However, the project has now been put on the back-burner after photos of Wayne sleeping in a hotel room surrounded by three party girls went viral last month, prompting a police sting and blackmail allegations. The stakes were high going in, following the emotional heft of Skyfall and the plot twists of Spectre. It's something that Sweden-born Sandgren, working on his first Bond movie, and director Cary Joji Fukunaga, also a Bond first-timer, were well aware of. They had to deliver fast-paced action, deep personal connections and just the right number of callbacks to earlier 007 films. It may not be true any more that nobody does it better, but Bond still does it pretty damn well. Whoever takes on the role after Craig has a very big bow tie to fill. But a new bar has been set for the series, with Craig going out in incendiary style. It remains to be seen what comes next after No Time to Die so comprehensively blows up the franchise formula. It's enough to give you the serious travel bug, even if you can't afford the luxury hotels someone on a government payroll seems to be able to manage. Like every , showing viewers not just London, but also far-flung locations like Italy, Jamaica, Norway and Scotland. James Bond fans can now rejoice. No Time to Die finally has its worldwide premiere Thursday after being delayed for more than a year and a half. In , Richard Trenholm promises an "epic, explosive and emotional farewell to the longest-serving 007." The next installment in the franchise will be the 25th fifth and final starring Daniel Craig as the British secret agent. He is a staunch supporter of the energy price cap, which he says will save UK households facing 'colossally higher' bills this winter, and means energy companies can't 'sneak in high margins under the cover of high wholesale costs'. He suggests the Government should introduce regular stress tests for suppliers with more than 20,000 customers - perhaps every three months - to ensure they are 'hedging' their fixed-price contracts to lock in prices in the wholesale market. That early showpiece shootout marks out No Time to Die as something a little different. In previous Bond movies, bulletproof glass is just another cheeky little optional extra for a gimmick-packed chase scene, as bullets bounce off harmlessly and Bond zooms away for a well-earned vodka martini. According to , a source claimed: 'This film is a real celebration of Wayne's story. It gets to the heart of his upbringing on the Croxteth estate in Liverpool and watches him rise to become one of the best footballers England has ever seen. It isn't just the glass cracking with every punishing impact, it's two battered human beings threatening to break. But here, the bludgeoning impact of every machine gun round is brutally felt, with whip-crack sound design giving a real sense of threat. But more importantly, inside the car Madeleine also batters at Bond's own bulletproof shell. Ministers put the plans into practice last week by asking restructuring firm Teneo to be on standby in case of a major supplier failure that cannot be handled through the supplier of last resort process. Jackson reveals that he suggested to Ministers that any supplier failure larger than Avro would be too big for the energy industry to absorb, and should be run under the 'special administration' process by a major accountancy firm appointed by the Government.