License to Kill

Crap
Total votes: 2 (40%)
Not Crap
Total votes: 3 (60%)
Total votes: 5

Movie: License to Kill (1989)

4
If you've ever read any of the Bond novels, Dalton's look and mannerisms were the closest to the original fiction's Bond character, who was a little more sleazy and a bit more brutal than the cool, calm, collected Sean Connery/Roger Moore/Pierce Brosnan/Daniel Craig Bonds. George Lazenby kicked ass too, unfortunately he appeared in the most emotional Bond movie and will be relegated to the forgotten annals of Bond lore.

Not crap. Dalton rules.

Movie: License to Kill (1989)

5
I thought both of Dalton's Bond films were real stand-outs in the whole series. A major departure from the 15 years of sillies the Roger Moore films subjected us to (although I like them, too - it's just that they're quite playful and not at all gritty). Plus they had real plots, a department in which the Brosnan films (except The World is Not Enough were seriously lacking).

Of the two, I like The Living Daylights a bit more, but I dig License to Kill as well. It was perhaps the rawest Bond flick up until this new one with Daniel Craig.

Also, I totally agree about Lazenby's performance in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. It was another radical departure toward seriousness in the whole Bond canon.

Movie: License to Kill (1989)

7
By far the best non-Connery Bond flick until Craig took over. Dark and uncompromising (relatively speaking). They could've done a little more with it, but I thought they were taking some significant chances considering the tone the franchise had taken for many years previous.
You had me at Sex Traction Aunts Getting Vodka-Rogered On Glass Furniture

Movie: License to Kill (1989)

10
Adam I wrote:
Heeby Jeeby wrote:I don't like Bond movies. Any of them.


Ditto.

Tedious to say the least, watching a man walking around with his gun-as-a-metaphor-for-cock in his hand, shooting baddies with his spunk bullets and spreading venereal diseases amongst subjugated women.
Rick Reuben wrote:
daniel robert chapman wrote:I think he's gone to bed, Rick.
He went to bed about a decade ago, or whenever he sold his soul to the bankers and the elites.


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