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The third film is fantastic, including in ways relevant to the article, playing with similar abuse-of-infrastructure ideas at city- rather than building-level.

It's actually a better city-level example of the first film's architectural ideas than the Nablus raid the article brings up. The Israeli forces' (horrifying, from the account in the article) "reconfiguration" of Nablus was a massively forceful one, blasting through wall after (residential) wall throughout the entire city *. In Die Hard (1 and 3) the protagonists' interactions with the civil infrastructure were far more involuntary and far less forceful, with the characters often being imperilled by those hostile spaces. Blasting through them like a Terminator wouldn't have been at all in keeping with the movies and the article does the first one a disservice by describing it in those terms.

The second one isn't great but I've always rather enjoyed it too. Far from diarrhoea, anyway.

* I should say, I know absolutely nothing about Nablus besides what's described in the article, and have no idea how accurate it is.




Completely agree! The antagonists also dig tunnels and otherwise subvert city infrastructure. I feel like it was a perfect example of what the author talked about.


Would you have a documentary or further reading about the Nablus battle? It sounds absolutely amazing.


They are both terrible, and they only get more terrible from there, sorry.


Oh, in that case I suppose I hate them now. Thanks for setting me right.




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