Our weekly James Bond rewatch series continues with the fourteenth Bond film, 1985's A View to a Kill.
The third of five Bond films directed by John Glen, it was also the seventh and final effort for Roger Moore, who closed out his time as 007 with one of the oddest, messiest and most divisive entries into the entire Bond canon.
Though it does sometimes manage to strike an agreeably ridiculous tone, too much of the movie feels like an off-kilter mish-mash of ideas thrown together without any regard for whether they actually compliment each other.
https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/movies/g2496/bes... 97. Hai Fat The Film: The Man With the Golden Gun The Actor: Richard Loo The Basics: Disapproving corporate money source for villainous activity Hai Fait is the most thankless kind of Bond baddie. He exists solely so a superior villain can kill him, raising the stakes for the third act. Still, for an evil CEO who runs his own martial arts school, he's awfully forgettable.