overgeeked
Open-World Sandbox
Some people have the most intense feelings about the dumbest possible things.
From the use of music, the family unification theme, the date it happens, to the setting (an xmas party), a christmas miracle (the vault being opened is framed - comically - as that), and so on. . . I think there is plenty that comes obvious from multiple modes of analysis.
Uh, yes?Do you figure all that is required to be a Christmas movie is to reference Christmas enough times?
Being able to steal from a vault doesn't really fit the paradigm.
Uh, yes?
But I think Die Hard does more than that. . . but you can continue to be stubborn about it. The Grinch is part of Christmas tradition too!
The Spirit of the Season was slain by Gimbels in the final battle of the War on Christmas.Some folks really really hate Die Hard being a Christmas movie. They simply cant see the joy it brings to a lot of folks and just demand that their standard of a Christmas movie must be adhered to. It just feels totally out of the spirit of the season to me.
Nope. Whackadoodle colonel and his loyal idiots seize an out building at Dulles, take over the automated navigation system, and hold all the planes awaiting clearance hostage.I think you are mixing the sequel up here?
lol, I missed the "-er" part in the post.Nope. Whackadoodle colonel and his loyal idiots seize an out building at Dulles, take over the automated navigation system, and hold all the planes awaiting clearance hostage.
I tend to lean on the concept that if a movie could easily be reframed to occur at any other time of year, then it's not a Christmas Movie. I was once of the "Die Hard is a Christmas Movie" camp, but the afore-mentioned requirement doesn't support it. Take out the surface level Christmas references and make the party about landing a big contract, and the movie still works perfectly.The family unification theme is the only solid bit here. Unfortunately, it isn't sufficient on its own, especially when much of the rest of the film is spent... killing people who are also likely to be members of families. The bloody, explosive deaths kind of undermine that point.
The rest are merely Christmas references. Do you figure all that is required to be a Christmas movie is to reference Christmas enough times?