As a seasoned holiday-movie star, Peter Billingsley isnât without his own opinion when it comes to whether or not Die Hard is a Christmas film.
In a 2023 episode of A Cinematic Christmas Journey podcast, the actor â who famously starred in A Christmas Story (1983) and appeared in other holiday hits, such as Elf (2003) and Four Christmases (2008) â and co-host Steve Byrne discussed all things Die Hard with the help of the filmâs cinematographer, Jan de Bont.
âYou know Jan de Bontâs work â he directed Twister and Speed,â Billingsley tells PEOPLE. âI had seen some quotes of him that he did not believe that Die Hard was a Christmas movie. He said, âI just donât see it.â So I said, âWould you mind if I try to convince you of why this is a Christmas movie? I know you made it. I know youâve lived with it for a very long time, since 1988.â He said, âOkay.â â
Read below to see Billingsleyâs reasons why Die Hard should exist in the holiday movie canon.
Why should Die Hard qualify as a Christmas film?
Although Die Hard came out in theaters during the summer of 1988, the filmâs plot â about a New York City police detective (played by Bruce Willis) who gets caught up in a terrorist takeover of a Los Angeles skyscraper â takes place on Christmas Eve.
âI think what sold [de Bont] is I said, âThat relationship between John McClane and his estranged wife, theyâre fractured, but by the end, they learn to forgive each other. Thereâs hope, thereâs joy, and theyâre going to go and have a great Christmas morning with their kids,â Billingsley says.
âNot to mention thereâs Christmas songs, and they have the snow falling. In my opinion it is a Christmas movie,â he adds.
Do the director and star consider Die Hard a Christmas movie?
Die Hard director John McTiernan agrees with fans and critics who categorize Die Hard as a holiday film. âWe hadnât intended it to be a Christmas movie, but the joy that came from it is what turned it into a Christmas movie,â he told the American Film Institute in 2020.
However, during Comedy Centralâs 2018 Roast of Bruce Willis, the star finally gave his input on the Die Hard debate 30 years after the filmâs release. âI did this roast for one reason and for one reason only, to settle something once and for all,â said Willis. âNow, please listen very carefully: Die Hard is not a Christmas movie! Itâs a goddamn Bruce Willis movie.â
Did Peter Billingsley sway Jan de Bont on Die Hard as a holiday classic?
Despite Willisâ opinion, Billingsley convinced de Bont otherwise.Â
âI went through my criterion,â Billingsley tells PEOPLE. âAnd he said, âIâve never thought about it that way.â He said, âYou have now convinced me it is a Christmas movie.â And I was like, âYes!â So I was able to change a filmmakerâs mind, which was cool.â
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