CommanderBond.net
  1. Quentin Tarantino considers spy series to rival James Bond

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-15

    It’s public knowledge that Quentin Tarantino has been interested in the James Bond film series for quite some time, despite not yet having the opportunity to direct one the films.

    Now, the Kill Bill director is considering creating his own spy series that would likely rival 007’s own big screen adventures.

    The Guardian reports that Tarantino is particularly interested in a spy trilogy penned by Len Deighton: Berlin Game, Mexico Set and London Match.

    The books center on the cold war-era adventures of Bernard Samson, a jaded, middle-aged intelligence officer working for the fictional Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) in the 1980s.

    ‘One of the things I enjoy musing about doing is the trilogy of Len Deighton books, Berlin Game, Mexico Set and London Match,’ Tarantino explained. ‘The story takes place in the Cold War and follows a spy named Bernard Sampson. What is attractive is the really great characters and the wonderful casting.’

    ‘I love England. It would be a wonderful life experience to have an excuse to work here for six or nine months,’ he added.

    What do you think of a rival spy series from Tarantino? Sound off here on the CommanderBond.net Forums.

    As always, stay tuned to the CBn main page&—and our brand new Twitter feed—for all the latest James Bond-related news.

  2. Moore James Bond in September on BBC America

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-14

    007 fans will be treated to Moore James Bond all month long in September on BBC America.

    The network will feature a marathon that includes some of Roger Moore’s most popular Bond films, starting 5 September. Furthermore, a Licence To Thrill All-Day Bond-athon is scheduled for 27 September and includes even more of Moore’s Bond outings.

    Full details follow in the release below:

    'Moonraker'

    MOORE BOND ALL MONTH LONG

    This month, BBC AMERICA gives you Moore, Moore, Moore – Roger Moore that is, starring as 007 in four classic James Bond films full of all the thrilling stunts, diabolical villains, cool gadgets, fast cars, and beautiful women you expect from Britain’s legendary secret agent.

    THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN – BBC AMERICA PREMIERE

    When a golden bullet with “007” etched into its surface arrives at MI-6 headquarters in London, it can only mean one thing: Francisco Scaramanga, the world’s most lethal assassin, has been hired to go after James Bond. Instead, 007 turns the tables and tries to hunt Scaramanga down. In the process, he uncovers a dangerous and wide-ranging plot to disrupt the world’s energy supply.

    The Man With The Golden Gun airs Saturday, September 5, 8:00 p.m. ET/PT

    THE SPY WHO LOVED ME – BBC AMERICA PREMIERE

    When British and Soviet submarines loaded with nuclear missiles disappear from the sea, both governments send their top agents to investigate. 007 is happy to learn that his Russian counterpart, Agent XXX, is a beautiful woman, but will her thirst for revenge against Bond – who killed her husband in an earlier mission – get in the way of them finding the lost subs and saving the world?

    The Spy Who Loved Me airs Sunday, September 6, 8:00 p.m. ET/PT

    MOONRAKER – BBC AMERICA PREMIERE

    007 blasts off in this adventure that takes him to California, Venice, Rio, the Amazon Rainforest, and, eventually, outer space in an effort to stop an ultra-wealthy madman’s plot to destroy humanity and start society over with a new master race.

    Moonraker airs Sunday, September 13, 8:00 p.m. ET/PT

    FOR YOUR EYES ONLY – BBC AMERICA PREMIERE

    A British spy ship carrying a top secret communications device accidentally sinks, but it’s no accident when the sailor hired by the government to recover the device is murdered alongside his wife. That’s James Bond’s cue to get involved, and he joins forces with the daughter of the murdered couple to find the missing device before it falls into enemy hands – and to find out who, exactly, the enemy is.

    For Your Eyes Only airs Sunday, September 20, 8:00 p.m. ET/PT

    LICENSE TO THRILL ALL-DAY BOND-ATHON

    It’s all-day action on BBC AMERICA with a day-long marathon of James Bond movies, including The Man With the Golden Gun, The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker, and For Your Eyes Only. You won’t want to miss a second of the adventure as Roger Moore’s Bond travels the world, from the Amazon to the Alps, in submarine cars and space shuttles, on missions for Her Majesty’s Secret Service. License To Thrill All-Day Bond-athon airs Sunday, September 27 starting at 6:00 a.m. ET/3:00 a.m. PT

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net—and our brand new Twitter feed—for all the latest news on James Bond-related events occurring around the world.

  3. Barbara Broccoli producing Catwalk Confidential for the stage

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-13

    Even though there is still quite a wait for the 23rd James Bond film, producer Barbara Broccoli is keeping herself busy with an array of other projects.

    Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson

    Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson

    In addition to producing the upcoming Broadway debut of Daniel Craig in A Steady Rain, WhatsOnStage reports that Broccoli is also acting as producer on Catwalk Confidential, Robyn Peterson’s one-woman show about her time as a supermodel.

    The production, which is currently playing in the UK at the Edinburgh Fringe, is set to transfer directly to the West End’s Arts Theatre for a limited four weeks from 9 September to 3 October 2009. Previews are set to commence from 4 September.

    Part fairy-tale, part memoir, part romance, this funny, cautionary and at times moving tale tells the story of 16-year-old Robyn fresh from Miami, who gets caught up in the world of high fashion amidst the boulevards of Paris in the early 1970s. In a whirlwind of glamour, sex and drugs, Robyn discovers there’s one thing to fear above all else: age. There is always a younger girl waiting to step into your shoes.

    Catwalk Confidential is brought to the stage by Broccoli’s Eon Productions and Michael Rose Ltd, the team who were also behind the stage production of Ian Fleming’s classic children’s tale Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

    Keep turning to the CommanderBond.net main page–as well as our brand new Twitter feed–for all the latest James Bond news and coverage.

  4. Empire Magazine champions Kathryn Bigelow for Bond 23

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-11

    It may be many months away before an official announcement is made, but Empire Magazine’s Empire Blog is putting forth their suggestion on who should take the director’s chair for the 23rd James Bond film.

    Their selection: Kathryn Bigelow. While her highly acclaimed film The Hurt Locker was just recently released in theatres around the world, she is also known for K-19: The Widowmaker, Point Break and Blue Steel.

    Pushing the fact that Daniel Craig’s 007 needs to have a little more fun, Empire states: ‘If [Bond is] to be brash, rash and go ballistic once again, why give the megaphone to a woman? Because the woman is Kathryn Bigelow and with The Hurt Locker she shows she knows what Bond is all about: adrenaline … The Hurt Locker is one long high: set-piece after set-piece, bomb by bomb, always explosive. This is what Bond is supposed to be.’

    They further put for the suggestion of Ralph Fiennes (who has a starring role in The Hurt Locker) as the lead villain in Bond 23. ‘Imagine the bickering, the banter and the peculiarly British cruelty of Craig vs Fiennes—and Bigelow’s fiery feminine touch. Bring on Bigelow, bring back the kiss kiss, bang bang…’

    Do you agree with these suggestions from Empire Magazine? Voice your opinion here on the CommanderBond.net Discussion Forums.

    Keep turning to the CBn main page—and our brand new Twitter feed—for the most up-to-date Bond coverage on the net.

  5. Marc Forster on Quantum of Solace; working with David Arnold

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-11

    Director Marc Forster has given a lengthy interview to Soundtrack Geek about the role of music in his films as well as the overall development of last year’s Quantum of Solace.

    Marc Forster

    As Forster has stated in past interviews, he wasn’t completely sold on helming a James Bond production when the offer first came through, but was ultimately won over by the opportunity to work alongside Daniel Craig.

    He said: ‘First I met with the producers and I told them I wasn’t sure, that I had to think about it and then they said that I should meet with Daniel who was in town. I connected with him because he’s a real actor, he’s down to earth and someone I knew I could make a really good movie with him even though at that point, we didn’t even really have a script.

    Once onboard the 22nd 007 entry, Forster decided to shake up the formula a bit by bringing in many of his own crew members. This included a new director of photography, editor, visual effects designer and main title design group.

    David Arnold

    David Arnold

    One of the few longstanding Bond crew members who remained for Quantum was composer David Arnold. Forster explained: ‘One of the things I wanted to do was bring my crew, the people I’ve worked with in the past to the Bond films, though in regard to the composer, David Arnold had scored several of the previous Bonds, so the producers had me listen to his music and meet with him. I met with him which I thought was interesting because I had replaced everybody else but would have this continuum going into Bond through David Arnold and actually it was a collaboration I enjoyed very much.’

    Interviewer Timothy E. Raw also brought up an aspect of the film that has sparked a great deal of discussion on 007 messageboards: the editing. ‘You have this close-knit team you brought on board to Bond,’ he mentions, ‘one of those people being your long-time editor Matt Chesse. The thing that baffled me, to be perfectly honest was that opening car chase action sequence. It had some of that Michael Bay, I daresay, attention deficit editing style. Is this the studio responding to Jason Bourne breathing down their necks that they feel they have to adopt this very similar “shaky cam” editing style in order to compete?’

    'Quantum of Solace'

    Quantum of Solace

    ‘No it wasn’t,’ Forster replies. ‘The studio didn’t really say much, it was more from me. I wanted to create that opening to be very disorientating, the feeling of not really knowing where I was. This was the character state for me, that Bond, he doesn’t really know who he is with this word of disorientation going on around him. That’s what I tried to do with that.’

    ‘I hear that there were a couple of people who saw that comparison to Bourne. On one hand, Dan Bradley, the second unit director worked on those movies which definitely adds too that comparison. The sequences he worked on, on this were the opening car chase scene and the exterior of the plane sequence. I shot the interior. In regard to the car chase though, when he shot things, I always watched it and gave him notes on how I wanted to have it different or this and that, so there was a constant dialogue of me pushing for the disorientation of that opening, not so much him actually.’

    There’s much more. To read more about Forster’s pre-Bond films, visit Soundtrack Geek for the complete interview.

    Keep turning to the CommanderBond.net main page—and our brand new Twitter feed—for continued Quantum of Solace coverage.

  6. Quantum of Solace gets Digital Spy Movie Awards nominations

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-09
    James Bond in 'Quantum of Solace'

    Digital Spy has launched the 2009 Digital Spy Movie Awards and Quantum of Solace has been nominated in a few of the categories.

    Daniel Craig competes against several others in the 2009 Best Actor category. He is nominated for both his role as James Bond and in Defiance.

    Fans can also vote for Quantum of Solace in the Best Blockbuster category, where it competes against Twilight, Star Trek, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince and several other films.

    Voting is open to everyone through August, with the winners slated to be unveiled on the site in early October.

    To cast your votes, visit the Digital Spy Movie Awards website.

    Keep turning to the CommanderBond.net main page—and our brand new Twitter feed—for continued Quantum of Solace coverage.

  7. From Russia with Love boat on display at Basildon's Motorboat Museum

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-09

    The recently re-opened National Motorboat Museum in Basildon currently features a classic James Bond vehicle on display.

    'From Russia with Love'

    From Russia with Love

    James Bond fans in the area can stop by to examine the Fairey Huntress racing boat which was used in the making of 1963’s From Russia with Love.

    The vehicle is currently on loan to the museum from Peter Nelson’s James Bond museum in Keswick since there is presently not enough space to properly display it.

    The National Motorboat Museum is open daily from 10:00am to 4:30pm except on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. It is located at Wat Tyler Country Park, Pitsea Hall Lane, Basildon Essex SS16 4UH.

    For further information, phone +44 (0)1268 550077 or visit the official website.

    Stay tuned to CommanderBond.net—and our brand new Twitter feed—for all the latest news on James Bond-related events occurring around the world.

  8. Daniel Craig included on Vanity Fair's Best Dressed list

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-05

    James Bond star Daniel Craig is once again making an appearance on the best dressed lists.

    This time around, Craig has been named one of the best dressed men of 2009 by Vanity Fair. He joins fellow actor Brad Pitt and United States President Barack Obama among others on the listing.

    What they said about Craig…

    Daniel Craig

    Daniel Craig

    DANIEL CRAIG – Because nobody does it better.
    Residence: London.
    Occupation: Actor.
    Age: 40.
    Notable red-carpet ensemble of 2008: Tom Ford black bespoke suit worn to Flashbacks of a Fool premiere in London.
    Watch: Omega.
    Causes: The Dorset Wildlife Trust, and Barnardo’s children’s charity.

    Penelope Cruz, Anne Hathaway and Quantum of Solace title song performer Alicia Keys—who describes her style as ‘slick, feminine, strong, and sexy’—were sworn in as the ladies of fashion alongside First Ladies Michelle Obama and Carla Bruni-Sarkozy.

    Actresses Renee Zellweger and Catherine Deneuve also made the cut.

    For the complete listing, visit Vanity Fair.

    As always, stay tuned to the CommanderBond.net main page for all the latest news from the world of 007. Be sure to check out our Twitter feed as well.

  9. Licence to Kill celebrates 20 years (Part II)

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-04

    Out On His Own And Out For Revenge

    20 Years Of Licence to Kill

    PART II

    'Licence To Kill'

    This summer marks the 20th anniversary of 1989’s hard-edged James Bond film, Timothy Dalton’s Licence to Kill. Promising audiences a renegade 007 out on his own for revenge, Licence to Kill has remained today one of the Bond films that most sharply divides fans over their opinions of it.

    Debuting in the UK on 13 June 1989, Licence to Kill then went on general release on 4 August and on 14 July in the US.

    Despite receiving generally favourable reviews from film critics at the time, Licence to Kill became one of the least successful films box office-wise (and the most unsuccessful overall in the US alone) in the James Bond series with a total worldwide gross of $156.2 million. Various reasons for this poorer-than-usual performance have been discussed, including the title/marketing materials change from Licence Revoked as well as the strong summer competition from othe films such as Batman, Ghostbusters II, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and Lethal Weapon 2.

    Taking into account the 20th anniversary of the film, CommanderBond.net asked our forum members to recall their first (or most memorable) time seeing Licence to Kill. To share your own remembrance, simply register here (it’s free and only takes a minute) on the CBn Forums.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… Tybre

    My first time came in late February of this year. I’d started reading the books and was really getting into Bond and looking up all the films I hadn’t seen and such on wikipedia. Decided to go on youtube when I heard about Timothy Dalton, see if there were any clips of him online. I stumbled upon the pre-title sequence of The Living Daylights and the car chase sequence of The Living Daylights. Both were very good scenes, and even though Dalton doesn’t talk a lot during them, I was instantly enamored with him. He ousted Pierce Brosnan as my #3 at that point in time. Via continued looking on Wikipedia, I was made incredibly happy when I skimmed the Licence to Kill article. According to Wikipedia, it had more or less faithfully adapted elements of my favorite book, Live and Let Die. Of course I was going to check it out then! I hurried back over to Youtube and started searching for clips. There were none that I found; just a lot of posts of the title sequence or just the song. In the related videos sidebar from one of these, though, was a link to a fan made trailer. Clicked it at once. I was sold from the first few seconds.

    The fan trailer opened with a man who looked kind of like and sounded even more like Regis Philbin asking Bond if he had the ring. My first reaction was “Regis in James Bond? That’s awesome and hilarious!” When Bond called him Felix, it only made me even happier. The trailer then cut to Felix carrying Della into their room, only to be met by Sanchez’s men. From this it cut to Sanchez dangling Felix over the shark pool, saying “I want you to know this is nothing personal. It is merely business”. That was it for me. The rest of the trailer was fantastic but from that moment on all my chips were on the table and I wasn’t about to back out. I was going out to Best Buy that night to see if they had On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, as I’d wanted to see the one-off Bond, so I figured I would buy The Living Daylights and Licence to Kill as well. Sadly Best Buy had virtually no Bond films, so I just ordered them off of Amazon instead, expedited, as I was impatient to see Licence.

    First thing I did after making my breakfast the Saturday morning they arrived was open up Licence to Kill and pop it into my PS3. I didn’t move from my armchair the entire film. Refused to acknowledge anything my mother or sister said to me. In fact, I completely forgot about my breakfast and just left it sitting on the table. I was enthralled. Sure, it only used Live and Let Die in the early parts — and at that point in time the only other Fleming I had read was From Russia With Love, so the elements of The Hildebrand Rarity were lost on me — but the rest of the film was great. Instantly became one of my favorites, and still holds its place in my top five Bond films. Timothy Dalton kicked Daniel Craig from #1 down to #2 in my list by the time of the scene at Hemingway House. I just positively loved everything about Licence to Kill. Yes, some of the actors in the early parts came across as a bit sub par, but none of the film’s flaws were enough to drag it down for me. It was the most fun I’d ever had watching a Bond film; the first time since I saw Octopussy as I little kid that I really loved what I was seeing on the screen.

    I’m very glad I decided to watch Licence to Kill first. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service was okay at the time; I love it now that I’ve read Fleming, and it got better with subsequent viewings, but the first viewing was so-so. I watched The Living Daylights pretty late at night and my sister got back with her friends about halfway through it, so I missed a lot of key points because they were being noisy. If I had started with either of these, in the manner that I did, I doubt I would love Bond as much as I do now, because while I loved the books, the books weren’t really enough to convince me to see all 22 films and see them multiple times. But watching Licence to Kill at eight-thirty on a cool Saturday morning in February, I was hooked.

    N.B.
    I should point out I know it’s not Regis as Felix Leiter, but that is what I thought while watching the trailer.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… Mharkin

    Now this one is interesting. Licence to Kill is a great film, but it’s never really struck me as anything special. It’s just there for me. Don’t get me wrong, it’s in my Top 10, BUT it’s quite uneventful. Timothy Dalton is definately one of the films highlights.

    I think the first time I saw this, was during ITV’s 00-Heaven Season in 1999. I liked it, mostly due to the larger role Q had. I remember laughing out loud at Desmond when he gets thrown over the chair by Bond. I probably got a cheap thrill over seeing a ’15’ rated Bond film when I was 9 years old.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… Jim

    The most memorable experience I had seeing it was in Rugeley (apparently some sort of “place”). It was the second time I had seen it and whilst I had quite liked it at the first attempt, I wasn’t enjoying it at all at the second shot – I was very, very bored, in fact. It may have been a lack of success with the companion that had put me in a bad mood. It may have been “being in Rugeley”.

    At one of the interminable Q bits, the doors at the back of the cinema flew open and this revolting old wino – probably the Mayor – staggered in, rushed the screen and puked up all over it.

    Well, not necessarily all over it (a body can only contain so much vomit, I find), but sufficiently. As criticism, somehow more immediately arresting that a star system or a letter grading.

    Everyone was more interested in the wino than the film. When a Bond film is less diverting than a scabby old tramp chucking his guts, then there’s something inherently wrong with it.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… Mr. Somerset

    I saw it opening day on the 14th—1pm showing as I recall. I showed up an hour early and there was no line, but an outage. I was afraid I might not see the film I waited two years for that day. Luckily, the power came on and the film started on time.

    I initially was disappointed in the gunbarrel music, but felt the pre-title sequence was fairly quick paced and exciting—as was pretty much the whole film. There were moments where I felt the Bondian atmosphere was lacking: interrogation of Sanchez, Barrelhead Bar, etc.

    I did like the dark aspect of Licence to Kill and saw it the next day with my dad. He loved it and it became of of his faves. The audience cheered (very loudly) at the water ski sequence as well as the wheelie truck stunt. I saw the film a total of 11 times that summer each with a more empty audience than before, but the film enjoyed more each time. I couldn’t wait until summer 1991 for Bond 17 AKA Dalton #3…

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… David_M

    I remember being strangely uninterested in this film from the get-go, despite having really liked The Living Daylights. Licence to Kill wasn’t really on my radar at all in the summer of ’89.

    My girlfriend at the time (now my wife) won tickets to an advance screening in a radio contest, which was the most exciting thing about the whole deal. We showed up with the other winners, got a little song-and-dance from the DJ and then saw the film. I wasn’t terribly impressed, beyond really liking Carey Lowell in that wet teddy. The low point was probably watching Dalton shove that guy into a drawer full of wet pasta some effects man was wiggling to resemble…what?…maggots?

    The thing that stands out most in my memory was that my girlfriend really liked the film, which was novel as she was usually nonplussed by the Bonds. I decided maybe EON was going for a new audience altogether, and maybe that wasn’t a bad thing.

    Licence to Kill became the first Bond I didn’t see multiple times in the theater. And remember, I didn’t even pay for the one viewing I did have. So when the box office take turned out to be disappointing and the series went into a 6-year hiatus, I felt pretty guilty for not showing more support. But 20 years on, with the series in no danger of going away, I’m perfectly comfortable sticking with my original impression: “Meh.”

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… O.H.M.S.S.

    It was the first movie, produced in my birth year 1989, which I saw.

    I remember I enjoyed it very much and I always feel great after that ending, as if I can feel Bond’s relief after the final confrontation with Sanchez. The repeating of the “Why don’t you ask me?” dialogue and that wonderful end title song all contribute to a fantastic feel when I’ve watched this movie.

    Timothy Dalton may have only made two Bond films, but to me he will always be my favourite.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… SpyMaster

    My first memory of seeing Licence to Kill was in the winter of July 1989 at the Ocean City Cinema complex in Durban South Africa. It has since closed but part of the building still remains an ice rink. The lines to the box office, seemed to never end, but I managed to cut in on the pretex of buying some snacks and got tickets for myself and my family. This was during the almost crumble of apartheid and we thought we’d be kicked out for such behaviour. Nonetheless, we got good seats and I was extremely pleased with Dalton’s performance. I subsequently got the LP then CD soundtrack, VHS, LaserDisc copies, then Special Edition, Ultimate Edition DVD’s and now finally the HD Blu-Ray. In my honest opinion, Dalton is as closest to Fleming’s 007 as Ian himself.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… tdalton

    My most memorable was probably the last time I watched it, which was the first time I’d seen the film on the Blu-ray format. The transfer of the film on Blu-ray is phenomenal, and one of the best transfers of a film 20+ years old I’ve seen to date. It was like watching the film for the first time, and it really helped to cement Licence to Kill as my favorite of the Bond films.

    I love the ending of the film and really don’t understand the criticism that it gets. For me, I consider that to be the end of the first EON franchise (I’ve never been able to see the Brosnan films as a continuation of the films Dr. NoLicence to Kill), as it really closes things out in a very nice way, with Bond not only having gotten revenge for Felix and Della, but also, in a roundabout way, for himself and Tracy as well (since we never got a true revenge film following On Her Majesty’s Secret Service)


    As always, stay tuned to the CBn main page for neverending James Bond coverage. Be sure to check out our Twitter feed as well.

  10. Licence to Kill celebrates 20 years (Part I)

    By Devin Zydel on 2009-08-03

    His Bad Side Is A Dangerous Place To Be

    20 Years Of Licence to Kill

    PART I

    'Licence To Kill'

    This summer marks the 20th anniversary of 1989’s hard-edged James Bond film, Timothy Dalton’s Licence to Kill. Promising audiences a renegade 007 out on his own for revenge, Licence to Kill has remained today one of the Bond films that most sharply divides fans over their opinions of it.

    Debuting in the UK on 13 June 1989, Licence to Kill then went on general release on 4 August and on 14 July in the US.

    Despite receiving generally favourable reviews from film critics at the time, Licence to Kill became one of the least successful films box office-wise (and the most unsuccessful overall in the US alone) in the James Bond series with a total worldwide gross of $156.2 million. Various reasons for this poorer-than-usual performance have been discussed, including the title/marketing materials change from Licence Revoked as well as the strong summer competition from othe films such as Batman, Ghostbusters II, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and Lethal Weapon 2.

    Taking into account the 20th anniversary of the film, CommanderBond.net asked our forum members to recall their first (or most memorable) time seeing Licence to Kill. To share your own remembrance, simply register here (it’s free and only takes a minute) on the CBn Forums.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… Turn

    My most memorable time seeing Licence to Kill was the first time, on the second night of its release in the U.S., as is my tradition. It was mainly memorable because it was one of the early group dates my future wife and I had, along with her sister and one of our best friends. Saw it at the 9 p.m. or so show at the Upper Valley Mall cinema in my hometown.

    It wasn’t a great place to see a movie at the time, but this was before the deluxe multiplexes with stadium-style seating and all that. I recall running into some guy I knew who was coming out of Licence to Kill and he wanted to talk about Batman and, ironically, Miami Vice.

    I don’t recall how crowded the auditorium was. I just remember enjoying the film and no real groans or unintentional laughs or anything like that, although my friend made a sound of disbelief when Bond tilts the Kenworth on two wheels to avoid the missle.

    I recall having to cut out for a minute, during the scene when Bond goes through the kitchen to set up his assasination attempt on Sanchez. I got back just as he was rappeling down the side of the building.

    It wasn’t the most memorable of the nights I went to see a Bond film the first time, but mostly for having been the first Bond I saw new with my wife before she was. She also went with me to Licence to Kill‘s other big competitors, Batman and Lethal Weapon 2, although I saw Last Crusade with another friend of mine.

    I still remember going to my college summer class the following Monday and immediately buying a USA Today paper to see how Licence to Kill did at the weekend box office. This was before the E Channel or updates and the Internet gave you results before the weekend even ended. I was shocked to see how poorly it did.

    I managed to see Licence to Kill once more at a second-run cinema with another friend. Then rented it when it came to VHS, then the next year on cable. The other most memorable time was on laserdisc when I rented a player from a place that did that.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… jrcjohnny99

    I went to a regional premiere of the movie at the Odeon in Manchester; I think in the days between the Royal Premiere in London and the general release.

    I loved it on first viewing; I’d really enjoyed The Living Daylights and was excited about Licence to Kill leading up to the release. They had a terrific teaser pooster for the movie.

    The event was great and I saw the pic a couple more times at the flicks (both probably at the Odeon Manchester); I remember at the time the film dividing a lot of fans, as indeed Dalton did.

    It plays well on DVD tho I think it has dated slightly; a shame it was to be Tim’s last picture.

    I remember buying the theme song on single and CD single (even tho I didnt have a CD player until that xmas); I think the only thing really dissapointing about the movie at the time was Kamen’s score, Seems like they tried to hard to replicate the success of Die Hard/Lethal Weapon.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… Zorin Industries

    I remember the date. It was June 4th 1989 in London’s glittering West End. It was a Sunday and it was the day of the Tiananmen Square massacre (well, that was on the TV news when I got home). Micheal Wilson was at the screening as were a few Eon Productions alumni and an odd collection of people (I reckon stuntmen and women) who cheered during the Barrelhead Bar Brawl.

    I was not “of age” then – i.e. it was a “15” and I was not there yet but as it was not a public screening that legally didn’t matter and I think there was a warning on the tickets. The tickets themselves were big glossy affairs with Dalton running and holding a gun motif – I still have mine somewhere (which was lucky as the cinema staff went a bit weird and would not give them back – but as there was no chance of re-using something so specifically printed for that day, they caved in eventually). The ticket also revealed that Patti Labelle had done a song. There were two songs?!! I had half caught the Knight one on local radio (so only heard it in its entirity during the film – no bad thing). It was the same with The Living Daylights. I didn’t even know who The Pretenders were, but was most surprised to see they had provided a second song. Ah – the days before the intraweb highway and phones that go in your pockets and don’t need wires tell you everything about a film. There is a lot to say in that (and not here), but the global internet consumption / fever for film news, stills and gossip has changed things – and maybe not for the better. When I saw Licence to Kill all I had seen was a press conference snippet in Hello magazine, some snaps of exploding tankers and Carey Lowell in that dress. Not half the film, an imagined screenplay, paparazzi shots with no context, nineteen teaser trailers and half the fans hating it because the first poster didn’t emerge on a Tuesday when it has always been a Tuesday (!).

    Because Licence to Kill was this mythical / magical “15” rated effort and I wasn’t that age just yet (though not far off) Licence to Kill felt a tiny bit naughty. It oddly still does to me. Even now its violent flourishes (which are light and tonally very Buena Vista in hindisght) still jar (in a good way) more than any Pakistani agent getting his head smashed into a Pinewood urinal nowadays.

    I liked the film then. It was like going to a family party and seeing your favourite cousin now sporting a tatoo. I was growing up, my body was growing up and now (bloody hell) James Bond was growing up too. But I do remember being slightly disappointed by the film. However, that was because the “violence” and “bloodshed” had been really shored up by the press (the Daily Mail had reported the year before how the film was aiming for a “15” rating and made it sound like the pre-title sequence would feature Timothy Dalton grilling newborns on a Key West beach). But Licence to Kill is still – despite its violent flourishes – a very tonally familiar Bond film. I think – even at that age – I was expecting Die Hard in tuxedos and didn’t get it. But Dalton was reassuring throughout. He takes the audience by the hand in Licence to Kill and very skillfully steers them to a different understanding about James Bond 007. He was such an advocate at the time of the character. He would always return it to Fleming and the books in every interview he did (that and Sam Wanamaker’s Rose Theatre project which saw Dalton sporting a red rose at the Licence to Kill premiere). Dalton enabled (told) the audience who James Bond was in a way no actor has ever achieved before or since. Craig’s films are maybe tonally and physically more in keeping with the work of Fleming, but it was Dalton in Licence to Kill who was brave enough to take the character back there first. The end result is this curious mix of Fleming characterisation (via the classically trained Dalton – 1989 was still the days when “RADA trained” meant something!) and Broccoli showmanship. They are not natural bedfellows. In hindsight I think Licence to Kill is a very successful Bond film and melds the two worlds more successfully rather than not. But in 1989, this young teenager found the film tonally and physically a bit of a weird hybrid.

    Also, I remember not liking Kamen’s score in parts. I wanted it just to shut the —- up (and still do sometimes now). It sounds in parts like it was scored to underline action scenes with 1000 thousand ninjas and massive Ken Adam sets. It missed the point of the lone figure Dalton wanted to cut in 1989. Even at that age it didn’t feel like it had John Barry’s stamp. I must have been the only kid in the country who was into John Barry more that Stock, Aitken and Waterman (though I did draw the line at a photo of the Yorkshire legend pinned above my bed – that would just be wrong) but he was sorely missed and may have been able to bridge the old and the new in the film.

    I do remember something else (and something that plagues everytime I see a new Bond for the first time)……I needed a pee throughout the whole film. I didn’t want to miss a second so had to endure a persistant bladder clearly not as into James Bond films as I was. It is something that I only get when seeing Bonds for the first time. And still do. Only now the security procedures at the screenings I go to mean you have about two hours to empty the bladder so it all works out (!). Too much information….? Sorry.

    PS. I was oddly fascinated by Benecio Del Toro (I think it was the eyes) and finally got to meet him by chance in New York years later. I asked him about doing the Bond. He said “that was the old days – when I was at school”…Bless. And now I keep bumping into him (well, I was nearly run over by a Pinewood golf cart last year when he was in his Wolf Man finery…).

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… Simon

    I saw it when I was living and working in New York, a sort of student exchange thing whereby students from both sides of the Atlantic could swap countries for the summer.

    I saw it at a Lowes, I think, and ended up being so non-plussed at it’s non-Bond feel that, upon exiting, I actually just turned around in the corridor and went in to see it a second time.

    Didn’t help.

    That said, there is more appreciation for it now than there was then. Probably due more to current tough trends and a longer break from things Moore.

    Similarly, I am wondering if time will help give more of an appreciation for The World is not Enough, but in this I think it is a lost cause.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… DaveBond21

    In the summer of 1989, I was only 14, and so I could not see Licence to Kill in the cinema due to its 15 rating. I do however remember looking at the poster. Dalton looked lean and mean, but I just thought it looked like a generic action movie poster, not a Bond film.

    However, I finally got to see it on British TV when it premiered in January 1994. I thought it was excellent, and loved the way that 007 was on a revenge mission. Sanchez made for an excellent and very realistic villain. Possibly one of the nastiest bad guys in Bond history. I really enjoyed the plot, with Bond bringing down Sanchez’s organisation from the inside, gaining his trust, Shakespeare-style, and then destroying him bit by bit. Love the way he sets up Milton Krest especially. The Bond girls were sexy and also resourceful. The action is underrated – I love the sequence which begins on a boat, then moves underwater, to water-skiing while hanging onto the seaplane, to heaving the pilot out and then throwing the money around! I’m also a big fan of the tanker chase.

    Gadgetmaster, Q, has his biggest role of any Bond movie (beating even Octopussy), taking leave to help 007 out. I always enjoy the scene of Q testing the firmness of the beds, as Bond remarks “I hope you don’t snore, Q” and also the shot of him throwing away one of his own gadgets, something he is always admonishing 007 for doing!!

    A unique, Latin score by Michael Kamen and good direction by John Glen make this a dark but entertaining Bond flick.

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… jaguar007

    I went to the first showing on opening day. I could not wait, I was so excited. I had felt that The Living Daylights was the best Bond movie since On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (and still do save Casino Royale) and was really excited to see Dalton continue. I left the theater rather disapointed. It just did not have the epic Bond feel to it. I thought about it after I saw the movie and realized I was shocked because it was different. I went to give it another chance the next day. The movie grew on me and to this day still hold the record for the most times I have seen a Bond movie in the theater, 9 times (I was only 21 and had alot of free time on my hands).

    Looking back at Licence to Kill by… clublos

    Ah, the summer of ’89! Ghostbusters 2, Batman and Bond.

    I was 11 and totally looking forward to this. My first experience with Bond was The Living Daylights two years before, so I was primed and pumped for new Bond.

    I remember ABC ran two nights of Bond (unheard of for a network station, or any station, back then) with Dr. No and The Man with the Golden Gun. USA Today had a promo to give away one of the cars in the film, and printed the one-sheet poster that took up an entire page. I carefully cut that out and put it up on one of my bedroom’s walls. At that age, promotional memorabilia was hard to come by at that time, and what little I had I took very good care of. I also had a copy of Starlog and Cinema Fantastique, each with articles on Bond. I desperately wanted the teaser poster, but that would have to wait (about 5 years, ashamedly).

    Opening day was Friday, July 14th, and I wanted to go to the very first showing but my dad wouldn’t get off work until the afternoon. She suggested my mom take me to the earlier show, but he took me to The Living Daylights two years ago and I there was no way I’d go without him. So we went around 3:30 or so. I remember getting there early, lining up to see the faces of the people coming out of the earlier showing to gauge their reactions. Being 11, I hadn’t mastered the art of reading facial expressions, so I had nothing.

    I had read about half of Gardner’s novelization, so I was psyching myself up for his description of Lupe’s visible nakedness beneath the sheets in her first scene (disappointed) and the goriness of Felix’s mutilation (relieved – not a fan of gore).

    Maybe it was my absorption in pop culture of the 80’s, which included Miami Vice, my interest in the drug trade or my enthusiasm for Bond (or all three) but I loved the film. I thought it was great. It was a step up and a departure from The Living Daylights, but in a good way. And as an 11-year old, I really dug the higher rating, which meant I was on my way to becoming more mature, or so I thought at the time.

    Ironically, I had no idea that the very next day I was to embark on the most exciting trip of my life and, tragically, the saddest return to home I’ve ever experienced.

    My family had planned a trip out west that summer. We flew from Atlanta to New Mexico and drove to Arizona, stopping at the Painted Desert and the Petrified Forest. We spent time at the Grand Canyon and then made our way to Las Vegas. During this trip, I had a blast. I knew I was very fortunate to be able to take that trip while my friends sat at home, and I cherish the memories of that time. Being in Vegas and seeing the Bond sites from Diamonds are Forever like the Slumber mortuary and staying in Circus Circus (it was still pretty nice back then, now it’s a dump) were amazing, all with the new Bond film fresh in my mind.

    Flying home, we had a long layover in Chicago because our flight from Vegas left late. It was raining in Chicago, and many flights were delayed. My mom decided to call my grandmother and let her know we were going to be late. She came back from the pay phone in tears. My dad asked what was wrong, she said my grandmother was very short with her, as if in a hurry, so my mom pressured her as to why. I’ll never forget these words, she said, “‘Something’s wrong with Freddie, I had to call Rescue.'”

    Freddie, my grandfather, the coolest man to have ever walked the earth. My hero, the man who made the saddest man laugh and the happiest man elated.

    We had no idea, being stuck in an under-construction airport in Chicago, what was happening with our family. I remember tears, I remember confusion in my head as to what it all meant. I didn’t want to lose him. It was too early, I wasn’t ready, there was more I had to learn from him.

    We got home that night at about 1:00am. My parents told me to go to my room and unpack. I could hear them dialing the phone. I knew who they were calling. The next sound I remember hearing was what sounded like my dad laughing, as if in a fit. I thought, “Maybe he’s okay. Maybe everything’s okay.” The sound wasn’t laughter. He was crying, something I never heard from my dad before. I ran into their bedroom, my mom was sitting on the bed sobbing, the phone next to her ear, and my dad was leaning against his dresser, head bent over. I knew what had happened.

    For some reason, through all the sadness, I look back on that summer with happiness. I had great times with my friends, a great trip to the western United States and saw some great movies. Maybe that was the final gift from Freddie: happiness.


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