The Living Daylights

The Living Daylights

Movie |

Assassination | London, England

  • Duration: 2h 10min
  • Music: Paul Waaktaar-Savoy,John Barry,Morten Harket,Magne Furuholmen
  • Award(s): BMI Film Music 1988 (Won)
    Golden Satellite 2004 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: Love Lies Bleeding, From the World of John Wick: Ballerina
  • Story:
    James Bond helps a Russian General escape into the west. He soon finds out that the KGB wants to kill him for helping the General. A little while later the General is kidnapped from the Secret Service leading 007 to be suspicious.
    Full Story
6.7/10
IMDb

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The Living Daylights - Cast

The Living Daylights - Crew

The Living Daylights - IMAGE GALLERY

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
James Bond helps a Russian General escape into the west. He soon finds out that the KGB wants to kill him for helping the General. A little while later the General is kidnapped from the Secret Service leading 007 to be suspicious.
Ratings

6.7/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Won
Golden Reel Award

Best Sound Editing Foreign Feature | 1988

Nominations
Golden Satellite Award

Best Classic DVD Release | 2004

Video Premiere Award

Best DVD Original Retrospective DocumentaryFeaturette | 2001 | John

FMCJ Award

Best ReRelease of a Previously Existing Score | 1998 | John

Saturn Award

Best Fantasy Film | 1988

BOX OFFICE

Budget 40,000,000 USD

Box Office Collection 191,185,897 USD

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

Timothy Dalton was originally considered for the role of James Bond in the late 1960s, after Sir Sean Connery left the role, following You Only Live Twice (1967). Dalton was screentested by Albert R. Broccoli for On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), but he turned down the part, as he thought he was too young. He was also considered for Diamonds Are Forever (1971), but turned it down again, still feeling he was too young. He was considered again for the role in For Your Eyes Only (1981), when for a while, it was unclear whether Sir Roger Moore would return. However, Dalton declined at that time, as there was no script (or even first draft). Dalton was offered the role again in 1983 for Octopussy (1983), and yet again in 1985 for A View to a Kill (1985), but had to decline the role both times due to previous commitments.

Timothy Dalton was originally unavailable to play Bond, and Pierce Brosnan was then chosen to play 007 in 1986, and was given the script to this movie. Although he was contracted to Remington Steele (1982) for seven seasons, NBC decided to cancel the show at the end of the fourth season, which meant that Brosnan was free to play James Bond in this movie the following year. However, shortly after the end of the fourth season, NBC had second thoughts about cancelling "Remington Steele", and subsequently approached the Bond producers directly in an attempt to strike a deal that would allow Brosnan to play James Bond and Remington Steele the following year. NBC also offered to completely reschedule the shooting of Remington Steele to ensure that there were no scheduling conflicts. But eventually, Albert R. Broccoli famously told NBC that "James Bond will not be Remington Steele, and Remington Steele will not be James Bond." Accordingly, Brosnan would only play Bond if the show remained cancelled. NBC had a sixty day deadline to revoke their decision to cancel the series, and at 6:30 p.m. on the sixtieth day of the deadline, Brosnan learned that NBC decided to make a fifth season. The Bond producers subsequently prevented Brosnan from becoming the next James Bond. Subsequently, the role went to Timothy Dalton, who was now finally available. NBC went on to make only six episodes of the fifth season of Remington Steele (1982) before finally cancelling the show for good.

The casting of Frederick Warder and Glyn Baker as 004 and 002 was intentional, due to their resemblance to George Lazenby and Sir Roger Moore, respectively. For the movie's opening scene, the writers wanted to toy with the audience's expectations of which of the 00 agents was Bond.

A stuntman was originally going to play the role of the SAS man who's rope is cut by The Imposter (played by Carl Rigg), the Russian assassin in Gibraltar at the beginning, but after watching rushes, director John Glen decided that they needed a real actor for the part, and it was given to another actor. At the time, this actor was out of work and staying home, taking care of his baby, while his wife was away on business. Upon getting the call, he left the baby with a neighbor, left his wife a note telling her he'd gone to be in a James Bond movie, and caught the next plane to Gibraltar to start filming.

This was the last Bond film to be scored by John Barry.

Popular Dialogues

"James Bond: Cheer up, Saunders. The operation's a success. And officially, its still yours. Saunders: I have no intention of leaving it at that, 007! I'm reporting to M that you deliberately missed. Your orders were to kill that sniper! James Bond: *Stuff* my orders! I only kill professionals. That girl didn't know one end of her rifle from the other. Go ahead. Tell M what you want. If he fires me, I'll thank him for it. Whoever she was, it must have scared the living daylights out of her."

"Kara Milovy: What happened? James Bond: He got the boot."