License to Kill/Trivia


 * Dead Guy Junior: Not referring to one of the characters, but Isthmus City president Hector Lopez was played by Pedro Armendariz, Jr., whose father, Pedro Armendariz, Sr., played Kerim Bey in From Russia With Love.
 * Hey It's That Guy: Jamie Ross used to be a CIA officer.
 * One of Benicio del Toro's earliest roles.
 * Nurse Terri Alden plays Mrs. Leiter.
 * And Jake Fratelli is Sanchez?
 * Johnson and Johnson are Sanchez and a CIA officer. In the same room at the same time!
 * Sharky would later become Da Chief on two different occasions.
 * Shang Tsung is an undercover narcotics cop.
 * And Kitana is Lupe Lamora.
 * Michael Kamen: Wrote the score.
 * The Other Darrin: In a weird example of this trope, actor John Terry, who had played Felix Leiter in the previous film was replaced by David Hedison - who had played Leiter all the way back in Live and Let Die. It was felt that an actor who had previously played the role should be in this one, for a better emotional reaction to what happens to him.
 * Playboy: The Chinese ninja woman who also appears during the opening credit sequence is Diana Lee Hsu, May 1988 Centerfold. She is part of a tradition of having an actress in a Bond movie to model in Playboy, although she's the first to have been a Centerfold before making the movie. Look for her in the opening credits.
 * Reality Subtext: Kind of inverted when Sanchez's actor, Robert Davi was taken by a number of thugs while on vacation in South America to an actual drug lord. The man enjoyed his portrayal of a drug lord.
 * Shout Out: Bond is taken to Hemingway House to turn in his licence and his weapon. He comments that it's "a farewell to arms". Subtle...
 * Throw It In: Robert Davi wrote Sanchez' line about "Loyalty is more important to me than money."
 * Also the shot of Q throwing the rake-radio into the bushes was simply the actor putting it out of shot for the next scene, however the sight of Q abusing a gadget the way he always complains about Bond doing was too good to lose.
 * What Could Have Been: Had the film come out in October and been successful, the studio would probably have had faith enough in Dalton to greenlight a third Dalton Bond movie. Plans for one existed however, but 'legal issues' prevented it from ever being made.