Directed by John Moore, written by Skip Woods, starring Bruce Willis, Jai Courtney, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, and Cole Hauser - Rated R
The Die Hard franchise has been ripe for parody since the first sequel. After Bruce Willis, as Detective John McClane, wondered in Die Hard
Yes, Bruce Willis is still cast as John McClane in A Good
Day to Die Hard (I would prefer something less stupid for a title, by the way,
like Die the Most Hardest or something), but he is a mere shadow of
himself. Willis’s portrayal of McClane
is what makes these films great. His exasperated
tone, his quick wit, and his laughter as he takes a beating. That stuff sort of exists in this film, but
it seems so forced that it doesn’t matter.
Not to mention McClane has changed over the years. He went from a reluctant hero forced into a
situation he wants to avoid into a kill-crazy vigilante who rushes into violent
situations for little or no reason.
Perhaps it’s the setting.
Moving John McClane to Russia
just seems wrong. For starters, this
isn’t 1985 and McClane isn’t Rocky. This
plotline about Chernobyl and
nuclear weapons would have felt lazy in the first Die Hard film, much less
the fifth one. The story felt more at
home in a direct-to-video Jean-Claude Van Damme movie. Wait…is this the plot to one of the
Universal Soldier DTV sequels? (Sadly,
I’m not joking. Check out Universal Soldier: Regeneration if you don’t believe me.)
So the setting sucks.
There’s still a slightly interesting bad guy for McClane to banter with,
right? Nope. The villain is vague to the point that I
couldn’t tell which plain, middle-aged Russian man was “good” and which was
“bad.” Maybe that’s the point, but it
made for a lame story. McClane does
cross paths with a dancing bad guy at one point, but their banter is more
head-scratching than knee-slapping.
But there must be a sidekick along for the ride, right? Die Hard With a Vengeance set the bar high
with the tumultuous team-up with Samuel L. Jackson, and Live Free or Die Hard
gave us the timely and surprisingly amusing duo of Willis and Justin Long. Good Day introduces the barely talked about
son of John McClane played by Jai Courtney.
Courtney previously played a thug in Jack Reacher, and that’s pretty
much all he’s good for at the moment.
There is just nothing interesting about this guy, whether that’s a
character or acting fault is irrelevant.
I didn’t want to see these two teaming up for anything, especially since
the new character is barely established and we’re given almost no explanation
for their hatred for one another aside from the fact that it must be hard to be
the kid of an action hero.
The upset kid dynamic just makes no sense for a film like
this. The audience has almost no
knowledge of this son character, so we’re with McClane all the way. We’ve been through four movies with this
character, so if we’re taking a side, guess which one we’re going with? On top of that, we don’t know specifically
what McClane did to upset the kid, so the son comes off as an ungrateful jerk. Who thought it was a good idea to try to get
the audience to hate the main character for being a dead beat dad? I hope this duo isn’t the future of the
franchise. Actually, after this, I’m not
sure I want a future for this franchise.
All of these major elements aside, this is still Die Hard,
and that name has become synonymous with crazy action (whether or not that’s a
good thing is beside the point now). If
the action holds up, then this film could be barely worth a watch. The action is…crazy, sure, but it doesn’t
save the film. So much of it seemed like
it was pointlessly trying to be insane.
Did you hate the sight of McClane on a fighter jet during the last
film? Then you won’t care for this one
at all. As for the style of it, I didn’t
know what to think once it was over.
There were so many strange, extreme slo-mo moments. Slow motion explosions? How is that impressive? And who wants to see two people falling in
slow motion for what seems like five minutes?
Upon research, I found that director John Moore had also made the abysmal
Max Payne, and then it all made sense.
After all of this bashing, though, I can’t tell the die hard
(pun totally intended) fans to skip this one.
It’s still Bruce Willis and he’s still John McClane, kind of. Some fans are bound to like it. I really wanted to, but I can’t ignore the
utter disappoint I felt walking out of the theater. If you’re on the fence, maybe this will help
you: I am now going to re-watch Die Hard 2
because I think I might like that sequel more than this. If you’re the same type of fan as I am, then
that should tell you how much I disliked this movie. Watch at your own risk.
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