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  • Hard to Kill (1990): Seagal in a Coma, and the Script Should’ve Stayed There

Hard to Kill (1990): Seagal in a Coma, and the Script Should’ve Stayed There

Posted on June 25, 2025 By admin No Comments on Hard to Kill (1990): Seagal in a Coma, and the Script Should’ve Stayed There
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Directed by Bruce Malmuth | Starring Steven Seagal, Kelly LeBrock, William Sadler


If you’ve ever wanted to watch a man wake up from a coma, grow a beard like a vengeful raccoon, and then break more bones than a Greek wedding—congratulations, you’re Steven Seagal’s ideal audience. Hard to Kill is one of those quintessential Seagal vehicles: joyless, humorless, and filled with more squinting than actual acting. It’s like a revenge fantasy written by someone who thinks whispering is a personality and shooting people in the knees is character development.

The movie’s tagline promises “They tried to kill him. He’s hard to kill.” And that’s basically the full plot. Everything else is just hair grease, broken wrists, and Seagal moving like a haunted Roomba powered by righteous fury.

Let’s crack some ribs and dive in.


Steven Seagal: Human Toothpick, Emotionally Unavailable

Steven Seagal stars as Mason Storm—a name that sounds like it was generated by a 12-year-old making his first Dungeons & Dragons character. Storm is an L.A. detective who stumbles upon a political conspiracy involving dirty cops, a sleazy senator, and the world’s least discreet hitmen. Naturally, they show up at his house, murder his wife, shoot him in front of his kid, and leave him for dead.

But—plot twist!—Storm doesn’t die. He simply enters a seven-year coma, because in Seagal-world, that’s how long it takes to grow a righteous ponytail and learn the art of vengeance.

When he wakes up, he’s stiff, angry, and even less expressive than before. He spends the rest of the film limping toward revenge, snapping arms like breadsticks, and delivering lines with the emotional range of a broken Etch A Sketch.


Kelly LeBrock: From Red Dress to Red Flag

Kelly LeBrock, who was once the most stunning part of The Woman in Red, shows up here as a nurse named Andy who apparently has no boundaries or standards. She finds a comatose Seagal in the hospital, falls in love with his greasy, unconscious body (??), and then helps him escape while he’s still learning how to walk again.

Let me repeat: she falls for him while he’s in a coma. There are actual long, romantic gazes between Kelly LeBrock and a man hooked up to tubes. It’s less Florence Nightingale and more Weekend at Bernie’s: The Erotic Cut.

By the time he wakes up and starts doing Tai Chi shirtless in her living room, she’s fully onboard with helping him kill people. No questions asked. No therapy sessions. Just, “Oh, you’re awake and want to kill half of Los Angeles? Sounds romantic.”


The Villain: Senator With a Spray Tan

The Big Bad here is Senator Vernon Trent, played by William Sadler, doing his best impression of a corrupt televangelist who sells fake gold coins during commercial breaks. He’s evil, smug, and utterly forgettable—like a diet version of every sleazy villain from every other Seagal film.

His master plan? Control the city by killing a detective and saying menacing things into a tape recorder. That’s it. He’s not trying to take over the world, just… avoid getting indicted. It’s the kind of low-stakes villainy that would be better suited for a town hall meeting.

Sadler tries to make something out of this cardboard character, but the script gives him little to do besides yell at goons and look shocked when Seagal inevitably crashes through a window.


The Action: Limping Through the Motions

Let’s be honest—nobody watches a Seagal film for the plot. You watch for the bone-snapping, neck-twisting, vaguely Aikido-ish beatdowns that happen every eight minutes. And Hard to Kill delivers… kind of.

The problem is that by the time Seagal wakes up, he moves like a man who just got out of bed—and not in a cool way. More in a “I threw my back out getting groceries” way. He limps through most of the film, pausing to meditate and slap people with the energy of a mildly annoyed bouncer.

The fight scenes are edited like a fever dream, with shaky slow motion, pointless zoom-ins, and sound effects that sound like someone hitting a wet ham with a tire iron. Every punch sounds like it was mixed in post by a Foley artist with anger issues.


The Coma Montage: Yes, This Is Real

At one point, we get a full-on training montage of Seagal recovering from his coma. It’s set to inspirational music. There’s Tai Chi. There’s beard grooming. There’s the infamous scene of him using a wooden cane as a punching dummy while grunting dramatically.

You haven’t lived until you’ve seen Seagal, shirtless and stiff, whisper “I’ll take you to the bank… the blood bank” while punching the air with the grace of a heavily sedated bear.

This is the movie’s idea of character development. Not grief. Not struggle. Just beard-growing and murder-prepping.


The Dialogue: Written By a Typewriter on Fire

The lines in Hard to Kill feel like they were pulled from rejected greeting cards for sociopaths. Gems include:

  • “You can take that to the bank. The blood bank.”

  • “I’m gonna take you out, and I don’t mean on a date.”

  • “Anticipation of death is worse than death itself.”

The script is littered with fake-deep nonsense delivered with the deadpan seriousness of a high school drama student who just discovered Nietzsche. There are entire scenes where Seagal seems to be arguing with himself while the rest of the cast watches, stunned into silence.


Tone: Deathly Serious About Dumb Stuff

For a film that features a man waking from a seven-year coma and immediately going on a kill spree, Hard to Kill is weirdly self-important. There’s no wink to the audience, no hint that any of this is as ridiculous as it actually is. Everything is bathed in melodrama and slow-mo, as if we’re watching The Godfather: Coma Edition.

Seagal never cracks a smile. The music swells like someone’s delivering Shakespeare. And the entire plot is treated like a Greek tragedy instead of what it really is: a guy waking up grumpy and murdering his way through his to-do list.


Final Verdict: Should’ve Stayed in the ICU

Hard to Kill is everything wrong with late-80s/early-90s action cinema rolled into one sweaty, ponytailed package. It’s sexist, joyless, bloated, and absolutely convinced of its own coolness. Steven Seagal growls and grunts his way through a revenge fantasy that’s so stiff it could’ve been legally classified as a corpse.

The only real highlight is watching Kelly LeBrock try to make sense of why she’s in this movie. (She and Seagal were married at the time, which honestly explains everything.)

Rating: 3/10 — Hard to kill? More like hard to watch.
Unless you’re conducting a film study on the cinematic evolution of neck-snapping, skip this and take yourself to the blood bank.

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