Licence to Kill
And now we come to the franchise killer, Licence to Kill.
Financially unsuccessful and generally derided, Licence to Kill is almost always ranked at or near the bottom of the canon.
And that is totally unjustified. Certainly not without its major problems, Licence to Kill just isn't that bad, and it attempts to nudge the franchise in a direction that it wouldn't experiment with again until the Daniel Craig years.
There are a number of reasons why people don't like this movie. Among the biggest complaints is the plot itself. Bond neither takes on enemy spies nor is the squeaky wheel that ruins the nefarious plans of megalomaniacs; Licence to Kill has much smaller fish to fry. There is a nasty drug kingpin named Sanchez (Robert Davi), and Bond is gonna bring him down. But even if the world is not at stake in this film, there are very personal issues to wrestle with. Sanchez attacked CIA agent and longtime Bond ally Felix Leiter (David Hedison) on his wedding night, killing his bride and lowering him into a shark tank until his legs were eaten off. Now Bond wants revenge. M and his other superiors at MI6 tell him back off. So Bond goes rogue, determined to take down Sanchez on his own.
Nowadays, the idea of Bond quitting MI6 doesn't seem like a big deal. Pierce Brosnan abandoned MI6 in Die Another Day, and it seems like Daniel Craig has made a nasty habit of it in most of his movies. But in 1989, this was pretty shocking. Bond was the Britain's secret weapon, loyal to Queen and country. He never loses his cool, and to have him desert his post to fight some feisty drug dealer was surprising and controversial to many. It doesn't bother me, especially since Licence to Kill features Bond doing more genuine undercover spy work than Roger Moore did during his entire tenure. He works his way down to Mexico, infiltrates Sanchez's gang and sets out to destroy it from the inside.
There is actually a lot of interesting stuff going on in this film, and it has a lot of good qualities. Timothy Dalton takes the seriousness and sense of danger up another notch in this film, making his run in The Living Daylights seem almost joyous in comparison. He's cruel and dangerous here, and that is cool to see. I think the rest of the cast also does good work, particularly Carey Lowell as Bond's new CIA ally Pam Bouvier, and Robert Davi and a VERY young Benicio del Toro as the villains. Long-time Bond helmer John Glen's direction is assured and reliable (he is even quoted as saying this is his favorite Bond film), and there are some exciting stunts - including some ridiculous tricks with 18-wheeler trucks, which would be laughably bad if it weren't for the fact that they were really doing them! That makes the absurd become something impressive!
On the other hand, I don't want to defend the film too much. Licence to Kill is definitely not some sort of misunderstood masterpiece. It has some serious problems. This is a long film, and it could have used some serious stream-lining. And entire subplot with Wayne Newton really serves no purpose and is just a time-kill. The film is utterly devoid of any humor at all, which is definitely a mistake. I really do feel that a key component of this franchise is that Bond enjoys his job, and we enjoy watching him enjoy his job. Licence to Kill is just way too grim. A shark ate off Felix's legs, for crying out loud!
And of course, if I am listing the horrible thing in this movie, I have to reserve a space for Carey Lowell's bad wig in her first scenes. Thank goodness they let her go with her natural short hair for the rest of the movie. Yeesh.
But the biggest problem is that there are stretches where Licence to Kill just doesn't feel like a Bond film. Ultimately, I think the quality that had been Bond's greatest strength for two decades backfired this time around - and by that, I mean the ability to adapt with the times. The late 1980s was the heyday of the rated R action movie, and stars like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone ruled the box office. Gore and violence was in. This was the age of Lethal Weapon, Robocop, Die Hard, Commando, Predator, and Rambo...and James Bond wanted to cash in. There are some truly grisly deaths in Licence to Kill - shockingly so for a PG-13 movie.
The other way the producers bowed to the issues of the late 1980s was by making Bond monogamous because of the AIDs crisis - he only sleeps with Pam Bouvier in this film. And while it is noble that they wanted to acknowledge what continues to be a very serious crisis, it is certainly out of character for Bond to ignore all the other women in the film.
I know the Daniel Craig films are also grim, and it must drive Timothy Dalton up the wall that Craig's tenure is praised for the very reasons that Dalton's tenure is derided. But the simple fact of the matter is that by trying to pursue what was popular in the late 1980s, Licence to Kill loses track of what makes Bond so special and unique. It devolves into your standard late 1980s revenge flick, just with a better actor in the lead. And that is a very serious problem, and certainly contributed to its under performance.
Licence to Kill took a beating at the box office for another reason - bad luck. The film was released in 1989, which was a bonanza year for franchises. It just got swallowed up by franchise films like Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Ghostbusters 2, Batman, Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, Back to the Future II, Karate Kid 3, Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, and Star Trek V. Wow. No wonder the film failed to ignite the box office.
But here is where I need to defend the film's legacy. It was not a disaster. It did not kill the franchise. Yes, for awhile it did look like there would be no more Bond films, but that had nothing to do with Licence to Kill. There was a run of bad luck. Ongoing fierce legal battles with a bankrupt MGM (the parent company of Bond's distributor, United Artists) left the franchise mired in lawsuits and tangled in development hell. With the production seemingly delayed indefinitely, Dalton retired from the role (important to note - he left; he wasn't let go). After five films, director John Glen also decided to throw in the towel. Then two of Bond's iconic team members passed away - open titles designer Maurice Binder and screenwriter Richard Maibaum, both of whom had been with the franchise since Dr. No. Worst of all, Cubby Broccoli himself had to step back from the driver's seat, as he was struggling with serious health concerns.
You can't blame Licence to Kill, but for a few years, it really was starting to look like James Bond was dead. Thank goodness for Goldeneye.
RANKINGS:
This was a tough film to rank. Licence to Kill has its problems, but its not a badly made film. I think it is going to rest nicely right below Live and Let Die...squarely in the middle of the pack.
1. Thunderball
2. From Russia with Love
3. Goldfinger
4. The Spy Who Loved Me
5. The Living Daylights
6. Dr. No
7. Octopussy
8. For Your Eyes Only
9. Live and Let Die
10. Licence to Kill
11. Man with the Golden Gun
12. Diamonds are Forever
13. On Her Majesty's Secret Service
14. Moonraker
15. You Only Live Twice
16. A View to a Kill
BEST LINE:
When Bond is arguing with M about seeking vengeance against Frank Sanchez:
M: This private vendetta of yours could easily compromise Her Majesty's government. You have an assignment, and I expect you to carry it out objectively and professionally.
James Bond: Then you have my resignation, sir.
M (furious): We're not a country club, 007!
TRIVIA:
The scene where Bond confronts M and then resigns from MI6 was filmed in Ernest Hemingway's old house in Key West. Hence the line: "Well, I suppose this is a farewell to arms." Ah, you gotta love inside jokes...
MVP:
What is the best thing about Licence to Kill? Despite my earlier criticism of Timothy Dalton's humorless take on the role, he is still clearly the best thing about the movie. He's a consummate professional and he was willing to take the character to some truly dark and dangerous places, and that needs to be applauded. And I do feel bad that he gets slammed for some of the same reasons Daniel Craig is praised. It seems hardly fair!
Showing posts with label Carey Lowell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carey Lowell. Show all posts
Friday, May 6, 2016
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Club Paradise
Club Paradise
After a life-threatening illness derailed his career in the 1970s, Peter O'Toole (Lawrence of Arabia) seemed poised for a comeback. He secured well-deserved Oscar nominations for The Stunt Man (1980) and My Favorite Year (1982), and made a lasting impression as the Roman general Silva in the sprawling Masada miniseries (1981). And then something happened, something horrifying, tragic and terrible. And that thing is called Club Paradise.
Wow, is this movie bad. Club Paradise is the unfortunate type of comedy where you don't laugh at all. You can't laugh. All you can do is stare and wonder how it even got made.
Robin Williams plays Jack, a retired firefighter living in the tropical paradise of St. Nicholas. Eventually he decides to refurbish and manage a resort with his buddy Ernest (played by reggae artist Jimmy Cliff). The problem is that despite their best efforts, their resort is a piece of trash and is literally falling to pieces. Jack and Ernest spend much of the movie trying to keep the place together so their guests can have a good time. Another problem is that a ruthless American businessman and the island's prime minister are plotting to force the locals into a tourism sucking cycle of servitude, leaving them destitute forever and unable to climb the economic ladder. Grr! Evil foreign capitalism!
...
Yeah, you read that right. Look, I'm not saying that fancy foreign businessmen and their big fancy resorts haven't played their parts in preventing economic equality on some of these islands, but this theme seems kind of heavy for a movie as crappy as this.
The biggest shame is that the cast and crew is full of talented artists. We all know what insane joyfulness Robin Williams is capable of bringing to the table, but he is terrible here and constantly changing character. He is actually acting like he is doing a standup routine, which makes for a pretty bad character performance. Was he trying to make the crew laugh maybe? The bad guys are played by Brian Doyle Murray (Bill Murray's brother and a fine comic actor in his own right) and the Oscar-nominated Adolph Caesar (A Soldier's Story). The hotel guests include fine actors like Rick Moranis (Ghostbusters), Eugene Levy (American Pie), Andrea Martin (SCTV) and Joanna Cassidy (Bladerunner). The director is the gifted Harold Ramis (Groundhog Day) and the script was co-written by Ramis and Murray, both of whom are really fine writers.
And then there is Peter O'Toole. I love that man. His brilliance in film, on stage, and in bars is legendary. He has risen above terrible material and delivered gold. And in this movie, he just...isn't any good. I don't know what is going on, but he is really off. To me, it's a big disappointment. Sure, he has the best line in the movie (see below), but it is the line that it clever, not O'Toole's delivery. And from my perspective, all the good will built from The Stunt Man, My Favorite Year, and Masada vanished. This was the beginning of the "unfortunate" period, that included such classics as Supergirl, Creator, King Ralph, High Spirits, Phantoms, The Seventh Coin, and Phantoms. Sure, there was that quality blip on the radar (The Last Emperor), but overall this was not a good time in O'Toole's career. Of course, who am I to judge? He probably had a lot of fun and made a lot of money doing these films. But wow...painful.
Actually, that is a good word for this whole movie: painful. Please avoid it. Please.
BEST LINE:
Governor Hayes (referring to his island): "Either the Americans will move in and turn it into Miami Beach, or the Cubans and Russians will come and turn the entire island into bloody Albania. There really is no hope."
MVP:
I have to go with the non-actor of the bunch, Jimmy Cliff. I don't think he made that many movies, but he actually has a nice screen presence. Everyone else seems to be trying too hard, while Cliff just goes with the flow. He gets my MVP, for sure.
TRIVIA:
The movie was originally supposed to star Bill Murray and John Cleese, both of whom would have been more appropriate in their roles than Williams and O'Toole. I don't know why they dropped out, but the decision probably ranks among their best career moves. Easily.
After a life-threatening illness derailed his career in the 1970s, Peter O'Toole (Lawrence of Arabia) seemed poised for a comeback. He secured well-deserved Oscar nominations for The Stunt Man (1980) and My Favorite Year (1982), and made a lasting impression as the Roman general Silva in the sprawling Masada miniseries (1981). And then something happened, something horrifying, tragic and terrible. And that thing is called Club Paradise.
Wow, is this movie bad. Club Paradise is the unfortunate type of comedy where you don't laugh at all. You can't laugh. All you can do is stare and wonder how it even got made.
Robin Williams plays Jack, a retired firefighter living in the tropical paradise of St. Nicholas. Eventually he decides to refurbish and manage a resort with his buddy Ernest (played by reggae artist Jimmy Cliff). The problem is that despite their best efforts, their resort is a piece of trash and is literally falling to pieces. Jack and Ernest spend much of the movie trying to keep the place together so their guests can have a good time. Another problem is that a ruthless American businessman and the island's prime minister are plotting to force the locals into a tourism sucking cycle of servitude, leaving them destitute forever and unable to climb the economic ladder. Grr! Evil foreign capitalism!
...
Yeah, you read that right. Look, I'm not saying that fancy foreign businessmen and their big fancy resorts haven't played their parts in preventing economic equality on some of these islands, but this theme seems kind of heavy for a movie as crappy as this.
The biggest shame is that the cast and crew is full of talented artists. We all know what insane joyfulness Robin Williams is capable of bringing to the table, but he is terrible here and constantly changing character. He is actually acting like he is doing a standup routine, which makes for a pretty bad character performance. Was he trying to make the crew laugh maybe? The bad guys are played by Brian Doyle Murray (Bill Murray's brother and a fine comic actor in his own right) and the Oscar-nominated Adolph Caesar (A Soldier's Story). The hotel guests include fine actors like Rick Moranis (Ghostbusters), Eugene Levy (American Pie), Andrea Martin (SCTV) and Joanna Cassidy (Bladerunner). The director is the gifted Harold Ramis (Groundhog Day) and the script was co-written by Ramis and Murray, both of whom are really fine writers.
And then there is Peter O'Toole. I love that man. His brilliance in film, on stage, and in bars is legendary. He has risen above terrible material and delivered gold. And in this movie, he just...isn't any good. I don't know what is going on, but he is really off. To me, it's a big disappointment. Sure, he has the best line in the movie (see below), but it is the line that it clever, not O'Toole's delivery. And from my perspective, all the good will built from The Stunt Man, My Favorite Year, and Masada vanished. This was the beginning of the "unfortunate" period, that included such classics as Supergirl, Creator, King Ralph, High Spirits, Phantoms, The Seventh Coin, and Phantoms. Sure, there was that quality blip on the radar (The Last Emperor), but overall this was not a good time in O'Toole's career. Of course, who am I to judge? He probably had a lot of fun and made a lot of money doing these films. But wow...painful.
Actually, that is a good word for this whole movie: painful. Please avoid it. Please.
BEST LINE:
Governor Hayes (referring to his island): "Either the Americans will move in and turn it into Miami Beach, or the Cubans and Russians will come and turn the entire island into bloody Albania. There really is no hope."
MVP:
I have to go with the non-actor of the bunch, Jimmy Cliff. I don't think he made that many movies, but he actually has a nice screen presence. Everyone else seems to be trying too hard, while Cliff just goes with the flow. He gets my MVP, for sure.
TRIVIA:
The movie was originally supposed to star Bill Murray and John Cleese, both of whom would have been more appropriate in their roles than Williams and O'Toole. I don't know why they dropped out, but the decision probably ranks among their best career moves. Easily.
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