Showing posts with label Well Go USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Well Go USA. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The Last Tycoon


A playground for the adventurous
Wong Jing's Hong Kong film is labeled as a crime drama, which "The Last Tycoon" certainly lives up to being. But the film also features some extremely explosive action sequences and has a rather hardcore romance element at its core. The film is constantly jumping back and forth between what's happening in the present, which takes place between 1937 and 1940, and nearly 25 years in the past. Naturally, most of the main characters are portrayed by both a more distinguished actor and a younger one.

Huang Xiaoming plays the Cheng Daqi of the past while Chow Yun-Fat is the man he grows up to be. Xiaoming does an impeccable job of portraying a young man with the undying ambition to make a name for himself. The young Cheng Daqi is always trying to prove himself nearly every time he opens his mouth. Meanwhile, Chow Yun-Fat is a bit more relaxed. He has everything he's ever wanted except for Zhiqiu (Yuan Quan) who's just walked back into his life. As the Japanese begin their...
A Lavish Chinese Gangster Melodrama: Operatic Grandeur, But Rather Thin Characterizations
Everything about the lush and beautiful gangster melodrama "The Last Tycoon" is done with visual panache and great style. An epic tale about the rise of a small town boy named Cheng Daiqi, the film has the sweep of a classic crime saga played out as an over-the-top and operatic historical set piece. Everything is big about this picture, a movie that seems to be in love with movies. Independent scenes can instantly reference other cinematic moments from a shoot-out reminiscent of "Bonnie and Clyde," to a romantic departure out of "Casablanca," to a street fight tinged with a "Singing in the Rain" vibe, to a church confrontation straight out of classic John Woo (but without the Woo doves). It is all put together with exquisite choreography, impressive effects, and a swelling soundtrack that compliments the escalating action. It's fair to say that director Wong Jing wasn't aiming for subtlety and understatement with "The Last Tycoon!" From the fight sequences, to the bombing of...
Great Film
My wife and I thoroughly enjoyed this movie, despite reading reviews which rated this movie at 6.4 on a scale from 1 to 10, I bought the blu-ray copy of this movie from Yesasia.com before it was released here in the United States, and I must say that the film is beautiful and entertaining from start to finish, Chow Yun Fat played his part well, along with the other main characters. If you enjoy Asian cinema, I will say this movie should be a must have for your collection. I rated this movie a 9 on a scale of 1 through 10.
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Monday, September 30, 2013

Drug War


Johnnie To's aggressively superb crime film
"Drug War" begins with Choi behind the wheel of a car, puking out of a window, driving recklessly, and crashing into a restaurant. That's a hell of a way to start a film. You're thrown into the drug operation in Jinhai currently run by Anti-Drug Squad leader Captain Zhang. Zhang's team is always going undercover with Sun Honglei portraying at least five different characters over the course of the film. Honglei is a chameleon and mimics body movements, facial expressions, voices, and stories of other characters in the film to near perfection.

Zhang impersonates Haha in one of the best scenes of the film during their meeting with Chang. Haha is eccentric, always boasting and bragging about his accomplishments, and has this booming laugh. Seeing Zhang, who's usually soft-spoken and laid back, take on this personality with ease, is incredible. The confrontation with Chang is intense thanks to cocaine making an appearance. The entire sequence has similar tension established in...


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