Hard Target Movie Review
Hard Target Review
"Hard Target" Overview

Rating: R
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : John WooProducer : Seth Daniel,James Jacks,Sam Raimi
Screenwiter : Chuck Pfarrer
Starring Jean Claude Van Damme, Lance Henriksen, Arnold Vosloo, Yancy Butler
Hard target my ass.
Of all of the dumb action flicks that I have seen, Hard Target is perhaps the
easiest target of all to hit. It sits there, a bloated animal on the silver
screen, waiting for some nasty critic to take pen to paper and kick it until it
stops moving… and I suppose that job would fall upon yours truly.
With a film such as Hard Target, you wonder what went wrong. Sam Raimi is
producing, John Woo is directing, Jean-Claude… wait… let’s not mention the
Belgium Waffle. Anyway, Hard Target had several items in its favor going in.
It even had what is at least a decent concept: man hunting man. (sure, it was
used before in the short story “The Most Dangerous Game,” but who cares?) But
instead of taking all of the elements it had in its favor, Hard Target decided
to become an easy target for an angry critic.
This movie is not fun. This movie is not tense. This movie does not even
feature anything much of the trademark idiotic romance. What this movie would
be is the idiotic Hollywood formula. No one cares about quality… the investors
just want their money back.
Hard Target is about Natasha (Yancy Butler)… a woman who comes to town in
search of her father… only to find out her father has been hunted down and
killed. Natasha is almost raped, and, since the cops are on strike (what a
dumb way to try to make a film plausible), Chance (Van Damme) saves her with a
few roundhouse kicks. Chance figures the mystery out, goes after the guys, and
ends up being hunted himself. Of course, the actual hunting is only after an
hour and a half of absolute idiocy that tries to pass as plot.
Hard Target is ludicrous, idiotic, uninspired, and just plain not worth it. It’
s as if John Woo hadn’t bothered to learn English before getting his first job
after emigrating.
Stay away -- at all costs.
Reviewer: James Brundage





