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Nice glimpse of the great days of Hong Kong film., 31 July 2006
Author:
Mozjoukine (Mozjoukine@yahoo.com.au) from Australia
When this film surfaced, the Hong Kong studios were good for a couple
of notable films a week - sad contrast to their post take-over output.
It seemed that Chow Yun-fat was in most of those. He aged on the screen
in front of us.
In this one, he pulls the trick familiar with the earlier generation of
the Colony's stars and, having done his piece in the beginning, only
re-appears for the big finale. Another actor plays the character as a
student, with Chow showing up with Temples silvered - and still
registering in his small footage. His reaction, at feeling the pistol
held at his head, is vintage Chow.
Without him, the piece would still be interesting, dealing with Chinese
students studying in pre-WW2 Japan, where they are held in contempt.
The non macho Yu Tat-fu appears to lose the girl to his kendo adept
friend but all is not what it seems.
The thirties Japanese setting is particularly effective, with striking
images of the heroine under her parasol on the old bridges and framed
in the trees round the pagoda. The distinction made between Chinese and
Chinaman is intriguing.
Performanmces are adequate but, while still repaying attention, the
piece feels too rushed to be a major work. It leaves this old Chinatown
hand bathed in nostalgia for the great days of their Cinemas.
A CVD copy has the original film sub-titles which are near illegible on
many scenes.
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