Last Action Hero is a 1993 action comedy directed by John McTiernan. The film is a parodic satire on the action genre and its clichés.
Trapped inside the movie, Danny must persuade Slater that he is, in fact, a fictional character played by the real-life actor, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Things become more complicated when the villain from Jack Slater IV, a hit man named Benedict, gains possession of the magic ticket and travels into the real world. Slater and Danny follow him, but find that things are far more difficult in a world where the clichés of action films (guns that never run out of bullets, cars that explode when shot at, and punching through a glass window causes no pain) do not exist.
Last Action Hero follows the story of Danny Madigan, a boy whose love of action movies keeps him out of school and in trouble. Danny idolizes Arnold Schwarzenegger, particularly his character Jack Slater; he has watched Jack Slater III six times.
Danny's obsession with television and movies leads him to befriend an old man named Nick, who runs a beat-up old cinema in downtown New York City. Nick allows Danny to watch pre-screenings and reel tests of movies before they are available to the public, which he offers to do with the new Jack Slater film, Jack Slater IV. Danny, however, is in trouble with his school for not attending classes and his single mother finds it increasingly difficult to keep tabs on him whilst holding down a job. Danny is eager to see the Slater film and against his own safety (the first time he opens his door, a man charged him, but left in disgust at the lack of valuables), he ventures out late at night to view the midnight pre-screening.
Danny arrives at the cinema only to be told he requires a ticket to enter. Nick then reveals a gold-plated ticket from his pocket and speaks of his time as a boy when he went backstage after a Houdini show in the same theater, and was presented the ticket. Told by Houdini that it was passed along by the great magicians of the Asias and that it has magical powers yet a mind of its own, Nick had always been too afraid to use it. Disbelieving, Danny allows Nick to nostalgically tear the stub off and start the movie.
Danny takes a seat in the theater, his eyes wide with excitement as Jack Slater IV is played on the screen. During a car chase scene the ticket stub begins to glow blue. Before Danny knows what is happening, a stick of dynamite flies out of the screen and onto the floor near Danny; it explodes, throwing Danny into Jack Slater's speeding car. Amidst the confusion Danny understands what Nick had revealed about the ticket and realizes he's inside the movie.
Danny ends up accompanying Slater, trying to convince him that he's a fictional character inside a movie. Even despite the seemingly unbelievable goings-on of the movie, Slater is unconvinced. Eventually Danny uses his knowledge of the Jack Slater story line to help Slater find out who killed his second cousin Frank.
The two run into Tony Vivaldi, the movie's crime boss, and his henchman Mr. Benedict. Danny later reveals that Benedict was wearing a red glass eye. Benedict overhears this and is intrigued to find out how Danny could come about such information.
Benedict eventually tracks Danny down at Slater's house, intending to take him hostage along with Slater's daughter Whitney. Slater arrives to save the two, but Benedict escapes back to Vivaldi's mansion with Danny's wallet, including the magic ticket. There he discovers that the ticket lights up and he is able to travel to the real world; but he is reluctant to try it.
Slater then gets fired by his over-the-top stereotyped police chief. Danny convinces Slater that Vivaldi is hatching a plan, and the two begin to work it out. They soon discover that Vivaldi is going to eliminate a rival syndicate: he has hidden a nerve gas bomb in the body of the late gangster Leo the Fart, to go off at his funeral, which is to be held on the roof of a hotel. Slater and Danny use a crane to dump the coffin into La Brea Tar Pits, which (barely) contains Leo's deadly "last fart". As Slater emerges from the pit, tar sloughs off him without a trace; Danny sarcastically remarks, "You know, tar actually sticks to some people."
Meanwhile Benedict is back at Vivaldi's mansion. Tony Vivaldi is excited as Benedict tells him intricate details, proving the plan worked. However, Benedict admits he was lying and then proceeds to shoot Vivaldi, ordering the butler to clean up the mess. Benedict sits down to have a drink at the bar when Slater bursts through the wall. He grabs Benedict and throws him at a wall only to see Benedict go straight through it.
Slater is puzzled. "Usually when I do that it leaves a hole," he muses. Danny guesses that Benedict has the ticket and is now in the real world, Danny's world. Danny convinces Slater that they need to go through and stop Benedict while the hole is still open. The pair step through to see Benedict escaping out of the theater. They give chase but Benedict escapes. Danny returns to his apartment, with Slater following bewildered.
Danny and Slater hunt for Benedict, who proves elusive, using his ticket to jump between other movies and the real world. Benedict hatches a plan to rid himself of Slater; he travels into the Jack Slater III movie and brings Slater's former nemesis, the Ripper, to the real world. If he can kill the real Arnold Schwarzenegger, Benedict believes that Slater too will die. The Ripper turns up at the New York premiere of Jack Slater IV and attempts to kill Schwarzenegger, but Danny and Slater foil him and the Ripper escapes to the roof. Slater and Danny pursue him; Slater eventually electrocutes the Ripper and saves Danny, but just as the duo think it's over, Benedict shows up and shoots Slater, giving him a mortal wound (something impossible in the film world). Danny, distraught and infuriated, knocks Benedict's gun over to Slater who shoots Benedict's glass eye, causing him to explode.
Seeing that Slater is dying from his bullet wound, Danny loads Slater into an ambulance and drives him back to the theater. Danny crashes through the doors and carries Slater, hoping to get him back into the movies, but is unsuccessful: he no longer has the ticket. Danny despairs when the black-and-white figure of Death (whom Benedict had inadvertently freed from The Seventh Seal) appears; but Death has come to see Slater only out of curiosity, because "he isn't on any of my lists." Death suggests that Danny look for the other half of the ticket — the stub that Nick tore off earlier.
Danny finds the ticket and activates its magic, returning Slater back to his movie world where the fatal injury caused by Benedict turns out to be "just a flesh wound", and is seen as a joke by his colleagues. Danny and Slater share a moment about believing in each other, which is often viewed as the film's weakest point, due to its supposed sappiness. The movie returns to Slater, who is back on the job winding up his once-again over-the-top police chief and explaining that the two of them are fictional and Slater wants to stop shooting and blowing things up. The movie ends with Nick and Danny watching the movie, and recalling to one another the adventure they'd just had.
Instead, the movie was panned by critics and grossed only States dollar|$" target="_blank" >*50 million in the United States (a disappointment considering the $60 million budget). In an A&E biography of Schwarzenegger, the actor (who was also the film's executive producer) says that the film failed due to bad timing, since it came out a week after Jurassic Park, the biggest movie phenomenon of that year. Schwarzenegger states that he tried to persuade his co-producers to postpone the film's June 18 release in the US by four weeks, but they turned a deaf ear. It is widely believed that the movie would have been successful (or at least recovered its production costs) if it had been released in mid-July, at the peak of summer.
Despite its box office failure, the movie has since gained some admiration as a satire on the action genre , as it intentionally parodies almost every action movie cliché.
1993 films | Action films | Adventure films | Comedy films | Fantasy films | Films directed by John McTiernan | Parody films | Worst Picture Razzie Nominee | Metafictional works | Last Action Hero | Last Action Hero | Den siste actionhjälten
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