Bruce Willis went out for coffee with a buddy in Los Angeles on Thursday, following the premiere of the trailer for his movie, Paradise City.
The 67-year-old actor, who announced his retirement from performing in March due to aphasia, was seen walking in a patterned shirt, pants, and baseball cap.
The movie veteran was seen conversing with a companion as they picked up hot drinks before leaving.
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Sighting: Bruce Willis stepped out for a coffee with a friend in LA on Thursday – after the trailer for his final movie, Paradise City, was released
This comes after Bruce was reunited with his former costar John Travolta in the action-packed trailer for their upcoming film Paradise City.
The action film, which will be released on November 11, is one of several that Willis completed before his family announced in March that he was retiring from acting after being diagnosed with aphasia.
The movie also appears to be the first major collaboration between Willis and Travolta, 68, in a feature film since they starred in Quentin Tarantino’s 1994 crime classic Pulp Fiction.
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Friends: The actor, 67, who announced in March that he was retiring from acting after being diagnosed with brain condition aphasia, wore a printed shirt, jeans and a baseball cap as he walked
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Stroll: The screen legend was seen chatting to his friend as they picked up their hot drinks before heading off
New movie: This comes after Bruce was reunited with his former costar John Travolta in the action-packed trailer for their upcoming film Paradise City
Willis stars in the film as an aging bounty hunter taking on one of his most dangerous missions yet in Hawaii. After he is shot and presumed dead, his son Ryan (Blake Jenner) teams up with his father’s former partner (Stephen Dorff) to hunt down his killers, all while dealing with a sadistic crime lord (Travolta).
The trailer, which was released on Wednesday, opens with Willis on a gorgeous Hawaiian coast as he pushes a man with a black bag over his head.
Then a group of armed men suddenly drive up to a hill overlooking the beach, and Willis turns to face them with the hooded man on the ground at his feet.
‘My name is Ian Swan. This man is my prisoner!’ he shouts at the men as they train guns on him.
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Reunited and it feels so good: Paradise City is the first major collaboration between Willis and Travolta in a feature film since they starred in Quentin Tarantino’s 1994 crime classic Pulp Fiction; seen together in a behind-the-scenes photo from the Pulp Fiction set
Taking the law in his own hands: Willis plays the bounty hunter Ian Swan, who is confronted by armed men while taking a prisoner on a Hawaiian beach
Showdown: He holds a handgun to the masked man’s head, but when the men encircling them open fire, he aims his assault weapon at them and begins picking them off one by one, even though he looks to have been shot.
He holds a handgun to the masked man’s head, but when the men around them open fire, he trains his assault rifle on them and starts picking them off one by one.
Swan looks to have been shot based on a bloody circle on his white shirt, and the action cuts away, implying he did not survive the firefight.
The story shifts to his son Ryan Swan (Jenner), who meets up with Dorff’s character Robbie Cole in the intention of avenging his father.
They are also joined by a detective (Praya Lundberg), who is working on the case.
After Ryan brawls with some of the other men working with Robbie, they reach an agreement.
‘Your father and I used to work together. “He made a lot of enemies,” Robbie explains.
New blood: The action cuts to his son Ryan Swan (Blake Jenner) meeting up with Stephen Dorff’s character Robbie Cole in hopes of avenging his father
Colleagues: “Your dad and I used to work together.” “He made many enemies,” Robbie says.
‘He was tracking a great whale of a bounty,’ he says, as Travolta’s crime lord first appears on screen.
He is shown in a flashback drinking with Willis’ character.
‘Are you dangerous?’ Travolta inquired.
‘Not for my pals,’ Willis responds.
“That’s too bad, because I already have enough friends.”
Dorff’s character then says that Travolta’s character leads the “largest meth operation in the Midwest.”
Around a bonfire, Willis says that he ‘helped make Maui the international drug port,’ while Travolta is seen partying.