If anything will get ‘em back in movie theaters, it’s going to be No Time To Die, the 25th James Bond film that was ready to premiere when COVID shutdowns first struck, and is finally getting released 19 months or so later. This is duly a big, splashy, expensive (at a cost of about $300 million) adventure of the sort you expect from what’s arguably the medium’s longest-running, most steadily-successful franchise. (There have been even longer ones, such as say Tarzan, and even more lucrative ones, like Star Wars, but none have been as consistent in regularity of production or...