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4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Andy Lau is a Fine "Con Man", 25 July 1999
Author:
gerrytwo from Queens, NY
In "The Con Man," Andy Lau's usually impassive personality is just right
for
playing the role of King, a sharper who falls on hard times after his
attempt to cheat a gangster at cards goes awry. When he gets out of
prison
after five years, his hair is a little whiter, his wife and child gone and
his future dim. Whether the movie deals with King's associate, "Skinny
Dragon" and his problem with a crooked cop nicknamed "Eastwood," or his
associate's beautiful sister's (Athena Chu) problem with her boyfriend,
the
movie always stays interesting. The end, involving fixing the
transmission
of the World Cup soccer championship to a gambler's boat, has to be seen
to
be believed. While there is plenty of comedy on this movie, there is also
some violence, especially at the start. This movie was popular enough
that
a sequel, "The Con Man in Las Vegas," is being filmed now. Charles Heung,
the producer, has enough pull to be allowed to film for the first time in
Caesars's Palace, according to a news report. Hmmm, maybe the other news
reports linking Heung and his brother to the HK Triads are accurate.
"The Con Man" is a great starring vehicle for Andy Lau.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Great fun, but essentially worthless, 30 January 2000
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Author:
Libretio
THE CONMAN (Du Xia 1999)
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Sound format: Mono
Following their collaboration on the eminently watchable A TRUE MOB
STORY (1998), director Wong Jing and star Andy Lau re-teamed almost
immediately for THE CONMAN, a variation on the hugely successful "God
of Gamblers" series. Here, Lau plays a ruthless card-sharp who's jailed
for killing a mobster after being caught cheating during a routine card
game. Upon his release five years later, a repentant Lau is targeted by
the dead man's equally vicious brother (Waise Lee) and forced to play
for big money against a notoriously successful gambler during a contest
which revolves around the outcome of the 1998 World Cup (!). In the
meantime, while searching for the wife and child he abandoned after
landing in jail, Lau is given refuge by a loyal - though somewhat
dim-witted - admirer (Nick Cheung) who is determined to learn the
tricks of the gambling trade. And just to complicate matters, Lau finds
himself unable to resist his feelings for Cheung's protective older
sister (Athena Chu)...
Not an action film per se, THE CONMAN proceeds at a rapid clip whilst
never really moving into first gear, perhaps because it foregoes
elaborate set-pieces in favor of character-driven tableaux. Lau coasts
through the film largely on autopilot (hardly surprising, given the
material) and allows himself to be upstaged throughout by Cheung, who
parlays the role of lovable buffoon into something quite distinctive
through sheer force of personality. But the climactic card game -
during which Lau and his cohorts attempt to deceive their opponents by
rigging the satellite transmission of an alternative World Cup Final -
lurches wildly from drama to comedy and back again, and hinges around
such a ridiculous sequence of events that the entire film is completely
derailed. Perversely, this ludicrous episode is also side-splittingly
funny, with Cheung playing multiple roles (including the women!) during
a series of fake commercial breaks which are designed to make it look
as though Brazil won the Cup (don't ask me to explain why - you
wouldn't believe me if I tried!). Having thus abandoned all
credibility, the film has nowhere else to go. Ben Ng (RED TO KILL) and
Karel Wong (THE JAIL OF NO RETURN) are featured in the supporting cast
as a couple of vicious thugs, though neither of these fine actors is
billed in the English-language credits.
(Cantonese dialogue)
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