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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 Nicolas Cage and John Travolta in the American hit Face/Off. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (7)

gudaulin 

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English At my age, a person usually already knows what brings them joy and what they should avoid. However, it doesn't hurt to confirm one's priorities and prejudices from time to time. A film in its genre rated as top quality should serve for that. Action films are not my cup of tea, but why not try one of the highest-rated films in its category for a change? Well, I won't lie, in a way, it was quite a spectacle. Action completely devoid of any dependence on physical laws, guns with eight rounds that fire fifty times in a row, a simple story without any elementary logic, flat characters that fit perfectly into their boxes, fighters who take out ten opponents without even breaking a sweat - and so forth. Thank you, I have confirmed all the negatives I feel toward such productions, and if I ever feel the need to be distracted by an action film in the future, I'll watch The Bourne Identity. Practically no genre is as overrated on FilmBooster as East Asian action films. In any other genre, whether it's horror, fantasy, sci-fi, or anything else, there are enough naysayers who can tarnish the enthusiasm of uncritical fans. Surprisingly, it doesn't work like that in this group. Hard Boiled is a one-dimensional film without any significant impact, but it is filmed with professionalism and actors who behave with absolute certainty within the confines of the script. Overall impression: 25%. ()

DaViD´82 

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English Tequila slammers, toothpicks, babe in arms, hundreds of smashed tiles and thousands of spent rounds. A perfect piece, down to the smallest detail, from John Woo, Fat and everybody else involved. This ode to action is incredible not only for a John Woo movie. Especially the brothers’ finale in the hospital is inimitable and unmatchable. If you are used to politically correct American productions, you will be shocked by the mass shooting of civilians or the brutal action overflowing with visuals typical for John Woo. Often in his pictures the action element plays just a supporting role to a drama involving two men, and here it is the same, although that motif takes much more of a back seat here. Even the scenes with kids, which elsewhere would be superficially cheap, are handled perfectly here. The entire movie gets by without any humorous element, with the honorable exception of two “sorta" snappy lines at the very end. The only negative aspect of this movie is the rather too disruptive music. One of the zeniths of Hong Kong “gun" movies. ()

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POMO 

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English Hard Boiled is a perfectionistic work that overshadows all other action movies. It is perhaps impossible for a film that is so long and packed with shootouts not to come across as over-the-top and spasmodic and not become boring after some time. But this one does the exact opposite. The last half hour is proof that John Woo is not from this planet. ()

Kaka 

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English A pioneer of the action genre, with amazing camera and editing work, revolutionary shooting sequences, long shots without cuts, breathtaking stunt work. Before all the modern Hunts, Bonds, Bournes, and Wicks, there was a detective with a cigarette in his mouth and two guns on his belt who set the direction for what action films would look like decades later. ()

lamps 

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English If Killer has an action drive and narrative poetics that are hard to describe and put into words, there is simply no name in the known universe for the breakneck pace of Hard Boiled. I guess that if all those who couldn't shoot their way through the story and stay alive were Jews, this would have been by far Adolf Hitler's favourite film (if he had the chance to see it, of course) :D You just don't see this kind of disrespectful deprivation of life not only of hundreds of bad guys, but also of dozens of innocent civilians – almost untouchable in Hollywood conventions – anywhere else. Though I'm probably one of the few who didn't fully enjoy the nature of the final hospital shootout, which at times descended into heavy parody, the level of experience of the cinematic action with its grandiose visuals and cleverly upgraded "background" story remains as pure and intense as in few other action films of the 1990s and all the years since. ()

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