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Hard to Kill

Hard to Kill (1990)

February. 09,1990
|
5.8
|
R
| Drama Action

Mason Storm, a 'go it alone' cop, is gunned down at home. The intruders kill his wife, and think they've killed both Mason and his son too. Mason is secretly taken to a hospital where he spends several years in a coma. His son meanwhile is growing up thinking his father is dead. When Mason wakes up, everyone is in danger - himself, his son, his best friend, his nurse - but most of all those who arranged for his death

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The Grand Master
1990/02/09

After Steven Seagal made his spectacular debut with Above the Law (1988), he returns with the violent revenge action flick Hard to Kill. Steven Seagal is simply doing what he does best by breaking bones, kicking butt and taking down bad guys with his .45 handgun.Los Angeles Police Detective Mason Storm (Steven Seagal) videotapes a secret mob meeting that takes place at a pier. Amongst those at the meeting is Senator Vernon Trent (William Sadler) who is revealed to be corrupt. Mason Storm manages to escape and reveals the information to his friend Lieutenant Kevin O'Malley (Frederick Coffin), unaware that other corrupt cops are listening in to the conversation and are amongst the conspiracy. After foiling a liquor store robbery on his way home, Mason hides the videotape and joins his wife Felicia (Bonnie Burroughs) and his son Sonny. A hit squad made of corrupt cops brutally gun down Mason and his wife and while staging it as a murder suicide, Sonny manages to escape. Felicia dies however Mason survives although he stays in a coma for seven years. When Mason awakens, the assassins return to finish the job although Mason manages to escape with the help of kind hearted nurse Andy Stewart (Steven Seagal's then wife Kelly Le Brock). After Mason makes a full recovery and reuniting with his son Sonny and Lieutenant O'Malley, Mason vows revenge on Senator Vernon Trent and the corrupt cops responsible for his attempted murder and the murder of his wife.This is the Steven Seagal of old which I always admired. He does what he does best here and he still looks in good shape. It's hard to believe that Steven Seagal has become extremely obese now and seeing movies like Hard to Kill make you miss the old days of Steven Seagal. William Sadler makes a good villain as corrupt Senator Vernon Trent. Kelly Le Brock adds sex appeal as nurse Andy. Keep an eye out for Dean Norris (TV's Breaking Bad) as Detective Sergeant Goodheart. Bruce Malmuth (Nighhawks) does a decent job in the director's chair. Hard to Kill is an enjoyable revenge flick that sees Steven Seagal does what he does best.7/10.

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breakdownthatfilm-blogspot-com
1990/02/10

For Steven Seagal, it was a lucky break for him to catch popularity as an action star. Any later in the 1980s and his name may not have made as big a splash as it initially did. Thanks to the success of Above the Law (1988), Seagal was seen as an upcoming asset for Warner Brothers and was being looked at as competition against other high profile 1980s actioneers like Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Dolph Lundgren, Jean-Claude Van Damme and Chuck Norris. Encouraging this prediction was this film. Unfortunately even for its financial success, Seagal's second film entry isn't anything ground breaking. As an overall product, it works but it's nothing special or unique. It's just a useful time waster. There are elements that work for the film but they're only equal to the flaws that flood the production.Steven Seagal plays Mason Storm, a cop who had a lead on a mysterious crime boss looking to get into power by running for congress. Due to unfortunate circumstances, Storm's cover gets blown and is attacked while at home with his family. Thought to be dead, Storm awakes from a coma in a hospital 7 years later and discovers the crime boss is still at large. It's at that point Storm decides to finish what he began. Although much of its premise has been seen many a time before, it's an acceptable one. Written by Steven McKay (Darkman II: The Return of Durant (1995)), his work here isn't bad but it isn't very good either. One of the biggest questions that don't make any sense is how was Storm's identity kept secret for so long? The reason is actually given later on but how did these villains not check up on that? That's really sloppy guys. Also, it turns out the film was heavily edited down, which explains the actual seen to how Storm was kept hidden from his enemies. However with that stated, credit can not be given for something that doesn't exist in the final product because no one else will know until they bother to lookup the information (if they're that curious).The other problem with McKay's writing is the suspense used for its villain. There really is no pay off to the realization of which the antagonist is. Not only is it revealed way ahead of time but also is only more clear as day due to a key phrase the character says. Mind you he says it after every claim he makes. Yet, another character clearly states that over the 7 years Storm was out, nobody could find any patterns. Sounds straightforward to me. The acting for the most part is fine. Steven Seagal has a number of good one-liners and his relationship with Lt. Kevin O'Malley (Frederick Coffin) feels authentic. Coffin and Seagal's role have the most real feeling relationship as two cops who have their backs. Then there's Kelly LeBrock (who happened to be Seagal's wife during the time). Slightly looking like a cheaper version of Angelina Jolie, LeBrock plays Andy Stewart, a nurse at the hospital that Storm wakes up in and ends up following until the ends of the earth. For what she portrays, it's fairly typical. However, this is nothing compared to her English/Australian accent she tries to pass with. It is very weak.The action was applaudable though. In fact, the amount of shoot outs and fist fights that occur feel a bit more frequent than the action sequences in Above the Law (1988). Plus, there are some more unique kill scenes too. For example, don't get angry with Steven Seagal while you're playing pool. Not a smart idea. The pacing on the other hand is a different story. Directed by Bruce Malmuth (Nighthawks (1981)) and edited by John F. Link, these two crewmembers seem to have clashing agendas. For the action scenes, Link provides tight editing that keeps things moving quickly. Yet as a whole, Bruce Malmuth's directorial skills end up slowing everything down no matter the quantity of action scenes. Much of the direction is the crime boss' henchmen trying to kill Storm. This is fine, but for a cat and mouse chase there should be fewer slow paced parts than fast. Link was working on getting that down but it seemed like Malmuth had other plans. This just makes the sit feel rather sluggish in general.The cinematography and music however attempted to reclaim some of the bad parts of the film. The film score, although hardly memorable at least had themes for its characters. Produced by David Michael Frank, a composer who's known for his fondness in synth compositions, doesn't stray far from that. Using a lot of keyboard and percussion, Frank demonstrates he can at least produce music with a signature style according to him. Matthew F. Leonetti (brother of John R. Leonetti) shot the cinematography. And although a large percentage of the film is shot at night or indoors, there are daylight and landscape shots that look great. A very good-looking scene is where Seagal is training in rural landscape. Seagal even climbs up a mountain and the view is magnificent. The action choreography is also well done and isn't shaky enough to disorient its viewers. Nice.It's not a good film but it isn't a total loss either. It has decent cinematography, music, acting (almost all) and energetic action. A lot its problems come from its sluggish pacing and rather nonsensically obvious writing that none of the characters seem to understand.

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classicsoncall
1990/02/11

I guess with guys like Steven Seagal and Jean-Claude Van Damme, you're either going to like them or hate them. Personally, I like them both and take their pictures for what they're worth - martial arts action and mayhem. "Hard to Kill" isn't very believable as a story, but the revenge theme is fired up to white hot, and Mason Storm (Seagal) is unstoppable in his quest to burn the bad guys. What I like about his fighting style is that it's generally realistic. It leaves out the fancy kicks and punches and simply goes for demolition with the least amount of energy expended. It goes with the whole 'superior attitude, superior state of mind' thing that exemplifies a character with perfect confidence in himself. I could try to be cute here and say you can take that to the bank, but with Seagal, you at least have an idea you'll get your money's worth.

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edwagreen
1990/02/12

Seagal is at it again in this thriller where he witnesses a discussion of an assassination plot against a U.S. politician, by an apparent ruthless politician out for the latter's job.Seagal is shot into a coma and his wife dies and supposedly his son.Awakening from a 7 year coma, Seagal gets fit quickly and returns to action as a one man killing machine.He finds romance along the way and what makes this film so good is the corruption viewed as far as the police department and others working with this crooked politician.There is also the fellow cop, a friend of Seagal's, who has shielded his son all these years.Seagal is the master of karate. No doubt about it. Fast paced with great action, the film is a gem.

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