Hard Boiled: Limited Edition – Arrow Video (4K UHD)
Theatrical Release Date: Hong Kong, 1992
Director: John Woo
Writers: Gordon Chan, Barry Wong, John Woo
Cast: Chow Yun-fat, Tony Leung, Teresa Mo, Philip Chan, Philip Kwok, Anthony Wong Chau-Sang, Kwan Hoi-san
Release Date: March 30th, 2026
Approximate Running Time: 127 Minutes 42 Seconds
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Widescreen / 2160 Progressive / HEVC / H.265 / HDR10 Dolby Vision
Rating: 18 (UK)
Sound: LPCM Mono Cantonese, LPCM Mono English, Dolby Atmos Cantonese
Subtitles: English, English SDH
Region Coding: Region Free (4K UHD), Region B (Blu-ray)
Retail Price: £34.99 (UK)
"Iconic actor Chow Yun-Fat (City on Fire) stars as Tequila, a gung-ho cop working to bring down Johnny Wong (Anthony Wong, Infernal Affairs), the villainous triad boss who maintains a stranglehold on Hong Kong’s illegal gun trade. Johnny attempts to recruit Ah-Long (Tony Leung, Bullet in the Head), an assassin from a rival syndicate, just as the insubordinate Tequila gets taken off the case. Taking justice into his own hands, Tequila tracks Ah-Long down and uncovers an intricate web of deception that threatens to boil over into all-out war.." - synopsis provided by the distributor
Video: 5/5
Here’s the information provided about this release's transfer, "The film has been restored in 4K resolution and graded in HDR10 and Dolby Vision. The original 35mm camera negative was sourced from the Hong Kong Film Archive and scanned in 4K by Interface Video Production Ltd in Hong Kong."
Hard Boiled comes on a 100 GB triple layer 4K UHD.
Disc Size: 92.2 GB
Feature: 87 GB
Although Arrow Video uses Shout! Factory's master as the foundation of their source, they have performed additional color grading. I didn't have any issues with either release's color timing, though there is some debate over which one is more aesthetically pleasing. That said, the source looks phenomenal; image clarity, contrast, black levels, and compression are solid, and the image always looks organic.
Audio: 5/5 (All Audio Tracks)
This release comes with three audio options, a LPCM mono mix in Cantonese, a LPCM mono mix in English and a Dolby Atmos mix in Cantonese. The two mono tracks are comparable to the Shout! Factory 4K UHD release, while the newly created Dolby Atmos track gives fans of this film a new way to experience it. That said, all of the tracks sound excellent, and the Dolby Atmos does a phenomenal job of expanding the sound spectrum without straying away from the original mono track’s intentions. Included are English subtitles for the Cantonese language track, English SDH for the English language track, and English subtitles for Cantonese text when watching the English language track. Language tracks and subtitles can only be changed via the setup menu and not during playback. It should be noted that Arrow Video has done additional work on their subtitles and they are not the same ones used by Shout! Factory.
Extras:
Extras on the 4K UHD disc include an image gallery (44 images—posters/stills/lobby cards), theatrical trailer #1 (3 minutes 24 seconds, Dolby Digital mono with text in English), theatrical trailer #2 (3 minutes 5 seconds, Dolby Digital mono with text in English), theatrical trailer #3 (1 minute 53 seconds, Dolby Digital mono with text in English and Cantonese), theatrical trailer #4 (3 minutes 23 seconds, Dolby Digital mono with text in Cantonese with removable English subtitles), deleted and extended scenes from the Taiwanese version and South Korean version (13 minutes 59 seconds, Dolby Digital mono Cantonese with burnt-in English, Mandarin, and Korean subtitles), an extended opening sequence (11 minutes 31 seconds, Dolby Digital mono Cantonese with burnt-in English subtitles), alternate English language credits (5 minutes 34 seconds, Dolby Digital mono English, no subtitles), an archival audio commentary recorded for the Criterion Collection with director John Woo, producer Terence Chang, filmmaker Roger Avary, and film critic Dave Kehr; an archival audio commentary with John Woo and Terence Chang, an audio commentary with John Woo and film journalist Drew Tayler; and an audio commentary with film historian Frank Djeng.
Extras on a Blu-ray disc include an interview with academic Lin Feng titled Chewing The Fat (12 minutes 44 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English with non-removable English subtitles for Cantonese film clips), an interview with author Leon Hunt Gun-Fu Fever (18 minutes 39 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English with non-removable English subtitles for Cantonese film clips), an interview with author Grady Hendrix titled Hong Kong Confidential: Inside Hard Boiled (13 minutes 4 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English with non-removable English subtitles for Cantonese film clips), an interview with composer Michael Gibbs titled Body Count Blues (10 minutes 1 second, Dolby Digital stereo English with non-removable English subtitles for Cantonese film clips), an interview with screenwriter Chung Hang Ku titled Boiled to Perfection (16 minutes 43 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo Cantonese with non-removable English subtitles), an interview with screenwriter Gordon Chan titled Hard to Resist (10 minutes 21 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo Cantonese with non-removable English subtitles), an interview with Terence Chang titled No Time For Failure (12 minutes, DTS-HD stereo English with non-removable English subtitles for Cantonese film clips), an interview with actor Anthony Wong titled Boiling Over (22 minutes 7 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo Cantonese with non-removable English subtitles), and an interview with John Woo titled Violent Night (41 minutes 7 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English with non-removable English subtitles for Cantonese film clips), an archival interview with actor Chow Yun-fat (18 minutes 14 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English, no subtitles), an archival interview with actor Tony Leung (11 minutes 2 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English, no subtitles), American Cinematheque 2025 Q&A with John Woo (37 minutes 57 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English, no subtitles), and an archival documentary titled The Test of Time, featuring interviews with John Woo, Terence Chang, editor David Wu and actor/stunt coordinator Philip Kwok (75 minutes 50 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English and Cantonese with text in French and removable English subtitles).
Other extras include a reversible cover art, a double-sided foldout poster, six postcard-sized art cards, a chipboard slipcase, a slipcover, and a 40-page booklet with cast & crew information, an essay titled The Legend of Hard Boiled written by Priscilla Page, an archival writing titled Bullet Ballet written by Stéphane Moïssakis, an archival interview with John Woo conducted by Stéphane Moïssakis, and information about the transfer.
Summary:
John Woo’s run of six films from A Better Tomorrow to Hard Boiled are among some of the best action films ever made. After Hard Boiled, John Woo, like many of his contemporaries, would leave Hong Kong and go to Hollywood to make movies. While he ventured into Hollywood filmmaking, none of John Woo's Hollywood projects could ever compare to those six iconic films.
Inspector "Tequila" Yuen Ho-yan will do anything, even break the law, to catch Johnny Wong, the man responsible for his partner’s death. During a raid, Inspector Yuen befriends one of Johnny Wong’s men, Alan, who also just happens to be an undercover cop. Inspector Yuen and Alan decide that, by working together, they can get more accomplished as they track down the evidence that will finally bring Johnny Wong down.
Hard Boiled is a masterclass in action cinema; John Woo was in top form for his farewell (at that time) from Hong Kong cinema, and the result is a remarkable film that stands out as one of cinema’s best action films. While he departed from Hong Kong cinema following Hard Boiled, Hollywood had sought to entice him as early as after the release of The Killer, a film that is widely considered his masterpiece. Hard Boiled may not reach the same level of emotional depth The Killer does, but when it comes to action sequences, it surpasses any of John Woo's previous or subsequent films.
It is immediately clear that you are about to watch something special. In the opening setup, there is a scene at a teahouse, where undercover cops are waiting for the moment to take down the criminals. In the bottom of birdcages are guns, which characters gain access to when they break the cages. Things quickly go awry, when the moment arrives; there is a hailfire of bullets and a lot of carnage left in its wake. Although John Woo has delivered countless exemplary action pieces, this moment is arguably his most brilliant and jaw-dropping.
Throughout cinema’s history there have been several notable actor/director collaborations in which both reached their greatest successes. More than any actor, audiences identify Chow Yun-Fat (City on Fire) with the cinema of John Woo, and they worked together on five films, starting with A Better Tomorrow and culminating with Hard Boiled. Chow Yun-Fat portrays "Tequila" Yuen Ho-yan, a hard-boiled police inspector who is impulsive and relies heavily on his instincts. He delivers another phenomenal performance that elevates everyone around him.
The most astonishing aspect of Hard Boiled is not its action sequences but its cast and their exceptional performances. Tony Leung (Bullet in the Head) is cast opposite Chow Yun-Fat in the role of Alan, an undercover cop who is deeply embedded into the criminal underworld. His role mirrors a similar character he would portray years later in Infernal Affairs. He delivers a captivating performance that perfectly contrasts with Chow Yun-Fat’s.
Another performance of note is Anthony Wong Chau-Sang (Full Contact), who portrays Johnny Wong, a psychopath crime boss whose first reaction is to kill. No matter how many times I have seen him portray a character like Johnny Wong, it is always a delight to see him in this type of role. The most memorable performance is Philip Kwok (Five Deadly Venoms) in the role of an assassin named Mad Dog, who has a moral compass when it comes to who he will kill.
The opening setup does a superb job fleshing out all the characters. Although the front half of the narrative is more exposition-heavy, that is not to say that the latter half is just wall-to-wall action; there are several dramatic moments in the latter half that greatly add to the rising tension. At 128 minutes in length, the narrative does an excellent job moving forward and building momentum to its finale, a lengthy action set piece that’s nearly ⅓ of the running time.
Besides the aforementioned tea house sequence, there are two other action sequences of note. The first of these takes place in a warehouse, where "Tequila" witnesses a massacre at the hands of Johnny Wong’s men, and instead of calling for backup, he becomes a one-man army with an impressive arsenal of weapons. The other is the finale, which takes place in a hospital, where Johnny Wong’s weapons depot is in the basement. When it becomes clear that the police are in the hospital and have the place surrounded, Johnny Wong has his men kill everyone, including patients. This is John Woo’s biggest and most impressive action sequence of his career. That said, John Woo’s action set pieces garner a lot of attention, and yet the heart and soul of his cinema is his ability to execute emotional conflict. Ultimately, Hard Boiled is an extraordinary action film that finds a perfect blend of substance and style.
For their release, Arrow Video has added a substantial amount of new extras, including archival interviews with Chow Yun-fat and Tony Leung, a Q&A with John Woo, an archival feature-length documentary, and an archival audio commentary with John Woo and Terence Chang. In comparing the two releases, it is evident that Arrow Video’s version stands out as the superior choice over Shout! Factory’s offering. Hard Boiled gets a definitive release from Arrow Video. Highly recommended.
Note about the 4K screenshots: It is not possible to make Dolby Vision or HDR10 screenshots that faithfully match the experience of watching a film in motion on a TV. Instead of not having any screenshots, all of the 4K screenshots are m2ts taken with a MPC-HC player and lossless PNGs.
Written by Michael Den Boer