HOLLYWOOD, CA – For a generation of moviegoers, Sir Sean Connery remains the definitive James Bond—the coolly lethal secret agent whose tenure set the gold standard for action cinema. Yet, beneath the veneer of this untouchable cinematic legacy, Connery carried a private frustration that centered on his final, and most controversial, outing as 007.
That regret came in 1983, when, at the age of 53, he returned to the role he had made famous for the independent, non-canonical film, Never Say Never Again. The actor later dismissed the entire venture with blunt clarity, calling it “a bloody mistake.”
The Unofficial Bond and The Battle of 1983
Never Say Never Again was not a product of Eon Productions, the studio behind the official James Bond franchise. Instead, it was an independently produced remake of Connery’s 1965 hit, Thunderball—made possible by a decades-long, complex legal battle over the rights to the original story.
Connery was reportedly lured back to the tuxedo by a blockbuster paycheck and the promise of a triumphant comeback, partly motivated by his long-standing antagonism toward Eon producer Albert R. Broccoli.
However, the production was plagued by behind-the-scenes turmoil. Sources indicate the making of the film was exhausting, with director Irvin Kershner clashing with producer Jack Schwartzman, whom Connery publicly feuded with, reportedly calling the operation “a bloody Mickey Mouse operation!”
The resulting film lacked the polish, the iconic John Barry theme music, and the signature creative machinery of the Eon series. To complicate matters, it opened the very same year as the official Eon entry, Roger Moore’s Octopussy, forcing a media-fueled “Battle of the Bonds” that confused and divided audiences.
Connery’s Candid Disappointment
The disappointment was eventually voiced directly by Connery himself. Though the financial offer was too tempting to refuse, the actor found the production creatively hollow and unfulfilling. For the man who created the modern James Bond, returning outside the official franchise’s structure proved to be a choice he genuinely regretted.
A Debate That Never Dies
Connery’s private frustration has done little to end the debate that surrounds Never Say Never Again.
The film remains a point of deep division within the 007 community:
-
Proponents appreciate its grittier, more grounded tone, and the opportunity to see Connery bring a more weathered, aging complexity to the agent—a theme that arguably predates Daniel Craig’s run by decades.
-
Detractors view it as an inauthentic, nostalgia-driven imitation. Many point to the lack of Eon’s style, a poor score, and a general feeling of being a “knockoff” despite the high budget and star power.
Ultimately, Connery’s harsh reflection—calling the film “a bloody mistake”—adds a rare layer of vulnerability to an otherwise untouchable screen legacy, reminding fans that even the most enduring cinematic heroes are the result of human, and sometimes flawed, decisions.