't have discovered something pretty basic like that during her background check! That in and of itself likely wouldn't eliminate her from service, but you'd think at a minimum someone would've thought to question her when a 00 agent is betrayed and captured during a mission infiltrating her old teammate!!!]]
141* FakeOutMakeOut: Bond and Frost do this to distract some guards at the ice palace. Being Bond, he has it continue even after the guards leave.
142* FallingChandelierOfDoom: Zao is impaled beneath a large chandelier made of diamonds and icicles.
143* FarEastAsianTerrorists: Colonel Tan-Sun Moon and his faction in the Korean People's Army turn into pro-North Korean unification terrorists after the former used the revenue from smuggling to arm his faction and create the superweapon called Icarus.
144* FatalFlaw: Gustav is aware of Bond's, [[spoiler:Miranda's]] and his own AchillesHeel.
145-->'''Graves:''' You see, I have a gift. An instinct for sensing people's weaknesses. Yours is women. Hers and mine are winning, whatever the cost.
146* FauxActionGirl: Jinx is supposed to be a top NSA agent, and in an early scene she does manage to complete an assassination, but thereafter she only manages to get strapped to a laser DeathTrap and almost drown in an ice hotel. In the end, she's given a DesignatedGirlFight with Miranda Frost by way of consolation prize.
147* {{Flynning}}: Two examples - Bond fights Graves in a delightfully over the top fight in the fencing club, and then Jinx fights Frost on the plane.
148* {{Foreshadowing}}:
149** The body-altering technology in Cuba, and the [[ItsPersonal savage ferocity]] with which Gustav Graves attacks Bond in their duel.
150** When Bond introduces himself to Grave, we briefly cut to Miranda's reaction.
151* FreudianThreat: While in Cuba, Bond witnesses his target pointing a gun at a waiter's crotch and threatening him to do as he's told, "unless you want to change your name to Fidel Castrata!"
152* GatlingGood: Zao's Jaguar has a Minigun mounted on top, complete with the usual inaccurate firing rate. Zao must have SteelEardrums as it's firing from right behind (and just over) his head.
153* GentlemanSnarker: This is Bond's default setting, but Gustav Graves knows it's just a performance: "The unjustifiable swagger, the crass quips, the self-defence mechanisms concealing such inadequacy."
154* GoKartingWithBowser: The friendly fencing match that becomes a not so friendly knock-down-drag-out swordfight.
155* GoOutWithASmile: Jinx is clearly determined to FaceDeathWithDignity, given her cheerful declaration of "Looks like we're going down together!"
156* GoodScarsEvilScars: Zao is holding a case of diamonds rigged with an explosive, which detonates. He survives, but the blast has ''permanently embedded several of the diamonds in his face''.
157* GrandFinale: The film serves as the final entry in the Creator/PierceBrosnan-era Bond series. What's more, as ''Film/{{Casino Royale|2006}}'' explicitly takes place in a ContinuityReboot, ''Die Another Day'' also serves as the finale to ''the entire film series as it has been from day one''. The only thing that remains of the continuity that was is the fourth M.
158* GratuitousForeignLanguage: conversation takes place in what the characters say is "Icelandic", but is really German.
159* GreaterScopeVillain: The DPRK are the ones backing the BigBad's plan, which involves [[spoiler:using a giant KillSat to conquer South Korea for North Korea]], but the most representation they get is the trio of generals seen on Graves' plane.
160* GunStripping: Bond is cleaning his pistol in his office when he hears silenced gunshots outside, reassembles his pistol, and goes to see what's afoot. After Robinson is killed, and Bond shoots through M to get her captor, Q steps through the furniture to reveal the whole scene has been a VR training session.
161* HallOfMirrors: Bond walk past a slew of mirrors while searching a clinic for Zao. They bear no significance to the plot, it's just one of the numerous references to past Bond films.
162* HarmlessFreezing: Jinx drowns in a melting ice palace. James Bond revives her by getting her into a hot spring. He specifically says that the hypothermia "kept her alive" (delayed death by suffocation). This is almost TruthInTelevision, though she should've also needed rescue breathing.
163* HateAtFirstSight: James Bond and Gustav Graves take an instant dislike to each other in their first scene, culminating in an absolutely brutal swordfight. While Bond already suspected Graves of having ties to terrorists and that he deals in conflict diamonds, in Graves' case this [[spoiler:turns out to be a subversion. He is actually Colonel Moon, so he has every reason to hold a grudge.]]
164* HaveWeMet: The first thing Graves asks Bond, who replies that he'd remember. [[spoiler: "Graves", of course, knows perfectly well who Bond is.]]
165* HeroTrackingFailure: Possibly the least-justifiable example of this in cinema history. The weapon is a laser. In space. And even though a few fractions of a degree are all that separate its firing angle from its target's location, it somehow can't catch him.
166** While probably not an intended [[TruthInTelevision Truth In Television]], shooting a high energy beam through the atmosphere causes thermal blooming, as the beam is burning all the chemicals between the source and target. Moving the beam after it has punched a hole to the original target means burning more holes, more blooming, and more lost energy on target. Thus, the beam cannot move as quickly as one might imagine.
167* HiddenWeapons: Peaceful has a gun in a holster around her thigh.
168* HighDiveEscape: Jinx is cornered by the police at a cliff. She first strips to her bikini, [[DistractedByTheSexy stunning them]], then jumps into the water near a waiting motorboat.
169* HighHeelFaceTurn: {{Inverted}} when [[spoiler:Miranda Frost]] tries to kill 007 ''after'' they spend the night together.
170* HighSpeedHijack: Bond escapes Colonel Moon's base by leaping into one of the Mooks' hovercrafts. He leaps in just as it begins moving, but completes the hijack as the craft accelerates.
171* HighSpeedMissileDodge: Bond dodge one of Zao's missiles (and right his upside-down Aston) with a well-timed EjectionSeat.
172* HollywoodHealing: During the film's climax, Jinx is slashed across the stomach by a sword. Soon after, she and Bond celebrate their victory by having sex, and not a single scar is visible on Jinx's naked body.
173* HoneyTrap: Downplayed; at the hotel in Hong Kong a masseuse is sent to Bond, compliments of the management. Bond starts making the moves on her, causing her to remark that she "isn't that [[HappyEndingMassage kind of masseuse]]." Bond replies that he "isn't that kind of customer", then reaches down and grabs the gun strapped to her thigh. She's actually been sent to spy on him by the management (all Chinese intelligence), who are hiding behind a mirror in the room (it appears Bond's gotten a bit more cunning since ''Film/FromRussiaWithLove'').
174* HoverTank: The hovercrafts, which are actually just that, hovercrafts, but armed to the teeth in a way that one wouldn't begrudge a tank.
175* HumanShield: Bond is using a virtual reality training simulation in which a terrorist uses M as a Human Shield. His solution is to shoot M in the arm, causing her to jerk out of the way enough for him to get a clean shot at the terrorist.
176* HurricaneOfPuns: The amount of innuendo between Bond and Jinx may drive your head into the screen. Even for a Bond movie, it's a ''lot''.
177* {{Hypocrite}}: North Korean Colonel Moon, having MajoredInWesternHypocrisy, fits this rather well. He sees Western culture as being beneath him. He also loves Western sports cars, [[spoiler: his chief ally is his British girlfriend, and he changed his whole appearance to a Caucasian magnate to further his plot.]]
178* IHaveNoSon: [[spoiler:Col. Moon]]/Graves [[spoiler:attempts to explain his EvilPlan to his father General Moon, telling how the Icarus could be used to destroy the Korean Demilitarized Zone, allowing renegade North Korean soldiers to invade and occupy South Korea. But his father, who had hopes of having a peaceful reunion of the two Koreas and hoped his son would act as a bridge between North Korea and the West, simply disowns him by telling that his son died the day he plunged into the waterfall, having realized and ashamed the cold-blooded monster his son has now become. This causes Graves/Moon to kill him out of anger, only for 007 to kill him in rage]].
179* ISurrenderSuckers: When Jinx is cornered on top of an embankment, she raises her hands in surrender... and executes a perfect backwards swan dive into the water below, then escapes on a waiting speedboat.
180* IcarusAllusion: Icarus is the code name of Gustav Graves solar energy KillSat. During the final battle with Bond, Graves is defeated when his plane flies through the beam of solar energy being projected by Icarus.
181* IcePalace: In a rare non-fantasy and non-Sci-Fi example, Gustav Graves has an ice palace in the middle of Iceland. Needless to say, Bond soon trashes the place.
182* IdiotBall: [[spoiler:Miranda demonstrates to Bond why it is never a good idea to bring a loaded gun to bed with you when you're a former fugitive still tracking down his betrayer. The fact that Bond, a highly experienced agent, didn't notice that his gun was curiously lighter before his confrontation with Frost and Graves is perhaps even more baffling. Also Falco failed to inform [=MI6=] about Miranda Frost had been on the fencing team with Col. Moon at Harvard. ]].
183* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: [[spoiler:Zao is impaled by an ice chandelier about twice his size.]]
184* ImplausibleBoardingSkills: In one of the most derided scenes in the movies, Bond uses an improvised surfboard made from the hull of a wrecked ice yacht to para-surf an unconvincing CGI tsunami.
185* ImprobableAimingSkills: If the gunbarrel sequence is something to go by, Bond can unholster, whip around, and fire accurately enough to ''send the bullet straight up the gun of an attacker he previously never saw'' in one swift, fluid, unplanned movement.
186* InconvenientParachuteDeployment: During the climactic fight, Bond deploys Graves' parachute, which gets caught by one of the engines of the cargo jet they're in and chews him up. For additional irony, Bond tosses Graves an IronicEcho of his attempted PreMortemOneLiner as a one-liner of his own and uses Graves' suit's taser function to force him to let go of his handhold.
187* InevitableWaterfall: During the hovercraft chase in the ActionPrologue, Bond manages to immobilize Moon on the giant hovercraft's blower at full speed and lets the vehicle crash through a sanctuary's wooden door, with is situated atop a waterfall. The hovercraft then plummets down the waterfall, while Bond managed to grab the rope of the sanctuary's bell.
188* InformedAbility: Miranda Frost. Said to be a gold medal standard fencer, in her one battle she swings wildly with minimal effect [[spoiler:and is killed for her trouble]].
189* InnocentInnuendo: Though what they're doing is hardly innocent, the end sequence of Bond and Jinx playing with diamonds is made to sound like [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything something else]] from outside.
190* InsecurityCamera: Bond actually discovers a [[BookcasePassage hidden doorway]] by looking at a security camera that is pointed straight at an "empty" spot in the wall, and completely blind to the rest of the corridor, making it easy to disable.
191* TheInsomniac: Gustav Graves as a result of gene therapy used to change his look. He seems pretty unaffected on the whole, though he claims to need to spend a few hours using a "dream machine" each day to stay sane.
192* InterestingSituationDuel:
193** Bond and Mr. Kil fight to the death inside a room full of out-of-control laser beams and must dodge the deadly beams while they're in the middle of trying to kill each other.
194** Bond and Graves fight on a plane that's disintegrating due to the Icarus.
195* InterrogatedForNothing: Bond is put through a who's who of torture methods, and it's later revealed that he was intentionally given an incomplete briefing by [=MI6=] for his mission, just in case he was captured. They do trade Zao for his return though, which he never expected to happen, and calls them out on.
196* InterserviceRivalry: Between [=MI6=] and the NSA, although most of it is on the NSA's part. Toward the climax of the movie M chews out Falco for thinking this way and withholding relevant information, noting that they would have had an easier time [[spoiler:finding Colonel Moon's mole in [=MI6=] had they known that Moon and Miranda Frost had been on the Harvard fencing team together]].
197* InvisibilityCloak: Bond's Aston Martin "Vanish", which even he can't help but compliment without a hint of snark.
198-->'''Bond:''' Oh, very good.
199* IronicEcho: Frost says she's heard all about the infamous James Bond; "sex for dinner and death for breakfast!" [[spoiler:She sleeps with Bond that night and tries to kill him the next day, pointing out that it really is death for breakfast.]]
200* {{Irony}}: One of the soldiers torturing Bond is a fairly attractive Korean female officer. Take ''that'', you decadent Western womanizer!
201* ItsPersonal: Bond desires very strongly to avenge himself on Zao and the person who betrayed him during his mission in North Korea.
202* ItWorksBetterWithBullets: Reversed when Bond pulls out his gun, [[spoiler:and Miranda comes in, reveals that she has been working with Graves all along and that she had sabotaged the firing pin of Bond's gun after sleeping with him. Otherwise, we would have James Bond not realizing that his gun was empty]].
203* {{Jerkass}}: Mr. Krug, the obnoxious man in Cuba who unintentionally provides Bond with a way into the gene therapy clinic. He's a womanizer, loud and boorish, and threatens to shoot a poor waiter's testicles off if he doesn't do exactly what he says.
204* JustPlaneWrong: Graves' plane undergoes an explosive decompression that sucks everyone minus Bond, Graves, Miranda and Jinx from the aircraft, and none of them undergo the potentially fatal effects of hypoxia at the plane's sustained altitude. Plus, most planes today are designed so that bullets alone cannot trigger such a catastrophic event.
205* KatanasAreJustBetter: In the epic sword-fight between Bond and Gustav Graves, at one point Graves gets hold of a katana and promptly chops Bond's sabre in half with a single blow. Curiously, they both pass up katanas in favour of longswords for the final duel.
206* KillSat: The Icarus, which fires a concentrated beam of sunlight. (TemptingFate with that name much?)
207* KingpinInHisGym:
208** Colonel Moon, whom we meet using Tae Kwan Do to take out his frustrations on the punching bag he's sewn his anger management therapist in.
209** Gustav Graves also has some fun at a fencing club. [[spoiler:We later find that they're the same person.]]
210* KissMeImVirtual: At the end of the movie, Moneypenny is caught experimenting with a pair of VR goggles...
211* KungShui: It's cheerfully lampshaded when Bond and Gustav Graves trash a fencing club during a duel which gets out of hand; after the fight, as various ruined furnishings are carried out, a bellhop remarks, "The place needed redecorating anyway."
212* LancerVsDragon: [[BondGirl Jinx]] has a DesignatedGirlFight with [[TheMole Miranda Frost]] while Bond takes on BigBad Gustav Graves during the climax.
213* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: "New watch -- this'll be your twentieth, I believe?" This joke works on two levels, as Bond is glib about returning all of Q's hardware in pieces.
214* MadeOfExplodium: Everything at Colonel Moon's base becomes this once Bond whips out the big guns. An especially egregious moment comes during the hovercraft chase when one craft Bond has blown away lands harmlessly next to a bunker that proceeds to explode seemingly on its own.
215* MagicPlasticSurgery: A major plot point for two characters:
216** [[spoiler:Colonel Moon, thought to be dead, disguises himself by using groundbreaking gene therapy to alter his entire ethnicity, to change from a North Korean colonel into a snobby British playboy, with the new identity of Gustav Graves. The Graves identity supposedly hailed from Argentina and moved to Iceland where he found diamonds and built a mine (it's actually a phony mine, used to launder African conflict diamonds obtained as payment for illegal arms trading.) It's actually one of the more convincing examples, as the process requires a battery of painful gene therapy (replacing bone marrow from substitutes harvested from unwilling donors) and causing no end of side-effects, including chronic insomnia. It's ''almost'' within the bounds of plausibility that one could be made to look like the other with RealLife facial reconstruction surgery, albeit only after multiple surgeries with long recovery periods in between]].
217** Zao is in the middle of such a procedure, and is left with no hair, pale skin, ice-blue eyes, and a bunch of diamonds stuck in his face (they'd been put there by a C4 explosion, but you'd think that taking them out would have been the ''first'' thing the surgeon would do). Bond interrupts his operation in Cuba, forcing him to make do with the Music/SineadOConnor look.
218* MajoredInWesternHypocrisy: Colonel Moon, the TropeNamer. What's even funnier about the line is that he speaks it with an air of someone who sees the Western world and its inhabitants as completely beneath him (TruthInTelevision as this is the cultural attitude of North Korea). Adding to his hypocrisy is his collection of Western-imported sports cars, [[spoiler:a British girlfriend in the form of Miranda Frost, and his undergoing plastic surgery that transforms him into a British playboy with the intent of furthering his scheme of destroying the land mines in the demilitarized zone so that North Korea can retake South Korea]]. That the reason he received an education in the West in the first place was because his father wanted him to be a bridge between the West and North Korea makes it a bit sad.
219-->'''Colonel Moon:''' I know all about the UN. I studied at Oxford and Harvard. ''Majored in Western hypocrisy''.
220* MasterOfYourDomain: Bond is able to lower his heart rate to the point where it appeared that he was dying.
221* MasterSwordsman: Yes, he's James Bond. No, it's unlikely that either his military or his [=MI6=] training included anything on using several different types of longswords. The same can be said for Gustav Graves, who, despite having a fencing instructor around, would not have learned anything useful about heavy sabres, katanas, hand-and-a-halfs, etc. As above, what Miranda Frost would actually be good at, Olympic fencing, has very little inherently to do with battle-grade weapons.
222* MeaningfulName
223** Miranda [[DefrostingIceQueen Frost]].
224** The KillSat is called ''Icarus'', of all things.
225* MessyHair: Bond was a prisoner in North Korea for 14 months, so naturally his hair becomes untidy and long without any grooming.
226* MightyWhiteyAndMellowYellow: Subverted. After Bond arrives in Hong Kong and has had a proper shave and some new clothes, it seems like he tries to seduce the Asian masseuse who was sent to his room. Then he takes her gun and reveals her as a Chinese operative.
227* MinorCrimeRevealsMajorPlot: Rogue North Korean colonel trades in smuggled diamonds for weapons but is presumably killed → [[spoiler:plot by said rogue colonel, who was previously thought to have died, to use solar-powered Kill Sat to cut a path through the Korean DMZ, allowing North Korea to launch an invasion of South Korea]].
228* TheMole: [[spoiler:Miranda Frost was the one who revealed Bond's true identity in North Korea.]]
229* MythologyGag: Has its [[MythologyGag/DieAnotherDay own page.]]
230* {{Nepotism}}: It's pretty obvious that the main reason why Colonel Moon even holds such a high rank in the North Korean military, a position that he then abuses for his own gain, is because his father is a General.
231* NewEraSpeech: Graves gives one when he presents the power of Icarus to General Moon.
232* NoBrows: Zao does not have eyebrows, due to having subjected himself to a gene procedure that was interrupted by Bond. It underpins his RedRightHand status.
233* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: It's believed that Gustav Graves was inspired by Richard Branson.
234* NoOSHACompliance: The diamond lasers at the ice fortress apparently have some sort of Party Mode, where pressing a button will cause them all to turn on and start spinning around wildly.
235* NotSoAbandonedBuilding: It's revealed that [=MI6=] has taken over a disused (and fictitious) Underground station under the Houses of Parliament.
236* NotSoDifferentRemark: Gustav Graves states that his persona is based on James Bond. Ironically, it's made him the toast of England.
237* NotStayingForBreakfast: For once, Bond ends up on the ''receiving'' end of this.
238* {{Novelization}}: The last of three films to be novelised by Raymond Benson.
239** The abandoned scene of Bond and Miranda in the hot tub is reinstated.
240** After escaping the hospital ship, Bond makes a stop in Seoul and gets into a street fight before reaching Hong Kong.
241** More continuity references - [[Film/TheManWithTheGoldenGun the dum-dum golden bullet with the 007 number engraved is in Bond's office]], Music/TheBeachBoys' [[Film/AViewToAKill "California Girls" plays on a radio in Cuba]] and [[Film/ForYourEyesOnly a parrot repeats the words "give us a kiss"]].
242** While Bond is tortured in North Korea, he remembers his old friends and enemies.
243* ObviousStuntDouble: It's a FreezeFrameBonus, but at one point during the Graves/Bond swordfight, we get a glimpse of the doubles for ''both'' actors.
244* OffstageVillainy: During Bond's captivity, Zao attempts to blow up a summit between China and South Korea, killing three Chinese agents before being captured.
245* OhCrap: Zao when Bond shoots down the chandelier above his head, letting out a scream before it impales him.
246* OlderHeroVsYoungerVillain: [[spoiler:Gustav Graves is a younger Shadow Archetype to Bond, what with having his own gadgets, DarkActionGirl, and dangerous exotic lifestyle. Zao - about the same age as he is - even has his own Bond car]].
247* OminousLatinChanting: The epic theme for Icarus.
248* OnlyOnePlausibleSuspect: We find out there's a mole inside the [=MI6=] who has, among other things, informed the bad guys who Bond is. Now, obviously the mole can't be Bond himself, nor M or Q or Moneypenny, as they are all mainstays of the franchise. Besides them, there is only one other major [=MI6=] character in the movie, who — surprise, surprise! — does turn out to be the mole.
249* OvertOperative: Nicely subverted with the hotel manager who (as usual) knows Bond well enough to recognize him (even with a BeardOfBarbarism). Then it turns out the manager is with Chinese intelligence and knows who Bond ''really' is (and vice versa).
250* {{Patricide}}: [[spoiler:Graves[=/=]Colonel Moon shoots dead his own father after the man dreads what his son has become and tries to stop his plan that will plunge the world into war.]]
251* PercussiveTherapy: Colonel Moon is introduced to the audience while beating on a punching bag to work out some frustrations—then the punching bag is unzipped, revealing that he'd stuffed his anger management therapist in there.
252* PillowPistol: It's used against Bond when [[spoiler:Miranda]] unloads it during the night.
253* PointDefenceless: The Icarus is programmed to automatically target and destroy incoming missiles. When Vlad tells Graves of the anti-satellite missile launched at Icarus, he isn't worried at all and just lets Icarus do its thing. It was only one missile.
254* PoorCommunicationKills: Colonel Moon's plot would never have got off the ground had the NSA not withheld vital information about his time outside North Korea. [[spoiler:The NSA knew of Miranda Frost's association with Moon/Graves through the Harvard fencing team, but kept it from [=MI6=] because they feared there was a mole in their organisation, thereby preventing them from fingering her as the very mole the NSA feared.]]
255* PoorlyDisguisedPilot: In addition to being a celebration of the series' fortieth anniversary, the producers wanted the film to set up a new series starring Jinx. As it turned out though, the mixed reception of this film combined with the catastrophic reaction to ''Film/Catwoman2004'' killed off any chance of the ''Jinx'' series taking off.
256* PowerPerversionPotential: Moneypenny uses the Virtual Reality Glasses for a little recreation with a virtual James Bond.
257* PreemptiveDeclaration: Bond enters a room with a wheelchair.
258-->'''Patient:''' What the hell do you want? I don't need a goddamn wheelchair.
259-->'''Bond:''' No?
260-->''(punches him)''
261-->'''Bond:''' You do now.
262* PrettyInMink: The ice palace patrons, and a white fur wrap Miranda wears (the furs were fake, but still counts more as this). The film's costumer said she liked combining the slinky dresses with fur because of the effect it gave.
263* ProductPlacement: It isn't new territory for a Bond film, certainly, but it was so glaringly obvious in this one that many critics nicknamed it "''Buy'' Another Day."
264* PropheticNames: The name of the orbital mirror system Icarus rather obviously foreshadows the device's final fate.
265* ProsceniumReveal: At one point, Bond is seen engaging in a shootout with intruders in [=MI6=] headquarters. Then he finds someone hold M hostage in her office. He shoots the attacker through M's shoulder, and suddenly everything freezes in time and Q appears, scolding Bond for shooting his own boss, as it turns out Bond is in a virtual simulation in Q Branch's offices.
266* PreMortemOneLiner:
267** Graves says "Father, you disappoint me." just before he kills [[spoiler:his own father]] towards the end of the film.
268** Bond, as usual, gives one to Graves, with the bonus of turning his own line against him:
269--> '''Graves:''' Time to face destiny!\
270'''Bond:''' Time to face gravity!
271* ProfessionalKiller: Based on the "cold-blooded" criteria of the trope, Jinx actually outstrips Bond on this score, at least in this film, deciding to crack jokes when offing the likes of [[spoiler: the gene therapy scientist and Miranda]].
272* PullTheIV: Bond does this when escaping from the [=MI6=] medical facility.
273* PunchClockVillain: Vladimir Popov, Graves' tech expert. He cheerfully announces that Bond managed to break Graves' own land speed record.
274* RacialTransformation: It turns out that [[spoiler:the British multi-millionaire Gustav Graves]] is in fact the new identity of the North Korean [[BigBad Colonel Moon]], which he achieved through [[MagicPlasticSurgery groundbreaking plastic surgery]]. In the same film, his [[TheDragon Dragon]] Zao is shown undergoing a similar process to assume a German identity, but James Bond interrupts the treatment before he can finish it. This has some [[RedRightHand nasty side effects]], leaving Zao as a bald albino with the diamond fragments he tried to have removed still embedded in his face.
275* ReadTheFreakingManual: When Q gives Bond the {{doorstopper}} manual for his latest [[CoolCar gadget car]], Bond tosses it in front of the vehicle's automatic shotguns which promptly blast the manual to shreds.
276-->'''Q:''' Here's the manual, should be able to [[TemptingFate shoot through that]] in a couple of hours.\
277''[Bond tosses the book into the air. The targeting shotguns blast it to pieces]''\
278'''Bond:''' [[BondOneLiner Just took a few seconds]], Q.\
279'''Q:''' Wish I could make '''you''' vanish.
280* RealAwardFictionalCharacter: Miranda Frost is mentioned as having won a gold medal in fencing... because the winner wound up dying of a drug overdose.
281* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: General Moon sent his son to study in the West so he could help bridge the gap between the Koreas, refused to condone the torture DPRK soldiers inflicted on Bond, resisted attempts by DPRK hardliners to launch an open invasion of the South, and finally, [[spoiler:tries to kill his own son when he realizes what a monster he has become.]]
282* RecycledPremise: The KillSat is remarkably similar to the one in ''Film/DiamondsAreForever''. Probably intentional, given that it is the 20th movie and the 40th anniversary, and the whole film is loaded with {{Mythology Gag}}s. ''Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe'', the 10th movie, had a similar deal going, for instance the plot of that film being a RecycledPremise of ''Film/YouOnlyLiveTwice''.
283* RedRightHand: Zao has diamonds embedded in his face from the explosion in the beginning. Meanwhile, Graves suffers chronic insomnia due to the gene therapy and must spend an hour each day in an REM device to avoid going mad.
284* RefugeInAudacity: Bond tries to check into a fancy Hong Kong hotel looking like he had barely survived a shipwreck. He just struts into the lobby like he owns the place, and pays no heed to the shocked gasps or {{Disapproving Look}}s of the guests and staff. This is because he knows the manager, who shows up and browbeats his staff into doing as Bond asks.
285* RenegadeRussian: Colonel Moon, a renegade from North Korea, though he does gain the loyalty of the North Korean generals after the coup. (Except, oddly enough, Moon's father, an officer with a great deal of common sense.)
286* ResignationsNotAccepted: [=MI6=] has an "evaluation centre" in the Falkland Islands for keeping agents deemed a danger (which may include those who decide to resign), and M can confine someone there as long as she deems necessary.
287* {{Revenge}}: [[spoiler:Bond attempted to shoot Miranda in the head the moment he discovered that she was TheMole in [=MI6=] who betrayed him, but he failed to get his revenge because Miranda jammed the firing mechanism of his gun the night before.]]
288* ReverseGrip: Jinx, but only while DualWielding, and only with her off-hand.
289* RogueAgent: After Bond is released from North Korea, he loses his 00 status and becomes a prisoner of [=MI6=] until they can determine just how culpable he was with the information leak that led to the execution of an American agent. Bond manages to escape the British vessel holding him captive, and he operates on his own until M unofficially recruits him to investigate Gustav Graves.
290* RoomDisservice: A Chinese agent poses as a masseuse. She fails but lives, because she's not there to kill Bond, only to find out what he's doing in Hong Kong.
291* RuleOfSexy: There is no valid reason for Bond to be shirtless during his first scene with M (the doctors had already done a thorough scan on his body some time ago, and he was merely resting before M visits him). He later escapes from the warship, and although he's wearing a blue shirt, he doesn't bother to button it even before he enters a posh Hong Kong hotel. For the sake of decorum, you'd expect that Bond would ''at least'' cover up his torso.
292** [[spoiler:There is also no valid reason behind Miranda Frost putting on a skimpy bathing suit for her fight with Jinx but this.]]
293* SecondPlaceIsForLosers: [[spoiler:Miranda Frost]] betrayed her country solely because she got a silver medal in the Olympics, and [[spoiler:Graves]] offered to make it look like the gold winner cheated.
294* SecretSecretKeeper: Chang appears to be just a typical hotel manager who sucks up to Bond. When Bond finds him peering into his room with others, he openly asks "do you really think I didn't always know you were Chinese intelligence?"
295* SelectiveMagnetism: Bond activates an MRI machine to disarm Zao. Ignoring the fact that it takes hours for an MRI to fully power up, the only things that the magnet attracts are the pistol and a few medical implements, leaving the steel table, hospital bed, etc completely untouched.
296* SensibleHeroesSkimpyVillains: Played straight with Jinx in combat fatigues even if she removes her jacket, and [[spoiler:Miranda Frost putting on very skimpy spandex.]]
297* SeriouslyScruffy: Bond ends up with a Beard of Imprisonment, one of the few times he's seen with any kind of facial hair on screen. (His ''chest hair'', on the other hand...)
298* SexFaceTurn: [[spoiler:Inverted -- Frost enjoys her night with Bond, but she's still prepared to shoot him dead the next day.]]
299* SexySurfacingShot: Jinx walks out of the ocean in a bikini, wearing a white belt and diving knife, just like Honey Ryder.
300* ShirtlessScene:
301** Bond has four; during his first scene with M, twice when he sleeps with Jinx, and once when he beds Miranda.
302** Zao's chest is bare throughout the gene therapy clinic scene.
303* ShootTheHostage: Done by Bond in a virtual training scenario to save M, justifying it as being OnlyAFleshWound.
304-->'''Bond:''' Check the replay. You'll find he's dead and she's only got a flesh wound.
305* ShoutOut:
306** During the climax on the plane when Graves throws out one of the parachutes is very similar to the climax in ''Film/AirForceOne'' when Egor Korshunov throws out the last parachute out the plane before fighting Marshall. Had Bond said, "Get off this plane," it would be cooler. [[spoiler:And both Korshunov and Graves are killed when the heroes forcibly pull their parachutes open.]]
307** Bond's [[UnwinnableTrainingSimulation Virtual Reality mission]] is based on the stage "King's Ransom" in the Platform/Nintendo64 game ''VideoGame/TheWorldIsNotEnough''.
308** Bond breaks out of [=MI6=] custody and casually enters a luxury hotel, getting himself a suite, a shower, a shave, and some nice suits, similar to how in ''Film/TheRock'', John Patrick Mason (played by former Bond Creator/SeanConnery) escapes from the FBI's custody and makes his way to a luxury hotel to go for those same things. Additionally, there's a scene where a two-way mirror is smashed.
309** Damian Falco was named after Sidney Falco, the main character in ''Film/SweetSmellOfSuccess'', which is one of the writers' favourite films.
310* TheSleepless: Graves suffers from chronic insomnia [[spoiler:as a side effect of the gene therapy he had]], and has to spend an hour in an REM machine every day to keep himself from going insane.
311* SlowLaser: The villains try to use industrial lasers on Jinx... and Mr. Kil gets them instead.
312* SmarterThanYouLook: Bond's opinion of the new Q. Q's answer is "Still, better than looking cleverer than you are."
313* SnarkToSnarkCombat: Bond and the new Q still don't get along.
314-->'''Bond:''' Give me the old firing range any day, Quartermaster.\
315'''Q:''' Yes, well, they call it the future, so get used to it. ''[takes Bond into a museum of {{Continuity Nod}}s]''\
316'''Bond:''' This where they keep the old relics, is it?
317* SnootySports: Bond encounters diamond magnate Gustav Graves at a fencing academy, which is located in a converted chateau. Bond and Graves conduct a fencing match that escalates quickly and goes way outside the sparring lane. Fencing has become a snooty sport ever since semi-automatic firearms replaced the sword as the standard issue weapon for soldiers. Today, the sword is relegated to a parade dress uniform, purely for ceremonial purposes.
318* SoftWater: Jinx still manages to play this trope straight, though it was given a token Handwave in that she had chosen the place she dived off beforehand; presumably, she checked the water was deep enough to make the fall survivable. The height she dives from is still pushing a bit, but by this film's standards, it hardly merits a mention.
319* SolarPoweredMagnifyingGlass: The Icarus is essentially this, being one large mirror with a center focusing array to concentrate the light into a single, extremely hot beam.
320* SteelEardrums: During Q's demonstration of the glass-shattering ring, he casually shoots at a plate of bulletproof glass at point-blank range without giving himself or Bond any ear protection.
321* StockFootage: When the Americans launch a missile at Icarus, it is the exact same one used by the British Navy in ''Film/TomorrowNeverDies''.
322* StrappedToAnOperatingTable: Jinx gets strapped to a table with a laser moving towards her neck.
323* SuicidalGotcha: Jinx dives backwards off a cliff into the ocean, where she is promptly picked up by a boat.
324* SupermodelStrut: After Jinx does her SexySurfacingShot, she walks out of the water and into the bar in a catwalk strut while swinging her hips from left to right.
325* SwordAndFist: The sword fight has Bond and Graves exchanging blows as well as slashing a variety of swords at each other.
326* SwordFight: What starts out as a somewhat friendly fencing match turns into a "first blood drawn from the torso". Also the duel between Miranda and DualWielding Jinx.
327* TakeItToTheBridge: When Bond is released from captivity in North Korea, he's sent out alone onto a mist-shrouded bridge across the Demilitarized Zone. He realizes it's a PrisonerExchange when Zao emerges from the mist in the other direction; they have a terse exchange in the middle, out of sight from both sides.
328* ATasteOfTheLash: It's implied that this happened to Bond at some point during the 1.5 years he was held prisoner in North Korea, given the scars on his back.
329* TestosteronePoisoning: The fencing instructor says sarcastically regarding the Gustav/Bond duel, "I don't like cock fights."
330* ThisIsForEmphasisBitch: Said by Jinx to [[spoiler:Miranda]] during their fight.
331-->'''Miranda:''' I can read your every move!\
332'''Jinx:''' ''(Stabs her in the chest, complete with The Art of War)'' Read ''this''! '''Bitch'''!
333* TimePassageBeard: When Bond is finally freed by the North Koreans more than a year after his capture, he's grown a beard (as well as a mustache and long, shaggy hair).
334* TitleDrop: "So you live to die another day... Colonel."
335* TooDumbToLive: Colonel Moon's jeweller, who continues to examine the diamonds brought to the base by a disguised Bond after Moon has ''blown up'' Bond's chopper and while the entire base is scrambling to evacuate the illegal weapons from the scene. It doesn't end well for him when Bond blows the C4 hidden among the diamonds.
336* TortureIsIneffective: Bond is taken prisoner by the North Korean Army at the end of the prologue and tortured for months, before finally being traded back to the UK. M assumes the North Koreans only traded him because he cracked; Bond assures her he never did.
337* TraitorShot: [[spoiler: after Bond leaves Miranda in bed to investigate, the camera lingers on her as she watches him leave while putting her earrings back on. Although her expression doesn't change much, it's little surprise when she's revealed to have been working with the villain all along and was in fact responsible for Bond's capture in North Korea.]]
338* TreacherousAdvisor: It's implied that General Moon's two adjutants are in on Graves' plot, although even they are disturbed when [[spoiler:the junior Moon kills his father.]]
339* TrialByFriendlyFire: Bond ends up shooting M to get at the guy behind. Turns out it was a simulation, with M receiving OnlyAFleshWound in the process.
340* {{Tuckerization}}: Jinx was named after a girl the writers knew from London's clubbing scene in TheEighties.
341* TurbineBlender: Graves gets sucked into his plane's engines, after Bond presses the button on Graves' cyber suit which causes Graves to electrocute himself and lose his grip of the plane window. The engine makes a ''heavy grinding'' sound as it rips Graves to pieces.
342* TwoPersonPoolParty: In a DeletedScene. Interestingly, this actually a FakeOutMakeOut scenario to hide the fact that Bond and Miranda have been snooping around the Ice Palace. They don't do the deed until returning to his room.
343* UnconventionalVehicleChase:
344** In the pre-credits sequence, Bond and the North Korean arms dealers engage in a hovercraft chase.
345** Bond also uses a rocket-propelled sled to run away from the blast of Icarus.
346* UnholyMatrimony: [[spoiler:Moon[=/=]Graves and Miranda are a couple, and they first met when they were on the Harvard fencing team.]]
347* UnkemptBeauty: The make-up department tried to make Brosnan look as unattractive as possible after his character had been imprisoned and beaten up for 14 months, yet the director undid some of its intended effect by giving the actor a gratuitous ShirtlessScene, so Bond still appears quite healthy (and remains at least somewhat desirable in the eyes of Brosnan's fangirls) in spite of the long-term torture.
348* UnwinnableTrainingSimulation: The Virtual Reality Glasses.
349* UsefulBook: Q gives James Bond the {{doorstopper}} manual of his new car. Bond throws the book in front of the car, triggering the shotguns under the hood which promptly shoot it to confetti.
350* UseTheirOwnWeaponAgainstThem: At the end of the film, [[spoiler:Graves' electric suit is turned against him after he's hanging out of a hole in the plane. When Bond triggers the electrocution, the no-longer-grounded Graves is shocked and loses his grip, getting dragged into the engine.]]
351* VerbThis:
352-->'''Miranda Frost''': I can read your every move!
353-->'''Jinx''': Read this! ''(pins a copy of Literature/TheArtOfWarSunTzu to her chest with a throwing knife)'' Bitch!
354* VictoryByFirstBlood: While Bond and Graves are fencing at the Blades club, Bond proposes a bet over a diamond marked with the insignia of Graves' company (which also happens to be an African conflict diamond). Graves accepts, then takes a pair of decorative swords off the wall.
355-->'''Graves:''' Since we're upping the wager, let's up the weapons, shall we? We'll do this the old-fashioned way, first blood drawn from the torso!
356* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Gustav Graves is beloved by England, and he knows how to schmooze with the tabloid press. Oddly enough, this causes a plot hole. How did no one notice this man never existed until a few months ago? And how did he accomplish enough to warrant a knighthood in that period? One possibility is that he'd had the resources for the transformation in storage for a long time.
357* VillainousBreakdown: Gustav Graves goes absolutely CRAZY during his fight with 007. Possibly justified due to the fact he's in a fight with the man who [[spoiler:secretly ruined his life]], and a {{foreshadow|ing}} that parallels [[spoiler:Colonel Moon's introduction in the TheTeaser, that had him beating up his anger management therapist.]]
358* VillainousDemotivator: Our introduction to Col. Moon is a scene with him kicking the living crap out of a subordinate... who is hogtied inside a punching bag.
359* VillainousFriendship: Moon/[[spoiler:Graves]] and Zao, brothers in arms who are very devoted to one another. It's telling that while he sees his girlfriend [[spoiler:Miranda]] as a weapon, he shows deeper, more personal affection for Zao in private.
360* VirtualTrainingSimulation: Q puts 007 in a VR training scenario where he gets to play ShootTheHostage with M.
361* VisibleInvisibility: The invisible car. There's a (rather overlong, which Bond lampshades) explanation of the spec-tech involved, and the distortion is ''very'' visible. At least when the car is moving, as presumably the cameras and computers have a hard time keeping up. When it's still, it's undetectable.
362* WatchThePaintJob: Colonel Moon's entire rare car collection rains out of the sky onto the rice paddies of North Korea.
363* WaterTorture: The ActionPrologue ends on a shot of the North Koreans ducking Bond in ice water to make him talk (and to punish him for apparently killing Col. Moon), which blends into the opening credits.
364* WeDontNeedRoads: Colonel Moon uses hovercrafts to cruise over the Korean demilitarized zone (which is littered with mines). Bond destroys his base, and Moon is forced to go underground and build a giant sunlight-reflecting satellite to destroy the minefield, instead. (Which had to be more expensive than simply buying more hovercrafts...)
365* WeaponizedCar: Bond's Aston Martin Vanquish and Zao's Jaguar XKR duel.
366* WellDoneSonGuy:
367** Colonel Moon wants this from his father. At least until [[spoiler:he becomes Gustav Graves]].
368** With regards to Bond's implicit mother-son dynamic with M, his delivery of "You burn me, and now you want my help" is petulant and resentful, and the hurt he feels towards M for not trusting him earlier is more personal than professional.
369* WhamLine:
370** For Bond, Colonel Moon suddenly blowing up the helicopter, then asking, "How do you propose to kill me now, ''Mr. Bond''?"
371** Also from Moon (Now Gustav Graves) when he is confronted by Bond and Miranda who have him at gunpoint, and he says to Bond when inquiring on who betrayed him to North Korea: "You never thought of looking inside your own organization?" Cue Miranda turning her gun to Bond instead.
372* WhatDidYouExpectWhenYouNamedIt: The superweapon is named "Icarus". At the end of the movie, the villain loses control of the weapon and accidentally burns the wings off his own plane, causing a spectacular crash.
373* WholeCostumeReference: Jinx wears the bikini top, Shorttank and survival knife ensemble while doing a SexySurfacingShot which was made famous by Honey Rider in ''Dr. No''.
374* WholePlotReference: While Graves's motivations are different, the scheme itself is taken wholesale from ''Film/DiamondsAreForever''; from using diamonds to build a giant space laser KillSat for neutralising ground-based military defences to the villain impersonating a respected industrialist.
375* WhyDontYouJustShootHim: Invoked. Mr Kil seems to really enjoy that laser.
376* WithinArmsReach: The film has the climatic showdown between James Bond and the villain Gustav Graves aboard an aircraft with a gaping hole in its fuselage. Graves has Bond at his mercy, largely by wearing PoweredArmour. Bond, however, pulls the ripcord on Graves's parachute, deploying it, whereupon the turbulence pulls Graves out of the aircraft.
377* WorkingOutTheirEmotions: Colonel Tan-Sun Moon is introduced to the audience while beating on a punching bag to work out some frustrations—then the punching bag is unzipped, revealing that he'd stuffed his anger management therapist in there.
378* WorkingTheSameCase: After being rescued by Bond, the mysterious Jinx reveals that she's an NSA agent—in a slight subversion, Bond has already realized that she's one of the good guys—and that they're both pursuing the same villain.
379* WorstAid: Jinx is unconscious underwater an awfully long time for her to come to that quickly when Bond rescues her and just gives her mouth-to-mouth.
380* WouldHitAGirl: Bond would've executed [[spoiler:the traitor Miranda if she hadn't disabled his gun without his knowledge]].
381* YouHaveGotToBeKiddingMe: Bond's reaction when Q brings out his "new transportation"; because it's invisible, he thinks Q's referring to the trolley it's sitting on.
382-->'''Q:''' As I learned from my predecessor, Bond, I ''never'' joke about my work.
383* YouJustToldMe: Bond uses this method to reveal the identity of Gustav Graves. The trope as played out here is somewhat less than effective, since the audience has already been alerted to this plot point.
384* YourMom: Jinx's answer to Zao when he asks her who sent her.
385-->'''Zao:''' Who sent you?\
386'''Jinx:''' Your momma. She wanted me to tell you that she's real disappointed in you.
387* YourTerroristsAreOurFreedomFighters: Said almost verbatim by Bond's Cuban contact, but promptly defied by Bond: "Zao has no interest in other people's freedom".
388* ZipMeUp: Happens with a fencing instructor (played by ''Madonna'') who asks Bond to zip up her corset:
389-->'''Verity:''' Do you mind? I've come undone.

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