We begin our journey through the "Five Days of Die Hard" with a look at the film that started the franchise. A holiday party in downtown L.A. is threatened by a group of terrorists and there's only one man that can stop them: a beat cop from New York.
Released two years after the original, Die Harder attempted to recapture the magic by giving us more of everything. Sadly, this film is more of a lump of coal than a bright, shiny holiday present.
Five years later, John McClane is back. Back in New York, and back fighting against terrorists. This time the whole city is under siege by the mysterious "Simon", and John is drawn into the game against his will for reasons that will all become clear...
After a long hiatus, the Die Hard series returned with the "analog" John McClane forced to take on digital terrorists in the Internet era. He'll need all the help (and luck) he can get to take out yet another group of bad guys.
And then the series fell right off a cliff. While most were iffy on the fourth film, no one is ever going to come to defend this fifth film in the Die Hard franchise. It's just that bad.
Bruce Willis teams with Gary Oldman along side Mila Jovovich in a Luc Besson joint that pushes the Die Hard genre as far as it can go, right into the future.