Showing posts with label richie ren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label richie ren. Show all posts

Saturday, February 3, 2024

Fierce Cop (2022)

Original title: 烈探

Super cop Zhang Tu (Richie Ren) is a third generation Chinese policeman in an unnamed Southeast Asian country. Zhang is trying his best as a single dad, and is certainly doing pretty well by movie cop standards. Alas, when he arrests the rapist idiot son of a drug and slave trade lord, said lord kidnaps Zhang’s son and brings him over the boarder into another unnamed country that isn’t supposed to be Thailand at all, no sir.

Our hero does of course take off in pursuit where his colleagues can’t help him – though his boss is actually as helpful as he can be, in what is a confusing twist for a movie about an angry cop. Zhang is, however, assisted by one of the women (Chen Yao) the bad guys ferry back and forth over various boarders to work in nightclubs.

In fact, he already knows her from the accidental nightclub raid and rapist son arrest, which does set up the two pieces of character development in the movie – her regaining her courage, and Zhang learning that moral uppitiness isn’t a fair reaction to sex workers.

On the character front, there really is very little else worth mentioning going on here. This already brings us to the main problem with Chen Tai-Li’s Fierce Cop – a script that’s really not very good at finding appropriate connective tissue between action sequences, and goes for some kind of mildly socially conscious melodrama that never hits because the material is so underwritten. The script is also cursed with one of the banes of my movie existence – flashbacks to scenes that happened about ten minutes earlier, suggesting filmmakers that believe their audience to have the memories of house flies. Also pretty bad is Fierce Cop’s insane unwillingness to even attempt to plot properly. Instead is uses coincidence as the main driving force of much of its plot. In an interesting turn of events, the film also goes out of its way to make its ending uniquely unsatisfying for reasons of what I can only assume is sheer laziness, first setting up the kind of anti-climax that undermines the impact of the pretty damn great climactic fight, to then eventually trundle into a happy end of sheer, idiotic coincidence, because, to speak with the movie “good things happen to good people”. To which one might also reply, “on what planet?”.

All of this is particularly irritating since the action scenes – action directed and most probably choreographed by Kenji Tanigaki - are genuinely great, full of clever uses of improvised weaponry, and a genuine feel of physical impact. Ren seems fully engaged in the action, showing screen fighting skills I can’t remember him having displayed before, though I could be wrong there. There’s an effective rawness to the action but also enough imagination to never let it devolve into “realistic” fighting.

In fact, the fight scenes are so good, it’s worth it wading through the rest of the film for them.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

In short: Punished (2011)

Law Wing-Cheong's thriller drama about a gangster-ish businessman's (Anthony Wong in a pleasantly subtle mood) vengeance on the kidnappers and killers of his daughter by the hand of his ex-triad member bodyguard (Richie Jen, The Artist Formerly Known As Richie Ren) is one of those films I wish I'd have enjoyed more than I actually did.

There's nothing particularly wrong with the movie. In fact, Law's direction is slick and rather tight in its minimalist commercial way (and does prefer the blue contemporary movie standard palette to the piss-coloured one, which may be ugly and very unoriginal but at least isn't an attack on my eyes), Wong's and Ren's performances are pretty great, and I do respect what Law is trying to do inside the parameters of the vengeance movie: namely putting the redemption of the vengeance-seeking anti-hero at a point in the narrative where he actually hasn't killed all of his enemies but does in fact need to show empathy instead of the more typical self-pity after the fact. Alas, it's also at that point and the narrative beats surrounding it where my main problem with Punished lies. The violence that comes before doesn't pack enough of a punch to actually make the viewer feel much about it at all, neither loathing nor excitement nor the typical-for-the-genre combination of both, making it difficult to share the emotional development of Wong's character. Wong's physical distance to the actual acts of violence perpetrated in his name - with the exception of the first one, which isn't a planned murder - doesn't help much here; even though he is factually more than a bystander, Wong never feels like an actual participant in the acts that are supposed to change him. It's well and good to give Ren his own character arc concerning the reasons for letting himself do what he does for Wong, but in the end, his character only ever does what he's told, never making his own decisions about his acts.

It does not improve this aspect of the movie that the redemptive ending is way too pat. Obviously, the two men with a history with problems with their own children will have to decide if they can execute a mother in front of her child or not, making redemption a pretty damn easy thing to achieve for them. I know, it's probably supposed to be karma, etc., and so on, and so forth, but mostly, it feels like rather lazy writing that tries to have things the easy way.

It's a bit of a shame really, because the acting performances would have deserved a stronger, more daring, script.