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Hard
Boiled
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Country
: |
Hong
Kong |
| Year: |
1992 |
| Genre: |
Action |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
2H06 |
| Distributor: |
Fox
Lorber |
| Date
reviewed: |
02/18/2002 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
Linda
Kuk, Terence Chang |
| Director: |
John
Woo |
Cast: Chow Yun-Fat, Philip Kwok,
Tony Leung, Anthony Wong, Teresa Mo, Bowie Lam, Philip
Chan |
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Story:
Chow Yun-Fat is the badass cop Tequila. During an arms
raid at a tea house, his partner is shot and killed
right before his eyes. Although Tequila immediately
blasted the murderer, it just wasnt enough to
satisfy him. Now he is dedicated to ending the ring
of weapons smuggling that is escalating in town. Also
involved is a fellow cop undercover as a triad. Once
they team up, no criminal is safe and the bloodshed
culminates in some of the most amazing gunplay sequences
ever captured on film.
Review: It is almost impossible to review
Hard Boiled and at the same time avoid the bottomless
anus-bowl of cliches that surround it. Im sure
its been described as a high octane thrill
ride, and even on the box it says Hard Boiled
is an action fans dream. This is
all true, but plain and simple it is just a damn awesome
movie. I am at a loss for bad things to say about
it. Not many movies get me as pumped up as Hard Boiled
does. It uses an arsenal of well executed techniques
to draw the viewer into each and every action sequence.
Woo also manages to craft these explosive scenes so
that he actually makes you feel stupid if you miss
something cool. There are many small and beautiful
things going on during all of the crimson waterworks
that you may not notice the first time through. One
image that really stuck out to me was during the first
action scene in the teahouse. There is a shot of someone
getting blasted in the leg. The bullet goes through
a table first, so you get this foreground picture
of the tables leg busting in two as the mans
leg snaps right behind it. It is really fantastic
in that it was totally unnecessary.
Speaking of cool, Chow Yun-Fat is just a straight
up shaolin playa. He was made for the bullet
ballet. Hand-crafted by the movie gods and then
issued out to John Woo. Surprisingly, he pulls off
all the right moves and then turns out to be a great
actor as well. This is why all of the scenes between
shoot-outs arent dull. I actually cared about
Tequila and whether he survived. I even cared a little
about his relationship with his girlfriend, and that
wasnt even played on that much. Every scene
is a necessary piece to the film. Unlike most movies,
I didnt really feel like there was any filler.
Style is, of course the essence of a John Woo film,
and I personally think that this is close to, if not
his best. Its certainly my favorite. Even the
opening of the movie which simply shows a drink being
mixed in a smoky jazz bar, has such a finesse to it,
that you are immediately sucked into the world. In
a way, this start to the film is almost dreamlike.
You see Tequila performing jazz, and it seems like
an unconventional introduction. Whereas most movies
would like to introduce you to the character in a
way that shows you he is a police officer (or whatever
else the occupation may be), Woo opens the film showing
Tequila as a human being with an interest aside from
work and killing. I just thought this strayed away
from the norm and was very refreshing. I say if new
film-makers wanna copy John Woos style, they
should try and focus on the more subtle aspects, instead
of leading people to believe his only influence is
jumping sideways in slow motion.
I could write an entire review solely on Hard Boileds
theme music if there wasnt someone to stop me
and if people would actually be able to sit through
it. While I can say that a lot of films have great
soundtracks with tons of classic tunes, this one doesnt.
Thats because all it needs is one sac-busting
song to play throughout the whole thing. If I made
an action movie, I would have to shoot John Woo and
burn all the copies of this movie so I could use the
song myself (I guess I could buy the rights but this
sounds more fun). Whenever this song came on in the
movie, which was about every ten minutes, I knew something
incredible was going to happen. And the song never
failed me once. Hell, I use the damn thing on my answering
machine. Im sure if I slapped that song in a
gay porn, J.D. Nguyen would be all eyes.
So a couple thousand buckets of blood, countless
empty clips, and an hour and a half later, it should
all be over. The dust should have settled by now.
But an epic action flick cant be complete without
a jaw-dropping 20 minute finale of non-stop mayhem.
I wont even go into the masterfully crafted
Hospital war zone scene too much, but lets just say
no one is safe, and even newborn babies are targets.
Woo doesnt screw around, and when he ended this
movie, he made sure that it was complete.
Basically, if you havent seen this yet, then
I believe you owe it to yourself to bump it up to
the next movie on your to-buy list. I know its
hard, but push back that rancid copy of Nowhere to
Hide that youve been meaning to throw your money
at. Really, dont get that movie damnit!!
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DVD
[ NTSC, All Region
] :
My only complaint about this DVD is that I dont
own the Criterion edition. Hmm, I do know a certain
Samurai Journalist that I could swipe
a copy from, but that would be wrong. The audio comes
in the form of Cantonese or English, and you can peep
it with or without English subs. It is presented in
the letterboxed format, and actually has some decent
extras. There is a running audio commentary with John
Woo and Terence Chang (producer), trailers, filmographies,
biographies, and some production notes on the movie.
Reviewed
by Joseph Luster
|
| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 3.5 |
4.5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |


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