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Hard-Boiled
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Directed by John Woo.
Hard-Boiled is the last film directed by Hong Kong action auteur John Woo before his arrival in the U.S. This 1992 thriller, along with The Killer, is widely seen as one of his best from his Hong Kong days. Every ingredient of the quintessential Woo thriller is present, including his ever-present anti-hero (Chow Yun-Fat). Yun-Fat portrays a maverick, clarinet-playing cop nicknamed "Tequila" whose partner is killed in the dizzying chaos of a restaurant gunfight with a small army of gangsters. It is soon revealed that one of the mob's high-ranking assassins is Tony (Tony Leung), an undercover cop who, despite his badge, is dangerously close to the edge. Tequila and Tony must team up in a tense partnership, and their common pursuit of a vicious crime lord results in a brilliantly elaborate climax in a hospital, where the heroes must rescue newborn babies from the maternity ward while fighting off dozens of mob soldiers. The characters Tequila and Tony are two sides of the same coin, another trademark theme of Woo's films that would later be most fully realized with Nicholas Cage and John Travolta in the American hit Face/Off. ~ Jonathan E. Laxamana, All Movie Guide
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tallquasimodotallquasimodo Tokyo Drifter
by tallquasimodo in tallquasimodo Blog
loved it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"I really wanted to be impressed by this movie, and I was, in a sense. The color is fantastic, and the cinematography is nothing to sneeze at either. It even had what must have been some very cool gunfights for its time. Unfortunately the narrative itself was too hard to follow. Call me racist, but I had trouble differentiating the various bosses from each other due to the similarity of their names to my western ear. This left the majority of dialogue fairly difficult to comprehend. I wish I had seen this movie before being exposed to some of the better handgun-based action movies made since, such as A Better Tomorrow, A Better Tomorrow II, The Killer, Hard Boiled, Desperado, etc. Even The Wild Bunch could be included in that category. " [More]
El_AaronEl_Aaron WOAH!!!
by El_Aaron in El_Aaron Blog
loved it.
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"Holy Jeebus!!! This was violent! In a good way though. I'm definately getting Stranglehold, and am interested in John Woo now! " [More]
erico_77375erico_77375 The Great Movies: Hard Boiled
by erico_77375 in erico_77375 Blog
loved it.
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"Chinese cinema have a grand history turning violence into art. It started with martial arts films (more cruelly known in Hollywood as Chop Socky Pics), where fights are more choreographed than most of today's music videos. Fighting became a ballet of punches, kicks, jumps and destruction. Then in the 80s came a filmmaker who started in kung-fu features and then tried his hand in bringing that same ballet feel to gunplay. This made him an instant success internationally as films like A Better Tomorrow and The Killer become successful. But just before that filmmaker, John Woo, was to leave Hong Kong to start a Hollywood career, he made his magnum opus. A film that not only carried the wild sensational gun battles, but also the weight of conscience and mental anguish that came from constant death. That film was Hard Boiled.Hard Boiled follows two men, one the stereotypical loner cop, the other an undercover agent posing as the right hand hit man to a mob boss. Both are trying to b ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Superstar action director John Woo attempted to go himself one better in Hard-Boiled, his last Hong Kong film before he headed for Hollywood. In a spectacular opening sequence that's imitated in The Corruptor, among other films, tough cop Tequila (international action star Chow Yun-Fat, in smart-ass mode) destroys nearly every piece of crockery in a teahouse when a police raid goes wrong. The balletic elegance of the incredible carnage in this scene is a Woo hallmark; the obligatory shot of Chow sliding across the floor, two guns blazing like he's dropped into a spaghetti Western, is cinematic poetry. While the ensuing plot is vintage Woo -- Tequila discovers that the assassin he's gunning for is actually an undercover cop, played with grim determination by Tony Leung -- the chemistry between the two actors as their characters develop an uneasy alliance makes the whole thing believable, even when it's discovered that the bad guys have chosen to hide their smuggled arsenal in a hospital basement, and the ensuing shootout probably cost more bullets than Terminator 2. ~ Genevieve Williams, All Movie Guide
 



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