The Prince George Citizen, TV TIMES - August 13th, 1994 - 39 Movie Marquee Tired of your carrier calling to collect each month? Say yes and we’ll sign you up for your choice of convenient easy-payment options. The word is • Payments can be made by credit card or cheque. Simply authorize us to debit your MasterCard, Visa or chequing account monthly. • Pay for 1,3,6, or 12 months. If you need to stop your paper for a vacation we will automatically extend your subscription by the length of time you are away. If you move we will transfer your subscription or refund the balance of your subscription. Your satisfaction is 100% guaranteed. Say “YES” by completing and returning the coupon below with your cheque, money order, or credit card authorization for your new option. Or call our subscription centre at 562-3301. jYES! i Mail this coupon to: Prince George Citizen Circulation Department 150 Brunswick Street, Prince George. B.C. V2L 2B3 Name i________________________________________________ SUBSCRIPTION EXTENDED FOR VACATIONS mmm mmm mmm mmm mmm mmmm mmm mmm mmm mmm wmm mmm mmm mmm mmmTIlO i* rillCC GeorgC “ ■“ Citiy* 1 VISA Cheque □ Monthly cheque debit - S10.75 (please enclose a __ blank void cheque) □ Monthly credit card debit - S10.75 Delivery Address. Telephone__________ Mailing Address _ □ VISA □ MASTERCARD □ Cheque enclosed Credit Card No____ □ 3 months - S32.25 □ 6 months - S62.50 □ 1 year- $123.00 Last month paid to Carrier. Expiry' Date Signature_____ Dalton departs as 007, Brosman becomes Bond by JOHN HARMON Viewers can check out Timothy Dalton on Fox Monday, Aug. 15, in his last James Bond role before losing his “Licence to Kill.” Dalton’s short-lived spell as Britain’s master spy is over, and Pierce Brosnan is now the new choice to play 007. Dalton has joined the ranks of retired spy stars Sean Connery and Roger Moore, but his early departure isn’t due to old age or thinning hair. Rather, Dalton was the victim of some thin plots, weak dialogue and poor casting in both “The Living Daylights” and “Licence to Kill.” In the latter film, one is almost embarrassed for Dalton as he tries to deliver the usual sarcastic Bond comments that worked so successfully for Connery and Moore in earlier movies. But even Dalton’s proven acting ability and the normal array of Bond beauties can’t Timothy Dalton make up for the glaring problems that plague a “Licence to Kill.” Take, for example, the stunts. Bond films have always been renowned for their spectacular explosions, car chases, skydives and fist-fights. “Licence” resorts to an outrageous scene where James Bond pulls a wheelie in a tractor trailer. What ever happened to underwater Lotus Esprit sports cars and machine gun firing gondolas? One can only hope that Mr. Brosnan has better luck with Mr. Bond than Mr. Dalton did, or 007’s license may just be revoked forever. Elsewhere this week, Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd and Sigourney Weaver battle a Carpathian warlock in “Ghostbusters II,” airing on ABC Sunday, Aug. 14. On CBS, a political candidate is haunted by a painful memory in “The Secret,” a 1992 drama starring Kirk Douglas, also on Sunday. Part 1 of “Woman on the Run: The Lawrencia Bembenek Story” airs on NBC Sunday, Aug. 14. The film stars Tatum O’Neal as the title character, a former policewoman who claims she was framed for murder. It concludes Monday, Aug. 15. A chess player is accused of murdering a TV celebrity in “A Perry Mason Mystery: The Case of the Lethal Lifestyle" on NBC Friday, Aug. 19. Hal Holbrook, Barbara Hale and William R. Moses star. In “Moment of Truth: Stalking Back,” a drama airing on NBC Saturday, Aug. 20, a woman wages a legal battle to protect her daughter from a violent stalker when authorities are unable to help.