A Good Day to Die Hard: 5 Reasons To Be Excited!

By Andy Scott /

5. The Title Seems Like It Should Always Have Been

In Keith Richards€™s autobiography he talks about being bemused by snappy song titles that should have been taken before he got there €“ €˜Beast of Burden€™ being just one €“ and this is how €˜A Good Day to Die Hard€™ feels. It€™s got that terse aphorism-esque quality to it that probably would have killed it in the manger had it been the opening movie€™s title but, with today€™s love of camembert comebacks, such a title somehow becomes €˜tongue-in-cheek€™. It€™s one of those titles that you quite enjoy saying. It€™s like the modern retail zeitgeist of nameing shops such things as €˜that shop€™ or €˜Sandra€™s€™ because it works quite well when you prefix it with €˜I€™m going to...€™ but, annoyingly, warrants further explanation to the perplexed listener. You can picture it now: men lining the queues with their receding hairlines and nostalgic yippee-khy -eh€™s, nudging their long-labouring partners and saying it€™s €˜a good day to Die Hard, didn€™t you know?€™ Before chuckling their way into a forward shuffle. There€™s something quite magnificent about a title like that, inciting gags and groans in equal measure, and it€™s definitely something in which to revel during the precursory days€™ wait.