News Analysis India | A Good Day To Black Night To Die Hard

A Good Day To Black Night To Die Hard

By Premendra Agrawal at December 10, 2011 17:53
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Perhaps Mr. John McClane lifted the title in 1988 for his movies ‘Die heart’ after the assassination of JKF Kennedy or Lal Bahadur Shastri. JAN 10 might be called Good day due to the signing of ‘Tashkent Accord’ means ‘No War Treaty’. Lal Bahadur Shastri was murdered in the black night of that day. My forthcoming book on the assassination of Shastriji highlights this angle with so many uncovered facts.  

 

The Die Hard series is a series of five action films beginning with Die Hard in 1988. All five films are centered on the character of John McClane (portrayed by Bruce Willis, a New York City police detective who finds himself fighting a group of terrorists in each episode. There are also several video games based on the films, as well as a comic book series released in August 2009

 

Die Hard 5 would, clearly, be too simple a name for the further adventures of Mr John McClane. And, clearly fuelled by the need to uncomfortably wrap the words Die and Hard into as clunky a title as possible, Fox has announced the name of the fifth instalment in  the Die Hard franchise.

 

It’s going to be called A Good Day To Die Hard.

 

“Since the first Die Hard in 1988, John McClane has found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, with the skills and attitude to always be the last man standing, making him enemy #1 for terrorists the world over. Now, McClane faces his greatest challenge ever, this time on an international stage, when his estranged son Jack is caught up in the daring prison escape of a rogue Russian leader, and father and son McClane must work together to keep each other alive and keep the world safe for democracy.”

 

A few decades ago, political, medical and other vectors are intertwined so tightly that some of the sad events of historians, politicians and citizens of friendly countries interpret ambiguous. USSR for many government and public figures could be a country not only attractive, but dangerous. In pre-war times there have been occasions when the distinguished guests who came to visit USSR, did not know whether they will ever return to his home. Someone could have died under mysterious circumstances; someone died or simply vanished from sight. Even with government officials, especially during the “Great Terror”, we have not been made to stand on ceremony.

 

premendraagrawal@gmail.com

 

 

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Silent Assassins  Jan 11, 1966 by Premendra Agrawal