Licence To Kill |  | Director: John Glen Actors: Timothy Dalton, Robert Davi, Carey Lowell, Talisa Soto, Anthony Zerbe Studio: CBS/Fox Home Video Category: DVD
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Rating: 243 reviews Sales Rank: 294569
Format: NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language) Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Discs: 1 Running Time: 133 Minutes
EAN: 5050070002379 ASIN: B00004SH50
Theatrical Release Date: July 14, 1989
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Amazon.com Timothy Dalton's second and last shot at playing James Bond isn't nearly as much fun as his debut, two years earlier, in the 1987 film The Living Daylights. This time Bond gets mad after a close friend (David Hedison) from the intelligence sector is assassinated on his wedding day, and 007 goes undercover to link the murder to an international drug cartel. Robert Davi makes an interesting adversary, but as with most of the Bond films in the '70s, '80s, and '90s--and especially since the end of the cold war--one has to wonder why we should still care about these lesser villains and their unimaginative crimes. Still, Dalton did manage in his short time with the character to make 007 his own, which neither Roger Moore did nor Pierce Brosnan did. --Tom Keogh
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 243
A licence to thrill. February 7, 2010 B. Mccann (Balckpool, England) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Released in 1989, Licence To Kill moved well away from the comic book gadgetry that previously defined Bond films. With Timothy Dalton's debut returning the character to the darker, hard edged assassin of the Fleming novels, it was decided to consolidate this with a film more reflective of this characterisation. It proved a grittier path that has since been more successfully taken by the recent Daniel Craig films. And even now, 20 years later, Bond fans are still divided over whether it is one of 007's greatest screen adventures, or whether it is even a "real" James Bond film at all.
The personal vendetta theme is one adapted from the novel You Only Live Twice, in which a grieving 007 ends up avenging the murder of his wife when discovering that the object of his latest mission, Dr. Shatterhand, is in fact Blofeld, the man who killed her. With the rights to Blofeld and SPECTRE no longer available to EON, the producers elected to have the wife of Bond's CIA buddy Felix Leiter being murdered instead, while Leiter is fed to a shark and partially mutilated; an episode adapted from a previously unfilmed scene in Fleming's Live and Let Die.
The perpetrator of these crimes is the South American drug baron, Sanchez. Again, some fans complained drug smuggling was not really Bond territory (even though it had been used in the film of Live and Let Die). The idea was lifted from an episode in the opening of the novel, Goldfinger, in which Bond has just completed a mission to eliminate a Mexican drug lord.
As played by Robert Davi, Sanchez was the most interesting villain in a Bond film since Scaramanga in The Man with the Golden Gun. Perhaps to play against Timothy Dalton's classical credentials, Sanchez was written up as a villain with Shakespearian complexity. Despite his nastier streaks, he is charismatic, charming, humorous, even likeable in some ways. He is a man of honour, who values loyalty before money and is willing to risk his operation to prove this point. But, like King Lear, Sanchez is a fool to his own vanity and impulsiveness - the latter of which is probably fuelled by sampling his own products - and this leads to his downfall.
The writers heighten this strange complexity by surrounding Sanchez with henchmen who are smaller and singularly vile. Milton Krest is a drunken loudmouth letch. Killifer has slimy written all over him even before he betrays his badge, oath and "old buddy" Felix. Dario is a repulsive piece of work, who was even kicked out by the Contras and whose loyalty to Sanchez is almost a love affair. Sanchez's finance wizard, Trueman-Lodge, is a shallow 1980s yuppie who reduces the human suffering of cocaine addiction to socio-economic group statistics for business needs.
Other critiques of the film have included the violence. It probably still remains the goriest Bond film, was the first to be given a restricted rating in this country, 15, and even then had to be censored to get that (The DVD has restored all the cut material). In some ways, it did feel like off the leash madness by the director, but the recent Daniel Craig films have, again, caught up with this.
One of the most criticised scenes, however, is the one where Bond runs out on M and is shot at by his fellow agents, many fans believing it does not make sense and was written that way to be sensational. It very probably was written up to elicit an effect; but then that is a mark of a Bond script. The scene was originally going to be a more mundane affair in which M simply visits Bond in his hotel suite to persuade him to abandon his vendetta and return to the fold. When Bond remains defiant, M basically tells him "You're on your own" and leaves. Obviously the producers decided they wanted something more dramatically punchy. However, as extrinsic as it may be, the version they ended up filming is vacuous. There is a detectable internal logic to the episode and a close adherence to the Jungian archetype of the Hero's Journey in its structure.
James Bond, having completed his previous quest with the prize of killing the traitor, Killifer, is "called to adventure" a second time by two MI6 agents. They escort him into the inner sanctum of the Hemmingway House for a meeting with the mentor (M). The sequence that follows then divides into two parts. The first is the mentor advising the hero to give up his present course and accept the mission that has been assigned to him. No weapons are drawn at this point as this is M offering Bond one last chance to abandon his personal vendetta and avoid its possible consequences. When Bond displays his continued defiance, he crosses the threshold and into the scene's second part and his first test. Weapons are now reached for by M's minions and they physically close in, having presumably been previously briefed to take Bond down should he make a break for it (and, presumably, this would be under the code of shoot to disable).
M, in his position, would have no choice but to countenance the policy. Bond is no longer at this point his top agent, but a tarnished one. He has broken ranks, disobeyed orders and possibly compromised the security of the intelligence service through an act of vigilante killing. Aware of Bond's capabilities, M would also know how dangerous he could prove to be if let out of control. He has no choice but to stop this agent going. It is only by the fact there are too many witnesses about that M orders his men to stop shooting.
Some critics also complained that the film reduced Bond to a killing machine and had become singularly humourless. Certainly this approach must have been a culture shock to the Roger Moore generation; but Bond is a licence to kill, professional assassin, not gentleman jewel thief Simon Templar. In defence of the decision to not give Dalton any humour at all this time (he did get a few quips in The Living Daylights), this is a revenge movie and, therefore, not really the place for silly jokes. Q is brought in to provide some light relief and, consequently, his scenes are a little out of synch with the main body of the film. Besides, would he not get in trouble with M for aiding a rouge agent, even if he is doing it in his spare time?
Released in the summer of 1989, Licence to Kill, fared less well in the American market than the previous Bond caper, which EON blames on a lacklustre publicity campaign by MGM/UA. The original film poster was mysteriously withdrawn by the studio and replaced by a dull photo montage which appears to partially hide the fact this is a Bond film at all. Despite this, the movie achieved an initial world wide gross in excess of $100, 000,000; certainly enough for EON to plan their third Dalton adventure, slated to shoot in Hong Kong during late 1990. A legal argument between EON and MGM/UA over the sale of Bond films to television scuppered that plan and 007 remained off air for six years.
Whether it works as a James Bond film or not, Licence to Kill is an engaging, hard edged action adventure thriller that has stood the test of time well. Not as cracking as OHMSS, which is probably why it has not reclaimed by critics in the same way that film has. But with the Daniel Craig movies putting Bond back in the site of hard edged thriller, a re evaluation of Licence to Kill is surely just around the corner.
Grows On You January 26, 2010 MythMaker (PA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I used to rate this one low but repeated viewings have changed my mind. It's very close to the world of the books & has some top-notch action. Dalton is awesome & Del Toro plays a wickedly intense henchman. The film suffers from an unpolished script, lackluster direction & weak score. But overall, better than almost every Roger Moore Bond put together. Certainly lightyears ahead of the last Bronson entry! Recommended for fans of the novels. Quantum of Solace is a virtual remake of this film. They both have strengths & weaknesses.
No Slipcover December 27, 2009 Shannon T. Nutt (Pittsburgh, PA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
A word of warning about this one to collectors - there's no slipcover for Licence To Kill (nor Man With The Golden Gun) which makes these two releases look slightly awkward on the shelf with all the others. Still it beats the boxed set releases, which don't even come with the individual cases.
Timothy Dalton remains my favorite Bond to date (Daniel Craig is growing on me), although I prefer The Living Daylights over this film. Still there's a lot to like here, including one of my all-time favorite Bond theme songs, sung by Gladys Knight.
A bit of triva: the movie was intended to be titled "Licence Revoked", but the studio changed the title at the last minute due to a Bond novel out at the time called "Licence Renewed" (they didn't want people to think it was based on that book) and because Americans associate the phrase with losing one's driver's license! Oh well, at least they kept the British spelling of "Licence"!
Licence To Kill September 12, 2009 Timothy Maher (Brandon, SD) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Timothy Dalton returns in his second and last film as James Bond. The movie still holds up twenty years latter. The HD conversion is outstanding, it was like seeing the movie for the first time. Dalton was a good Bond, he had been asked to do "Goldeneye" back in 1994, but ultimatly responded he was moving on to other things, but was very happy to be asked to reprise the role offered to him by the producers. Dalton was too good an actor to play Bond, I do not think the scripts could even come close to giving this man the challenge. Still, I wish he would have at least done Goldeneye. I look forward to "Living Daylights" in HD!
What Might Have Been September 6, 2009 L. Cabos (planet earth) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Timothy Dalton's second -- and, alas, final -- outing as James Bond. Unlike LIVING DAYLIGHTS which was originally intended for Pierce Brosnan and reworked for Dalton, this one was specifically designed to showcase Dalton's strengths. This is a hard-edged Bond (the first to be rated PG-13) and has Bond on a personal vendetta against the Drug Lord who maimed his friend Felix Leiter and murdered Leiter's bride. His licence to kill revoked, Bond is a renegade. Good cast with Robert Davi as Sanchez, Carey Lowell as Pam Bovier, Anthony Zerbe as Milton Krest and a young Benecio del Toro as Dario -- one of Sanchez's killers. A good film but it had the misfortune to come out during a regime change at MGM and dumped out in the same summer as:
Gross Movie
251,185,407 Batman (1989)
197,171,806 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
147,253,986 Lethal Weapon 2 (1989)
140,088,813 Look Who's Talking (1989)
130,724,200 Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (1989)
118,500,000 Back to the Future Part II (1989)
112,494,738 Ghostbusters II (1989)
109,859,444 The Little Mermaid (1989)
106,593,296 Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
100,047,830 Parenthood (1989)
And that doesn't include Jim Cammeron's THE ABYSS.
MGM through it out with as little publicity as possible. Some Bond fans love this movie (and I am one) and others absolutely hate it. There has been a lot of talk that MGM/UA wanted to fire Dalton. I think -- and this is all speculation -- if Dalton had just one more chance -- a film had come the normal two years later -- he would have been accepted as Bond. Truth is, the series was declining in popularity -- and the last Moore films can be counted in that -- and ALOT of people really wanted Brosnan to be Bond. Dalton never got his GOLDFINGER. Roger Moore's 2nd film THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN was every bit as much a financial disapoinpment as LICENCE TO KILL. Roger Moore had, with his third Bond, his GOLDFINGER with THE SPY WHO LOVED ME. Dalton never got that chance. It took a six year absence for audiences to want another Bond and Brosnan hit it out of the park with GOLDENEYE -- probably his best film. Still, with only two films, Timothy Dalton left a memorable impression. His realistic take on Fleming's Bond would find justification in Daniel Craig's success with CASINO ROYALE and QUANTUM OF SOLACE. Like Lazenby's ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE, it would stand the test of time.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 243
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