![]() ![]() No details about the car appear in the film, however, based on the dialogue from Goldfinger this is James Bond's first Q Branch equipped vehicle. Near the beginning of the film, this car appears parked. īentley 3.5 Litre drophead coupé Park Ward (1938) No of Bond's investigation.īond hires this car and takes it to Miss Taro's home in the Blue Mountains. He later takes another Yellow Cab from Pus-Feller's back to the hotel.ĭent drives to the pier to take a boat to Crab Key to warn Dr. Later, Duff uses this car to pick up Miss Taro from her house.īond takes this cab to the harbour to meet Quarrel. Leiter and Quarrel trail Bond from the airport in this car.ĭuff and Bond take this car from Government House to visit Strangways's house. A speedometer close-up is actually from a 1957 Ford. After Jones dies, Bond drives the car to Government House, making it the first car Bond drives in the series. A Humber Super Snipe MK11 was used as a stand-in when the vehicle drives off a cliff.ĭr No's henchman "Mr Jones" picks up Bond from Palisadoes Airport in this stolen car. Appears again later in the film chasing Bond in the Blue Mountains. Used as a getaway car after the murder of Strangways. In the Queen's Club parking lot, Strangways is shot beside his car by the "Three Blind Mice." Vehicles in films Cars and trucks Vehicle This is a list of noteworthy vehicles seen in James Bond, used by either Bond himself, his allies, or his enemies. Bond's collection is the Aston Martin DB5. One car in particular that has been linked to Mr. Among the most noteworthy gadgets, Bond has been equipped with various vehicles that have numerous modifications to include elaborate weapons and anti-pursuit systems, alternative transportation modes, and various other functions. post as modern), this is among my favorites for the total package and, as many others have posted, felt more akin to the Craig Bond than audiences at the time were ready for.Throughout the James Bond series of films and novels, Q Branch has given Bond a variety of vehicles with which to battle his enemies. In the end of the classic Bond movies (I always considered Bonds Cold War era as classic vs. The various kills in this are pretty extreme, the stuntwork was insane and Bond going rogue I don't believe was handled in this way prior, so that was new as well. I mean, Bond is a spy with a license to kill at many times by any means. ![]() It had it all and honestly got a bad rap upon release as straying too far from the traditional Bond formula. The one thing it did however bring from the books was Felix Leiter's end from a shark attack. I'm still lost how a Diane Warren track made it into a Bond movie and wasn't a headliner.Īll of that aside, the movie was shockingly grizzly compared to the somewhat tame The Living Daylights or really any movie prior. This movie had a bit of everything, Johnson and Johnson from Die Hard included. Also Timothy Dalton was a more serious, no-nonsense Bond who in this film was just out for revenge, like proto-Jack Bauer. The darker, more serious, more brutal tone of the film is one aspect that I liked about it. It's so dark and so violent.Īnd that's why it's my favorite Bond film. We don't even know what happened to Sharky, Bond's investigator friend only that they killed him. Plenty of other bad guys get shot, drowned, thrown from a plane from thousands of feet in the air, etc. Sanchez is doused in gasoline and his body set on fire and he burns alive before dying in a gigantic explosionĪnd those are only the most gruesome and horrific killings I saw in the movie. Sanchez's henchman, Dario, gets thrown into a cocaine shredder and ground into human mincemeatĬolonel Heller, Sanchez's head of Security, is killed by Sanchez by being impaled by a fucking Forklift and driven through a wall ![]() Sanchez, the bad guy, having been manipulated by Bond into believing Martin Krest stole his money, locks him in a decompression chamber, turns up the pressure beyond safe levels, and then damages the pipes to the chamber, causing Krest's head to fucking explode Here's some detail as to how gruesome the movie can get.įelix Leiter gets brutally mauled by a great white shark and his wife gets raped and murdered.īond while investigating the attack finds the traitor officer Killinger and kills him by making him fall into the same great white shark tank and they watch him get mauled to death by the shark but when watching License to Kill, I had to wonder how this movie got a PG-13 rating. Most bad guys in James Bond films get shot, fall down great lengths, get blown up, etc. James Bond movies have their share of violence, but I think License to Kill takes the death and violence to a whole other level compared to other films in the series. ![]()
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