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		No. 47 - 
		Die Hard (1988)Gordon Co./Silver Pictures, 20th Century-Fox
 40 STORIES OF SHEER 
		ADVENTURE!
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				Die Hard (1988), 
				DML Rating: 
				★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect Director: John McTiernan; Screenwriters: Jeb 
		Stuart, Steven E. de Souza; 
		Rated R for language, 
		violence Starring: Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman, Alexander Gudunov, 
				Bonnie Bedelia, Reginald VelJohnson, De'voreaux White, Paul 
				Gleason, William Atherton, Clarence Gilyard, Robert Davi, Grand 
				L. Bush Movie Introduction: New 
		York City policeman John McClane (Willis) has flown across the country 
		to visit his estranged wife (Bedelia) and two daughters on Christmas 
		Eve. Straight from L.A. Airport, he stops in at his wife’s company 
		holiday party at the Japanese-owned Nakatomi building. The festivities 
		are interrupted when a group of terrorists, led by the sophisticated 
		Hans Gruber (Rickman), take over the exclusive high-rise, thus 
		imprisoning everyone inside. McClane hears gunfire, and slips out a side 
		door leading up several stories. He is unable to call for help. Quickly 
		he realizes that he may be the only chance the hostages have.    
		 Defining Moment: 
		don’t mess with a NYC cop The very capable McClane is able 
		to kill a couple of bad guys, and secure a weapon, their short-circuit 
		radio, and some C-4 explosives. Due to their limited time constraints 
		and number, the terrorists elect to continue as planned without 
		immediately killing the pesky New York cop, who thus far has eluded 
		them. The police finally arrive at the building and decide try a frontal 
		assault with a SWAT team and armored vehicle. It’s a trap and the team 
		is slaughtered. McClane pleads on the radio for Hans to call off the 
		attack. Hans refuses then orders a bazooka to take out the armored 
		truck, killing all inside. McClane has had enough. He frantically grabs 
		a few bars of the explosives, straps them onto a rolling chair and sends 
		them down the elevator shaft. KABOOM! The entire 2nd floor is blown out, 
		glass and debris flying everywhere... because that’s how they do it in the Big 
		Apple!  
		Something subtle you might have missed:  it takes a villain There are two essential ingredients 
		in most successful action movies. The "hero" is obvious, and therefore 
		easier to get right. Of equal importance is the villain, aka the 
		antagonist. An evil nemesis that does not work can almost kill a film (Lex 
		Luthor in 
		Batman v Superman for example). Think about it. Does 
		The Wizard of Oz 
		work without the ageless performance by Margaret Hamilton as the Wicked Witch? Who is Luke without Darth Vader? Die 
		Hard introduced us to the incredibly talented Alan Rickman. What he 
		does so well is give us a villain with multiple dimensions. He's 
		dastardly, yet surprisingly charming. You understand his motivation, 
		even sympathize with him. That is a lot of fun for the audience. Rickman 
		went on to portray the deplorable Elliott Marston in 
		Quigley Down Under, and 
		the nasty Sheriff of Nottingham in 
		Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves 
		(1991). His most well-known villainous portrayal was that 
		of the slimy Professor Snape in the Harry Potter film series. For 
		most of the Potter run he was the personification of condescending evil. 
		What a pleasant surprise awaited us as his true motivation was finally 
		revealed. 
		 And frankly, the failure of 
		Die 
		Hard 2 (1990)  was the lack of a convincing villain. The good 
		news: this was corrected in the superb
		Die Hard With a Vengeance 
		(1995). 
		 Memorable Quotes: 
		 
				"Just a fly in the 
				ointment, Hans. The monkey in the wrench. The pain in the ass." 
				– John McClane 
				"I am an exceptional thief, 
				Mrs. McClane. And since I'm moving up to kidnapping, you should 
				be more polite!" - Hans Gruber Dad's Review: I was not a Bruce Willis fan before this movie. 
				He was a cocky TV actor best known for his stint on
				
				Moonlighting, a TV detective series that many believed 
				started the phrase "dramedy". I never got into that show 
				- just a bit too 
				cutesy. Die Hard completely changed my opinion of Bruce. 
		 This action-packed movie 
		blew away the box office and catapulted Willis to the status of major 
		star immediately. He would eventually star in four Die Hard sequels (the 
		last two are not very good) and go on to star in many film 
		hits including: 
		Pulp 
		Fiction (1994), 
		Armageddon (1998), and 
		Unbreakable (2000), to name a few.    
		 
		 Die 
		Hard is the action film by which all 
				action films are compared. It upped the ante for the genre 
		due to its over-the-top stunts and high-quality production. It helped that it 
		features a vulnerable, out-matched hero (who we cheer for), a devious villain (we 
		love him, too), and 
		a wonderful cast of well-developed supporting characters, right down to the 
		lowliest candy-bar-eating henchman. It is perfectly paced. Oh, and 
		it is a 
				Christmas movie (well, sorta). 
		At the center of this film is John McClane and his estranged 
		wife, Holly. They are separated. She has moved to Los Angeles to pursue 
		her career. John still lives in New York City because he loves being a 
		NYC cop. There's still love between them, but there's 
		stubbornness, too. 
		 Enter the terrorists. They seize 
		the Nakatomi building and everyone inside. They are intelligent, 
		well-financed, and man, do they have a plan! As the main group focuses on the 
		hostages, including Holly, a second smaller team works on cracking the 
		company's gigantic safe to plunder all inside. These determined men, and 
		their sophisticated leader Hans, will not be deterred. 
		 However, the one thing they did 
		not plan for was John McClane. Once he makes his presence known, the film kicks into triple 
		octane mode. The terrorists become obsessed with capturing him, but he's 
		just crafty enough to elude them, much to the displeasure of second-in-command Karl (Godunov) whose brother was McClane's first victim. Some of 
		the best film moments are the short wave radio conversations between the leader Hans and John, each 
		trying to learn more information about the other without tipping their 
		hands. All the action 
		aside, I must really applaud all the little 
		touches, the side stories that make us giggle or warm our heart. I'm 
		referring to Argyle, the sassy limo driver, who ends up trapped in the 
		basement garage. I'm talking about 
		Al Powell, the sweet beat cop who likes Little Debbies too much, and 
		becomes McClane's radio confidant to interface with the police outside.  How about Theo? 
		He's Hans' snarky tech specialist whose job is 
		to break into the massive safe - he has some of the films funniest 
		lines! 
		After a buffet table of explosions, 
		near misses, and tearful reunions, you will be exhausted. It is a "Wow 
		Moments" 
		film, and I know you will enjoy it. 
		  
		Onto No. 48... Nelson Wobble and the Cacao 
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