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Screenwriter takes out full-page ad in Hollywood Reporter to pitch Die Hard 6

Screenwriter takes out full-page ad in Hollywood Reporter to pitch Die Hard 6

Screenwriter takes out full-page ad in Hollywood Reporter to pitch Die Hard 6
12 November 2015

Honestly, how hard can it be to write a Die Hard script?

Considering the quality of the last two entries in the John McClane canon - Die Hard 4.0 and A Good Day To Die Hard – not very.

Ever since the bloody events of the Nagasaki Tower, the grizzled veteran has lost his job, his family and his hair, but still somehow finds himself falling into situations involving heavily armed bad guys to prove how eerily true the title is - lightning doesn't just strike twice, it singes the man's vest on a regular basis.

However, one Hollywood screenwriter is aiming to give the franchise the shot in the arm it needs, having taken a full page ad out in The Hollywood Reporter to pitch his film to director Len Wiseman, producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura, and Bruce Willis.

That man is Eric D Wilkinson, who previously produced Paranormal Movie, and his film pitch, picking up from where the last one left things in Russia, is this:

Former hero cop John McClane, 60 years old and beat to shit, is a convicted felon, being carted off to a Federal prison. Why?

Flashback to 1979, where 24-year-old New York City Patrol Officer John McClane is part of a team of cops assigned to investigate the murder of 6-year-old Ethan Peller, working under the direction of an up-and-coming Detective Stan Winshaw. Strong police work leads McClane to suspect possible sex trafficker Clarence Sutton, who mysteriously vanishes moments before McClane can make the arrest. The rule-breaking McClane and his superior Winshaw butt heads. The trail goes cold and the case is never solved. When McClane makes unprovable accusations about Winshaw he is transferred to the city’s bleakest division.

34 years later, Detective John McClane takes a personal leave and heads to Moscow to help his estranged son, who is being tried in a Russian court. While McClane is out of the country, the remains of Clarence Sutton are discovered, not only with DNA evidence linking Sutton to the murder of Ethan Peller, but additional evidence that ties John McClane to Sutton’s killing.

Upon McClane’s return from Russia, he is arrested, tried and convicted for the murder of Clarence Sutton. He is given a 30 year prison sentence in ADX Florence, an ultra-maximum-security, or ”supermax” prison which houses some of the most dangerous criminals in the country, including Omar Al-Maqdisi and Abdul bin Saeed, masterminds of the two worst terrorist attacks on American soil.

Following the Russian adventure, John had successfully reunited his family and reconnected with his wife Holly. Now, while he serves his sentence, Holly has been spending all of her time and effort on his appeal - especially once new evidence surfaces which may not only exonerate McClane, but also implicate Stan Winshaw (now a decorated police Captain) who may have framed John for the murder of the suspect they were chasing nearly forty years ago. However the day Holly goes to the prison to deliver this news personally to John, a riot breaks out, and before she can safely leave, the prison is put on lockdown.

But this is no ordinary prison riot.

By nightfall, inmates control the facility, holding Holly McClane and many other hostages. We soon learn that the riot itself was a distracting subterfuge… part of a plan to break both Al-Maqdisi and bin Saeed out of prison so they can help complete a horrific new terrorist attack in New York City.

However the one thing the terrorists didn’t count on was the one man who is always in the wrong place at the wrong time… And when it comes to John McClane, old habits die hard.

OK, so minus flashbacks maybe it’s not quite the revolutionary step forward in the saga we needed. Though who can argue with that pay-off?

Nonetheless, it won’t be long until Ben Stiller’s mid-90s prophesy of Die Hard 12 is realised.