Daniel Craig's No Time To Die did what none of the previous 24 Bond outings had ever done before. After despatching off Rami Malek's villain Safin, Ian Fleming's spy died after being blown to smithereens by missiles hitting the island lair.
The world was left in shock and now 007 fans can actually visit the spot where James Bond died. In No Time To Die, Safin's lair Poison Island was set in disputed waters between Russia and Japan.
In reality, the movie was shot in the Danish Faroe Islands, found just north of Scotland. Following the announcement that Prime Minister Bárður á Steig Nielsen had unveiled a tombstone to Bond on the spot where he died in the movie, Express.
co. uk headed to the North Atlantic archipelago to see it for ourselves. After a short 90-minute flight from Edinburgh, we landed in Vágar International Airport, before hiring a car and heading up the coast to see the beautiful scenic village of Gásadalur and its famous waterfall - a sight that wouldn't look out of place in a JRR Tolkien novel.
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