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Johnnie To

Autor(a) de The Heroic Trio [1993 film]

35 Works 159 Membros 3 Críticas

About the Author

Image credit: Henry Chan

Obras por Johnnie To

The Heroic Trio [1993 film] (1993) — Director — 16 exemplares
PTU [2003 film] (2003) 16 exemplares
Mad Detective [2007 film] (2007) 15 exemplares
Fulltime Killer [2001 film] (2001) — Director — 12 exemplares
Exiled [2006 film] (2006) 11 exemplares
Election [2005 film] (2005) 9 exemplares
Throw Down [2004 film] (2004) — Director — 8 exemplares
Drug War [2012 film] (2012) 7 exemplares
The Mission [1999 film] (1999) 7 exemplares
Running on Karma [2003 film] (2003) 7 exemplares
Election II [2006 film] (2006) 7 exemplares
Breaking News [2004 film] (2004) 5 exemplares
Running Out of Time [1999 film] (1999) — Director — 5 exemplares
Vengeance [2009 film] (2009) 4 exemplares
Three [2016 film] (2016) 3 exemplares
Sparrow [2008 film] (2008) — Director — 3 exemplares
Running Out of Time | Running Out of Time 2 — Director — 2 exemplares
Justice, My Foot! [1992 film] (1992) 2 exemplares
The Mad Monk [1993 film] (1993) — Director — 2 exemplares
Election / Election 2 2 exemplares
Running Out of Time 2 [2001 film] (2001) — Director — 1 exemplar
Office [2015 film] (2015) — Director — 1 exemplar
Triad Trilogy (2012) 1 exemplar
Love on a Diet [2001 film] (2001) 1 exemplar
Judo (Throw Down) 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome canónico
To, Johnnie
Nome legal
杜琪峰
杜琪峯
Outros nomes
To, Kei-Fung
dù, qífēng
Johnie To Kei-Fung
Data de nascimento
1955-04-22
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
Hong Kong
País (no mapa)
Hong Kong
Local de nascimento
Hong Kong
Ocupações
director
screenwriter
producer

Membros

Críticas

Sung Sai Kit is the best lawyer around, willing to take any case (as long as he’s offered plenty of money) and say anything he has to in order to win. His wife, Madam Sung, appreciates all the finery that Sung is able to buy for her, but she also superstitiously believes that Sung’s work is the reason why 12 of their 13 children have died. When their 13th child dies right after Sung’s most recent court win, Madam Sung decides she’s had enough - Sung will retire, even if she has to push him every step of the way. She even goes so far as to curse the child she’s carrying. If Sung breaks his promise and goes back to being a lawyer, then their son will be born without a penis. (They just assume it’ll be a son, since all 13 of their other children were.)

However, it’s Madam Sung herself who eventually convinces Sung to go back to work. She meets a pregnant woman whose husband died under suspicious circumstances, and she argues on the woman’s behalf after the woman gives birth and then tries to kill herself. Sung takes the job on, but the corruption he finds himself up against may be more than even he can handle.

Netflix thought I would love this, probably because I enjoyed Wing Chun, a comedy with a similar feel. Unfortunately, this was one of those times when Netflix was wrong. There were aspects of this movie that I enjoyed, but the humor generally didn’t work for me.

This was primarily a broad comedy with a bit of wire-fu mixed in. There were visual jokes (the portraits of Sung’s parents), gay jokes (two male officials were very clearly a couple, which was played entirely for laughs), fart jokes, and sexual jokes (a racy love letter read aloud in court, a boob joke, accidental drinking of breast milk, etc.). I was a bit stunned at the way the 13th son’s death was handled - lots of drama and fake-looking crying, and yet everyone seemed to be pretty much over it by the time Sung’s retirement ceremony happened. I eventually adjusted to the movie’s tone, which I realized reminded me a lot of stuff like Robin Hood: Men in Tights, but the child’s death happened fairly early on and was extremely jarring.

I didn’t like Sung very much. I wanted him to win because the widowed woman’s situation sucked, but I didn’t get the impression that he was defending her because he cared much about her, or even justice in general. This was the guy who argued that a man whose son was killed should be required to pay the medical bills of a man who hurt his pinky while killing the son.

I did like Sung and his wife as a couple, though. Not only were they openly affectionate, they made a good pair: they were both incredibly clever, and Sung had his education while his wife had her martial arts skills. The only thing I disliked, as far as their relationship went, was when Sung’s wife became extremely jealous of the woman with the murdered husband. Most of the time, though, they were a strong couple that worked well together and had faith in each other’s abilities.

All in all, this had a few good moments but wasn’t really worth watching. I did like Madam Sung, even though she (like everything else in the movie) was ridiculous. She battled people for her husband’s sake while 9 months pregnant (not physically possible, but still kind of fun to watch), refused to let him bow out of promises he made to her, tried to defend the widowed woman in court when her husband wouldn’t, even though she couldn’t really write, and generally let nothing stand in her way.

Oh, one more thing: I was pleasantly surprised at the way the penis curse turned out. I mean, I guessed what would happen the instant the curse was mentioned - it was pretty obvious. The thing that pleased me was Sung's reaction. I may not have liked the guy much, but at least his 14th child made him happy.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
… (mais)
1 vote
Assinalado
Familiar_Diversions | Jan 29, 2017 |
Andy Lau (Actor), Cecilia Cheung (Actor)
93 mins
 
Assinalado
SouthAsiaInstitute | Feb 6, 2013 |
This review has been flagged by multiple users as abuse of the terms of service and is no longer displayed (show).
 
Assinalado
snvids | Oct 3, 2007 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
35
Membros
159
Popularidade
#132,375
Avaliação
½ 3.4
Críticas
3
ISBN
11
Línguas
1

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