The 12 Best Daniel Craig Roles That Aren't 007

Daniel Craig first started performing when he was a child, entertaining barflies at the pub his parents ran. He'd perform impersonations of celebrities he'd seen on television. "I'd get money," Craig told GQ of his early acting efforts. "I suppose I've been making a living out of this from a very early age." While studying at the National Youth Theatre of Great Britain, Craig made his professional acting debut at 16 in a Shakespeare production, quickly establishing himself as one of Britain's finest young actors. Craig was 32 when he was cast as James Bond in 2006's "Casino Royale" — a role that would forever change his life. He played 007 in four more films, including his 2021 Bond swan song, "No Time To Die."

There's no argument that Bond has been Craig's signature role — not surprising since he holds the record as the longest-running 007, portraying him for 15 years. But those spy films, as iconic as they are, represent a fraction of Craig's cinematic output, which is far more diverse and expansive. Those roles have run the gamut, ranging from a shrewd Southern-fried detective (who apparently took diction lessons from Foghorn Leghorn) to a real-life murderer who inspired a literary classic to a gunslinger battling an extraterrestrial invasion, and more. Read on to discover the 12 best Daniel Craig roles that aren't 007.

Ray in Some Voices (2000)

Daniel Craig made his on-screen debut with a small role in the 1992 film "The Power of One." He continued working in film and television steadily, with highlights including "The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles," and playing an assassin-priest in the 1998 historical drama "Elizabeth." Those roles led to the 2000 indie dramedy "Some Voices." Craig plays Ray, a schizophrenic Londoner recently released from a years-long stint in a psychiatric hospital. He soon meets Laura (Kelly Macdonald), a Scottish woman in the midst of leaving her abusive husband. The two hit it off, with Laura unable to resist Ray's spontaneity and childlike sense of wonder. At first, all goes smoothly, thanks to the medication that quiets the voices in Ray's head. However, chaos ensues when Ray makes the unfortunate decision to stop taking his medication, hoping that love will do a better job of managing his mental illness.

"Some Voices" was hardly a hit, making a worldwide gross of $9,188 at the box office. But it was well-reviewed — particularly Craig's performance. "In a strong cast, the up-and-coming Craig is superb, capturing all of Ray's joy, frustration, and fear in his expressive face," noted Channel 4. A review in Time Out London declared, "Craig's vibrant yet haunted expressiveness tells us everything needful about this doomed sweetheart." Craig ultimately won Best Actor at the British Independent Film Awards for the role.

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Connor Rooney in The Road to Perdition (2002)

In 2001, Craig made the jump from British indie to Hollywood blockbuster with a role alongside Angelina Jolie in "Tomb Raider." He followed that project with a prestige film, director Sam Mendes' 2000 drama "Road to Perdition." Boasting an all-star cast that included Tom Hanks, Paul Newman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Jude Law, and Stanley Tucci. Craig played Connor Rooney, the volatile, loose-cannon son of Newman's fearsome mob boss, John Rooney. As Craig divulged during an interview with The Hollywood Reporter's Awards Chatter podcast, Mendes cast him personally. "He went, 'I'm doing a gangster movie in Chicago. I want you to play Paul Newman's son,'" Craig said. "I [didn't] need to hear anymore." But when he flew to Chicago to audition for Mendes, it did not go well. "I did his reading, and [Mendes] said, 'That was terrible, but I'm going to give you the part because you've come all this way,'" Craig added.

Facing off with screen legend Newman in what wound up being his final screen performance was heady stuff for Craig. "I look back on it now, and I just go, 'My goodness me, that was a moment when things changed for me,'" he recalled in an interview with CBS Sunday Morning. "Not about my status or my recognition. Something within me went, 'I am allowed to sit at this table.'"

XXXX in Layer Cake (2004)

Daniel Craig's star was on the rise when he landed the leading role in "Layer Cake," the directorial debut of Matthew Vaughn (who later directed the "Kingsmen" franchise). In the role that's been credited with attracting the attention of Bond producers, Craig starred as an unnamed cocaine dealer (identified as XXXX in the credits) on the cusp of cashing out and retiring from his life of crime. Just as he's about to pack it in, he's ordered to undertake two final assignments: track down the drug-addicted daughter of his boss' boss (Michael Gambon), and oversee a massive drug deal. Of course, both projects go off the rails for reasons beyond his control.

"For me, he didn't look like your usual cliché of a gangster," Craig said of his character in an interview with IGN. "I wanted to do something different. I wanted to show the kind of elegant businessman-like drug dealers. There's a lot of them out there." Once again, Craig received praise for his taut performance as a shrewd criminal with a knack for business and a distaste for violence. "Craig is fascinating here as a criminal who is very smart, and finds that is not an advantage because while you might be able to figure out what another smart person is about to do, dumbos like the men he works for are likely to do anything," noted Roger Ebert in his review

Steve in Munich (2005)

Craig graduated to leading roles in movies, yet he was happy to take a supporting part in 2005's "Munich" to work with the film's director, Steven Spielberg. "Munich" follows a covert operation launched by the Israeli government in retribution for the assassination of 11 Israeli athletes and their coach during the 1972 Olympics in Munich at the hands of a Palestinian militant group known as Black September. Eric Bana stars as Avner, appointed by Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir (Lynn Cohen) to head the top-secret revenge mission. His top-tier team includes Robert (Mathieu Kassovitz), a munitions expert, Carl (Ciaran Hinds), the "cleaner," and Hans (Hanns Zischler), an expert forger. The team is rounded out by Craig's character, Steve, a South African brought in to serve as driver and trigger man.

"Steve at first is very gung ho," said Craig. The men face a moral dilemma as they commit atrocities to avenge the murdered athletes. "As the movie goes on... We see the fact that these are just human beings.. He suffers, because of the terrible things that they begin to do, and the terrible acts that they have to commit to fulfilling the job they've taken on." 

Perry Smith in Infamous (2006)

The same year that Craig made his 007 debut in "Casino Royale," he also starred in "Infamous," a film dramatizing the story of how author Truman Capote (Toby Jones) researched and wrote his true-crime classic, "In Cold Blood." In the film, Capote meets with convicted murderers Perry Smith (Craig, his hair and eyebrows dyed jet black, while contact lenses concealed his blue eyes) and Dick Hickock (Lee Pace), who share details of their horrific slaughter of a Kansas family. Capote's relationship with the malevolently magnetic Smith becomes sexual, violently so. Since Craig had then been cast as Bond, an "Infamous" scene in which he and Jones kiss made headlines for all the wrong reasons. Jones was continually asked in interviews about what it was like to kiss 007. "What's he supposed to say? 'Very dry?'" Craig quipped in an interview with The Observer. "Anyway, it's all over the internet now: 'Bond has gay kiss!'"

As "Infamous" director Douglas McGrath told The Observer, Craig's character doesn't appear until about 40 minutes into the film. "But boy, the minute he comes in, he sure grabs everyone," said McGrath. "I knew Daniel was right because he is very persuasively violent, very persuasive as a vulnerable person, but he is also totally magnetic. As Perry, you think is he dumb, or much smarter than I thought, which keeps you on a knife edge."

Ben Driscoll in The Invasion (2007)

In his first film after the release of "Casino Royale," Craig teamed up with Nicole Kidman for the sci-fi thriller "The Invasion." The film is a loose remake of the sci-fi horror classic "Invasion of the Body Snatchers." Kidman plays psychiatrist Carol Bennell, who makes the horrifying discovery that an extraterrestrial epidemic has been changing people's personalities and behavior. Craig portrays Dr. Ben Driscoll, who helps her try to stop the alien virus from spreading. 

Ultimately, critics deemed "The Invasion" a failure and a commercial flop. Still, Craig did admirable work portraying a doctor trying to convince the medical establishment that their new strain of flu is actually an alien invasion. Speaking with interviewer Emmanuel Levy, "The Invasion" director Oliver Hirschbiegel praised Craig's performance in the film. "I felt so fortunate to have Daniel in the role of Ben," he said. "He naturally conveyed all the facets of his character: all the toughness, the intelligence, and the tenderness that makes you see why Carol relies on Ben so much. Daniel also has a wicked sense of humor. I had a great time working with him."

Tuva Bielski in Defiance (2008)

Based on true events, "Defiance" follows a group of Jews in Nazi-occupied Belarus in 1941. In the film, the group flees to the forest and successfully (for a while, anyhow) wages war against Hitler's forces using guerilla-style tactics. Craig starred as Tuvia Bielski, fighting with his brothers Zus (Liev Schreiber) and Asael (Jamie Bell) to establish an encampment that grows increasingly larger as more Belarusian Jews flee Nazi oppression to join them. Tuvia, a farmer, recognizes he possesses an innate knack for military strategy, leading a fearsome fighting force.

Craig explained in an interview with Collider what makes his character interesting, stating that he's "not a particularly good Jew." But he is "first and foremost a Belarusian businessman." In fact, what interested Craig most about the character and the film's story were the moral compromises that Tuv makes, and the barbarous acts he and his men commit — all justified as being in service of the greater good. "It's obvious if anyone watches the film, if anyone reads the book, obvious if you sort of understand the storyline, these people did bad things," Craig said. "They did very, very bad things and you always have to look at the net result which is that twelve hundred people walked out of this situation and survived."

Mikael Blomkvist in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011)

Stieg Larsson's "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" was a bestseller with a global following when Craig joined the American film adaptation opposite Rooney Mara in 2011. Mara played the titular tattooed girl, punk-ish computer hacker Lisbeth Salander. Craig portrays crusading journalist Mikael Blomkvist, aided by Lisbeth. The pair tries to uncover the circumstances behind the mysterious disappearance of the 16-year-old niece of a wealthy industrialist (Christopher Plummer) 40 years earlier. As predicted, the David Fincher-directed film was a box-office hit that garnered largely positive reviews. 

While promoting the movie, Craig told The Sun why he felt the film was an important one to make (via Digital Spy). "This movie deals with forbidden or difficult subject matters," Craig explained. "It deals with violence towards women, it touches upon Nazism, and all the suppression of Nazism in a country where maybe there hasn't been a lot of discussions. And it's those subject matters that interest me." During that same interview, Craig delved into what he found particularly interesting about playing the character of Blomkvist. "He's flawed, he's an egotist, but he's got a very strong moral center. His ego gets in the way, I think, sometimes. Maybe he's got a Jesus Christ complex, like most men. And that's his downfall."

Ivan Ivanovitch Sakharine in The Adventures of Tintin (2011)

Several years after working with Steven Spielberg in "Munich," Daniel Craig reunited with the acclaimed director for a very different project: Spielberg's CGI-animated "The Adventures of Tintin." Bringing the beloved Belgian comic book character to life, Spielberg cast Jamie Bell as the voice of the titular protagonist Tintin, while Andy Serkis voiced Tintin's constant companion, Capt. Archibald Haddock. Craig voiced Sakharine, a relatively minor character in the comics who was promoted to primary villain for the movie. As Craig revealed in an interview with Esquire, this was no ordinary voiceover role. Spielberg wanted to animate the physicality of his actors. Craig and his co-stars performed their scenes in front of a green screen while motion-capturing sensors were affixed to them (a process familiar to Serkis from playing Gollum in the "Lord of the Rings" movies). 

"We shot it in mo-cap. Which is like, 'F**k me, I'm literally in a leotard with a f**king helmet on, and a camera strapped to it,'" Craig recalled. Magnifying the indignity significantly, he joked that Spielberg's set wound up being visited by all manner of A-listers. "It's Steven Spielberg, so every f**ker in the world comes to visit. [David] Fincher comes to visit. Clint f**king Eastwood comes to visit. It was just like, are you kidding me? I'm gonna meet these people dressed like this? Playing a pirate, wearing a leotard and a camera? Really?"

Jake Lonergan in Cowboys & Aliens (2011)

Expectations were sky high when it was first announced that Craig would be co-starring with screen legend Harrison Ford in "Cowboys & Aliens," a sci-fi western film from Jon Favreau, director of Hollywood hits like "Iron Man" and "The Mandalorian." Craig plays Jake Lonergan, an outlaw who awakens with a strange piece of alien tech on his wrist with no memory of how it got there. Jake figures out that extraterrestrial hardware can blast out powerful bursts of energy. This comes in handy when he finds himself facing off against cutthroat cattle baron Col. Woodrow Dollarhyde (Ford) and his army of henchmen — and even handier when the warring humans find themselves becoming uneasy allies forced to band together to fend off an alien invasion.

Reviews were decidedly mixed, but even the negative critiques singled out Craig and Ford for their solid performances. "The acting from the large cast is of a high standard, Craig and Ford were more or less born into their roles," wrote Roger Ebert, while Salon's Andrew O'Hehir wrote that "Daniel Craig makes a terrific western drifter in the Eastwood mold, with no name and no past, and he doesn't look, sound or act anything like James Bond." While the film pulled in more than $174 million at the box office, the film was nonetheless considered to be a flop, given that its budget was a hefty $163 million.

Joe Bang in Logan Lucky (2017)

Directed by Steven Soderbergh, "Logan Lucky" follows a motley crew of criminals led by Jimmy Logan (Channing Tatum), attempting to pull off an audacious heist by robbing the Charlotte Motor Speedway in the midst of the biggest NASCAR race of the year. Among the team, Jimmy assembles is legendary safecracker Joe Bang (Craig), whose expertise in explosions is vital to their plan. One obstacle, however, is that Joe is currently behind bars, leading to an outrageous scheme to bust him out of the slammer, and then return him to his cell before the guards notice he's gone. 

With his hillbilly drawl and glint of chaos in his eyes, Joe Bang is a character about as far from James Bond as it gets. As for Craig's characterization, Soderbergh told GQ that he took no credit. "He had carte blanche to build this character any way he wanted," Soderbergh said. "I said to him, 'I don't care how you look. I don't care how you sound." Soderbergh went on to compare Craig's role in the film to a Roman candle. "He gets to show up and inject this jolt of energy and then leave. But he doesn't have to carry the movie. It's the perfect supporting role."

Benoit Blanc in Knives Out (2019) and Glass Onion (2022)

Craig was in the midst of ending his participation in the Bond franchise just as he jumped into another — or at least that's how it turned out when he accepted the role of Southern detective Benoit Blanc in "Knives Out," director Rian Johnson's Rubik's Cube of a whodunit. In "Knives Out," Blanc investigates the murder of a wealthy mystery novelist (Christopher Plummer), with his greedy children and their grasping spouses emerging as suspects. Craig returned for the sequel, 2022's "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery," which featured a new cast and an even more convoluted mystery for Blanc to solve. Part Columbo, part Foghorn Leghorn, Blanc's Southern charm and bourbon-dripping drawl often allows him to be underestimated by those he's investigating. Craig told Netflix's Tudum that developing Blanc's accent was key to creating the character. "There's a touch of Tennessee Williams in there," Craig explained. "There's a touch of the historian Shelby Foote. It's trying to create something that's a bit otherworldly."

Craig will revive the character for a third "Knives Out" movie. He considers being able to leap from one successful franchise into another a blessing. "I can't believe my luck, I spent 17 years of my life doing that other thing which has been glorious and wonderful, and for this role to fall into my lap, I couldn't have expected it," Craig told the "Happy Sad Confused" podcast.