
When Casino Royale went into development, the Bond franchise faced one of its biggest creative decisions. The series was being rebuilt from the ground up and needed a new 007 who could anchor a more grounded, character driven story.
Director Martin Campbell, who had already launched the Brosnan era with GoldenEye, returned to guide the search. The process was extensive and carried a single requirement. Every actor had to audition with the same legendary scene from From Russia With Love.
Campbell used the exact scene he relied on during the GoldenEye casting. It was simple but revealing. Bond enters a hotel room, removes his gun and jacket, senses danger and discovers a woman waiting in his bed. The sequence gives actors nothing flashy to hide behind. It is all about presence, timing and control.
Campbell has explained why he depends on it so heavily. “The word is effortless. You never see Bond fumble he is very economic, efficient and effortless. That scene covers all the bases, basically.”
Every candidate stepped into that quiet moment where Bond’s confidence and awareness had to speak louder than action or dialogue.
In the group of actors tested, Daniel Craig immediately set himself apart. He did not try to imitate previous Bonds or lean into the suave style associated with the role. Instead he delivered the scene with a grounded intensity that matched the tone Campbell wanted for Casino Royale. Craig brought a sense of weight and internal focus that made Bond feel real rather than iconic.
Campbell recognized the potential instantly. He did not need an actor who would coast on charm or nostalgia. He needed someone who could redefine the role and carry a story that explored Bond’s early life and the emotional cost of becoming 007.
Craig’s casting surprised some fans, but it was exactly what Campbell hoped for. He explains why the team was not looking for a famous face.
“There are no established standouts like Pierce. Pierce was a perfect Bond for his time. But Daniel was not Daniel Craig when he got the part, and all credit to Barbara Broccoli for pushing him. So what you are looking for is another Daniel Craig, someone who is not necessarily a star.”
By avoiding established names, the filmmakers ensured that Bond himself would remain at the center of the story, not the persona of the actor playing him. They wanted audiences to meet a new 007 rather than recognize a celebrity stepping into the role.
Craig entered Casino Royale without the widespread support enjoyed by previous Bond actors, but his performance quickly reshaped the conversation. He delivered a version of the character who could be vulnerable, dangerous and human. The reboot succeeded because Craig committed completely to showing Bond’s evolution rather than leaning on the character’s legacy.
His journey from relative unknown to one of the most acclaimed Bonds reflects the very spirit of Casino Royale. The film follows a man learning how to be 007 and Craig mirrored that arc in real time, growing into the role through intense physical work and emotional depth.
The casting of Daniel Craig was not a lucky guess. It was the result of a careful audition process. Multiple actors tried to capture that effortless confidence, but Craig delivered something sharper and more grounded.
Martin Campbell and the producers recognized that the franchise needed a new direction and Craig became the anchor for that change. His rise from underdog to franchise icon remains one of the most significant turning points in James Bond history.






