Hard Boiled (film)

"Give a guy a gun and he's Superman. Give him two and he's God!"

- Superintendant Pang, on Tequila and his "attitude" with firearms

Hard Boiled is a critically-acclaimed action film by John Woo, starring Chow Yun-Fat in his slightly younger years. This 1992 action classic that has aged very gracefully, and boasts action very few modern contemporary films can match up to. Has a sequel in the form of a game called Stranglehold, also produced by John Woo.

Hard Boiled is all about two cops - one undercover, another much maligned for always, always playing the Bad Cop (tm) - working together to bring down a gunrunning ring. There is plenty of plot in between which establishes the characters of Tequila (the Bad Cop) and Alan (the undercover cop) nicely.

But what you're here for are the action scenes, intricately choreographed and masterfully done by John Woo. What Shoot 'Em Up played for humor, Hard Boiled plays absolutely straight - and both movies end up totally awesome (for different reasons).

This film provides examples of:
"[[spoiler: Alan: Did I just shoot a cop?
 * Action Prologue: The opening teahouse scene.
 * Badass: Pretty much all the cops, but especially Tequila and Alan.
 * Badass and Baby: One of the movie's most iconic moments is Tequila protecting a baby while blasting up bad guys during the finale of the hospital shootout.
 * Black and Gray Morality: This film is your classic story of a cop who shoots first and asks questions later, and an undercover cop who kills people for the mob in order to maintain his cover, up against an ruthless gun smuggler and his gang.
 * Car Fu: One poor mook ends up eating bike during the first half of the big warehouse shootout. Ouch.
 * Cool Guns: Pick a modern automatic weapon on the list from before 1992. It will appear in this movie.
 * Cowboy Cop: Tequila. Full stop.
 * Da Chief: Superintendent Pang.
 * Die Hard On an X: The second half of the movie can be best described as "Die Hard in a Hospital."
 * Even Evil Has Standards: Mad Dog
 * Eye Scream
 * Also, Mad Dog.
 * And a real life version: Tony Leung's eye was injured by explosion debris during the climax, with the shot of it happening remaining in the film.
 * Gory Discretion Shot: While at the hospital,
 * Gratuitous English: Serves as an aid in decoding the cryptic messages left by Alan.
 * Guns Akimbo: See the page quote, played straight with awesomeness.
 * Gun Fu
 * Gun Kata: Word of God has described the gunfights as "gun ballet."
 * Hand Cannon: One of the guns that sees use in this movie is a single-shot Thompson/Center Contender, wielded by Mad Dog against Tequila and Alan.
 * Heel Face Turn:.
 * Heroic Bloodshed
 * Heroic BSOD: Averted, Tequila talks Alan out of falling into one of these after realizing he may have shot a fellow cop.
 * Which leads into a Crowning Moment of Funny a moment later:

Tequila: Yes.

Alan: Fuck]]"

"Mad Dog: Boss, let's set the patients free.
 * Honor Before Reason: The cops, naturally. And quite surprisingly, even The Dragon of Johnny Wong.
 * Improbable Aiming Skills: Par for the course on a John Woo movie, but deserving of special mention for one scene. Tequila has placed several rounds of gunpowder into a metal pipe, with a bullet covering the entrance. He fires a shot from at least seven feet away, one handed, and hits the bullet, blowing the gunpowder in the pipe. This description in no way reflects how awesome and impossible that is.
 * He later uses this skill to.
 * Allan shooting the lighter when he was supposed to kill the informant for Johnny Wong.
 * Made of Iron: Another John Woo staple. Mad Dog loses or has an eye severely injured, and at one point suffers Tequila repeatedly punching it, apparently with no adverse affects. In the final shootout the characters take damage which would render normal people paralytic, instantly dead, or at least incapable of serious action, yet they never stop.
 * Mexican Standoff: Between Tequila and Alan at the warehouse.
 * Moe Greene Special:.
 * More Dakka: While played relatively straight with everyone else, it is allegedly averted by Tequila who we are informed "never wastes a slug."
 * Never Hurt an Innocent:

Johnny: Oh, why do you care about what happens to them.

Mad Dog: It's the decent and honorable thing to do.

Johnny: I'll run this show MY FUCKING WAY, thank you!!"


 * When Mad Dog and Alan's cataclysmic battle raged into the emergency ward, they found helpless patients, many on crutches suddenly trapped between them. Both men burned with bloodlust and hate to slay each other; yet the cop and the gangster nodded at each other with brotherly understanding, lowered their weapons, and told the patients to quickly run before they would resume their duel.
 * Which is ruined by
 * Noble Demon: Johnny Wong's right hand man, Mad Dog, who wants to let the hostages at the hospital go and.
 * The Oner: The hospital's elevator scene.
 * Out of the Inferno:.
 * Redshirt Army - Played straight with the cops at the teahouse, averted with the SDU team at the hospital.
 * Rule of Cool
 * Sacrificial Lamb: Benny, Tequila's partner in the beginning.
 * Serial Escalation: If The Killer took John Woo's trademark action tropes up to 11, then Hard Boiled took them Over 9000.
 * Shout Out: See Infernal Affairs after watching Hard Boiled or vice versa, notice something upon viewing? Hear that shouting?
 * Tequila carrying a baby during the climax is a reference to the famous story of the ancient Chinese general Zhao Yun saving the infant son of his lord Liu Bei during the Battle of Chang-Ban. Woo later got to tell the original story in Red Cliff.
 * Tony sends coded messages to the police by sending flowers to Teresa (Teresa Mo), a police secretary and Tequila's on-again, off-again girlfriend, with the message on the card. Before it's decoded, the message on the first card reads, "Are you somewhere feeling lonely/Or is someone loving you?", which is a lyric from Lionel Richie's "Hello".
 * Stuff Blowing Up: IN SPADES.
 * Throw Down the Bomblet: Mad Dog.
 * What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic: The obvious example would be the birds, always with the damn birds, Mr. Woo.