I'm just watching
Face/Off at the moment, and it did just remind me of how awful his continuity and realism can be.
For example...
Travolta's charging towards Cage's on-rushing plane, and yet when he's forced to swerve round it, he immediately spins his armoured jeep round and keeps up with it, going faster than any of the police vehicles on its tail. That immediately destroys suspension of disbelief. (along with a set of other annoying discrepancies)
But that said, he immediately reminds me that this is larger-than-life 'locura' with the explosively ridiculous shoot out in the hanger, and he just sweeps you up in that aspect. With the massive golden sparks flying off everything, the slow-mo to flash-to-and-fro pace changes, the ludicrous near-limitlessness of the action, and the final classic face off.
I saw most of
Bullet in the Head the other day, which reaffirmed this feeling of aggravatingly jarring continuity (which i identify with a lot of Hong Kong editing/story-telling), combined with some very smooth action. But it convinced me he's got one other thing going for him...
I thought at first that Woo couldn't handle storylines (either the emotional content or the socially-pertinant aspects), but i've decided to an extent that he can, and that his films would fail without this ability.
Bullet in the Head is a good example coz it covers some massive issues, like cultural change in Hong Kong and Vietnam in the sixties, and its influence on individuals (it helps that he had Tony leung, who's a great actor in my book).
The only other film i've seen,
MI2, at least has a reasonably 'heavy-weight' theme - i.e. the mis-use of novel technologies (and i thought the way individuals were affected by it, amongst their own emotional struggles, was pretty reasonable for an action flick.)
There are also some intriguing takes on the psyche's of cops and criminals in
Face/Off, and the leading actors are much better than the standard action flick types.
I'd say i actually forgive Woo his failings overall.
(Incidently, i've just noticed all those films have some form of disfigurement as well. Maybe that should be added to the doves 'trademark'?

)
Apparently John Woo likes to stand close to the explosions. The view is pretty good from there, and the energy's potent (just don't expect it to illuminate things with a huge amount of subtlety

).