Hard Time is a 1998 American made-for-television action crime film directed by and starring Burt Reynolds.[1][2][3] This film premiered on TNT on December 13, 1998.

Hard Time
Written byDavid S. Cass Sr.
Steve Wesley
Directed byBurt Reynolds
StarringBurt Reynolds
Charles Durning
Robert Loggia
Music bySnuff Garrett
Clarke Rigsby
Kevin Stoller
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producersRobert Halmi Jr.
Scott Garen
ProducerDavid S. Cass Sr.
CinematographySuki Medencevic
EditorGlenn Farr
Running time90 minutes
Production companyLarry Levinson Productions
Original release
NetworkTNT
ReleaseDecember 13, 1998 (1998-12-13)

It is followed by two sequels, The Premonition and Hostage Hotel (both in 1999). It was always envisioned as a trilogy.[4]

Plot

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Logan McQueen, a Vietnam War veteran and Miami police officer, chases two briefcase thieves down an alley. One of the thieves knocks him down, steals his gun and shoots the other thief with it. Logan is put in prison pending investigation but his bail is provided by the mob, who expect him to return money that is missing from the stolen briefcase. Logan begins to suspect that someone in his own police department is framing him for the crimes but the mob has now given him an opportunity to seek the truth.

Cast

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Production

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Reynolds made the film after starring in Boogie Nights. He later said: "After the excitement or resurrection or finding out that I wasn't dead came out, I promised myself two things. One was that I wanted to do a major studio film (Mystery, Alaska), and the other one was that I wanted to direct - because I had a great passion for directing, and I missed it".[5]

TNT approached Reynolds with the offer to star in three television films, one of which he would direct: "This was a chance to do something that the Turner network had never done before, which was to take a few characters and put them in three movies, all of which could stand on their own but do them in a way that there would be an arc to the characters. They would change in the three films".[5]

The films were all set in Florida but shot in Los Angeles because it was cheaper. Reynolds said: "this is a film with three Oscar nominees. We had access to a lot of people who don't ordinarily do television. . . . If we had to take them to Miami, our budget would go up greatly. So that would have to be taken into account".[6]

Reynolds said he liked the film because he liked the idea of watching someone who had strong views on capital punishment change his mind. Reynolds said the character was like his father, "one of the fairest men I've ever known, but he is prejudiced about things, and that's because he spent his whole life as a policeman. He's not real good about forgiveness when someone does something illegal".[6]

Reynolds changed his character's name from Conrad Logan (as it was originally written) to Logan McQueen as a nod to the "very complicated, very underrated" Steve McQueen.[5]

Reynolds enjoyed directing: "It's the difference between being a chess player and chess pawn. Having done 300 television shows and almost 60 movies, I'm tired of having guys who are younger than some sandwiches I've had telling me to turn left at the couch. There's no appreciation of actors and no sense of history".[7]

Home media

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The film was released on DVD on August 3, 2004.[8]

Hard Time: The Premonition

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Hard Time: The Premonition is a 1999 sequel to Hard Time. It was directed by David S. Cass Sr.

Plot

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A serial bomber terrorizes the city.[9]

Cast

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Hard Time: Hostage Hotel

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Hard Time: Hostage Hotel is a 1999 American film. It is the third and last in the Hard Time series. It was also known as Hide and Seek. It was the last film to be directed by Hal Needham before his death in 2013.

Plot

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Though they have not yet made up with each other, Duffy convinces Logan to help him catch fugitive Sy Harkin. The rescue goes wrong, ending in a gunfight and leaving Flynn and Duffy seeking another paying job.

As Congressman Robert Sinclair is giving a speech in the ballroom of an old hotel that is being renovated, his wife Susan and daughter Justine are taken hostage by Vietnam vets Flynn and Kenny, who blows up the ballroom and kills the audience, though Sinclair escapes. Flynn demands to negotiate through Duffy, who helped him out of jail in the past.

The FBI attempt to rescue Sinclair's family but are killed by various booby traps in the hotel. Duffy safely follows instructions from Flynn to the meeting point but is knocked out when Flynn discovers that he is wearing a wire. Logan arrives to see Susan's aide thrown to her death from a hotel window. Higgs obtains weapons and he and Logan infiltrate the hotel through a basement window, but are overheard by the FBI and the criminals as they are communicating with Captain Waters on a walkie-talkie channel.

Logan breaks into the room as Flynn is about to throw Justine out the window. Duffy shoots Kenny and Logan chases Flynn through the tunnels under the hotel, navigating a series of booby traps marked in Vietnamese. Logan offers to get Flynn help for his trauma from war but Flynn refuses and blows himself up, though Logan manages to dive and save himself and Justine.

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References

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  1. ^ Ray Richmond (December 10, 1998). "Review: 'Hard Time'". Variety. Retrieved October 6, 2015.
  2. ^ Steven Linan (December 12, 1998). "Reynolds' 'Hard Time' Gives Viewers a Rather Difficult Time". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 6, 2015.
  3. ^ "Hard Time". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved March 7, 2016.
  4. ^ CABLE ON THE ATTACK BIG, AMBITIOUS PROGRAMMING RIPPLES ACROSS CABLE: Staci D. Kramer. Special to the Tribune.. Chicago Tribune 27 Sep 1998: 5.
  5. ^ a b c "Burt Reynolds sounds amazed when he talks about the audience Heldenfels", R. D., The Charleston Gazette, 12 Dec 1998: 5C.
  6. ^ a b Burt's back, doing 'Hard Time' Jefferson, Graham. USA Today, 10 Dec 1998: 03D.
  7. ^ REYNOLDS IS DAD SOLID PERFECT, Givens, Ron, New York Daily News, 11 Dec 1998: 160.
  8. ^ "Hard Time". Amazon.com. Retrieved March 7, 2016.
  9. ^ Brothers Clash in 'Summer's End', Martie Zad, Washington Post Staff Writer, 8 Feb 1999: BR4.
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