
Come December, the same tired argument surfaces at every bar, group chat and dinner party: Is Die Hard a Christmas movie? Spare us the semantics. It is. And this year, with Bruce Willis quietly fading from the public stage, watching John McClane bleed barefoot across Nakatomi Plaza feels less like tradition and more like tribute.
It’s Christmas Eve. The Nakatomi Corporation is throwing its holiday party. The soundtrack swings from Run-D.M.C. to “Let It Snow.” A dead terrorist gets gifted a Santa hat and the seasonal greeting, “Now I have a machine gun. Ho-ho-ho.” Hans Gruber — Teutonic, cultured, and dressed like he’s en route to a Bond villain’s New Year’s Eve gala — times his $640 million USD bearer-bond heist for the one night the vault’s guards are drunk on eggnog and holiday bonuses. Even the reconciliation at the heart of the film is pure yuletide: a stubborn cop crawling through air ducts to get home to his family.
Willis, the man who turned the action hero into a blue-collar wiseass with nothing to lose, stepped away from acting in 2022 after a diagnosis of aphasia that later progressed to frontotemporal dementia. The disease is cruel and precise. It steals language, behavior — the very traits that made Willis the most watchable movie star of his era. His wife, Emma Heming Willis, still calls Die Hard a Christmas movie, the same way she still sets an extra place at the table for the Bruce the world fell for.
So cue it up. Not out of nostalgia, but defiance. Watch him vault over cubicles in a soiled tank top with a cigarette hanging from his mouth as he mutters “Come out to the coast, we’ll get together, have a few laughs,” all the while the city burns behind him. Watch the grin that launched a thousand imitators, the one that said, “Yeah, I’m terrified, but watch this anyway.” That was peak Willis: charm weaponized, vulnerability disguised as swagger.
John McClane isn’t bulletproof. He’s bruised, limping, and usually one wrong move from death. In other words, he’s us. And right now, watching a guy who refuses to quit (even when everything hurts) feels like the most honest holiday sentiment going.
This Christmas, dim the lights and let the explosions roll. In the flicker of those TV screens, Mr. Willis is still up there, barefoot and fearless, reminding us what real toughness looks like. Yippee-ki-yay.
Die Hard is available now on Cathay Pacific‘s award-winning inflight entertainment system.