Yippie-Ki-Yay...
The Story:
New York cop John McClane
(Bruce Willis) flies out to Los Angeles see his wife Holly (Bonnie
Bedelia) for Christmas. When he arrives at the Nakatomi Tower for the
Christmas party, he has no idea that the party is about to be
commandeered by terrorists led by the enigmatic Hans Gruber (Alan
Rickman). Managing to escape, McClane systematically takes down the
terrorists one by one, but there is more to this group than terrorist
motives. McClane is going to save his wife...
Or die trying.
I think we all know where I stand on this movie. It's in my personal Top 10 list of greatest movies I've ever seen.
It totally reinvented/reinvigorated the action genre of film in the late 80s.
We
had grown so used to Stallone, Arnold, Chuck and the rest of the
kick-butt generation, that McClane was an odd choice for a hero.
He's not big. But he's tenacious. His willpower alone is what sets him above, and apart, from the rest of the crowd.
It
didn't hurt that Bruce Willis had charisma and charm to spare as the
wiseacre. Those who watched him on Moonlighting knew he would become a
star.
Think John McClane is David Addison...with an attitude! :)
His
one liners didn't come across forced, they came out as a snarky
response to the bad guy... McClane was the everyman action hero. He's
not ripped and buff, but he would use his smarts and adrenaline to try
and save the day. That connection is one that the audience can grab and
connect with. 25 years later, this movie still impresses as much as it
did back in the day.
It really is a blueprint for how to make an action movie correctly.
The counterpoint for the everyman action hero, you have to have a great villain.
This is where most movies go wrong. You can't just have a cardboard cutout/stereotype.
You need someone charismatic that audiences hate...but like. Like to hate. Hate that you like him.
Rickman
owns Hans Gruber, so much so, that every installment since has been
trying to catch that lightning in a bottle. You've got the hero, but
how's the villain?
Sadly, every installment falls short, but when you come out this strong as a franchise, there really is nowhere to go but down.
I let the teens see Die Hard for the first time last year for Christmas...
Yes, this qualifies as a Christmas movie.
They sat glued to the screen.
I was so proud. :* )
Final Grade: A+
Rewatchability/Purchase
Factor: I loved it so much, I begged and whined a little... and they
upgraded me to the Blu Ray set for Father's Day. I have the best family
ever! It gets watched at least once a year... for Christmas!
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