Hard Boiled
M**L
A classic for a reason
They really don't make them like this anymore. If you're a fan of old school action movies, you owe it to yourself to see this one.
R**M
Incredible
One of the greatest action movies of all time
J**N
Classic Action movie
Great movie featuring Chow Yung Fat and Tony Leung. Great directing from John Woo. Everything in this movie works from lightning to stunts and how each scene was edited.
A**P
The hard-boiled die hard
The Good Things*The video/sound quality is great. The picture is a bit grainy, but still clean, sharp, colorful, and vivid.*Includes a commentary and a bunch of featurettes and interviews.*Includes English dubbing, as well as the original Chinese and optional English subtitles.*Contains a huge amount of great action scenes. The last hour is especially awesome; it's like a nonstop sequence of shoot-outs. Like any John Woo movie, it has a lot of slow-motion jumping and flying and crashing-through-glass, but none of it is hoaky or cliched (no darn doves either).*Photography is good.*Fight scene choreography is good.*Production design (sets, props, costumes) were good. One of the bad guys (who incidentally only had one eye) had a way cool gun.*The story is good.*The characters are quite good. They are well-acted and well-written.*Music is not bad.*It dawned on me, as I was watching this, that this is the predecessor to the video game "Stranglehold." Cool.The Bad Things*I think the sides of the screen may have been cut off or something. Other people seem to have a "skewered" image. Either way, there's something weird about the aspect ratio.*Subtitles translate only the English dubbing, not the original Chinese dialogue.*Not for the squeamish; contains lots of bloody violence, brutality, and lots of swearing.The Questionable Things*Some things are quite absurd (I can't remember what specifically, but I remember seeing some of the action scenes and thinking "yeah right!"). If you prefer movies to be totally realistic, you may wind up laughing at a lot of things. But if you can suspend disbelief, it's not so bad.*The first hour had some slow parts to it.Once, I said that "Invisible Target" resembled "Die Hard," but now I see that I spoke way too soon. This movie is much more like a Chinese "Die Hard," and it's equally thrilling, if not moreso. Although the first hour of this movie seemed a bit long, the second hour was a non-stop extravaganza of violent action. Above all, it was well-made and John Woo's style is most original and fresh in this film. This DVD edition is not the best, but I found it suitable; die-hard fans, or fans of Hong Kong cinema, may be dissapointed. Still, highly reccomended to anybody who enjoys action!
A**R
AWESOME HARD BOILED Stunts ... But OVERKILL
Yes, I do mean, YES, the stuntwork and the gunplay in HARD BOILED is freakin' awesome but the final result became (to me, obviously) ok enough already this shoulda' been over 15 minutes ago. I was laughing at the preposterously ridiculous conclusion because I realized the John Woo direction would not stoop to killing one "character" while displaying this is just a movie, don't take this too seriously (not a bad thing) when our hero cop (Chow Yun-Fat) has officially turned into a gun-wielding, people saving, comic book super hero.Dare I say I like my action movies and shootouts with at least a hint more plausibility (like, even, Die Hard had/has) with a barrage of bullets a little less "selective" in NOT finding their mark because our hero can't get killed.Anyways, did I mention the freakin' stunts and shootouts were freakin' awesome?!What a body count! What mayhem! Whew! I didn't even let the endless display of hurtling bodies on sometimes obvious wires spinning and twisting through the air after another explosion deter my entertainment. It was just too cool not too appreciate.I gotta' mention after seeing Chow Yun-Fat again (saw The Replacement Killers first) that it is easy to see why this guy became an international star. Also, the second-lead action star was portrayed very well and very cool by the slighter of frame but very convincing as smooth, tough guy Tony Leung.HARD BOILED had an effective plot twist or two and Director John Woo has a great eye for film making on display with the opening sequence of neon lit Hong Kong shone like classic noir as credits roll and our cop hero to be (with his cop partner on drums) playing some nice jazz saxophone. Love that sh**. Hong Kong looks awesome. The Tea House (with those birds 'visiting') is a place you'd love to visit that you'd hate to see shot-up ... And you can guess how that goes...HARD BOILED boils down (sorry) to being an entertaining ride, but sometimes less is more. One less outrageous shootout of explosions would have rated HARD BOILED better than 4 stars.As it is the xtras are worth a peek with a couple actors (not Yun-Fat or Leung, though), Producer and Director giving interviews (if you can understand John Woo he's kind of amusing). I liked the location filming guide segment that pointed out the Avian Flu closed the Tea House not long after completion of HARD BOILED. No more birds permitted in Tea Houses anywhere.Oh, and I probably never would have realized (without xtras) John Woo plays the bartender in HARD BOILED.Another Chow Yun-Fat movie is in the foreseeable future as is a second look at Woo's Face-Off (with Travolta and Cage).
J**E
Classic!
This is the film that turned me on to John Woo and Chow Yun-fat. Intricately choreographed shootouts and non-stop action. There are plot holes, but the plot wasn't getting in the way, anyway. Hong Kong Cinema at it's best.
J**E
This is what I wanted
Great film,a full length feature,the dubbing better than most though limited dialogue,as it should be.
M**Y
Alles bestens!
Alles bestens!
T**O
ちょっと残念
日本盤には特典映像が全く入っていないので購入しました。残念な事にジャケットに書かれているのに収録されていない物が3項目もありました。因みに収録されているのは1.ジョン・ウーのインタビュー、2.フィリップ・チャンのインタビュー、3.コク・チョイのインタビュー、4.ベイ・ローガンのコメンタリー、収録されていないのは1.テレンス・チャンのインタビュー、2.ゲームソフトのメイキング、3.予告編集、以上です。画質と音質は日本盤の方がいいかな。画質は最初に出たパイオニア名義のソフトに近いと思います。この頃の香港映画のソフトは日本盤よりも海外盤の方が特典内容が断然いいと言うのはちょっと残念です…。日本のメーカーさん、高いお金取るんだから、もっといい物をお願いします!
M**5
The Godfather of all action movies since 1991
I bought this to replace my aged Video Cassette which is now so badly worn you can almost see through it. The DVD Collectors edition is excellent. I was thrown at first as the opening credits suggest its going to be a boxed version of the film, but afterwards it shifts to a full screen. Its an excellent re-mastered copy of what I regard as a classic and still John Woo's best.Now for the film itself. Well I put it on when I received it to just watch the first five minutes to check the quality, which was a stupid thing to do because I was immediately sucked back into this action masterpiece and ended up watching the whole movie. This you must understand is a film I've watched more times than I can remember.I hadn't watched it for some years, but John Woo's direction, the cast, the stunts, plot and just sheer pace and narrative just held me spell bound all over again. This film from 1991 doesn't use any CGI, so its three big action packed, stunt filled scenes are all real, no computers involved, just jaw dropping, bone crunching, explosive action packed cinema at its very best.When John Woo made 'Broken Arrow' apparently John Travolta wasn't convinced he should do the movie with this 'unknown' Chinese director. It took Christian Slater going round to Travolta's house with a copy of Hard Boiled, and made Travolta sit down and watch it to get him to come on board.The cover states 'Its better than a dozen Die Hards', oh yes, its true and in fact when I watch any action movie Hard Boiled is my yardstick, especially as John Woo didn't have access to any CGI, so very rarely does any modern 'action' movie measure up. In fact I've seen so many copy or even steal scenes from Hard Boiled its embarrassing.So, before I ramble on any further, buy it. This is John Woo at the very top of his game, along with Chow Yan Fat, and Tony Leung giving superb performances. Quite frankly the best of the best when it comes to gun toting explosive action.
A**I
Woo alla vecchia maniera
Ho voluto prendere tutti i film di Woo con Chow Yun Fat , penso che questi film siano il miglior esempio di cinema girato da Woo prima del periodo americano dove si è omologato a quello dei colleghi occidentali
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