| Index | 2 reviews in total |
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Okay Spy Film/Spoof, 1 March 2009
![]()
Author:
crossbow0106 from United States
This film is a style over substance film. You get two beautiful stars in Shu Qi and Tien Hsin playing agents and Patrick Tam as a commercial director looking to woo Julia (Ms. Qi) for his new commercial and himself. This is a film you can't take too seriously, as there is some utter nonsense in it. However, it looks great, its a very vibrant film. The outdoor shots of Hong Kong are well filmed and the story is okay. The last twenty minutes are the best part of the film, up to then it somewhat meanders. If you want to see Shi Qi in a better film watch "Milennium Mambo", even if that film is decidedly not funny. Sandra Ng is in this, always welcome, but not for very long. So, if you like Shu Qi and/or Patrick Tam, check this out but don't expect profundity. They churn these films out in the U.S. all the time with an eye on the profit margin. If you're not a fan of three mentioned actors this is otherwise not essential viewing.
Enjoyable spy-action-comedy-romance, 19 July 2008
![]()
Author:
gridoon2012
Patrick Tam plays James, a director of TV commercials who becomes
infatuated with Julia, a mysterious woman he happens to notice walking
across the street one day (and since Julia is played by Shu Qi, who can
blame him?). She is actually a high-tech industrial spy, and plans to
quit the service after completing one more mission, with the help of
her new partner Candy (Tien Hsin). When the women realize that they
have been set up, James tries to help them and the initially hostile
Julia begins warming up to him.
The hero's name, the trailer, even the DVD cover seem to suggest that
this film is a James Bond spoof. It is not (James never becomes an
agent, amateur or professional). It is a combination of comedy (it did
make me laugh at a couple of points, usually when James' two horny
buddies were involved), spy movie (Mission: Impossible - style), action
and romance. It manages to keep a generally good balance between all
those different ingredients. But let's be honest, the main reason this
works is the cast: Shu Qi has a role that plays on her glamour, and she
looks incredible in several shots. But Tien Hsin is arguably even
better (and arguably even more beautiful; inarguably bustier),
delivering a pitch-perfect performance as a seemingly airheaded woman
who turns out to be quite the competent and serious agent when the need
arises. Although some may disagree, I found her character EXTREMELY
likable. It's an enjoyable film, and do sit through the closing
credits: they will leave you with a smile on your face. (**1/2)
| Ratings | External reviews | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |