Dark Raven
It's not about what you deserve...
- Joined
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"License to Kill" did mediocre business partly because it was released in 1989, alongside "Batman". The former seemed old hat, the latter seemed new and exciting.
Timothy Dalton played Bond very straight, which was probably a conscious move away from Roger Moore's knowing wink. The problem with that is that his Bond was quite underwritten, anyway. It's a very competent performance, but it seems to lack the charisma of Connery or Craig.
Robert Davi was a pretty good villain, I think.
1989 had a lot of other releases that year. Die Hard and some others I can't remember. Bond released in the summer was up against some very stiff competition. Since then they've released it in the winter.
Dalton played it as a world weary, hardened yet understated spy who tried to keep a low profile and wasn't trying to be too over the top so that the could better blend in. I think he could've been as successful as Craig had he been around now.
Davi was good, and I imagine Bardem would be a bit similar. Benico Del Toro was also in Licence To Kill.


I feel like Dalton's short tenure is the biggest missed opportunity. My imagination runs wild.