ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,7/10
8,3 k
MA NOTE
Un gangster en fuite sacrifie tout pour sa famille et pour une femme qu'il rencontre alors qu'il est en voyage.Un gangster en fuite sacrifie tout pour sa famille et pour une femme qu'il rencontre alors qu'il est en voyage.Un gangster en fuite sacrifie tout pour sa famille et pour une femme qu'il rencontre alors qu'il est en voyage.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Prix
- 19 victoires et 34 nominations au total
Ge Hu
- Zhou Zenong
- (as Hu Ge)
Lun-Mei Gwei
- Liu Aiai
- (as Gwei Lun Mei)
Fan Liao
- Captain Liu
- (as Liao Fan)
Regina Wan
- Yang Shujun
- (as Wan Qian)
Chloe Maayan
- Ping Ping
- (as Zeng Meihuizi)
Yicong Zhang
- Xiao Dongbei
- (as Zhang Yicong)
Yongzhong Chen
- Client
- (as Chen Yongzhong)
Zhipeng Li
- Chang Zhao
- (as Li Zhipeng)
Jiahao Chang
- Cat Eye
- (as Chang Jiahao)
Jiazhuang Chang
- Cat Ear
- (as Chang Jiazhuang)
Zijie Chen
- Yang Zhilie
- (as Chen Zijie)
Qingsong Tang
- Xiao Jiang in Yellow Hair
- (as Tang Qingsong)
Xiaoxian Fu
- Hong Hong
- (as Fu Xiaoxian)
Wenyang Qiu
- The Manager of Xing Qing Du Hotel
- (as Qiu Wenyang)
Yiming Zhang
- The Son of Yang Shujun
- (as Zhang Yiming)
Avis en vedette
Rain falls hard over a remote area where a mobster-on-the-run awaits instructions from a mysterious woman; the camera captures the dazzling, stylish and inventive visions of director Diao Yinan as he opens this action-packed thriller demonstrating how poetically he conceives a scene. Bleeding, hurt and wanted, Zenong has wrongly shot a cop, while on a competition with other gangster families, in order to claim control over the drug/theft most profitable streets. Aiai is a hustler and "bath lover"- a Chinese modern version of prostitution- who is working on both sides, struggling to survive as a mediatior on the bloodshed war between the gangsters' families and the police seeking to avenge their colleague. As they wait for their next move, they both narrate in flashbacks the circumnstances prior, when the street war sparkled a revolution on the local criminal business. An electrifying, fast-paced, ultra violent and seductive neo-noir thriller, Yinan obviously understands of visual techniques, conceiving each frame as a piece of art in movement, with lyrical, glamorous observations on the details, on the silent moments embracing the unexpected, the subtle eroticism, the rain, the neon lights on the roads, but most impressively how he extracts poetry from the bloody confrontations and its uncontrollable shootings. Addressing male rivalry and dominance, pride and greed, it's a riveting, visually-arresting and superbly crafted mobster-on-bikes tale.
Gang warfare in Wuhan in this highly stylized Chinese gangster movie. There isn't a great deal that's new about Yi'nan Diao's "The Wild Goose Lake". Walter Hill, Jean-Pierre Melville or more recently Michael Mann could have made this but Diao's use of flashbacks to propel the story and his superb use of locations certainly give this an edge. Despite the fatalistic tone it's hardly what you would call existential despite moving at a fairly leisurely pace. The plot isn't always easy to follow and sometimes it's hard to know who belongs to whose gang or who's a cop and who isn't.
As a cop killer on the run, Ge Hu is as cool as they come; in another lifetime Delon or Belmondo might have played this part and Lun-Mei Kwei is excellent as the film's femme fatale. In the end there is more atmosphere than action and the film's look finally overwhelms its content but it's great that in this day and age this kind of gangster film is being made and that China has taken such a fundamentally American genre and twisted it to its own ends.
As a cop killer on the run, Ge Hu is as cool as they come; in another lifetime Delon or Belmondo might have played this part and Lun-Mei Kwei is excellent as the film's femme fatale. In the end there is more atmosphere than action and the film's look finally overwhelms its content but it's great that in this day and age this kind of gangster film is being made and that China has taken such a fundamentally American genre and twisted it to its own ends.
Hu Ge plays Zhou Zenong, an ex-con and a leader of a minor crime family mostly specializing in motorcycle thefts. Unfortunately, a quarrel with another crime family has him accidentally shoot a police officer, mistaking the man for one of his enemies. Now he's on the run and ends up near Wild Goose Lake, a lake resort known for its prostitutes. You can definitely disappear in a place like that. But does he manage to pull it off?
The story revolves around Zhou and Liu Aiai (Gwei Lun-mei), one of the local prostitutes, whose pimp is a known associate of Zhou's. Liu is made to contact Zhou because she's not immediately known to the police, and the rest evolves from that.
If I had to describe the style of the film, I'd say it's a weird mixture of John Woo and Kim Ki-duk. With more emphasis on Kim. It definitely wants to be a crime thriller, but it's very slow and thoughtful about it. The film has this serenity to it. People are in a rush, it's a tense situation, but there are still moments just to have a conversation or to get lost in your thoughts. Have a moment of introspection.
Until the film decides it's time for the final action scene, when all bets are suddenly off. It's a jarring mixture to say the least, but I can't say I minded it.
If I had to name one flaw, I'd say the plot is a touch meandering. The slow style works surprisingly well, but whenever the story needs to move forward, it takes a while to do so and jumps through a few hoops too many.
Still, if you're looking for a Chinese crime drama, you could do a lot worse.
The story revolves around Zhou and Liu Aiai (Gwei Lun-mei), one of the local prostitutes, whose pimp is a known associate of Zhou's. Liu is made to contact Zhou because she's not immediately known to the police, and the rest evolves from that.
If I had to describe the style of the film, I'd say it's a weird mixture of John Woo and Kim Ki-duk. With more emphasis on Kim. It definitely wants to be a crime thriller, but it's very slow and thoughtful about it. The film has this serenity to it. People are in a rush, it's a tense situation, but there are still moments just to have a conversation or to get lost in your thoughts. Have a moment of introspection.
Until the film decides it's time for the final action scene, when all bets are suddenly off. It's a jarring mixture to say the least, but I can't say I minded it.
If I had to name one flaw, I'd say the plot is a touch meandering. The slow style works surprisingly well, but whenever the story needs to move forward, it takes a while to do so and jumps through a few hoops too many.
Still, if you're looking for a Chinese crime drama, you could do a lot worse.
When I saw Wong Kar-Wai's "In the Mood for Love"(2000) with Maggie Cheung - I knew we were watching a completely new cinema that would one day self-realise into epic cinema ~ epic Chinese cinema. And I have now seen that realisation in The Wild Goose Lake. This film is like a cross between Godard's Breathless and de Sica's Bicycle Thieves - and is so satisfying you could watch it upside down. It is possibly the grittiest film I have ever seen, with the urgency and cinematic style of French cinema of the 1960s - where the possibilities are endless and every new film in this genre will be waited for in anticipation.
I have to say I was really disappointed with this . It was recommended as sleazy Noir movie but I just found it dull.
There is only so much I can take of people chain smoking and looking moody .
Fleeing from the law, gangster Zenong Zhou crosses paths with an innocent-looking woman named Aiai Liu . Unbeknownst to Zhou, she holds a significant secret. Zhou must then confront the limits of what he is willing to sacrifice both for this stranger and for the family he left behind.
As well as being as dull as dishwater , the characters we're uninspiring and I couldn't care less what happened to them . There were too many people getting involved with finding Zhou and it diluted any interest I might have.
The one good thing is that it looked great . Set at night , the scenery is fantastic . There is something about the back streets of China that look great on the big screen but sadly that's the only positive and I'm sure by tomorrow I will have forgotten about most of this film .
Fleeing from the law, gangster Zenong Zhou crosses paths with an innocent-looking woman named Aiai Liu . Unbeknownst to Zhou, she holds a significant secret. Zhou must then confront the limits of what he is willing to sacrifice both for this stranger and for the family he left behind.
As well as being as dull as dishwater , the characters we're uninspiring and I couldn't care less what happened to them . There were too many people getting involved with finding Zhou and it diluted any interest I might have.
The one good thing is that it looked great . Set at night , the scenery is fantastic . There is something about the back streets of China that look great on the big screen but sadly that's the only positive and I'm sure by tomorrow I will have forgotten about most of this film .
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film was shot in Wuhan dialect, instead of Standard Mandarin. Hence, most of Chinese audiences, like all foreign audiences, actually have to read the subtitles in order to understand what the characters are saying.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 774: Best of the Best + Holidate (2020)
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- How long is The Wild Goose Lake?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Озеро диких гусей
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 12 573 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 4 573 $ US
- 8 mars 2020
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 31 064 835 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 53m(113 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.90 : 1
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