Director Renny Harlin was under immense pressure to outdo John McTiernan’s original. The result was a film that lost some of the original’s gritty realism in favor of larger explosions and more absurd set pieces. However, the workprint suggests that there was a version of Die Hard 2 that was leaner, meaner, and more psychologically brutal. For those lucky enough to have viewed the rip (usually a 4th-generation VHS transfer, later upgraded to a fuzzy digital file), the differences are immediate and jarring. Here are the most significant changes. 1. The Alternate Opening: A Different Kind of Vengeance The theatrical cut opens with John McClane (Bruce Willis) waiting for his wife Holly at the airport, watching a man get arrested for carrying a gun. It’s a slow burn.
In the golden era of home video—before directors’ cuts were sold as deluxe Blu-ray features and before deleted scenes became clickbait on YouTube—there existed a shadowy artifact sought after by only the most obsessed cinephiles and tape traders. For fans of the action genre, few items have reached the mythic status of the Die Hard 2: Die Harder workprint .
Have you seen the Die Hard 2 workprint? What differences did you notice? Share your memories of the tape-trading days in the comments.
While the theatrical cut of Renny Harlin’s 1990 sequel is a beloved, if somewhat messy, blast of Christmas Eve chaos, the workprint represents a fascinating "what if." It is a raw, unpolished, and often startlingly different version of the film that has circulated on bootleg VHS and later digital files for three decades. This article dives deep into the history, the differences, and the legacy of the Die Hard 2 workprint. To understand the value of this artifact, one must first understand the industrial process. In the late 80s and early 90s, a workprint was a rough cut assembled by the editor during principal photography. It was never meant for the public. These tapes were struck for the director, studio executives, and test audiences.