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  1. Jul 14, 1989 · Licence to Kill: Directed by John Glen. With Timothy Dalton, Carey Lowell, Robert Davi, Talisa Soto. A vengeful James Bond goes rogue to infiltrate and take down the organization of a drug lord who has murdered his friend's new wife and left him near death.

  2. Licence to Kill (released in the United States as License to Kill, but sold in the U.S. home video market with the British spelling) is the sixteenth film in the James Bond film series made by EON Productions. Released in the United Kingdom on 13 June, 1989, Licence to Kill is the fifth and last Bond film to be directed by John Glen, and the second and final film with Timothy Dalton portraying British Secret Service agent, Commander James Bond. It is also the final film to have Robert Brown as M

  3. special effects technician (uncredited) Jeffrey S. Farley. ... shark puppet crew (uncredited) Steve Hamilton. ... senior special effects technician (uncredited) Sergio Jara Jr.

  4. Page 1 of 6, 11 total items. James Bond (Timothy Dalton) takes on his most-daring adventure after he turns renegade and tracks down one of the international drug cartel's most-brutal and powerful ...

    • (64)
    • Action
    • PG-13
  5. A petrol-soaked Sanchez attempts to kill Bond with his machete. Bond then reveals his cigarette lighter-the Leiters' gift for being the best man at their wedding-and sets Sanchez on fire. Burning alive, Sanchez stumbles into the wrecked tanker, destroying it. Bouvier arrives shortly afterward, and picks up Bond.

  6. Synopsis. En route to the wedding of his friend Felix Leiter in Florida, Bond and Leiter take a detour to arrest drug baron Franz Sanchez. It doesn’t take too long, however, for Sanchez to break himself out of jail, and kill the new Mrs Leiter and maim Felix. Bond seeks revenge. With his licence revoked by the British government, and with the ...

  7. In "Licence to Kill," however, the use of a drug kingpin named Sanchez ( Robert Davi) and his henchmen ( Anthony Zerbe, Frank McRae) is apparently part of an attempt to update the whole series and make it feel more contemporary. There are still, of course, the obligatory scenes. The film begins with a sensationally unbelievable stunt sequence ...