James Bond fans can always expect each film in the nearly 60-year series to be action-packed, but latest entry No Time to Die is packed, period.

The 25th official entry in the Bond series, No Time to Die sports a running time of 163 minutes, according to Vue. This is nearly an hour longer than inaugural film Dr. No from 1962 and 1964's Goldfinger, which each are 110 minutes.

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Current Bond star Daniel Craig headlines the briefest film in the series, the 106-minute Quantum of Solace, and the second-longest, Spectre, which is 148 minutes. At 128 minutes, The World Is Not Enough comes closest to the whole series' 129-minute average running time, if one includes unofficial entries Never Say Never Again from 1983 and the 1967 spoof Casino Royale starring David Niven.

No Time to Die is Craig's swan song as Bond, and his movies tend to run longer than those of his predecessors. Craig's five Bond films run an average 141 minutes. Sean Connery's seven movies, including Never Say Never Again, have the shortest average at 120 minutes. Roger Moore's seven average out to 127.5 minutes, and Timothy Dalton's two average 131.5 minutes. Pierce Brosnan's four films come out to 122.5 minutes. The run time of George Lazenby's sole Bond outing, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, is on a par with Craig's films at 142 minutes.

Directed by Cary Fukunaga and starring Daniel Craig, No Time to Die will be in theaters on Oct. 8.

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Source: Vue