The scene in Skyfall where Daniel Craig is shaved with a classical razor lead to a 400% increase of straight edge razor sales.
How Skyfall Made Straight Razors Cool Again
When Naomie Harris leaned over Daniel Craig in Skyfall with a gleaming cut-throat razor, whispering "sometimes the old ways are the best," she wasn't just delivering a memorable line. She was kickstarting a grooming revolution.
In the five days following the film's UK release on October 26, 2012, sales of straight razors exploded by 405% at UK-based retailer The Shaving Shack. But the numbers get even more dramatic: internet searches for "cut throat razor" and "straight razor" soared by 735% during the same period.
The Bond Effect in Action
This wasn't just a brief spike. Between late October and mid-November 2012, global organic traffic from searches for "cut throat razor" increased by 399% compared to the same period the previous year. Traffic for "straight razor" jumped 191%, while searches for "open razor" climbed 153%.
The phenomenon extended beyond just traditional straight razors. Sales of shavettes—a more affordable alternative that uses replaceable blades—rose by 509%. Retailers across the industry reported increases ranging from 50% to over 400%.
Why This Scene Resonated
The shaving scene tapped into something deeper than just product placement. In an era of disposable plastic razors and electric trimmers, the image of Bond being shaved with a century-old tool felt dangerous, intimate, and quintessentially masculine. It required skill, trust, and a steady hand—everything the modern world seemed to be moving away from.
The scene also benefited from perfect casting. Harris's character exudes confidence and precision, turning what could have been a routine grooming moment into an exercise in tension and sensuality. When she draws that blade across Craig's throat, you're watching two people who could kill each other choosing not to.
A Lasting Cultural Shift
What's remarkable is that this wasn't just a temporary fad. The Skyfall scene contributed to a broader "wet shaving" revival that was already gaining momentum among men seeking alternatives to expensive cartridge razors. Online communities, YouTube tutorials, and artisan shaving suppliers all benefited from the sudden mainstream attention.
The film effectively took a niche hobby practiced by traditionalists and barber enthusiasts and made it aspirational for the average guy. If James Bond used a straight razor, maybe it was worth learning how to use one yourself—even if your bathroom routine didn't typically involve international espionage.
