He's double-oh seven, license to kill. It all adds up to lots of dead bad guys. Here's every time James Bond uses his license to kill...to kill. Visit me at: PATREON: / luckasc WEBSITE: www.protokino.com INSTAGRAM: /
-Feeding someone to maggots -Feeding someone to electric eels -Feeding someone to a mfing shark -Feeding someone to a mincer -Setting the big bad on fire Licence to Kill really is Bond living his best life
RIP Sir Roger Moore (October 14, 1927 - May 23, 2017), aged 89 And RIP Sir Sean Connery (August 25, 1930 - October 31, 2020), aged 90 You both will be remembered as legends.
It sure sucks that they are gone from this world... But they will never be forgotten. Fun fact, Roger Moore originally wanted to play as Bond in Dr No, but was deemed too young for the role, hence why we have Sean Connery as Bond from Dr No up till Diamonds Are Forever, unless you want to count that one unofficial bond film or From Russia With Love's video game adaptation published by EA.
That’s not the reason Roger Moore could not play James Bond. He was the preferred choice over Sean Connery, but In 1962 when they shot Dr No, Roger Moore was under contract to in the British TV series The Saint; he was already committed to the series and could not get out of his contract. But it worked out great for him; a successful TV series for 8 years, and then he played Bond when Connery left after Diamonds Are Forever
I do appreciate how Sean Connery's role in Dr No included some pretty ruthless kills that were unheard of in cinema in 1962. The double tap on the geologist, the knife in the back to the guard, strangling the nuclear tech to death. He was on a roll in that one. The follow up where he has his brutal fight with Robert Shaw was equally visceral, particularly for 60s audiences. He was an awesome Bond, but the context of what audiences were used to makes his run even more groundbreaking in the level of violence.
Yeah, that train fight stuck with me seeing FRWL as a boy. Even nowadays you could film that exact fight and it wouldn't be out of place in a Wick movie.
@@EVERYJAMESBOND The movie came before the video game. Even Tomorrow Never Dies was released around the same time. They just had him switch to a lot of machine gun kills. It could have been fueled by other first person shooter games or just other action films of the late 80s and early 90s like Die Hard or stuff with Arnie and Stallone.
I don't think most of that was influenced by the games, it was more so the bigger budget for action sequences. ...That VR thing in Die Another Day, that totally was a video game influence, though, 007 NightFire is totally the reason for it.
13:35 and 14:46 Timothy Dalton is such a caring Bond , when he sends people off a plane from big hights, he's giving them a comforter to fly with: A shoe or a plane door. I wonder if they hit the ground still holding it.
I always thought that either A View to a Kill or Goldeneye should've been his third film. We was a decent Bond, shaking off the camp for a more late 80's action thrill!
@@adamlis9321 View to a Kill would have benefitted from Dalton debuting as Bond. Rewrite the script, keep Zorin and MayDay, and keep Duran Duran’s banger of a theme, and you’d have a solid start. GoldenEye would have validated him and been one of his best.
No. It's the cop that blew himself up in Casino Royale, this, Elliot Carver being drilled in TWN, the sattelite array killing 006. Holy Sh*t! Brosnan, why are you so brutal?
In "Dr. No", Bond shoots professor Dent after confronting him with his faux pas regarding Strangways and his secretary. After the 'interview' and Dent's bodged attempt to shoot Bond using an already emptied S&W, Bond shoots the scientist at point blank range. It's interesting to know that Terence Young, the film's director, had to put in quite some effort to keep that scene in the final cut of the movie. To 1962 movie standards, it was rather a brutal murder, but Young argued that a double-O is the type of man who will leave none or very few opponents alive and in this case, revenge for Cdr Strangways also came into play.
My understanding is that the sequence as originally filmed had Bond putting four bullets into Dent, but the censors thought this was excessive and demanded it be trimmed down to the two that we see in the final release. And never mind the standards of the time: even now, I feel that the extra one in his back when he's already lying on the floor feels unnecessarily brutal; another two would just seem gratuitous.
Actually those submarine counts in the Spy Who Loved Me is a total of 300. It takes a minimum of 150 men to man a nuclear sub and Bond tricked two subs into killing each other.
I wouldn’t say 150 is the _minimum_ per se as the _Los Angeles-Class_ which would have been in service at the time could operate with only 129. Granted it’s the Soviet and British subs which deploy from the _Liparus_ but still, 129 does prove a whole new “minimum”.🙄 And I checked, the _Trafalgar-Class_ British nuclear sub in service at the time the film came out had a complement of 130. However, the fictional _H.M.S. Ranger_ in the film was based on the _Resolution-Class_ which only needed 143. While the Soviet _Delta I-Class_ only counted 120. Either way, 150 is actually _more_ than what is required to operate those subs especially when you consider that some staff on a sub are non-essentials like the KP staff and I don’t think Stromberg expected the two stolen subs to be out their that long after launching to need a cook on board.
@MichaelAarons1701 Think about it. They're about to start WW3. Do you think they're going to be able to return to port afterward? Those so-called 'non-essential' personnel are going to be needed. Plus, this is the 1970s, so not everything is automated and needs to be done manually. So yeah, 150 is about right.
Dario's death in Licence To Kill always stuck with me ever since I was little, getting shredded/crushed/ripped apart by big running machinery is legit my biggest fear ever
What’s most scary about it is that by the time his scream stops echoing out, there’s no mouth left for him to scream with, _nothing at all in fact._ Chilling…
@stratpluslover8391 : Given the fact that he was "in league/associated" with a criminal organisation (murder, blackmail and narcotics et al) and what they do, I'd say his fate was richly deserved.
@@SPECTRE_Madman: If this compilation was one where Bond indirectly causes the death of any secondary villain or a major one (not the lead) Krest certainly feature in it - an example of how ruthless he could be - the direct opposite of his enemy.
Too bad that the killing of Burt Saxby from “DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER” got edited out. However, if the Clark County Sheriff and his deputy as well as all those Las Vegas police officers in “DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER” got cadaverized, then Connery would have had a better kill record.
Was kinda hoping the failed kill in The World Is Not Enough (the one where Bond goes "See you back at the lodge" only for the paraglider to deploy a backup chute to his consternation) would be including just for the -1.
In “Die Another Day (2002)”, “Casino Royal (2006)”, and “Skyfall (2012)”, we can perfectly see how every single movie made in 2000-2020 was full of jump cuts, scenes that make no sense, and everything is colour tuned to grey, blue, yellow, or something else that makes everything look fake. Plus a nice side dish of film grain purposefully inserted onto random scenes for no reason
Crazy to see how just how violent some of these kills got in comparison to the older movies. We go from cutting away as Bond hugs someone to death to him throwing someone into a rock grinder and setting people on fire
There are a couple of kill counts that are questionable. -Thunderball: When Bond cuts the breather tubes of the divers, two of them clearly start swimming to the surface. -Live and Let Die: When Bond kicks Whisper into the drum and closes it on him, he didn't die. -The Spy Who Loved Me: Two of the three guys in the jeep that went into the water didn't die.
The hangar scene definitely counts. Such a shame that none of the San Francisco police officers got to perish in the pursuit chase, especially Captain Moustache! And how about those Czech police officers in the car chase scene from “THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS”, why don’t they count among those being cadaverized? And why skip out on the killing of Vargas from “THUNDERBALL”?
The best kill in the franchise: "Octopussy"(1983). Bond vs.Grischka. "And that's for 009!". Yes, MI6 never forgets any of its heroes. What a satisfying revenge! Roger Moore was perfect in "Octopussy"! Even at the age of 55, still such a charming English gentleman agent!
I think you forgot boris grishenko in goldeneye, even after trevelian’s death, bond’s mines did go off causing the gas tanks to blow up and send boris to a freezing death
Damn Roger Moore and pierce Brosnan were beast with machines in terms of killing bad guys. I feel Brosnan gets too much hate nowadays but to me pierce Brosnan's bond was a fusion of Sean Connery and Roger Moore. I really did enjoy Brosnan's outing as James bond. Such a shame Brosnan didn't get a farewell bond movie. Brosnan can do a gritty spy movie such as November man.
I feel the Brosnan movies aren't getting a fair shake. Bond got credit for a submarine's entire crew and a hanger full of soldiers but no credit for the chemical factory (Goldeneye) or the stealth ship (Tomorrow Never Dies)? I don't mind not counting them, but consistency is needed. Otherwise well done.
6:55 - 7:00 -- Yeah, the no-parachute guy. That must be a terrible way to go... there's no pain to distract you, so all you have to do is be consumed with the fact that your death is imminent -- well, "imminent" meaning a few minutes at least -- and there's nothing to be done about it. The scream of almost existential dread as he kind of floats away really sells it.
Agree! The most disturbing death scene I've seen in all of cinema is in X-Men: First Class, where a mutant teleports humans (including Oliver Platt) to a great height, and just let go. Horrible thought... Worse than drowning! Also, that scene in Moonraker is also one of my favourite Bond escapes, simply because (ignoring close-up shots) it was all done FOR REAL! No CGI bulls***, it was just Jump Out Of Plane, ACTION! CUT! Repeat 80 times! They'll never film scenes like that ever again... unless Tom Cruise is involved!
Every James Bond, Archie Bunker: “It wouldn’t come as no surprise to me that this feller is the only man in England 🇬🇧 permitted to even carry a gun, and he sure as well H-E-Double-Toothpicks does a good job of saving the world on a number of occasions.”
A few you missed out: In Live And Let Die, Mr Big says Bond killed one of his boys in Harlem (Presumably the man he hit with a fire escape.) In Skyfall, Bond kicks one of Silva's henchmen in the neck, making an audiable snapping sound.
KILL COUNT: Dr. No 0:05-0:48 From Russia with Love 0:49-1:17 Goldfinger 1:18-1:50 Thunderball 1:51-2:39 You Only Live Twice 2:40-3:34 On Her Majesty's Secret Service 3:35-3:57 Diamonds are Forever 3:58-4:41 Live and Let Die 4:43-5:17 The Man with the Golden Gun 5:18-5:27 The Spy Who Loved Me 5:28-6:55 Moonraker 6:56-8:57 For Your Eyes Only 8:58-10:58 COMMING SOON!!!
I think its a safe assumption in that it is mentioned that they're entirely air tight and there's not a tremendous case for Bond to hop over there and crack it back open before poor ol Whisper choked on his own CO2. Him dead.
I'm going to be the theory that the CIA and other authorities, carry out a search of Kananga's HQ for evidence (as it's a crime scene) and Whisper - due to challenging issues - acted as an informant to be spared in getting jailed.
There's no getting away from the outset that 007 is a trained and merciless killer - when it's necessary - what I don't like is Moore's 007 being unable to fight, let alone kill. Octopussy is a clear example of this. None of them - Connery, Lazenby, Dalton, Brosnan and Craig - hold back when it comes to stopping enemies whose sole intentions is causing all sorts of mayhem and bloodshed. Despite being newly promoted in "Casino Royale" and being a rookie (of sorts), 007 certainly is ruthless here : killing enemies like Mollaka Danso, Alex Dimitrios, Steven Obanno, Adolph Gettler et al shows 007 is more than capable as a lone operator - good compilation.
I am curious about how the death count excluded some of the deaths of cronies who were indirectly killed by the villain(s) but by the actions of Bond. Like in Dr. No, there were an unknown number of cronies killed when the explosion at the bauxite mine after Bond killed Dr. No. Then there is the cronies killed at Fort Knox, on the space station, in the Alps, and in that space capsule Bond self-destructed from You Only Live Twice. And Bloefeld was killed in Diamonds Are Forever, then not killed in Spectre..."ran out of bullets". But I would speculate there could be a lot more added to the final tally, that was missed.