Daniel Craig continues to show off his eye-catching new look as he opts for a VERY casual ensemble to attend the BAFTA NYC Tea Party

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He has already been catching the eye with his bold new look.

And on Sunday night, Daniel Craig continued to ensure he was the centre of attention as he attended The 2024 BAFTA NYC Tea Party.

The Hollywood heartthrob, 56, is well-known for his suave 007 appearances and for showing off his muscular frame, but in recent months seems to have debuted a number of strikingly different looks.

The James Bond actor continued to show off his longer blond hairstyle as he posed for snaps at the event.

He teamed his look with a far more casual ensemble than he's known for as his spy-alter-ego, sporting a  blue suede jacket and white shirt, which he left unbuttoned at the top and paired it with some beige baggy trousers.

Daniel Craig continued to show off his eye-catching new look as he attended The 2024 BAFTA NYC Tea Party at The Pierre Hotel on Sunday

Daniel Craig continued to show off his eye-catching new look as he attended The 2024 BAFTA NYC Tea Party at The Pierre Hotel on Sunday

The Hollywood heartthrob sported a blue suede jacket and white shirt, which he paired with beige baggy trousers and tanned shoes

The Hollywood heartthrob sported a blue suede jacket and white shirt, which he paired with beige baggy trousers and tanned shoes

Keeping things casual, Daniel slipped into a pair of dark tanned Birkenstock and finished off his outfit with a pair of quirky round, blue tinted glasses. 

In recent years, the star's quirky tastes have become more and more evident through Daniel's fashion choices.

LOEWE's FW24 campaign, saw Daniel look almost unrecognisable in yellow tinted glasses, knitted jumpers and and intricately beaded trousers.

A Belvedere campaign saw the actor cause and online sensation when he featured in a sultry leather jacket and vest combo for the brand.

In 2021, he also appeared to go out with a bang as he commemorated a premiere for his last James Bond film with a bright pink velvet tuxedo.

In one of his most recent fashion statements, Daniel rocked his new look of long blond locks at Venice Film Festival.

Daniel is married to actress Rachel Weisz who he has known as far back as 1994, when they first played lovers in a steamy theatre production together.

After years of friendship, the couple fell in love while filming a movie together in 2010 - and married in a 'secret' ceremony within a year.

I recent years, the star's quirky tastes have become more and more evident through Daniel's fashion choices and he finished off his outfit with some blue glasses

I recent years, the star's quirky tastes have become more and more evident through Daniel's fashion choices and he finished off his outfit with some blue glasses

The actor has taken fans by surprise in recent months with his new do which appears to be for his upcoming film Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (pictured in 2012)

The actor has taken fans by surprise in recent months with his new do which appears to be for his upcoming film Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (pictured in 2012)

Last month Daniel attended Venice Film Festival where his film Queer premiered (pictured with his wife Rachel Weisz)

Last month Daniel attended Venice Film Festival where his film Queer premiered (pictured with his wife Rachel Weisz) 

Daniel is set to star in the racy same-sex romance film Queer, and has already received critical praise for his performance

Daniel is set to star in the racy same-sex romance film Queer, and has already received critical praise for his performance 

In 2018, the notoriously private couple - both of whom have children from previous relationships - welcomed a daughter. 

Last month Daniel attended Venice Film Festival where his film Queer premiered.

Directed by Luca Guadagnino, Queer is based on William Burroughs' semi-autobiographical novella and stars Daniel Craig as American expat and war veteran William Lee, who has a romance with a younger man, Eugene Allerton (Drew Starkey), a drug addict and discharged Navy serviceman.

Initial reviews suggest moviegoers will be left shocked by the explicit nature of some of the key moments in the movie.

Daniel spoke about the frank gay love scenes in his new film Queer, telling the Venice Film Festival: 'We just wanted to make it as touching and as real and as natural as we could.'

Queer review: Hats off to Daniel Craig, BRIAN VINER reviews the same sex romance as James Bond shrugs off the image of Ian Fleming's ultra-heterosexual alpha-male super-spy 

Queer: Steamy period drama 

Rating:

Hats off to Daniel Craig. The 56-year-old star could hardly be trying harder, after those five James Bond films in 15 years, to shrug off the image of Ian Fleming’s ultra-heterosexual alpha-male super-spy. 

First Craig played the discreetly gay master detective Benoit Blanc in the Knives Out films, and now he has cast discretion aside altogether in the torridly physical Queer, which had its world premiere last night at the Venice Film Festival.

Adapted from William S Burroughs’ autobiographical novel of the same title, Queer is set in the early 1950s mostly in Mexico City. There, among other gay American expats, dissolute writer William Lee (Craig) spends his time drinking tequila by the barrel-load and chasing young men.

One of them is Eugene Allerton (Drew Starkey), with whom Lee quickly becomes infatuated. 

At first he isn’t entirely sure whether Gene shares his ‘proclivities’, and refrains from making a move while director Luca Guadagnino very artfully uses camera and editing-suite trickery to show how Lee is yearning to do with his body what he yet can’t. 

Based on William Burroughs' semiautobiographical novella about obsessive lust, it stars Craig as American expat and war veteran William Lee

Based on William Burroughs' semiautobiographical novella about obsessive lust, it stars Craig as American expat and war veteran William Lee

But soon enough the pair are lovers, cue some sweaty and extremely graphic sex scenes which might startle folk who still think firmly of Craig as 007, one of fiction’s most irrepressible seducers to be sure, but only of women.

Mind you, he doesn’t really look like Bond in this film. Lee is permanently unshaven, sports a mid-century haircut, and is almost always drunk. 

Craig does a magnificent job of making him seem completely real: a feckless, hard-drinking, chain-smoking, drug-addicted, pistol-toting, promiscuously ‘queer’ barfly in an environment in which none of the above really make him stand out from the pack.

That pack includes another promiscuous American expat, played with glorious loucheness by Jason Schwartzman, whose encounters with young Mexicans always seem to end up with them robbing him.

Nor is Lee especially happy, even after bedding Gene. The younger man is a flighty sort, seemingly attracted to women as well as men. 

In desperation Lee offers him an arrangement. Will Gene come with him to South America, and be ‘nice to me twice a week’, if he picks up the tab?

It is not really clear how Lee makes a living since he always seems far too inebriated to write, and if the film has a flaw then it’s this: there’s not enough of a back story. 

Nor, frankly, is there at first much of a narrative. Lee fancies Gene rotten and that’s about it. But the look of the film, the period detail, is exquisitely handled. For those who don’t know the work of William S Burroughs think Graham Greene instead. 

Craig does a magnificent job of making him seem completely real: a feckless, hard-drinking, chain-smoking, drug-addicted, pistol-toting, promiscuously ¿queer¿ barfly

Craig does a magnificent job of making him seem completely real: a feckless, hard-drinking, chain-smoking, drug-addicted, pistol-toting, promiscuously ‘queer’ barfly

Drew Starkey, Omar Apollo, Jonathan Anderson, Lesley Manville, Jason Schwartzman, Justin Kuritzkes, Daniel Craig, Luca Guadagnino (pictured L-R)

Drew Starkey, Omar Apollo, Jonathan Anderson, Lesley Manville, Jason Schwartzman, Justin Kuritzkes, Daniel Craig, Luca Guadagnino (pictured L-R)

It¿s not easy to steal this film from Craig but if anyone manages it, Lesley Manville does.

It’s not easy to steal this film from Craig but if anyone manages it, Lesley Manville does.

If there’d been a decidedly rakish gay theme in Greene’s novels about Latin America in the mid-20th century, this film would feel like being plunged into one of them. You can almost feel the heat, taste the chillis, smell the perspiration.

Moreover, narrative-wise, things are about to hot up in more ways than one. After recovering from dysentery and other illnesses related to his prodigious intake of heroin and cocaine, Lee takes Gene deep into the Ecuadorean rainforest in search of a drug called ‘yage’, which is said to confer telepathic powers on those bold (or idiotic) enough to take it, as well as mad hallucinations.

From this point the movie too becomes downright nuts, as if Guadagnino and screenwriter Justin Kuritzkes (who also collaborated on this year’s excellent Challengers) have themselves been on the yage.

But it yields its most extraordinary performance, from Lesley Manville as an alarmingly formidable, borderline-unhinged American botanist and doctor who has long since gone native, is embedded in the jungle, and knows how to satisfy her questful visitors.

It’s not easy to steal this film from Craig but if anyone manages it, Manville does. 

Angelina Jolie probably has the Best Actress award wrapped up here in Venice, for her committed performance as the opera singer Maria Callas in the uneven Maria, but if Manville gets a Best Supporting nod when the Oscar nominations come round, I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised. Queer is worth seeing for her alone, but for plenty besides.

There is as yet no confirmed UK release date for Queer.