The Raid DVD
Mei Ah
Regie:
Laufzeit:
100 Minuten
FSK:
ab 18 Jahre
Mehr Infos:
EAN:
4890391103260
Ton:
Dolby Digital 5.1
Sprache:
Kantonesisch/Mandarin
Land:
China
Jahr:
1991
The Raid
This wartime action-comedy from Tsui Hark and Ching Siu-Tung is set in 1930s China during the occupation of Manchuria. Plot: Lt. Mong (Paul Chu) leads a rebel squad to derail some poison gas, but he gets unlikely help from old Dr. Choy (Dean Shek), a retired soldier whose wisdom and energy prove to be an inspiration to the downtrodden Chinese. Also, he tags along because he resents being called old. Along for the ride: a couple of gang bosses (Corey Yuen, Jacky Cheung), some kids, a feisty double agent (Fennie Yuen) and lots of shtick. The bad guys: Tony Leung Ka-Fai in a fun turn as a villain, and Joyce Godenzi as a sexy Kawashima Yoshiko.
Based on some popular comics at the time, and the filmmakers make sure you know through their transitions: annoying animated page turning that looks like an Ah Ha video. This was probably a New Year’s Comedy of sorts, as the wacky comedy and all-star cast are earmarks of typical New Year fluff. A harmless and enjoyable film, it proves to be better than Ching Siu-Tung’s later, similar effort Dr. Wai in “The Scripture with no Words.” Strangely, some of the comedy is pretty funny instead of being annoying, and the whole cast is a delight. This is even true for Dean Shek, who overacted so miserably in A Better Tomorrow Part 2 that he threatened to destroy mankind. A Hong Kong product all the way. Fluffy but fun.
Based on some popular comics at the time, and the filmmakers make sure you know through their transitions: annoying animated page turning that looks like an Ah Ha video. This was probably a New Year’s Comedy of sorts, as the wacky comedy and all-star cast are earmarks of typical New Year fluff. A harmless and enjoyable film, it proves to be better than Ching Siu-Tung’s later, similar effort Dr. Wai in “The Scripture with no Words.” Strangely, some of the comedy is pretty funny instead of being annoying, and the whole cast is a delight. This is even true for Dean Shek, who overacted so miserably in A Better Tomorrow Part 2 that he threatened to destroy mankind. A Hong Kong product all the way. Fluffy but fun.