Even the tanker-trailer chase at the climax-despite some amazing stunt work-is lackluster. There’s also too much talk and not enough action. He’s too easily accepted into Sanchez’s inner circle as a friend and security adviser, and his efforts to slowly turn the drug kingpin against his confederates lack the ring of plausibility. Bond’s attempt on Sanchez’s life is stopped by a pair of Hong Kong narcotics agents. Unfortunately, once 007 arrives in Isthmus City, the movie loses all of its tension and impact. Forsaking M and the Secret Service, Bond becomes a rogue agent seeking revenge at all costs-a great plot device, and one that harks back to On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, which also involved a bride being murdered on her wedding day. The movie starts out with a good twist when Bond’s longtime friend Felix Leiter is thrown to the sharks by Sanchez. The film is also claustrophobic audiences used to the series’ globe-trotting locations were disappointed by the bland trips to Key West and fictional Isthmus City. Robert Davi’s Franz Sanchez is a suitably ruthless crime boss, but his international drug dealing is a bore, ripped from the headlines of the 1980s drug wars. Wilson, working from an outline by Richard Maibaum (due to a Writers Guild of America strike, Maibaum was unable to write the script), eliminated some of the very elements that have contributed to the longevity of the series-namely, the dark humor, fascinating locations, and a grandiose scheme perpetrated by a larger-than-life villain. In the most serious Bond movie since From Russia with Love, writer Michael G. What the film needed wasn’t over-the-top violence but a fresh story line. Pam Bouvier (Carey Lowell) takes a bullet in the back and survives, courtesy of a Kevlar vest, and Bond narrowly avoids failling into a bag shredder that claims the life of knife-wielding Dario ( Benicio Del Toro). The head of Milton Krest (Anthony Zerbe) inflates and explodes in a decompression chamber. Felix Leiter (David Hedison) is thrown to the sharks and loses a leg. It would have been one thing if Bond and Sanchez were involved in an incredibly violent fight à la From Russia with Love, but the violence is visited on supporting characters instead. Unfortunately, the added violence featured in the film was unnecessary. Timothy Dalton returns as James Bond in Licence to Kill, the first Bond film to barely escape a restricted R rating from the MPAA for excessive violence. Helping along the way: resourceful CIA pilot and undercover operative Pam Bouvier ( Carey Lowell) and a very present and active Q ( Desmond Llewelyn). Ordered to Istanbul for a new mission, Bond defies his superior M ( Robert Brown) and becomes a rogue agent-determined to take down Sanchez and his illegal drug operation. Shockingly, Sanchez’s thugs then murder Della and throw Leiter to the sharks. The drug lord is captured, but he escapes with the help of drug runner Milton Krest ( Anthony Zerbe) and duplicitous DEA agent Ed Killifer ( Everett McGill). A few miles away, James Bond ( Timothy Dalton) is attending the wedding of his good friend Felix Leiter ( David Hedison) to Della Churchill ( Priscilla Barnes) when Leiter is called into action to take down Sanchez. South American drug lord Franz Sanchez ( Robert Davi) takes a risky journey to Key West, Florida, to catch his girlfriend, Lupe ( Talisa Soto), in bed with her lover, Alvarez (Gerardo Albarrán). Worldwide box office gross: $156.2 million (US domestic gross: $34.7 million international gross: $121.5 million). Broccoli, and the first to feature a title that is not taken from a work by Ian Fleming. ★★1/2 The sixteenth James Bond film produced by Albert R.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |