Sunday, April 15, 2012

Alan Rickman Reel: Die Hard


 My household are big fans of Alan Rickman. As such, we've decided to review his films from start to finish. Using IMDb, that puts us starting with Die Hard (DIE HARD!!!!)

John McClane had other plans.



sgwordy: I’ve heard you claim that Alan Rickman plays the best action villain of all time in Die Hard. After another viewing do you still think so? Why?

Dr Musacha: Definitely. Hollywood tends to write only two types of villains right now, the crazy idiot that would get caught or killed by his own henchmen in no time, and the stone-faced underactor that never shows any emotion. Rickman’s Hans Gruber is brilliant and charismatic, he even cracks a few jokes early in the movie. But beneath the civil exterior there is a cold, calculating person that will not hesitate to use any means to get what he wants. It’s a well-rounded, terrifying package.

sgwordy: Agreed. He’s one of those villains that you know is going to actually shoot, not faff about until he loses control of the situation (exception being the end). It makes him scary and so much more enjoyable than most film baddies.

sgwordy: Would you say that’s because of Alan Rickman or how his character is written or both?

Dr Musacha: Both, the character is well written and credit should go to the writers.  But many of Rickman’s contemporaries (Nicholson, Hopper, etc.) would have resorted to chewing the scenery.

sgwordy: Interesting, would you say that has anything to do with his British accent?

Dr Musacha: [laughs] No, but I thought it was awesome when he faked an American accent.

sgwordy: Just as I thought Gruber’s stupid moment came at the end, the American accent bit was McClane’s stupid moment. His accent was disguised but not his voice.

Dr Musacha: This was Rickman’s feature film debut. Did this feel like someone making his debut?

sgwordy: Definitely not. There are so many throwaway villains whose names no one remembers but everyone knew who Alan Rickman was after this.

Dr Musacha: Do you think it’s more difficult to play a fleshed out villain or hero?

sgwordy: Hero definitely because villains almost always get more layers if they are well-written. Poorly written villains are cardboard cut-outs of stupid.

Dr Musacha: It’ll be interesting to compare his villainous turns to future heroic roles.

sgwordy: Do you sometimes wish that Gruber had lived so it could have been his series?

Dr Musacha: A well conceived villain is more important to the success of a story. You want a good hero so you [the audience] can relate but a great villain raises the stakes and gets the audience invested in the plot. Cartoonish or stupid villains undermine the tension. But no, I don’t wish he had lived because his death scene was so awesome. Plus then poor Alan Rickman might have had to be in that terrible fourth Die Hard movie, and I wouldn’t wish that on anybody.

sgwordy: I would add that a stupid villain undermines the hero because how impressed can you be with a hero who is fighting a stupid villain.

Dr Musacha: Die Hard is still considered a classic in the genre - why do you think it still resonates with people (besides Rickman and Willis)?

sgwordy: I would say because the action serves the plot, rather than vice versa. It’s not action with a plot superimposed.

Dr Musacha: I think you nailed it, and the pacing is key. The film starts with just enough background to get you interested in the characters, then meshes action with plot seamlessly the rest of the way. It’s not bunches of action interspersed with exposition of the villain detailing the plan.

sgwordy: Also, as you said above, a great villain makes a great movie. And McClane is fun, too. The script makes me cringe in parts but it’s also super awesome in parts. Additionally, I wouldn’t say it’s exactly a banner film for better opportunities for actors of color but it’s quite noticeable that being a person of color did not mean you were going to be the villain who bought it first or the good guy who gets to die serving the plot.

Dr Musacha: I’d add also that Holly is a great female character. Her part isn’t large but she’s smart, takes a leadership role, and isn’t sitting around waiting anymore than any person might have to do with a gun pointed at her head.


Summary:
Rate the movie on a scale of 1 to 10:
Dr Musacha – 9
sgwordy – 8

Was Rickman the best thing about this movie?
Dr Musacha – Tied with McClane
sgwordy – Tied with McClane

In the context of his body of work, on a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate Rickman as Rickman?
Dr Musacha – 10
sgwordy – 8

Favorite Rickman quote from this movie?
Dr Musacha: I’m an exceptional thief, Mrs. McClane. And since I’ve moved up to kidnapping, I think you should be more polite.

sgwordy: We do it the hard way.


Die Hard, the cassette tapes, the computers, the hair!!! Good stuff, y’all!!!


8 comments:

  1. Absolutely great post and subject!!!! Love this. So many great lines Rickman delivers throughout the film. My Pick:

    "" I wanted this to be professional, efficient, adult, cooperative. Not a lot to ask. Alas, your Mr. Takagi did not see it that way... so he won't be joining us for the rest of his life."

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  2. Oh my gosh... you're not going in order, are you? Just skip to Galazy Quest, already -- you know you want to!!!

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  3. With complete and total respect to your leopard friend: the scientist and the doctor should do movie debates more often!

    with complete and total respect to Brooke: No! No! not Galaxy Quest! It MUST be 'Truly Madly Deeply'! and then 'Snowcake'!

    with complete and total respect for Rickmann: it wasn't his American accent that convinced me, it was that his German language bits were quite decent, something that can't be said of 99% of actors who attempt it.

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  4. @lp13 - Great quote! (Just went to catch up at your blog but then I noticed Matrix and sci-fi list action and I know that's going to take hours of my time so I can't do it now but I'm so very excited to get to it as soon as I have a bit of time.)

    @Brooke - Yes, we do want to!!! How did you know? :) Actually, it was watching Galaxy Quest last weekend that got this whole thing started. What a classic!

    @M. - Thanks! We hope to. I haven't seen either of those movies but they are on the list. I can't believe they are better than Galaxy Quest but few movies are. ;) I thought his German accent was really good but I don't speak German so it was only because he sounded so very much like my German friends when speaking English and German that I thought that. Easy for an untrained ear to mishear so I'm excited to hear (ha!) that he was doing so well.

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  5. to be clear: I'm not necessarily saying TMD or SC are flawless films. I'm saying he did excellently in both of them. Which, I'm thinking, is the point of your Rickman quest.

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  6. Def is point and now I'm really looking forward to seeing him in those films when I had no idea, before, what to think of them. Love that this has now been deemed a quest.

    Sadly, I think the quest is going to be delayed this week. Many trips out of town in a very short period of time has left me no internet time lately.

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  7. Hooray for quests! I actually don't think Severus Snape is his best role. Feels like he's caricaturizing himself in the HP films. I like the understated ones.

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  8. Agreed about Snape not being an understated role (which I also prefer out of Rickman) but I think he did it well because Snape as a character was highly under appreciated and often caricatured by his students and, I think, readers. Just another thing Rickman could do that probably no one else could: perfectly mock his own character just as others do.

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