Hard Boiled (1992)

Hard Boiled
JOIN NOW

Persons under 15 years must be accompanied by a parent or adult guardian

Director: John Woo
Actors: Chow Yun Fat, Philip Chan, Bowie Lam

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

DVD
Status: Unavailable
Run time: 126mins
Origin: HONG KONG
Aspect Ratio:

Member Reviews (1)

1 Member Review
Nathan Reichman
says
Pretty good film artistry. Overload of gratuitous violence and a rather difficult plot to follow. Not that there was much of a story. My missus gave up after 30 minutes.
Posted Tuesday, 14 December 2004 See my other reviews