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Hung sau dou (2017)

GENRESDrama
LANGCantonese,Mandarin,Japanese
ACTOR
Stephy TangChapman ToYasuaki KurataStephen Au
DIRECTOR
Chapman To

SYNOPSICS

Hung sau dou (2017) is a Cantonese,Mandarin,Japanese movie. Chapman To has directed this movie. Stephy Tang,Chapman To,Yasuaki Kurata,Stephen Au are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2017. Hung sau dou (2017) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.

Half Japanese Hong Kong girl Mari Hirakawa who succeeds karate school after tragic death of her Karate master and father encounters ex-karate student, ex-yakuza Chan Keung who also succeeds the half of her father's karate dojo. Then, Chan Keung retrains Mari for being a true heritage owner of the karate school.

Hung sau dou (2017) Reviews

  • Democratic Values of Hong Kong Film: Japanese Hong Kongese and its Life in Hong Kong

    hilaryswank20112017-11-16

    This film is not an art film at all, but it is a well made Hong Kong action film featuring karate and typical human relationships around it. And we can enjoy it without political position of the director in Hong Kong political environment. Chapman To is obviously affected by Sugata-Sanshirou (Dir.Akira Kurosawa, Japan, 1943) and Clint Eastwood's Million Dollar Baby (US, 2004), however it is in several essences only. For instance, the 30 year old girl gets trained by a senior trainer who is compassionate about her drastic situation of life; the official karate sequence in which the antagonist is look like the opponent of Hilary Swank's boxer in the final match. The plot is simple enough that Mari Hirakawa who is a half Japanese Hong Kong girl does not get along with her father, Karate master on his disagreement on Mari and her boy friend's affair. After, her father's die, Mari unexpectedly inherits the karate school, dojo with ex-student of his father, yakuza, Chan Keung who also succeeds the half of it. Conflict is clear enough. Main conflict is not focussed on who inherits the whole dojo. On the contrary, it is development of Mari through its conflicts with Chan Keung at their half succeeded dojo, after her break with her boy friend, uncontrollable Mari gets beaten by karate children at there. This is the beginning of mutual relationship between protagonist Mari and Chan Keung who teaches karate for her and his students. There is only one strong antagonist appears at the karate match where only one audience attends. The result is turned out to be win over the Mari's opponent. The karate match is typical Hong Kong film's performance on action sequence that its extent of violence exceeds Hollywood standard, and it is adequate to make audience feel the pain of protagonist. This kind of defamiliarization is effective! What I prefer is the training montage sequence of Mari. During which you can see jogging on the tram rail line roads on Hong Kong Island, Wan Zai and Causeway Bay. It is also unusual to show Mari's jogging on the middle of the streets in early morning. Stephy Tang a few used stunt for her actions, almost all performances are done by herself. It adds acting values to the certain extent. The ending is pretty sudden and vague, the dream sequence in which abstract light on the dark space shows Chan Keung leaving the dojo to Mari, and Mari also gets defeated by the opponent on the ring. It is open ending which is typical in art film. Without this, I appreciate all of them and enjoyed the development of Mari. Mixture of genre film and art film features are harmful to box office. Anyway, I prefer this film among all Hong Kong films this year! 10 out of 10!

  • The Empty Film

    kluseba2018-12-25

    The Empty Hands is a slow-paced film about an unlucky young woman who inherits the karate dojo of her deceased father that she needs to share with a former student who has just come out of prison. The story features profound characters, the diversified story is filled wth promising ideas and the few fighting scenes are entertaining. The protagonist has lost her passion for karate after losing a fight in a tournament as a child, doesn't get along with her stubborn father before his death and has a complicated romantic relationship with a local radio celebrity who hides her from his wife and family. The student that inherits fifty-one percent of the karate dojo had ties with a crime syndicate but decided to beat his boss and two of its associates to pulp when they were planning on raping an innocent teenage girl which led to his prison sentence. When they inherit the dojo, their lifestyles, opinions and tempers clash. The former student wants to improve the dojo's reputation and save its legacy while the daughter wants to get rid of it and make it a real estate project. Since she only owns forty-nine percent of the dojo, she initially has to accept her partner's decision to continue to give karate classes but they soon make a deal: if the daughter accepts to take part in another tournament and manages to be still standing at the end of the fight, her partner is willing to retreat and give the entire property to her. The daughter accepts and the fight in the tournament is indeed the film's climax and highlight. The biggest downside of the movie is its dull pace despite an already short running time. Static camera work, slow movements by the actresses and actors and repetitive settings try to give the film an arthouse style but end up dragging it down. The movie is sometimes advertised as an action film but it's actually a drama. The film sometimes doesn't live up to its potential as several story lines remain incomplete such as the fate of the radio celebrity. The movie only features two fighting sequences while an intriguing third one only happens off screen. The fate of a Japanese immigrant to Hongkong and later on China would have deserved a more complex story line as well. The Empty Hands is worth to be watched if you are looking for a slow-paced drama with interesting characters. If you are intrigued by the context of a karate dojo or the fate of Japanese immigrants in China, you will find this movie boring. In the end, The Empty Hands has a quite unique style but almost as many downsides as positive elements. I don't regret watching it at all but wouldn't watch it again anytime soon.

  • Whats in the box?

    s32761692018-04-08

    I've never liked art house all that much. For me its akin to taking more interest in the wrapping at the expense of whats actually in the box. Personal introspective with a art house meets martial arts make over The Empty Hands reaffirms that reservation. Its a visually interesting film helped in in no small part, by a decent cast and story. What muddies the waters is the obsessive use of visuals as the film draws to its conclusion. The result is a diffuse experience that leaves the viewer feeling like they have been handed a road map whilst standing in the middle of a desert. Suffice to say, sometimes a picture is "not" worth a thousand words. 5/10 from me.

  • Review

    smfalhinai2018-03-06

    I would not recomend it at all. Abit slow. No much excitment.

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