Flash Point (Variety Review)

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Flash Point (Variety Review)

Postby dleedlee » Mon Sep 24, 2007 11:03 am

Flash Point" (Dao Huo Xian)
(Hong Kong-China)

A Mandarin Films Distribution Co./Polybona Film Distribution Co./Enlight Pictures presentation of a Mandarin Films Distribution Co. production. (International sales: Mandarin Films Distribution Co., Hong Kong.) Produced by Nansun Shi, Donnie Yen, Shan Dong Bing, Zhang Zhao. Executive producers, Raymond Wong, Yu Dong, Wang Chang Tian. Directed by Wilson Yip. Action director, Donnie Yen. Screenplay, Szeto Kam-Yuen.

With: Donnie Yen, Louis Koo, Collin Chou, Fan Bing-bing, Ray Liu, Kent Cheng, Xing Yu, Xu Qing, Xia Ping, Lin Guo Bin, Luo Lan.
(Cantonese, Mandarin dialogue)

A pall hangs over "Flash Point," the new cops-vs.-Triad entry from busy H.K. action specialists Wilson Yip and Donnie Yen, and it's only partly due to the long waits between displays of Yen's new interest in mixed martial arts. A plot defeated by creative exhaustion is matched with an attitude endorsing the sorts of tactics that suit a police state. Plainly disappointing as a well-sustained kick-butt thriller, and politically toxic, the pic opened in early August to strong Mainland B.O. and upward thumbs, and looks to perform along the lines of the duo's last hit, "SPL."

Detective Ma (Yen) begins and ends the saga, set in 1996 prior to the H.K. turnover to China, by stating (in voiceover) the simple credo, "My duty as a cop is to catch thieves." "Catching," though, hardly describes what Ma actually does. His undercover partner Wilson (Louis Koo) may have successfully worked his way inside the rising Triad gang led by Tony (Collin Chou), but given Ma's reckless approach -- he's the kind of guy who opts for running kicks to the groin over talking things through -- Wilson's cover is bound to be exposed.

Paradoxically, despite Ma's rule-breaking style and Yen's obvious gifts for waging and staging mixed martial arts (which fuses Western boxing, Muay Thai kicking and a Brazilian brand of Jujitsu), the filmmakers and screenwriter Szeto Kam-Yuen don't create enough set pieces and action blocks early enough to grab the viewer. There's barely enough onscreen in the first two acts to indicate that Yen's cop-hero has the right chop-socky stuff, which is sure to make genre auds itchy.

"Flash Point" is remarkably routine for being one of the first films to consciously promote Bruce Lee's long-held ideal of a fusion of every popular martial arts style, and offers no reason to be the slightest concerned when Wilson nearly dies, or Ma appears outgunned and outmanned, or when Tony's crew seems poised for Triad supremacy. A strained kidnap subplot finally unleashes the brand of action -- between Ma and Tony in brutal combat, at the 76-minute mark in the 87-minute-long pic -- that fans would be demanding all along.

There's nothing here offering the pleasures of "SPL's" faceoffs involving vet superstar Sammo Hung, but Yen's intensely physical approach to mixed martial arts is so visceral it will distract some from the pic's message that any method deployed by cops, no matter how illegal, is justifiable.

Camera (color, widescreen), Cheung Man-po; editor, Cheung Ka-fai; music, Chan Kwon-wing; production designer, Kenneth Mak; costume designer, Lee Pik-kwan; sound (Dolby Digital), Sam Wong; visual effects, Menfond Electronic Art & Computer Design Co.; action choreographers, Kenji Tanigaki, Yan Hua. Reviewed at Toronto Film Festival (Midnight Madness), Sept. 13, 2007. Running time: 87 MIN.

http://www.varietyasiaonline.com/content/view/4426/1/
???? Better to light a candle than curse the darkness; Measure twice, cut once.
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Mon Sep 24, 2007 4:01 pm

...but Yen's intensely physical approach to mixed martial arts is so visceral it will distract some from the pic's message that any method deployed by cops, no matter how illegal, is justifiable.


Gee, this is only the hallmark of literally dozens, possibly hundreds, of Hong Kong police actioners made in 80's and 90's :roll:. I can't imagine Koehler missed the fact that FLASH POINT is set in 1996—making it more or less wish fulfillment on the part of the filmmakers, which Wilson Yip basically admitted at the TIFF—but he seems sharp in his less-than-subtle suggestion that the film's "police state" politics got "upward thumbs" in China (even though they should be old news to anyone familiar with Hong Kong crime pictures of the era). He is kinda right about one thing: the film does take a bit too long to get to the good stuff, expecially compared to SPL. And technically, the leader of the gang is Ray Lui, not Collin Chou. Odd how many people seem to miss that.
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