Story Segal: Love

Hard to Kill (1990) takes this to absurd, operatic heights. Seagal plays Mason Storm, a detective shot and left for dead. He awakens from a seven-year coma (a fact the film treats with the casual logic of a dream) to find his wife has been killed. But then, into this void, steps Andy Stewart (again, Kelly LeBrock), a caring nurse who becomes his physical therapist, his partner in vengeance, and his new love. The film’s most romantic moment is quintessential Seagal: lying in a hospital bed, still learning to walk, he looks at Andy and says, with total deadpan sincerity, “I’m going to take you to bed… and I’m going to make love to you for a week.” It is not seductive. It is a threat. A promise. A bizarre, almost contractual declaration of romantic intent that only Steven Seagal could deliver without a hint of irony. The Seagal love story is rarely just between two white Americans. One of the most consistent and problematic (and therefore fascinating) threads in his filmography is the romanticization of the “exotic” Other. From Marked for Death (1990) with his Jamaican love interest, to Out for Justice (1991) where he reunites with a childhood sweetheart in his old Brooklyn neighborhood, to the truly bizarre On Deadly Ground (1994)—where he is the eco-warrior savior of an Alaskan Native woman (Joan Chen)—Seagal’s character is perpetually the strong, silent outsider who earns the love of a woman from a different, more “spiritual” culture.

The apotheosis of this is Under Siege (1992). While remembered as a pure action classic—Seagal as Casey Ryback, a Navy cook who is actually a former SEAL—it is, in its own way, a screwball romance. The love interest is Jordan Tate (a pre-fame Erika Eleniak), a Playboy Playmate brought on the battleship to surprise the crew. Their dynamic is preposterously charming. She’s in a bunny suit; he’s in a chef’s apron. She’s a bubbly, frightened civilian; he’s a monosyllabic killing machine. The romance builds not through dialogue, but through shared survival. He teaches her how to handle a gun. She provides the emotional intelligence. Their final kiss, aboard the reclaimed battleship, surrounded by burning wreckage, is the most earned romantic beat in any Seagal film. It says: I have seen you gut a man with a steak knife, and I am not afraid. Then came the fall from theatrical grace. The 2000s and 2010s saw Seagal relegated to the purgatory of direct-to-video. The budgets shrank. The waistlines expanded. The dialogue became even more minimal. But remarkably, the love story persisted. love story segal

The phrase “Steven Seagal love story” sounds like an oxymoron, a joke waiting for a punchline. And yet, throughout his filmography, from his improbable 1990s heyday to his twilight years of DTV oblivion, Seagal has consistently anchored narratives that are, at their bruised and peculiar hearts, tales of love. Not the love of Richard Curtis or Nora Ephron—no meet-cutes in bookshops or confessions atop Empire State Buildings. This is the love of a man who can snap a trachea with one hand while gently cupping a woman’s chin with the other. It is a love story told in roundhouse kicks, meaningful stares, and the quiet moments between the dismemberment of Yakuza lieutenants. Hard to Kill (1990) takes this to absurd, operatic heights

In films like The Foreigner (2003), Out of Reach (2004), and Today You Die (2005), a new formula emerged: Seagal is a grizzled, retired operative with a tragic past. He is alone. Until he meets a woman—often a prostitute, a waitress, or a single mother in trouble. The romance is transactional. He saves her from human traffickers or corrupt cops. In return, she offers him a home-cooked meal and a place to rest his weary, ponytailed head. The dialogue is sparse, mumbled, often ADR’d so poorly that his lips don’t match the words. And yet, there is a melancholic sweetness to it. These late-period Seagal love stories are about two broken people finding a low-stakes, low-energy refuge in one another. But then, into this void, steps Andy Stewart