Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueJournalist Ye Pan is looking for the truth behind a puzzling double fall. During her investigation, she reports nurse Li Yue and mother You Xi as suspects, which triggers public outcry and t... Tout lireJournalist Ye Pan is looking for the truth behind a puzzling double fall. During her investigation, she reports nurse Li Yue and mother You Xi as suspects, which triggers public outcry and the situation gradually gets out of control.Journalist Ye Pan is looking for the truth behind a puzzling double fall. During her investigation, she reports nurse Li Yue and mother You Xi as suspects, which triggers public outcry and the situation gradually gets out of control.
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The film Malice is about a news reporter who is investigating the supposed murder case of a 10 year old cancer patient and her nurse after they both plummet to their death from the roof a hospital.
Although the film at times feels like a made for television special, it did have it's moments of intrigue. The first half could use some time to breathe as I felt it flash fowarded the story quite a bit, instead of allowing the audience to feel the emotional weight of the situation.
However, the second half does have enough of said weight to make the journey, and the outcome, feel like the trip was worth it. The film also features enough twists in it's story to keep the audience going and gives them something to chew on after it's conclusion.
Overall, not a bad release. I found myself becoming more invested in the story through the second half and the outcome made some very good points on how the media affects the public's opinion and the responsibility journalists have to keep the story straight. I would recommend this one to fans of Chinese dramas and to up-and-coming journalists, for it has a good moral lesson to teach about the dangers of telling just one side of the coin.
3.5 investigations out of 5.
Although the film at times feels like a made for television special, it did have it's moments of intrigue. The first half could use some time to breathe as I felt it flash fowarded the story quite a bit, instead of allowing the audience to feel the emotional weight of the situation.
However, the second half does have enough of said weight to make the journey, and the outcome, feel like the trip was worth it. The film also features enough twists in it's story to keep the audience going and gives them something to chew on after it's conclusion.
Overall, not a bad release. I found myself becoming more invested in the story through the second half and the outcome made some very good points on how the media affects the public's opinion and the responsibility journalists have to keep the story straight. I would recommend this one to fans of Chinese dramas and to up-and-coming journalists, for it has a good moral lesson to teach about the dangers of telling just one side of the coin.
3.5 investigations out of 5.
There's something about Malice that creeps in quietly and sits with you. It is not loud. It is not violent. It does not need to be. This is not a thriller built on explosions or chase scenes. It is a slow, quiet burn of truths unraveling, of guilt sinking, of moral lines being crossed one inch at a time.
At the centre of it all is Ye Pan, played with nuance by Zhang Xiao Fei. She is a journalist chasing answers after the tragic murder of a child cancer patient and her nurse. From the start, this is not just a whodunit, it is a why-did-it-happen and how-did-we-let-it-happen. The crime itself is painful, the kind that makes your stomach drop and your hands clench. And as we follow Ye Pan deeper into the maze of interviews, lies and uncomfortable truths, it becomes clear that the real horror here lies not in monsters or murderers, but in what ordinary people are capable of especially when they think no one is watching.
The pacing is steady and layered. The story doesn't sprint but it doesn't dawdle either. It peels back bit by bit, one truth leading to another. But the real challenge comes in the dialogue. It's fast and furious. You need extra dose of focus for you to concentrate and follow the story because there are a lot of arguments, debates, speculations and expositions amongst the characters. It's interesting but it can sometimes overfeed the audience which will make it a bore like you're reading a police crime report with lots of info. And yet, there is something fascinating about how the film never underestimates your intelligence.
Zhang Xiao Fei carries much of the weight here. Her character is not always likeable. She's stubborn, obsessive and ca sometimes be harsh but that's what makes her feel real. There's tension in every decision she makes as she struggles with professional integrity, public pressure, and personal doubt. Her performance does not ask you to root for her. It asks you to understand her.
The film explores modern themes including the ethics of journalism, the dangerous ripple effects of virality, the damage a single post can cause to someone's life. It holds a mirror to our social media behaviours and asks uncomfortable questions. Have we ever rushed to judge someone online? Have we contributed to a digital witch hunt without thinking twice? It makes us think how if we've all done malicious things on social media, if we have indirectly contributed to the downfall of a person, diminishing a person's reputation through spreading hate on social media or how far we would go to be unethical just to get the job done. It makes us reflect our past doings.
Where Malice falters is in its final act. The twist arrives with a bang but instead of elevating the story, it feels like a detour. It focuses on its shock value. It is not awful but it does dilute the grounded tone the film worked so hard to build. There is also some repetition in the investigation. The main character can sometimes be back and forth with its suspects, interviewing the same people twice or dealing with trust issues with the same people many times. It can be draining even for a 100-minute long film.
Verdict: Malice is a patient, cerebral thriller that dives deep into the ethics of truth and the weight of speculation. While its twisty third act and info-heavy dialogues may overwhelm some, its exploration of modern media culture is striking and important. Zhang Xiao Fei delivers a compelling performance in a story that reminds us that the most dangerous weapon might just be a headline. This one will stay with you and make you think after the credits roll.
At the centre of it all is Ye Pan, played with nuance by Zhang Xiao Fei. She is a journalist chasing answers after the tragic murder of a child cancer patient and her nurse. From the start, this is not just a whodunit, it is a why-did-it-happen and how-did-we-let-it-happen. The crime itself is painful, the kind that makes your stomach drop and your hands clench. And as we follow Ye Pan deeper into the maze of interviews, lies and uncomfortable truths, it becomes clear that the real horror here lies not in monsters or murderers, but in what ordinary people are capable of especially when they think no one is watching.
The pacing is steady and layered. The story doesn't sprint but it doesn't dawdle either. It peels back bit by bit, one truth leading to another. But the real challenge comes in the dialogue. It's fast and furious. You need extra dose of focus for you to concentrate and follow the story because there are a lot of arguments, debates, speculations and expositions amongst the characters. It's interesting but it can sometimes overfeed the audience which will make it a bore like you're reading a police crime report with lots of info. And yet, there is something fascinating about how the film never underestimates your intelligence.
Zhang Xiao Fei carries much of the weight here. Her character is not always likeable. She's stubborn, obsessive and ca sometimes be harsh but that's what makes her feel real. There's tension in every decision she makes as she struggles with professional integrity, public pressure, and personal doubt. Her performance does not ask you to root for her. It asks you to understand her.
The film explores modern themes including the ethics of journalism, the dangerous ripple effects of virality, the damage a single post can cause to someone's life. It holds a mirror to our social media behaviours and asks uncomfortable questions. Have we ever rushed to judge someone online? Have we contributed to a digital witch hunt without thinking twice? It makes us think how if we've all done malicious things on social media, if we have indirectly contributed to the downfall of a person, diminishing a person's reputation through spreading hate on social media or how far we would go to be unethical just to get the job done. It makes us reflect our past doings.
Where Malice falters is in its final act. The twist arrives with a bang but instead of elevating the story, it feels like a detour. It focuses on its shock value. It is not awful but it does dilute the grounded tone the film worked so hard to build. There is also some repetition in the investigation. The main character can sometimes be back and forth with its suspects, interviewing the same people twice or dealing with trust issues with the same people many times. It can be draining even for a 100-minute long film.
Verdict: Malice is a patient, cerebral thriller that dives deep into the ethics of truth and the weight of speculation. While its twisty third act and info-heavy dialogues may overwhelm some, its exploration of modern media culture is striking and important. Zhang Xiao Fei delivers a compelling performance in a story that reminds us that the most dangerous weapon might just be a headline. This one will stay with you and make you think after the credits roll.
This movie is not about suspense or mystery at all but aimed solely at lecturing the viewers. This movie makes you feel like being treated as a kindergarten kid who needs to be told the basics of right and wrong, in a didactic and patronizing way. The protagonist keeps verbalizing the moral of the movie ad nauseam and many supporting characters are portrayed in a repetitive manner. I don't know about others but I personally didn't pay for a holier-than-thou lecture disguised as a movie.
While the plot was entertaining to some degree, many parts of the story was too cliché and even cringy. There was a shot of a character turning to the camera (or the audience) and raise a question, and that shot was highly anticipated by anyone who has basic theatre literacy.
While the plot was entertaining to some degree, many parts of the story was too cliché and even cringy. There was a shot of a character turning to the camera (or the audience) and raise a question, and that shot was highly anticipated by anyone who has basic theatre literacy.
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 41 889 $US
- Durée
- 1h 40min(100 min)
- Couleur
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