Presented by guest programmer and VTIFF member Ravi Venkataraman
When John Woo’s Hard Boiled dropped in 1992, his days in Hong Kong were numbered. Hard Boiled capped a run of classic bullet operas—The Killer, A Better Tomorrow, Bullet in the Head—that rendered violence as poetry and blasted Woo into the Hollywood system. A year later, Woo would helm the Jean-Claude Van Damme vehicle Hard Target, widely regarded as the first major Hollywood studio production directed by a Chinese filmmaker.
Hard Boiled remains a crown jewel of the heroic bloodshed genre—full of elaborate gunfight choreography, long takes, kinetic visuals, and lavish slow-motion photography—and arguably the pinnacle of Woo’s legendary collaboration with star and muse Chow Yun-fat. In this tender-hearted Dirty Harry riff, Chow embodies the controlled fury of jaded detective “Tequila” Yuen who undergoes a dizzying odyssey through the world of Hong Kong Triads, undercover agents, and frenzied police raids. More than a cops-and-bad-guys story, Hard Boiled continually stuns with its originality and dark humor. And it all crescendos unforgettably in the breathless hospital climax, certainly one of the best action sequences ever committed to film. Decades after going out of print on home media, Hard Boiled has finally been revived and restored in 4K.