5 Silly Movies That Actually Had Profound Meanings

4. Hard Boiled

There may be some controversy about how €˜silly€™ Hard Boiled is, but let€™s be honest: the pop culture memory of this film is entirely built around the balletic bullet battles. When you hear €˜Hard Boiled€™ you think the bottomless clips and a million metallic sparks for every shot fired, cops dual-wielding pistols while sliding down bannisters, and Chow-Yun Fat engaged in gunplay with a baby tucked under his arm. Of course you think those things. Those things are frigging awesome. But Hard Boiled isn€™t just a supercut of the most insane cinema violence. There€™s an actual movie under there. The violence isn€™t destruction for destruction€™s sake. It serves a greater purpose. See, director John Woo didn€™t approach his films as empty explosion-porn. His influences included classic Hollywood musicals, films which utilized the inherent falsehood of cinema to express HUGE emotional epiphanies. When characters in musicals had emotions that they couldn€™t contain, they exploded into song. In Woo€™s films, they explode into, well, explosions. Also blood. Woo is a devout Christian, and many of his films deal with heroes struggling to attain spiritual purity in a world beset with crime and pain. The external violence is a metaphor for the internal turmoil of men wracked with guilt and doubt, and seeking to cleanse their sins and reclaim their souls. In Hard Boiled, both Chow Yun-Fat€™s Officer Tequila and Tony Leung€™s undercover cop Tony are wracked with feelings of guilt after the deaths of friends and colleagues, killed in chaotic crossfires. Tony, in particular, is tormented by the betrayals he has committed both in doing his job and in trying to avoid death at the hands of cops and criminals alike. So in that final hospital scene, as the duo pair up to cleanse the earth of gleefully-evil scumbags, they are fighting not just to stay alive, but to atone for their own crimes. The violence represents two men clawing their way to redemption, one bullet at a time.
 
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Brendan Foley is a pop-culture omnivore which is a nice way of saying he has no taste. He has a passion for genre movies, TV shows, books and any and all media built around short people with hairy feet and magic rings. He has a Bachelor's degree in Journalism and Writing, which is a very nice way of saying that he's broke. You can follow/talk to/yell at him on Twitter at @TheTrueBrendanF.