I watched Die Hard again this week. Yes, again. And yes, it is a Christmas movie. I will not be taking questions at this time.
Once you’ve lived in Los Angeles, watching Die Hard becomes a scavenger hunt. You stop following the plot and start clocking landmarks. Oh, that exit. That building. That’s not how traffic works, but fine. I always look for something new, which is impressive given how many times I’ve seen this movie. You’d think by now I’d have exhausted its secrets. And yet, there’s always something.
This year, though, it hit differently.
Watching Bruce Willis knowing what we now know about his significant cognitive decline, adds an unexpected layer of gravity. There’s something quietly heartbreaking and deeply meaningful about seeing him at the height of his sharpness, wit, and physical confidence. John McClane isn’t just surviving; he’s thinking on his feet, improvising, bantering, problem-solving under pressure. The mind is agile. The timing is perfect. It’s a reminder of who he was and always will be in our collective memory.
And Alan Rickman. My God. Hans Gruber. One of the greatest villains of all time. Educated. Calm. Impeccably dressed. Terrifying without raising his voice. Watching him is like watching a master class in controlled menace. Every time he’s on screen, I think about how Yes, That. That’s how you enter a room.
Honestly, I want to be both of them. McClane’s grit and Gruber’s composure. Chaos and control. Sneakers and tailored suits. It’s aspirational.
There’s also something comforting about Die Hard in general. The predictability. The familiar beats. The knowledge that no matter how dire things get, someone will crawl through air ducts, tape a gun to their back, and figure it out. It’s oddly soothing. Especially this year.
And let’s talk about the toes. The fists-with-your-toes thing. Does it work? I don’t know. Do I still do it every time I check into a hotel? Absolutely. With commitment. There is something very 1980s about the idea that stress can be managed by aggressively gripping carpet. And yet, here we are.
Maybe that’s why this movie endures. It’s competence porn with a holiday backdrop. It’s about resilience. About grit. About ordinary people rising to impossible circumstances. It’s loud, ridiculous, and deeply reassuring.
This year, watching it felt like a love letter to performance, presence, and a time when our action heroes were allowed to be flawed, barefoot, and bleeding and still win.
So yes. Die Hard is a Christmas movie. It’s tradition. It’s comfort. It’s nostalgia with explosions.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to unclench my toes and pour some eggnog.
Categories: Culture, current events, Film, identity, Pop Culture, Psychology, society, TV





Ah Yes “Die Hard” With
‘Grace Under Pressure’
Honing in the Focus
As Distraction is
Not Part of Survival
Fearless Confidence
That ‘James Bond Persona’
In Flow Oh Dear Lord So Uncomfortable
in my Own Body Wanting to Capture What
my Father Expressed So Easily Everywhere
(A Challenge indeed for me on the Autism Spectrum)
He Went Enduring a Law Enforcement Career
For 46
Years It’s
True It Doesn’t
Come Without a
Call to Adventure
True it takes Years
To Become That Honed
In On Focus Without Distraction
Yet the Fearless Confidence Is Far
Beyond Not
Even being
Comfortable
in One’s Own Body
Ah Yes What 22,966 Miles
of Public Dance Brings in
148 Months Anniversary
Today Part and Parcel
of the Whole Free Gig it is
Not Unlike the 14.8 MiLLioN
Words in the Same Distance of Months in Free Verse
Poetry So Easy it Was to Give a Eulogy at my Father’s
Funeral What i Couldn’t Possibly Do Before i Gained
A Focus of
Song Along
With A Dance
Of Soul in Attention Span
Truly in Die Hard Ways hehe
my Neighbor Who Captained
Merchant Barges for Decades
Succumbing to Early Onset
Alzheimer’s Disease That
Also Captured My Father
As He Died Before it took over
His Life and His Identical Twin
Brother Living with it Until 88
His Wife too my Aunt Still Alive
Reaching 92 Years Old Particularly
Challenging for my Cousin’s as Care
Givers for Over 10 Years as Surely She
Is A REAL Example of ‘Die Hard’ This way
i Find Reality
to be More
Interesting
Than Fiction Indeed
Being Comfortable in
One’s Own Body Surely
A Prerequisite INDeed Yes
With Fearless Confidence
As A True Icing of Life as
Long As Compassionate
And Empathetic LoVE iN Peace Thrives Together too
As Of Course that Most Vital Element in Long Term Survival
For Humanity Seems to Be Dying So Dam Easy These Days…
Key:
Distraction
Dear Miriam
From What
It Even
Means to
Be And Do Human
Fully And Thrive For REAL
BasicAlly Dance And Sing Together Free…
in my way
now
at least
it plays
well for me..:)
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