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License to Kill
License to Kill
Actors: Jacqueline Brookes, James Farentino, Penny Fuller, George Martin, Ari Meyers
Director: Jud Taylor
Genres: Drama, Kids & Family, Television
UR     2008     1hr 36min

Celebrating her high school graduation young Lynne Peterson is killed in an auto accident by a successful businessman who is driving drunk. Her father vowing to see his daughter's killer punished runs up against the slow-m...  more »

     

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Movie Details

Actors: Jacqueline Brookes, James Farentino, Penny Fuller, George Martin, Ari Meyers
Director: Jud Taylor
Genres: Drama, Kids & Family, Television
Sub-Genres: Drama, Kids & Family, Television
Studio: VCI ENTERTAINMENT
Format: DVD - Color,Full Screen
DVD Release Date: 02/01/2008
Release Year: 2008
Run Time: 1hr 36min
Screens: Color,Full Screen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Languages: English
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Member Movie Reviews

K. K. (GAMER)
Reviewed on 4/9/2023...
Very dated but what a great plotline and cast of characters. Denzel Washington plays a solid but uneventful role for the most part compared to others. A tearjerker at times and a must watch!

Movie Reviews

License to Kill (NOT the 007 movie)
Laurie S. | Portland, OR, USA | 09/16/2005
(1 out of 5 stars)

"Dud. Dull. Drab. Predictable. Formula. Overuse of cliche. This overly simple story line spells out the evils of drunk driving and the havoc it wreaks on the innocent by featuring one family's struggle to cope, not only with the death of a young daughter with her whole life ahead of her, but also the frustrations with the legal system in dealing with the aftermath. The script is tedious and the actors can do little to overcome it's simplistic, stilted feeling, including never transforming the actors into real-feeling characters. The actors actually looked awkward with one another. I have no idea who wrote it, but it feels like perhaps they were about 12 years old and this was a class project. I could not figure out who the audience was supposed to be -- junior high Sunday School classes perhaps, this being part of the chapter about the importance of being responsible about drugs, smoking and alcohol. Denzel Washington, whose name is being featured prominently to sell this DVD, though not the major charater in the story, was clearly at the outset of his career, trying hard, but awkward and only okay. James Farantino and Don Murray did somewhat better, but still were not all that convincing -- alternately overacting and walking through their roles. I kept waiting for it to get better and to find someone or something to relate to, but it never happened because the whole thing was too Dick&Jane.
"
False advertisement
S. Johnson | Michigan United States | 11/22/2006
(2 out of 5 stars)

"The producers of this movie are geniuses. This movie is skillfully marketed as if Denzel is the lead actor when in fact he is only in the last half of the film (more like the last half hour of the film). I only bought it because I love Denzel. By the time he made it to the screen, I was already sleep. This movie is quite horrid. The story line drags, the actors are boring and the outcome is fairly predictable. The only satisfaction I received from the film is that he played a lawyer."
STIFF BUT EFFECTIVE
Michael Butts | Martinsburg, WV USA | 01/20/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)

"This tv movie is hopelessly preachy and manipulative, but it does bring to the front the tragic issue of drunk driving. A talented and lively high school senior is killed by a drunk driver; her family tries to deal with the guilt and the father is determined to bring the driver to justice. The script is cliched, but it does try to look at both sides of the coin and focus on the alcoholic issue as well as vehicular manslaughter. Denzel Washington makes one of his earlier appearances as the prosecuting attorney but the writers don't give him much to do. James Farentino and Penny Fuller, along with Don Murray and Millie Perkins, do an okay job in showing the anguish of the victim and the perpetrator. Not a classic but not a dud either."