|
John
McTiernan's Die Hard marks the peak of the 1980's action
boom that made mega-stars out of the likes of Ah-nuld, Stallone
and Van Damme. It's a flick that is either very aware of itself
or a collage of copycat scenes and over-the-top dialogue.
Whichever it is, things go boom and the hero, Bruce Willis,
runs around as a one-man army spewing off classic one-liner
after classic one-liner. All this and it's a Christmas movie
to boot.
Willis
plays John McClane, a New York City cop on his way to Los
Angeles to see his two daughters for the holidays and attempt
to reconcile with his estranged wife Holly (Bonnie Bedelia).
They split when the opportunity arose for her to move up in
the corporate world. The catch was she had switch coasts.
So now John is back, moseying into Los Angeles like a reluctant
cowboy. He's called into action when a group of terrorists
take over the building where Holly and her company are celebrating
their annual Christmas party. So John takes to the air shafts,
elevators and all the other nooks of the skyscraper to take
out the terrorists one by one while the LA police stand by
idly trying to figure out what's going on.
Although
there's a couple of great action movies that came after Die
Hard, the genre was in a nosedive shortly after it was
released. And the one big blow-'em-up movie that followed
was Terminator 2, which was more science fiction than
one man taking on many. And while many action movies exist
for little more than face value, there's a lot of subtext
going on in Die Hard ranging from the realization of
women's right to a career, to commentary on the ills of corporate
power, to flashbacks of Vietnam. But even if you don't see
any of this, Die Hard is a darned entertaining movie.
The
perception of an action flick is that they have to be big.
And most of them are. While the explosions are numerous, the
majority of Die Hard takes place in a single skyscraper.
Even still, McTiernan keeps the butt kicking fresh throughout.
In setting the movie in a confined place it adds a sense of
claustrophobia that in turn lends to the relentless nature
at the heart of the action genre itself. In order to keep
our attention, the action flicks go boom, bang and crash at
every possible juncture. Story and character development are
often limited. With all of the fire and toppling buildings,
the viewer becomes stuck in a trance that won't let up. Eyes
become transfixed on the flames and other loud overturning
objects that fly across the screen. It's impossible to escape
the escape the big screen brings. By leaving John to fight
inside the walls and air ducts of just one place, Die Hard
just confines it a little more, drawing attention to itself
as a piece of genre entertainment.
While
the repetition of sights might have become tiresome, things
stay fresh throughout the movie. John is thrown into preposterous
odds over and over, slowly making his way from the lobby and
up the stairwells and elevator shafts the skyscraper has to
offer, fending off all the wonderful villains and henchmen
McTiernan can throw at John. Heading them all is Hans Gruber
(Alan Rickman), one of Hollywood's truly great baddies. With
a slick tongue, ruthless thought process and cold demeanor,
Gruber outsmarts all of the human police types and manages
to go toe-to-toe with the more super-human John. For a hero
to work, the villain has to be good. McLean is a great hero
who can not only fight and throw out great lines like the
Terminator or Rambo, but is actually a rounded character at
the same time. So to make him standout, Hans had to be one
heck of a nasty guy with more in mind than taking over the
world. Rickman is frighteningly good as the snake-like villain.
Although a standout over everyone in the cast, Rickman does
so in a way that doesn't undermine the roles of everyone else
around him.
Die
Hard is a Christmas classic unlike any other. I doubt
I'll ever gather around the fire and watch it with my family
on Christmas Eve, but that doesn't mean I won't thoroughly
enjoy it on my own to relieve a little of the crowded mall
blues I get after going through a rough day of shopping. The
action genre might have died for a while, but it didn't go
down easy.
©Movie
Views; December 21, 2003
For
those who find movie
quizzes to be fun you can find plenty of quizzes
on the web. If you aren't looking for a film
quiz then that's far from the only kind of quiz
you can find online, considering that pregnancy
quizzes are also abundant.
|
|
 |
| John
McTiernan |
 |
|
Jeb Stuart |
|
Steven E. de Souza |
 |
| Bruce
Willis |
| Alan
Rickman |
|
Bonnie Bedelia |
| Reginald
VelJohnson |
| Alexander
Godunov |
 |
| 1988 |
 |
| USA |
 |
| 131
minutes |
| |
|