Hudson Hawk (1991) USA
Hudson Hawk Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Michael Lehmann
Studio:Sony Pictures
Producer:David Willis, Joel Silver, Michael Dryhurst
Writer:Bruce Willis, Robert Kraft
Rating:4
Rated:R
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:6302213134
UPC:0043396705937
Price:$9.98
Awards:3 wins & 4 nominations
Genre:Comic Action
Release:1999-03-29
IMDb:0102070
Duration:95
Picture Format:Anamorphic Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround, French, Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround, Commentary by director
Subtitles:English, French
Michael Lehmann  ...  (Director)
Bruce Willis, Robert Kraft  ...  (Writer)
 
Bruce Willis  ...  Eddie 'Hudson Hawk' Hawkins
Danny Aiello  ...  Tommy Five-Tone
Andie MacDowell  ...  Anna Baragli
James Coburn  ...  George Kaplan
Richard E. Grant  ...  Darwin Mayflower
Sandra Bernhard  ...  Minerva Mayflower
Donald Burton  ...  Alfred
Don Harvey  ...  Snickers
David Caruso  ...  Kit Kat
Andrew Bryniarski  ...  Butterfinger
Lorraine Toussaint  ...  Almond Joy
Burtt Harris  ...  Gates
Frank Stallone  ...  Cesar Mario
Carmine Zozzora  ...  Antony Mario (as Carmine Zozorra)
Stefano Molinari  ...  Leonardo Da Vinci
Enrico Lo Verso  ...  
Remo Remotti  ...  
Giselda Volodi  ...  
P. Randall Bowers  ...  
Arthur M. Wolpinsky  ...  
Comments: Catch the excitement. Catch the laughter. Catch the Hawk.

Summary: Bruce Willis's awful, 1991 vanity piece is an abuse of audience goodwill and a waste of a good cast and director (Michael Lehmann of Heathers). The story, cowritten by Willis, concerns a cat burglar pressured into stealing precious art, including some from the Vatican. But the script is just a convenience upon which Willis piles his vaguely boorish brand of hip irony, assuming his audience will stay with him every step of the way. Certain, self-congratulatory scenes induce cringing--Willis and Danny Aiello, for instance, sing "Side by Side" (to brassy accompaniment on the soundtrack) every time they're working a job--but the overall effect is more irritating and baffling. Keep a good thought for Willis (an underrated actor better than the summer junk we usually see him in) by checking out his superior work in Pulp Fiction and his small but memorable role in Billy Bathgate. --Tom Keogh