Right since I've recently re-watched the first two Die Hard films, I thought I would revisit my previous post for Die Hard 2 as well and give some of the sections a bit of expansion (not that it really needs it lol as my previous post on it was pretty big but I like to do it all the same).
So, after 30 years (amazing to think its 30 years since this film was released!) let's take another look at this follow up to the classic original and see how it fairs...
And the usual warning is coming...
PLOT SPOILERS AHEAD!!!
STORY
So, the film is set on Christmas Eve in the year 1990, where LAPD officer, John
McClane (Bruce Willis) is waiting at Washington Dulles International
airport for Holly (Bonnie Bedelia) who is on a flight to Dulles. McClane while waiting in the
airport bar notices two men, who appear to be wearing army fatigues and
carry parcels. McClane follows the men to the baggage area, where he
confronts them, and they pull a gun on him, in the enusing gunfight,
McClane kills one of the men, while the other gets away.
McClane after
the incident speaks with the police captain Carmine Lorenzo (Dennis
Franz) who dismisses his request to close off the baggage area and
investigate further, as he thinks it was just a punk stealing luggage,
McClane is then escorted out of Lorenzo's office.
After this McClane
manages to borrow a fingerprint press and lifts prints off the dead
man's hands, and calls up his fellow police officer Al Powell (Reginald
Veljohnson again) and faxes a copy of the man's prints to check out who
he is. Al soon calls McClane back and informs him that the man was a
former army sergeant who apparently died two years ago.
McClane then
goes to the chief of the airport tower's operations, Trudeau (Fred Thompson) with his
findings, but at that point the airport runway lights all start to go
off. It is soon revealed the airport has been taken over by a terrorist
group lead by an ex special forces operative, Colonel Stuart (William
Sadler) who intends to use the airport for their own means, so that they
can intercept a plane carrying the drug lord General Ramon Esperanza
(Franco Nero), who has been brought to the US to stand trial for drug
trafficking charges.
With the terrorists now in control
of the airport tower systems, all communications to the planes have
been cut off, which leaves the planes in the air, unable to land, which
includes Holly's plane. And a botched attempt by Lorenzo's SWAT team
and the airport tower's director of communications Barnes (Art Evans) to
re-establish comms with the planes, ends with all the team killed by
Stuart's men in an ambush, but McClane at the last moment steps in saves
Barnes, and shoots Stuart's team.
This enrages Colonel Stuart who then
recalibrates the instrument landing system, and pretends to be the
tower chief, and causes one of the planes to crash into the ground,
killing 230 people onboard. McClane realises he must do something to
stop the terrorists and try to ensure that his wife's plane will be able
to land, and Trudeau tells him his wife's plane will soon run out of
fuel.
Meanwhile on Holly's plane, she discovers that she has the misfortune of having
to share the same aisle as Dick Thornburg (Richard Atherton), the sleazy
news reporter from the first film, who protests that he is put near
Holly, as he filed a restraining order against her for assaulting him
(at the end of the first film again).
McClane with
Barnes help soon locates the terrorists hideout, which is an old church,
and by then a Special Forces platoon is brought in to help try and
resolve the terrorist situation, lead by Major Grant (John Amos).
Colonel Stuart and his men soon evacuate the church when the Special
forces team arrive, a firefight ensues, and McClane chases after Stuart
on snowmobiles, but Stuart gets away.
McClane having taken one of
Stuart's machine guns soon realises that the ammo they used was actually
blanks, and it dawns on him that the Major Grant and his team are
working together with Stuart. McClane goes back to Lorenzo and after
failing to convince him that Grant is in cahoots with Stuart, he fires
the machine gun loaded with blanks at him.
Lorenzo then sends out all
his police units to go after Stuart and Grant's men, and McClane catches
up with the pesky news reporter Samantha Coleman (Sheila McCarthy) who
has been bothering everyone throughout the movie, to get a ride in her
news chopper, in order to stop Stuart and Grant's men from leaving on a
plane. McClane soon with help of the ride, jumps on the plane before it
takes off and a final fight ensues with the terrorists....
THOUGHTS
Well, my previous review of this film was actually a bit harsh as I didn't enjoy the film all that much but historically I have always enjoyed Die Hard 2 in the past and now on re-watching it again, I actually really did enjoy watching it and found it still to be an entertaining a fairly worthy sequel even though it doesn't reach the heights of the original. Of course the situation this time round is that bit more far fetched than in the original especially given how amazingly coincidental the terrorist attack just happens to take place on Christmas Eve again just in time for McClane to be there! All the same, this is still a fun sequel with some good action in it.
PERFORMANCES AND NOTABLE SCENES (Warning: this section contains spoilers and strong language!)
As for the performances things aren't too bad here as the cast are
fairly strong so let's take at the key performers and some notable
scenes.
Starting with Bruce Willis who reprises his role well as John
McClane, the wise-cracking cop, who once again pits himself against a
group of terrorists at Christmas Eve (coincidences, coincidences!).
Bruce naturally has some good scenes and for starters there is the one where McClane first meets with Chief
Lorenzo who refuses to listen to him regarding his concerns over the
man he killed in the luggage area.
And as Lorenzo says to McClane "I
don't need full fuckin forensics to tell me all this was, was some punk
stealing luggage!". And McClane angrily retorts "That punk pulled a
Glock 7 on me. You know what that is? It's a
porcelain gun made in Germany. Dosen't show up on your airport X-ray
machines, here, and it cost more than you make in a month!". And
Lorenzo smugly says "You'd be surprised what I make in a month" and
McClane says to him "If it's more than a dollar ninety-eight I'd be very
surprised!". And as Lorenzo has McClane escorted out his office by two officers,
McClane asks Lorenzo one last question "Hey, Carmine, let me ask you
something. What sets off the metal
detectors first? The lead in your ass or the shit in your brains?!" and
he mutters under his breath "Fat fuck!".
Then there is the scene where McClane makes his way onto the Dulles
airport control tower and he show Trudeau the fax on the man that
McClane killed earlier. And after Trudeau looks at it he says to
McClane "Alright, we've got a body in the morgue that seems to have died
twice. Assuming it's not a computer error, what do we assume?" and
McClane says "That somebody's about to seriously fuck with this
airport!". And McClane continues as he refers to the fax saying "
What the fuck do you this is, huh? The safety patrol, here? This is the
resume of a professional mercenary! You got the world's biggest drug
dealer on his way here, now. What, do you need, a slide rule to figure
this out? Or maybe another body in a zipper bag before you start asking
questions?!".
However as the terrorists take control of the airport's systems and Stuart makes himself known as he calls the tower and let's them know his demands to safely land Esperanza's plane, Trudeau, the chief officer of the tower speaks to his crew. Then Trudeau speaks to McClane and asks him "McClane, is this what you expected?" and McClane gravely says "No, this is just the beginning!".
Another good moment is when McClane interrupts Stuart's call to the
airport tower and as Stuart says to them "Now you'll pay the penalty!"
McClane says on the radio "I've got five dead officers down here,
Colonel Stuart! Is that penalty enough?!". And as Lorenzo blurts out
McClane's name, Stuart says "Oh McClane! I read about you in People
Magazine. You seemed a bit out of your league on Nightline, I thought!"
and McClane says "Hey, Colonel, blow me! How much drug money is
Esperanza paying you to turn traitor?!".
And then we have the (somewhat ridiculous) scene where McClane arrives
back at the airport and tells Lorenzo that (SPOILER!!) the Special
Forces unit sent in to combat the terrorist situation are in on it with
Stuart.
And in the scene McClane says to Lorenzo, who tells that Major Grant, who
leads the unit "Grant and his unit are gonna kill that son of a bitch
and take that remote from him!" and McClane says to him "No, they're not
gonna do that! They're gonna get on that goddamn plane and get off
with him!" but Lorenzo protests and says "Get the fuck out of here!".
And McClane says to him "When the army canned Stuart, he must have
loaded that unit with his own men!" but Lorenzo still refuses to believe
him and says "McClane you are completely round the bend! You know what
else? You're under arrest you motherfucker!". And then McClane pushes
back Lorenzo and opens fire on him with one of the machine guns from
Stuart's men, which fires blanks and McClane after takes out the clip
and shows it to a shaken Lorenzo "These are the bullets they used out
there tonight! Blanks!".
Then there is the moment where McClane finds the news reporter Sam
Coleman in admist the people outside the airport and he calls over to
her and she gives him a lift in her TV helicopter saying "Jeez! If you
give me this story and I'll have your baby!" and McClane quips "Not the
kind of ride I'm lookin for!".
And lastly there is McClane last fight scene between Grant and Stuart
and as he fights Grant first, Grant says as they struggle "Too bad,
McClane! I could have liked you!" but then McClane gains the upper hand
and says to Grant "I've got enough friends!" and he kicks off the wing
of the plane right into one of the engines. And after he loses his
fight with the superior Special Forces trained, Stuart, he is kicked off
the plane but not before, the McClane releases the fuel from the wing
of the plane and as he lies in the snow he takes out of his lighter and
lights it and says those immortal words "Yippee ki-yay, motherfucker!"
and sets the fuel alight and well, you know the rest!
William Sadler next is one of the weaker links in the cast here
however as even though he is an excellent actor, his character is a
pretty one dimensional villain who has been given some pretty lame
dialogue to deliver and his loaded threats have no real menace to them.
Regardless of that though, Sadler still has some moments worth
mentioning such as the scene near the start where he walks through the
aiport and he is stopped by Sam Coleman. And Coleman says to Stuart
"Colonel Stuart, could we have a few words, please?" and Stuart says
"You can have two: "fuck" and "you!".
And last of all is the final scene of the film where all the terrorists have been dealt with and as McClane and Holly are about to leave the runway courtesy of Marvin's luggage trolley, Lorenzo suddenly pulls up and get's out. So, Lorenzo says to McClane as he holds a ticket in his hand "McClane, did you get this parking ticket infront of my airport?" and McClane says "Yeah!" and Lorenzo smiles and tears it up and says "Ah, what the hell! Its Christmas!".
Another good scene from Atherton is where Thornbur is about to try and do a live broadcast from the plane and he feigns being sick so he can lock himself in one of the toilets and he calls up his network station to do it.
Then later there is the scene where a beaten up McClane has just killed one of Stuart's men at the church and he meets up with Grant. And Grant says to McClane "Jeez, McClane? You OK? You want a medic?" and Lorenzo chastises McClane for his actions but Grant defends McClane and says to Lorenzo " Lorenzo, shut the fuck up and do something useful! Go seal the street!" and Lorenzo taken aback says "Hey, you can't talk to me like that!". And Grant says "Oh, no, Carmine?! Sergeant, get this bureaucrat out of Mr. McClane's face! Now!". And McClane grins and says to Grant "I guess I was wrong about you. You're not such an asshole after all" and Grant says "No, you were right. I'm just your kind of asshole!" and McClane smiles.
potential hostages for you!" and Stuart says "Major Grant, isn't it?" and Grant says "If you remember me, Colonel...then you remember I know the drill as well as you do. Check out your own fucking plane!".
Then there is the scene where Trudeau tries to offer a few words of support to a shaken McClane after Stuart crashes one of the planes on the runway, killing 230 people. And Trudeau says to McClane "McClane, I know how you must feel" and McClane, emotionally says "I wanted to help those people tonight. I was pretty goddamn useless!". And Trudeau takes a moment and tells McClane the bad news about Holly's plane "We called the government for help. They're going to send in a Special army unit. A counterterrorist team. Your wife's plane... They're still broadcasting, even though we can't answer. They're going to run out of fuel in 90 minutes".
DIRECTOR AND MUSIC
Directionally speak, the film's director, Renny Harlin does a
pretty decent job with the action and the set pieces are generally
pretty good (mostly) and he keeps the film's pacing pretty tight and it
rarely lags at any time. Harlin would also continue to do well in the
action genre as he would go on to direct Sylvester Stallone's
Cliffhanger three years later.
As for the music, Michael Kamen also contributes another fine score to the film, building
on the original score and adding some extra passages, as composers tend
to do in sequels! Track wise, "Let it Snow" sun by Vaughan Munroe, is used once more, but an
additional fine choice is Sebilius's "Finlandia", which is used in the film's climax.
FLAWS (Warning this section may contain spoilers!)
As for flaws.....yep Die Hard 2 does of course have some.
And to kick off one of the biggest problems of the film is to do with
the bland one-dimensional villains, particularly Stuart and Esperanza
who are pretty much your run of the mill baddies who aren't that
interesting and their parts are very much underwritten and given some
lame dialogue. Not to mention its the same for Stuart's men, who are
also pretty bland and deliver some bog standard dialogue, especially the
one guy in the SWAT team shootout scene who is about to charge at
McClane on the escalator and he says "I'm gonna kick your fuckin ass!".
Oh yeah, very original!
The film also continues in its incompetent depiction of the
police as yet again, McClane is the only intelligent cop in the whole
film (with the exception of Al of course but he only appears briefly
here) where as Lorenzo and the rest of his men are idiots. And Lorenzo
refuses to listen to McClane at all turns despite the fact that some
pretty bad shit went down in his airport with one guy get's killed, it
means more to Lorenzo to worry about the reindeer flying in from a
petting zoo then that!
Another problem I had with the film was to do with the whole idea of
using a large commerical airport at one of the busiest times of the year
(at Christmas Eve) as the one place to land a plane carrying one of the
most infamous druglords in the world, rather than use a private
airfield instead! I mean it would allow Stuart and his men to attract a
hell of a lot LESS attention on themselves! But nope! The incident
has to happen in the most public area imaginable, yet they could have
avoided all this only if they planned it to happen anywhere but in a
very busy public airport that also happens to have John McClane there,
too!
Then there is of course the whole idea of Holly just happening to be
onboard the very same plane as Dick Thornburg, which makes for a pretty
ludicrous coincidence especially considering that he has filed a
restraining order against her, yet he decides to get closer to her later
anyway to check out other airline planes visible outside Holly's
window!
Then we have the death defying scene where McClane narrowly escapes
death by ejecting himself from Esperanza's plane just after Stuart and
his men chuck some grenades onboard it. Yet for the amount of time it
would have taken McClane to sit on the ejector seat and strap himself
in, surely the grenades would have exploded long before he could have
safely ejected himself from the plane! But again its John McClane we
are talking about here and just maybe someone had set the grenade
detonation times just long enough for primary protagonists to escape.
I also felt that the film gives away its main twist in a rather obvious
way a bit too soon as we see Stuart's men change their ammunition from
live to blanks when they see Grant's team arrive, thanks to the colour
coded magazines they use. I mean here the writers are pretty much
throwing the twist right in your face and saying "YES, GRANT'S MEN ARE
ALSO THE BAD GUYS!".
Another daft snag is to do with the fact that Esperanza is the only one
that can fly a plane out of the 20 or so guys who are on this mission! I
mean surely they should have recruited at least a couple of guys that
could fly a plane as a back-up just in case something went wrong rather
than have Esperanza as the designated pilot!
Then there is the scene where McClane fights Stuart and get's his ass
kicked but before Stuart kicks him off the wing of the plane, McClane
manages to release the wing's fuel dump, spraying fuel everywhere yet
Stuart fails to notice this himself, yet his is pretty close to the dump
so you think he really should have seen it!
And to add to this scene, I find it pretty ridiculous that when McClane
uses his lighter to light the trail of fuel that would ultimately catch
fire to the plane just as it takes off. I am now expert on the effects
of fire and fuel and how they interact with each other in various
environmental conditions but would it be possible for the fuel to be set
on fire in snowy conditions??? I'm not entirely sure about that one
myself!
And last of all there is the stupid moment where McClane takes it upon
himself to shoot at Lorenzo using the machine gun loaded with blank
bullets, yet he easily could have been taken out by the dozen cops that
surrounded him in the building at that point! But because its John
McClane they just stand around and do nothing and let McClane go
blazing! Wouldn't it have been a better idea to have McClane maybe say
to Lorenzo "Look, here they used blanks!" and fire a few blank shots off
in the corner rather than fire them directly at a police chief and risk
getting himself blown away!
Anyway that's it for the flaws.
SUM UP
So to sum up, Die Hard 2 is a very enjoyable follow up to the original and features another good turn by Bruce Willis and a
decent supporting cast with good performances from Art Evans, Bonnie
Bedelia, Fred Thompson, William Atherton and John Amos, as well as a
good score from Michael Kamen. It also has some good suspenseful action scenes in it too even if it has that ridiculous scene with McClane ejecting out of a plane before it explodes!
However of course the film is not perfect as it is somewhat hampered by its cheesy script and lame baddies with Stuart being a very one-dimensional villain and its continued inept depiction of the police which they didn't sort until the following film, Die Hard With a Vengeance.
But all that aside, Die Hard 2 is still a pretty solid entry in the franchise and I will give it a rating of:
7.5 out of 10
Right, so that's it for now and I will be back with another review quite soon, which might be one of the action video game, DmC (Devil May Cry) the reboot game made back in 2013, which I have been playing again quite recently.
So, until the next one, its bye for now!
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