For vicarious thrills, it's hard to top movies about contract killers. There's something fascinating about watching characters that operate in shadowy territory, following their own unyielding codes of ethics, getting into and out of danger on the strength of their wits. Movies about hitmen swim in moral ambiguity, asking audiences to identify with, or even root for, people who are in the business of killing. Cinemagoers have long had obsessions with contract killers -- even if they were one-dimensional characters, so long as they looked cool (Boba Fett, anyone?). But in the past decades, they've been flying out of the margins in a big way, discovering some personality and taking on lives of their own.
After cutting his teeth on drama and action flicks like
The Big
Blue (67 percent on the Tomatometer) and
La Femme Nikita
(82 percent), director
Luc Besson hit
his groove with 1994's
Léon (aka The
Professional, 72 percent).
Jean Reno stars
as the titular character, a withdrawn hitman saddled with an orphaned 12-year-old (Natalie
Portman) after her family is slaughtered by a corrupt cop (Gary
Oldman). The cast and crew were firing on all cylinders with this one: Reno's
befuddled French guy and Portman's tomboy pixie acts are endearing; Oldman makes even something as mundane as taking a pill amusingly bombastic; and
Besson's trademark action scenes never felt as casually cool as they did here,
especially Léon's climatic fight defending his apartment.
"Luc Besson's lone-hitman thriller sees a 12 year-old
Natalie Portman push the boundaries of love and pedophilia," writes Shannon J.
Harvey of Australia's Sunday Times, "[It's] as emotionally complex as it
is a slick action thrill-ride."
1994 proved to be a banner year for hitmen public relations. Not only did Léon strive to show a killer in a sympathetic light, but Quentin Tarantino also fine-tuned their image in Pulp Fiction (96 percent), presenting hitmen not as just mere antagonists who showed up, did their dirty work, and then disappeared. Pulp Fiction's killers (Samuel L. Jackson and John Travolta) were out-and-out bad dudes, but Tarantino also delved into their lives before and after murder gigs, creating a portrait of two otherwise regular guys who suffered mid-career crises and engaged in trite conversations.
The Léon trailer.
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ZiGyStRdUsT writes: on Nov 23 2007 11:27 PM le samurai (forgive my spelling), it the best hitman movie imo (Reply to this) |
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Ruckas356 writes: on Nov 24 2007 05:01 AM the professional was damn good. Gary oldman is a great and underapreciated actor. (Reply to this) |
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IMAmoose24 writes: on Nov 24 2007 08:06 AM How have I not heard of this Leon movie? It looks right up my ally. Checking it out as soon as possible. (Reply to this) |
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Jhcrow writes: on Nov 24 2007 01:46 PM What Is The Name Of Both Of The Songs (Reply to this) |
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cyber.bruce writes: on Nov 24 2007 03:46 PM ??? (Reply to this) |
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HONORANDOFFER writes: on Nov 24 2007 03:51 PM In reply to this comment (#1302312) First song is by Portishead and the second by Radiohead. Old trailer using newish music. (Reply to this) |
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Jhcrow writes: on Nov 24 2007 07:14 PM In reply to this comment (#1302535) Thanx (Reply to this) |
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osiris3657 writes: on Nov 24 2007 10:34 PM What about hitwomen? I'm thinking of The Bride from the Kill Bill movies. Or Josh Hartnett's character in Lucky Number Slevin, or Jason Bourne...yes, Jason Bourne should be considered among the best movie hitmen. (Reply to this) |
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bamb0o-stick writes: on Nov 25 2007 04:25 AM In reply to this comment (#1303668) Jason Bourne was more of a government trained soldier than a hit man/assassin. These other characters like Leon, Jules and Vince were more like independent hit men. People went to them to do a job with money on the table or they worked for a mob boss. As my own personal favorite, I guess any hit man/assassin played by Chow Yun Fat is awesome in my book. (Reply to this) |
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Oblivioncry writes: on Nov 25 2007 07:01 AM Gary Oldman is amazing as is everyone else in this movie. Leon is in my personal top10 for sure (Reply to this) |
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Oblivioncry writes: on Nov 25 2007 07:02 AM the scene in which portman tries to kill her self is the most amzing (Reply to this) |
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hevlarxis writes: on Nov 26 2007 09:20 PM She tries to kill herself in this one too? I just saw Heat. She must have a death wish. (Reply to this) |
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