Die Hard (1988) The first film takes place in
Los Angeles at the fictional Nakatomi Plaza (portrayed by
Fox Plaza). It begins on
Christmas Eve when McClane (
Bruce Willis) comes to reunite with separated wife
Holly (
Bonnie Bedelia) in Los Angeles at her company's Christmas party. Holly, who now has her own career, lives with their two children and uses her maiden name. At Nakatomi Plaza,
West German terrorists break in and take the celebrants hostage. McClane escapes detection and hides throughout the building. He kills off the gang and learns their real plan, to steal $640 million in
bearer bonds from the building's vault. In the finale, McClane shoots the terrorist leader,
Hans Gruber (
Alan Rickman), out of the window to fall thirty stories. It was released on July 15, 1988, to positive reviews and grossed $140.8 million worldwide.
Die Hard 2 (1990) The second film takes place two years after the first, again on Christmas Eve of 1990. In
Washington, D.C., McClane waits for his wife at
Washington Dulles International Airport. Mercenaries led by former U.S. Army Special Forces Colonel Stuart (
William Sadler) take over the airport communication systems, stranding planes in the air, including the one with McClane's wife. Colonel Stuart wants to free a captured Latin American dictator (
Franco Nero) en route to the airport. McClane discovers the plan, including a conspiracy between Stuart and an Army counter-terrorist unit sent to stop him. He foils their plans and provides a visual landing signal for the circling aircraft by exploding the villains' getaway plane. It was released on July 4, 1990, to positive reviews and grossed $240 million worldwide.
Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995) In the third film, McClane, now a police lieutenant, is back in New York City, separated from his wife, suspended from the police force, and a borderline alcoholic. A terrorist known only as "Simon" (
Jeremy Irons) threatens to blow up various locations in the city unless McClane will play his twisted version of
Simon Says, riddles and challenges. Zeus Carver (
Samuel L. Jackson), a shopkeeper from
Harlem, saves McClane after the first challenge, and reluctantly continues to help. The FBI reveals that Simon is the brother of Hans Gruber, killed in the first film. McClane learns revenge is a cover story for robbing the
New York Federal Reserve. McClane tracks Simon to the Canada–US border. McClane kills Simon by shooting at a power line above Simon's helicopter. It was released on May 19, 1995, to mixed reviews and grossed $366.1 million worldwide.
Live Free or Die Hard (2007) The fourth film, which was released as
Die Hard 4.0 outside North America, takes place on
Independence Day, over a decade after
Die Hard with a Vengeance. McClane is well-known, divorced, and estranged from his daughter
Lucy (
Mary Elizabeth Winstead). Cyber-terrorists hack into computers at the FBI, who had sent McClane to bring in
computer hacker Matthew "Matt" Farrell (
Justin Long) for questioning. Assassins hired by terrorist mastermind Thomas Gabriel (
Timothy Olyphant) attempt to kill McClane and Farrell. Farrell tells McClane that the terrorists are actually in the middle of a "fire sale" — a crippling cyber-warfare attack on the national infrastructure: power, public utilities, traffic, and other computer-controlled systems. Although the terrorists capture Lucy and Farrell, McClane foils the criminals and saves the hostages. It was released June 27, 2007, to positive reviews and grossed $383.5 million worldwide.
A Good Day to Die Hard (2013) The fifth film is set a few years later, mostly in
Moscow, Russia and the
Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, Ukraine. McClane finds out that his estranged son John "Jack" McClane, Jr. (
Jai Courtney) was arrested in Moscow for murder. When he arrives at the Moscow courthouse for Jack, Russian terrorists bomb the building and Jack escapes with imprisoned ex-billionaire Yuri Komarov (
Sebastian Koch). In an intense car chase, McClane pursues and saves the pair. Jack, unhappy at the unexpected arrival, reluctantly picks up his father. When they stop at a CIA safe house in Moscow, McClane learns Jack is a deep-cover CIA operative trying to get close to Komarov for his file that incriminates corrupt, high-ranking Russian official Viktor Chagarin (Sergei Kolesnikov). Chagarin's henchmen, led by his main enforcer Alik (Radivoje Bukvic), attack the safe house. McClane holds them off, and escapes with Jack and Komarov. They retrieve a key for the file in Chernobyl, and meet Komarov's daughter Irina (
Yuliya Snigir). Irina betrays them to Alik. The McClanes escape, without Komarov. Irina, always on the side of her father Komarov, tries to save him. McClane goes after Irina, while Jack chases her father. Jack throws Komarov
off of the roof, and he falls on the rotors of the helicopter and is eviscerated. It was released on February 14, 2013, to negative reviews and grossed $304.7 million worldwide.
Cancelled sixth film When the production was formally announced for the fifth film in the series, Bruce Willis expressed his desire to retire the John McClane character in a sixth and final film, explicitly calling for a 'fleshed out' conclusion. In 2013, Fox Studios began looking into developing the next installment. The studio took story pitches for a so-called "Die Hardest", including those from the public, at least one of which would have brought the action to Japan. A crossover with popular television program,
24, with
Die Hard characters had been previously considered, but contract negotiations with
Kiefer Sutherland soured and no pilot was made. Instead,
Die Hard was re-formulated as a gaiden (side story) featuring
Jack Bauer called "
Die Hard 24/7". It was optioned and became
A Good Day to Die Hard. The studio then chose to reincarnate
24 in limited edition as
24: Live Another Day (a homage to
Live Free or Die Hard), which premiered in May 2014 and ended that July. By 2015,
Live Free or Die Hard director Len Wiseman's self-penned prequel/sequel
origin story idea called
John McClane gained traction. Writer
Evan Katz pitched a follow-up to
Live Another Day called
24: Legacy that was greenlit in 2015. The show aired from February through April 2017 and was soon cancelled (not renewed) in June. Following this model, a deal had been made with
Lorenzo di Bonaventura to produce another, similar television programme that revolved around the concept of
real-time narration, but for twelve hours instead of twenty-four since
Die Hard stories happen over that time frame, saying: "We want you to get invested in John McClane more than ever before". That summer, Wiseman was in negotiations to direct a standalone mini-series (12 episodes) tentatively titled, "
DIE HARD: Year One", based around the
BOOM! Studios graphic novel of the
same name. Its plot - rumored to borrow heavily from said comic book issues - follows John McClane as a beat cop in New York City early in his career as narrated by Bruce Willis in the present-day. Wiseman publicly floated that he was casting for a young version of John McClane in September. Six months later, the studio enlisted duo
Chad Hayes and
Carey W. Hayes to re-write the screenplay after Bruce Willis refused to endorse the previous edition and its actor. In July 2018, di Bonaventura submitted an updated
treatment titled
McClane, further confirming that the storyline was similar in stature to
The Godfather Part 2: featuring elements of McClane's and Holly's characters in the 1970s, intermixed with their present-day counterparts. The following month, Wiseman said that pre-production on the new film should start "...fairly soon, no dates" once the script has been completed.
Tobey Maguire (son in-law of then-
NBCUniversal Chairman
Ronald Meyer) joined the production team in late Summer. By December, di Bonaventura handed in yet another draft, this time without input from Willis. Production designer Carol Uraneck, who was hired that September, later left the project by the close of the year. Between February and April 2019, the production team made revisions to the writing, but insinuated that the project, though supposedly moving forward, was on the studio's backburner. It has been hinted that
Samuel L. Jackson could reprise his role as Zeus. Actress
Mary Elizabeth Winstead said that she was interested in returning as Lucy Gennero-McClane, but later intimated doubt that, due to scheduling, the film would
ever get made. The
acquisition of 20th Century Fox by Disney resulted in a production hiatus in August 2019. Wiseman was then dealt to Lionsgate to direct pictures in the
John Wick franchise. di Bonaventura stated in a July 2021 interview that the
McClane project is "not happening" as a further consequence.
Die Hard was removed from the Fox imprint indefinitely. In lieu of companies-wide reorganization, the media giants (Disney,
Comcast) are said to be rebooting the property for streaming on
Hulu or
Netflix. Willis had taken roles that featured the "Die Hard scenario" or implied its namefellow in a number of direct-to-video films since the release of
A Good Day to Die Hard. After confirmation of the potential sixth
Die Hard film's cancellation and the wrap of production on the film
Detective Knight: Rogue, Willis' family announced that he had been diagnosed with aphasia and paused his career. In July 2022, he was
videographed on the lot at Fox headquarters, the very same location of the set of
Die Hard, to mark the film's anniversary. This footage was shared by his wife
Emma Heming Willis on social media. By February 2023, Willis was diagnosed with
frontotemporal dementia and his family announced his retirement from acting, ruling out any future return as McClane. ==Cast and crew==