| Overall: | C- |
|---|---|
| Violence: | D |
| Sexual Content: | B- |
| Language: | C |
| Drugs/Alcohol: | A |
| Run Time: | 130 |
| Theater Release: | |
| Video Release: | 19 Nov 2007 |
| MPAA Rating: | |
| See Canadian Ratings | |
| How We Determine Our Grades | |
Computer criminals also create huge problems for a banking company in the movie Firewall. Another unlucky woman gets her personal life entangled in The Net.
Home Video Extra Features
Live Free or Die Hard comes to DVD in either a single (full screen theatrical cut) or double disc (widescreen, unrated and rated editions). Both versions offer an audio commentary with actor Bruce Willis, director Len Wiseman and editor Nicolas De Toth, the music video Die Hard by Guyz Nite and a behind-the-scenes with the band.
The Live Free or Die Hard Two-Disc Edition also includes Analog Hero in a Digital World (a making-of featurette), a 23 minute long conversation with actors Bruce Willis and Kevin Smith, theatrical trailers and an excerpt from the Fox Movie Channel Presents Fox Legacy. Both DVD choices provide audio tracks in English (Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1) French (Dolby Digital Surround) and Spanish (Dolby Digital Surround), with subtitles in English, French and Spanish.
Live Free or Die Hard is available in Blu-Ray as well. This format presents the PG-13 rated theatrical version of the film, all of the above mentioned special features, plus D-Box motion sensor capabilities, several high-definition trailers and the high definition BD-Java multi-level strategy game Black Hat Intercept! The disc will be authored in BD-J with AVC (MPEG 4) compression and presented on 50 GB dual-layer disc with English 5.1 DTS HD Lossless Master Audio plus English, French and Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital Sound.

Rod Gustafson has worked in various media industries since 1977. He founded Parent Previews in 1993, and today continues to write and broadcast the reviews in newspapers, on radio and (of course) on the Internet. He currently serves as the President of the Alberta Association for Media Awareness, a provincial non-profit society. He also authors a regular column for