Hard Night Falling (2019)
Hard Night Falling (also known as Survival) is a 2019 action-drama-crime film directed by Giorgio Bruno, written by Alessandro Riccardi and Giorgio Serafini, scored by Sandro Di Stefano, pictured by Rocco Marra and Angelo Stramaglia, the protagonists are Dolph Lundgren, Hal Yamanouchi and Natalie Burn, among others.1 The film was made by Sun Film Group, West Arts and Explorer Entertainment, it was released on December 10, 2019.Plot:
A lavish party is turned hostage when a master criminal attempts to steal the building’s fortune. However, he and his team are unaware that there is a highly qualified lawyer among the guests. And he will stop at nothing to protect his estranged family. After a failed arrest due to inter-agency communication problems, Michael Anderson heads to a lavish party at the estate of Giuliano Rossini (Mario Opinato). His wife Mary and daughter Dianna (Chiara Arrigoni) doubt he will actually show up. He and his team show up. There seems to be a fortune hidden in the property in gold, and he intends to take it. Alone, heavily outnumbered and outgunned, Mike has to overcome enormous odds to save his family.Movie Review:
I had every reason to be excited yet have low-expectations at the same time. I had liked Giorgio Serafini’s work with Dolph on Blood of Redemption and Puncture Wounds but his follow-up collabs like Ambushed and The Tracker had pacing issues and limited action. Dolph had also fared terribly with co-star Natalie Burn previously in the amateur productions Acceleration and In the Name of the King 2, with Expendables 3 being their only solid co-star title (and that doesn’t really count since they shared no scenes together and she was essentially a credited extra role). This time, the posters looked captivating, Serafini reached out on the Ultimate Dolph site forums and gave the directing chair to his long-time collaborating producer Giorgio Bruno. The premise sounded like another take on the beloved Commando/ Die Hard/ Taken formula so did it make good use of all that it had in store?RELATED:
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While a little overexplained and having partially questionably dialogue delivery at times, this film retains consistent editing, lovely Italian scenery, a non-confusing set-up and a professional look. Since this plot is a Die Hard clone, let me use that film’s premise to explain the happenings: imagine the Nakatomi Plaza owner Takagi as main villain Hans Gruber; imagine the plaza setting changed to an Italy mansion; the whole heist involving rare coins and 3 keys to various incorporated safes of gold; and the millionaire who organizes the whole event being a non-sleazy/non-drugged out version of Ellis. Sounds bizarre and not necessarily like more fun, but trust me it actually works here. I was also fine with the filmmakers choosing to have Dolph’s
hero be established as estranged from his daughter and then have that kid exit the picture by having Dolph get her out safely. The kid wasn’t annoying but I think we can all agree that the less kids in peril, the better.
Dolph’s character wasn’t that notable but served the simplified stealthy action overview well, some interaction with the hostages didn’t hurt and Burn was competent as the Interpol agent partner of Dolph’s character. This film can be a solid rental or one-time buy. It looks theatrical yet was never intended for such a big-screen release. Sound is clear but sometimes the gun noises get repetitive. Nothing ever drags and for non-overdone excitement, it’s hardly bland. It’s overall beyond straightforward in the fun it has on display.