Jan de Bont explains why 'Die Hard' isn't a Christmas movie: 'It's a little far-fetched'

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Debating Die Hard’s status as a Christmas movie falls on the long list of holiday traditions that includes stuffing stockings and roasting chestnuts on an open fire. Two years ago, Bruce Willis — the star of the 1988 action classic — attempted to settle the matter once and for all, declaring “Die Hard is not a Christmas movie!” at his 2018 Comedy Central roast. Given the setting, though, it’s fair to assume that he might have been joking.

But it turns out that Willis’s feelings are backed up by the movie’s cinematographer, Jan de Bont. “I’m not sure if the spirit of Christmas is fully embraced by that movie, to be honest,” the director of blockbusters like Speed and The Haunting tells Yahoo Entertainment. “To really call that a Christmas movie — it’s a little far-fetched.”

Bruce Willis as John McClane in the 1988 action favorite, 'Die Hard' (Photo: 20th Century Fox Film Corp./courtesy Everett Collection)
Bruce Willis as John McClane in the 1988 action favorite Die Hard. (Photo: 20th Century Fox Film Corp./courtesy Everett Collection)

At the same time, De Bont admits that the spirit of Christmas was felt on the Die Hard set, in large part because the commenced production took place in Los Angeles during the 1987 holiday season. “We were filming around Christmastime in the winter, and it was freezing cold,” he remembers. And then, of course, there’s the action itself, which unfolds on Christmas Eve and involves New York cop John McClane (Willis) taking on an army of terrorists who rudely interrupt the Nakatomi Corporation’s annual holiday party.

Director John McTiernan added to the festive atmosphere by playing lots of Christmas music and including visual jokes like the final scene where reams of paper float down from the skyscraper like snowflakes falling to the ground. Moments like that are why De Bont doesn’t take offense at those who insist that Die Hard qualifies as a Christmas movie, even if he doesn’t agree. “I totally get it — it’s so funny,” he says of the never-to-be-resolved debate.

One aspect of the Die Hard discourse that De Bont is completely on board with is the oft-made argument that the film reinvented the art of the action movie at a key moment in Hollywood history. “At that time, action had become so generic, and there was nothing fresh about it anymore,” he says of the action movies the major studios had been churning out pre-Die Hard. “By doing everything on location, and using that building as a real set and a real character, it added to the tension and increased the reality in a huge way.”

Reginald VelJohnson and Paul Gleason in the climactic scene of 'Die Hard,' where paper falls from the skyscraper like snowflakes (Photo: 20th Century Fox Film Corp/Courtesy Everett Collection)
Reginald VelJohnson and Paul Gleason in the climactic scene of Die Hard, where paper falls from the skyscraper like snowflakes. (Photo: 20th Century Fox Film Corp/Courtesy Everett Collection)

Working alongside McTiernan, De Bont — who got his start in the Dutch film industry before moving to America in the early 1980s — helped establish a template for on-screen action that defined Hollywood blockbusters for the next two decades. “We wanted to use real stuff, and make people feel like they were on the 34th or 46th story of a building,” he says. “We used the low ceilings, instead of building a set and making the environment bigger to accommodate us.”

As the director of photography, De Bont made a point of taking the camera in close to the action. “A lot of it is shot handheld, and the camera goes along with the actors,” he says of how he and McTiernan choreographed McClane’s desperate one-man war. “That wasn’t just to show off our style — it was about making the camera a participating element in the movie. I think that’s why audiences like the movie so much: They always feel like they’re a part of the action.”

According to De Bont, audiences like being part of the action much more than Willis did. “In the beginning, Bruce didn’t want to do [the stunts],” he reveals. “But then he started to realize, ‘Wait a second, if I do it myself there will be three cameras on me instead of one, because they won’t want to do that many takes.’ Actors like that because it means they don’t have to do [the scene] over and over. If you notice that all the attention is on you and on getting it right the first time, you’re more willing to take risks. My experience has been that each time actors do stunts like that, they’re so happy and proud of themselves afterwards that they actually did it.”

De Bont brought that Die Hard experience into his own directorial efforts, encouraging Keanu Reeves and Bill Paxton to perform many of their own stunts in Speed and Twister, respectively. In Paxton’s case, the late actor did a stunt that De Bont actually advised against. “There’s that sequence in Twister when Bill and Helen [Hunt] are in the car when it starts hailing, and that was real hail,” De Bont recalls. “I said, ‘I don’t think we should do this with you, because we can’t control the size of the hail.’ But Bill said, ‘No, I really want to feel it.’

“Of course, he got hit by a big block of ice and started to bleed!” De Bont continues. “But he said, ‘Don’t stop, keep going.’ So you do have to be careful that it doesn’t go too far with that adrenaline feeling. Actors can get addicted to it, and that’s not so good either. You have to find the right balance between the two.”

Die Hard is currently streaming on HBO Max.

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