Hard Target
In a strange and exciting story for a girl named Natasha Binder who is still search for her lost father. Natasha came to New Orleans in search of her father. Perhaps during her search she will be assisted by a very difficult man in that task. The man concluded that Natasha's father had been killed by a large organization to kill people and sell human organs. From that moment, everything changed and the task became very exciting and difficult for Natasha and who help her.
18 October 1960, Berchem-Sainte-Agathe, Brussels, Belgium
6 November 1937, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
27 September 1934, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
24 February 1961, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
14 December 1965, Detroit, Michigan, USA
5 May 1940, New York City, New York, USA
2 July 1970, New York City, New York, USA
6 November 1950, Westchester, New York, USA
7 May 1939, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
13 November 1950, Devon, England, UK
20 January 1966, Mobile, Alabama, USA
16 June 1962, Pretoria, South Africa
4 December 1949, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
24 September 1944, Copenhagen, Denmark
30 March 1959, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
July 03, 2005
A combo of American Honk Kong actioners that fails to show John Woo's distinctive talentSeptember 16, 2004
Should have been so much better.January 02, 2004
Click to read reviewMay 26, 2006
One of my greatest guilty pleasures.May 12, 2001
Even when the acting is hammy, notably Wilford Brimley's turn as Chance's Cajun uncle, Woo stages every fight with hypnotic grace.November 02, 2008
Though working on a Jean-Claude Van Damme vehicle can be seen as a comedown for Woo, he rises to the occasion to create an often rousing entertainment that is almost inarguably Van Damme's best film to date.January 01, 2000
Essentially, Hard Target is a risk-averse Van Damme vehicle, steered by many hands, and set on tracks leading directly to the delivery entrances of the country's video stores.June 24, 2006
It's what Hollywood wanted Woo for: bigger, brighter explosions.January 20, 2006
Hysterically inept attempt at action filmmakingAugust 30, 2004
Presenting Mr. Van Damme as reverentially as Sergio Leone did the young Clint Eastwood, Mr. Woo displays a real aptitude for malignant mischief, which is this story's stock in trade.January 01, 2000
Woo, a master of stylized violence and explosive action, has had to buy into America's fascination with explosive effects and reaction. Something gets lost in the transition.October 10, 2006
A disappointing American debut of the Hong Kong cult director John Woo is a decent action vehicle by standards of its star Jean-Claude Van Damme but, hampered by a B script and flat characters, it doesn't bear Woo's auteurist signature and unique vision