Hitman 2007

Hitman 2007

The film features a range of intense action sequences, including:

What’s your take on Hitman (2007)? Love it or hate it? Drop a comment below. And if you want a breakdown of the game-accurate kills they almost got right, subscribe for more retro action reviews. hitman 2007

The fight choreography isn’t John Wick (few things were in 2007), but it has a gritty, early-2000s charm. A standout scene: 47 takes down a room full of guards using only a fiber wire and a tea tray. Another highlight is the train shootout—bullet casings flying, blood spritzing, Olyphant reloading with robotic precision. It’s violent without being stylish, which oddly fits the character. The film features a range of intense action

Hitman (2007) sits at a but somehow spawned a 2015 reboot (with Rupert Friend) that was even less memorable. The Olyphant version has developed a cult following for its unapologetic B-movie energy. It’s a time capsule: the grainy digital look, the heavy bass score by Geoff Zanelli, the brief nudity, the mid-credits scene setting up a sequel that never came. And if you want a breakdown of the

The project began as an attempt by 20th Century Fox to capitalize on the massive success of the Hitman video game series developed by IO Interactive. Initially, Vin Diesel was attached to executive produce and potentially star, but he eventually stepped back, leading to the casting of Timothy Olyphant as the titular assassin. Olyphant, fresh off his success in Deadwood , shaved his head and took on the iconic barcode tattoo to embody the genetically engineered killer. Plot and Narrative

If you grew up in the era of DVD menus, nu-metal soundtracks, and the never-ending debate of Matrix vs. Equilibrium , then you probably remember .

Directed by Xavier Gens and starring Timothy Olyphant, this video game adaptation arrived during the "Wild West" period of gaming movies—long before The Last of Us or Arcane set a high bar. With a new Hitman TV series reportedly in development at Amazon, I decided to revisit Agent 47’s first big-screen outing. Does it hold up? Not exactly. Is it entertaining? Absolutely—just not always for the reasons the filmmakers intended.