This was the first Bond film with a premiere outside the UK, opening on 22 May 1985 at San Francisco's
Palace of Fine Arts. The British premiere was held on 12 June 1985 at the
Odeon Leicester Square cinema in London. In the United Kingdom, the film grossed £8.1 million ($13.6 million). On its opening weekend in the US and Canada it grossed $13.3 million from 1,583 theaters over the four-day
Memorial Day weekend, the biggest opening for a Bond film at the time, but not enough to beat
Rambo: First Blood Part II which was number one for the weekend with a gross of $25.2 million from 2,074 theaters. It went on to gross $50.3 million in the United States and Canada. Other large international grosses include $11.7 million in Germany, $9.1 million in Japan and $8.2 million in France.
Sean Connery declared that "Bond should be played by an actor 35, 33 years old. I'm too old. Roger's too old, too!" In a December 2007 interview, Roger Moore remarked, "I was only about four hundred years too old for the part." Moore also said that, at the time,
A View to a Kill was his least favourite Bond film, and mentioned that he was mortified to find out that he was older than his female co-star's mother. He was quoted as saying, "I was horrified on the last Bond I did. Whole slews of sequences where Christopher Walken was machine-gunning hundreds of people. I said 'That wasn't Bond, those weren't Bond films.' It stopped being what they were all about. You didn't dwell on the blood and the brains spewing all over the place".
Pauline Kael of
The New Yorker said, "The James Bond series has had its bummers, but nothing before in the class of
A View to a Kill. You go to a Bond picture expecting some style or, at least, some flash, some lift; you don't expect the dumb police-car crashes you get here. You do see some ingenious daredevil feats, but they're crowded together and, the way they're set up, they don't give you the irresponsible, giddy tingle you're hoping for." Kael also singled out the dispirited direction and the hopeless script. "Director John Glen stages the slaughter scenes so apathetically that the picture itself seems dissociated. (I don't think I've ever seen another movie in which race horses were mistreated and the director failed to work up any indignation. If Glen has any emotions about what he puts on the screen, he keeps them to himself.)" However, not all reviews were negative. Lawrence O'Toole of ''
Maclean's'' believed it was one of the series' best entries. "Of all the modern formulas in the movie industry, the James Bond series is among the most pleasurable and durable. Lavish with their budgets, the producers also bring a great deal of craft, wit and a sense of fun to the films. Agent 007 is like an old friend who an audience meets for drinks every two years or so; he regales them with tall tales, winking all the time. The 14th and newest Bond epic,
A View to a Kill, is an especially satisfying encounter. Opening with a breathtaking ski chase in Siberia,
A View to a Kill is the fastest Bond picture yet. Its pace has the precision of a Swiss watch and the momentum of a greyhound on the track. There is a spectacular chase up and down the Eiffel Tower and through Paris streets, which Bond finishes in a severed car on just two wheels. But none of the action prepares the viewer for the heart-stopping climax with Zorin's dirigible tangled in the cables on top of San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge." And although O'Toole believed that Moore was showing his age in the role, "there are plenty of tunes left in his violin. James Bond is still a virtuoso, with a licence to thrill." Brian J. Arthurs of
The Beach Reporter, however, said it was the worst film of the Bond series. Norman Wilner of
MSN also chose it as the worst Bond film, while
IGN picked it as the fourth-worst, while
Entertainment Weekly ranked it as the fifth-worst.
Danny Peary had mixed feelings about
A View to a Kill but was generally complimentary: "Despite what reviewers automatically reported, [Moore] looks trimmer and more energetic than in some of the previous efforts ... I wish Bond had a few more of his famous gadgets on hand, but his action scenes are exciting and some of the stunt work is spectacular. Walken's the first Bond villain who is not so much an evil person as a crazed neurotic. I find him more memorable than some of the more recent Bond foes ... Unfortunately, the filmmakers – who ruined villain
Jaws by making him a nice guy in
Moonraker – make the mistake of switching May Day at the end from Bond's nemesis to his accomplice, depriving us of a slam-bang fight to the finish between the two (I suppose gentleman Bond isn't allowed to kill women, even a monster like May Day) ... [The film] lacks the flamboyance of earlier Bond films, and has a terrible slapstick chase sequence in San Francisco, but overall it's fast-paced, fairly enjoyable, and a worthy entry in the series." Also among the more positive reviews was
Movie Freaks 365s Kyle Bell: "Good ol' Roger gave it his best. ... Whether you can get past the absurdity of the storyline, you can't really deny that it has stunning stunt work and lots of action. It's an entertaining movie that could have been better." Walken was also praised by online critic Christopher Null for portraying a "classic
Bond villain". Bond historian
John Brosnan believed
A View to a Kill was Moore's best Bond entry. He said Moore looked in better shape than the previous Bond film,
Octopussy. Brosnan, an airship enthusiast, especially admired the dirigible finale.
Neil Gaiman reviewed
A View to a Kill for
Imagine magazine, and stated that "When Grace Jones went to bed with Moore, I was sure the producers had hit upon a way to kill the old fellow off with dignity, but when Bond was seen wandering around fresh as a daisy the next morning I realised how escapist this all is. Unless he just rolled over and went to sleep, of course, which is what I was strongly tempted to do." John Nubbin reviewed
A View to a Kill for
Different Worlds magazine and stated that "There is a fierce pride in what is going on in
A View to a Kill that has been missing in the Bond series for a long time. Roger Moore has fought since the first picture for just this kind of an end result. Looking over the Bonds he has been in, one could see this end result coming. If Moore hadn't kicked and complained the way he did, every one of them might have been as dreadful as
The Man with the Golden Gun. Luckily, British determination won out in the end. For all those people who swore they'd never enjoy a Roger Moore Bond film, here's an open invitation to stop at my house for a big plate of crow - mine was delicious." Roberts was nominated for a
Golden Raspberry Award as
Worst Actress, but she lost the trophy to
Linda Blair, who appeared in
Night Patrol,
Savage Island and
Savage Streets. On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 36% based on reviews from 61 critics, which is the lowest rating for the Eon-produced Bond films on the website. The site's critical consensus reads: "Absurd even by Bond standards,
A View to a Kill is weighted down by campy jokes and a noticeable lack of energy." On
Metacritic, the film has a score of 40% based on reviews from 20 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". ==Other media==