Cinema of Hong Kong has changed a lot over the past two decades. One thing remains unchanged is the genre Hong Kong moviegoers would never ever getting tired of, the crime-gangster or cop drama. This genre is pioneered by two great street-crime movies in 1980s i.e. John Woo’s A Better Tomorrow, and Wong Kar Wai’s As Tears Go By. The style of the latter is actually heavily adapted from Martin Scorsese’s Mean Street (1974) which depicted New York’s street crime gangster in a realistic fashion. At that time, gangster movies were still, by many, considered taboo. Nowadays, there are literally hundreds of them produced annually and unfortunately most of them are junks. This movie is not an exception, albeit it has some interesting noteworthy points.
Man (Leon Lai), and Kee (Richie Jen) are two cops from different units. They both coincide one another when the cases they handle are related. Man, an almost degenerate cop still mourned his wife’s death, cares one thing and one thing only: beat the hell out of bad guys’ asses. Kee, on the other hand is much less of an idealistic cop, who is actually abusing his authority to get money to pay off his debt even it conflicts his own responsibilities. The two initially were in a brief partnership until Man found out the rat behind the escape of a bomber criminal. And the two collide face to face.
I remember the last time, a very good Hong Kong thriller of this genre was out almost a decade ago in 2002, Infernal Affairs played very satisfyingly by Andy Lau and Tony Leung and was directed by Andrew Lau and Alan Mak. It even caught Hollywood’s eyes and manifested with a remake The Departed in 2006 by Martin Scorsese who is literally the king of this kind of films. If only Hong Kong can maintain a crime thriller like this, I would be happy to sneak out to theatre every time Hong Kong releases this kind of film. Of course in reality, movie business is just.. well .. like any other business. The producers care about profit more than any artistic motivation. Don’t get me wrong, I am not opposed to that. As a matter of fact, the fact that movies of this genre are consistently produced every year means there are a lot of built-in audiences anticipating them. But they are way too many produced arbitrarily without any notion of creative craftsmanship. And instead of relying on clever, intriguing and apt story telling, this movie relies heavily on mindless noisy actions and some bloody scenes too. This is never good. The performances of the actors don’t really help much. One plus point is that the cinematography of the picture was really good !, but the editing was like a work of an amateur.
-Mulyadi Tjoa, MIS officer @ P.T.
Freeport Indonesia-