Definitely a Christmas movie
Debate Rules
AI scores every argument. Team with higher total wins. Stronger arguments bring more points. Pick your side, share your argument and help your team win.
Debate topic:
Is Die Hard a Christmas movie?
It's an action movie that happens at Christmas
Definitely a Christmas movie Team
It's an action movie that happens at Christmas Team
Debate Rules
AI scores every argument. Team with higher total wins. Stronger arguments bring more points. Pick your side, share your argument and help your team win.
Definitely a Christmas movie
The test for whether something is a Christmas movie isn't whether Christmas is the subject — it's whether Christmas is essential to the story. Die Hard passes that test completely. The entire plot is contingent on the Nakatomi Christmas party. John McClane is in Los Angeles specifically because he flew out for Christmas to reconcile with his wife. The antagonists chose Christmas Eve as their cover. The Christmas setting provides the building's unusual occupancy pattern that the heist depends on. Remove Christmas from Die Hard and you don't have Die Hard.
The Roger Ebert test: if you feel festive watching it in December, it's a Christmas movie. Die Hard absolutely passes this test. There's Christmas music throughout. 'Now I have a machine gun, Ho Ho Ho' is one of the most iconic Christmas images in film. People annually rewatch it specifically in December as part of their Christmas season ritual. The cultural function it serves is the same function It's a Wonderful Life serves. Function over form.
Bruce Willis said in a 2018 interview it's not a Christmas movie. Then he said at a comedy roast that it is. He literally can't decide. I'm choosing to believe the version where it's a Christmas movie because that's more fun.
The 'Ho Ho Ho' note written in Hans Gruber's blood is the single most Christmas image in cinema. That moment only exists because it's Christmas. The movie is structurally built on Christmas — the isolation of the building, McClane's emotional journey to reconnect with his family, the party that puts everyone in the right place. This isn't background decoration. Christmas is the load-bearing wall.
It's an action movie that happens at Christmas
Genre classification exists for a reason and Die Hard is an action thriller. The fact that the setting is Christmas doesn't change the genre any more than Batman Begins being set partly in winter makes it a winter movie. Christmas is the backdrop and the narrative justification for the plot. The film's central themes — masculinity, marriage breakdown, a lone hero against impossible odds, cold war tensions expressed through European terrorists — are not Christmas themes. Applying the 'anything set at Christmas is a Christmas movie' logic consistently gives you problematic results. Lethal Weapon is set at Christmas. Batman Returns is set at Christmas. Iron Man 3 is largely set at Christmas. Are we classifying all of these as Christmas movies? The moment you apply the rule consistently it becomes clear it's not a good rule.
A Christmas movie is a film that exists to evoke Christmas feeling and tell a story about Christmas themes: family, redemption, generosity, the spirit of the season. Home Alone. Elf. It's a Wonderful Life. A Christmas Carol. These films are about Christmas in a meaningful way. Die Hard is about a cop fighting terrorists. The Christmas trapping is set dressing. Great set dressing, but set dressing.
By the 'it's set at Christmas so it's a Christmas movie' logic, The Nightmare Before Christmas isn't a Christmas movie because Jack Skellington is trying to steal Christmas, not celebrate it. The classification doesn't hold under scrutiny.
calling Die Hard a christmas movie is like calling an NFT drop 'art'. the wrapper doesn't define the content gm
The strongest counter-argument to the 'Christmas is load-bearing' position: you could replace the Christmas party with a corporate gala, a New Year's Eve party, or any other large gathering that would justify the building being full of hostages. The specific holiday is interchangeable. The plot machinery doesn't require it to be Christmas — it requires a reason for the building to be occupied. Any major event accomplishes this. Therefore Christmas is incidental, not structural.