DVD - Wide Screen / Cardboard sleeve Learn more
Enter a zip code
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen / 2-Disc Edition | $22.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen / DTS | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / DTS | $23.99 |
Commentary by director John McTiernan and production designer Jackson DeGovia; Scene-specific commentary by special effects supervisor Richard Edlund; Subtitle commentary by various cast and crew; Branching version with the extended Power Shutdown Scene cut back in
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Die Hard
1. Landing in L.A.
2. Festival Flight
3. McClane Residence
4. Argyle
5. The Limo
6. Nakatomi Police
7. Takagi & Ellis
8. Reunited
9. Uninvited Guests
10. Separation Anxiety
11. Hostile Takeover
12. Disconnected Parties
13. Party Crashers
14. Meet Hans Gruber
15. Idustrialization & Men's Fashions
16. Fill in the Blanks
17. The Vault
18. False Alarm
19. I Promise I Won't Hurt You
20. Ho Ho Ho
21. Blood List
22. Mayday
23. Twinkie Patrol
24. The Shaft
25. Not a Creature Stirring
26. Welcome to the Party, Pal
27. Dick Thornburg
28. Mr. Mystery Guest
29. KFLW News
30. Missing Detonators
31. L.A.'s Finest
32. Going In
33. LAPD RV
34. Chair Bomb
35. Contract Negotiations
36. Issuing Demands
37. Hostage Terrorist, Terrorist Hostage
38. Johnson & Johnson
39. Cat and Mouse
40. Shoot the Glass
41. Powell's Confession
42. Merry Christmas From the FBI
43. McClane's Confession
44. Nightly News
45. Vendetta
46. Meeting Mrs. McClane
47. Choppers up the Ass
48. The Roof
49. Escape Plan Foiled
50. Showdown
51. Happy Trails, Hans
52. Partner's Meet
53. Powell's Comeback
54. Let It Snow
55. End Credits
John McTiernan's Die Hard introduced a type of character that hadn't been seen much in big-budget action films of the 1980s: the working class hero. Apart from Sylvester Stallone's Rambo movies and some of the cruder, decidedly low-budgeted, martial-arts movies starring Chuck Norris, there wasn't a precedent for Bruce Willis's gruff John McClane. In contrast to its predecessors, Die Hard was such a high-profile production that Willis was suddenly elevated to the status of cultural icon, not unlike Sean Connery and his alter ego James Bond. Willis and McTiernan can take credit for bringing back the kind of distinctly American, masculine swagger John Wayne used to bring to his roles, albeit with a dirtier lexicon of catch-phrases than Wayne ever would've used on camera. The director and his crew of special effects experts could also take credit for a series of explosions that rivaled the combined fire-power and energy expended in Wayne's The Hellfighters, Back To Bataan, The Sands of Iwo Jima, Chisum, and The Longest Day combined. It's a testament to Willis' star power that his work in this vein is still taken seriously at the box-office, as evidenced by Die Hard: With a Vengeance, and not yet an object of excessive burlesque or parody -- something that cannot be said of Stallone's 1990s action pictures. Bruce Eder Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations