The Spy Who Loved Me, hands-down.
Think I'm gonna have to fit in a commemorative viewing this weekend.
Think I'm gonna have to fit in a commemorative viewing this weekend.
The Spy Who Loved Me, hands-down.
I agree that Yaphet Katto injected power and conviction to his role as Kananga. Speaking of Live and Let Die, the original book is one of the best Ian Fleming novels. Key scenes from For Your Eyes Only and License to Kill were taken from the book.I used to really like Octopussy, but last time I tried to watch it I gave up, Bond focusing the camera on a woman's cleavage wasn't one of 007's finest hours.
Live and Let Die obviously has issues, but no more than many of films of that era and Kotto's view counted for a lot in making be reappraise it. How they handled a black villain was important. Kananga isn't a henchman, he isn't some comedic character, he's a smart, dangerous, eloquent adversary and in the top drawer of Bond villains, IMO of course. In fact the film has a retinue of great henchmen too. Tee-Hee and Baron Samedi are again great adversaries. And of course it should be remembered that the most ludicrous and comic character in the film is the redneck.
If I could make one change to the film I think its that Solitaire should have been black. Don't get me wrong, I love Jane Seymour to bits, and she's a great Bond girl (little or no agency but that aside) but a black Solitaire would have balanced the film up somewhat in a way Strutter doesn't quite manage.
Random LALD related question. Who the hell slipped Bond the Queen of Cups card that tipped him off about Rosie? (or was it coincidence-it struck me last night that the hotel might have just given away a tarot card with every check!)
Second random question. Why the hell does Strutter tell Bond to drop it after he escapes from the Fillet of Soul? Obviously from a dramatic perspective we're supposed to think Strutter is another of Mr Big's goons but it doesn't make a whole heap of sense.
Whaaat? "License To Kill" is at least as good as "The Living Daylights." RT ranks it better, even (77% for LTK, 70% for TLD).For varying reasons, none of the Bonds ever got a decent second ''episode'', with the exception of Connery's FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE.
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