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szdaily -> Movies -> 
Drug War
    2013-04-05  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    IN “Drug War,” Hong Kong genre master Johnnie To gives a superlative lesson on how to give an updated, thoroughly engrossing twist to the classic cops-and-robbers chase. Following his relatively action-less financial thriller “Life Without Principle,” To cuts a sweet slice of genre cake that pits the balletic efficiency of police operatives against the wiles of organized crime lords and leaves few characters standing by its bloody end. The first action film To has shot on the Chinese mainland, it brings a reported budget of US$16 million of cool to the mainland, where drug stories are rare.

    Reteaming with his regular screenwriter and co-producer Wai Ka-fai (“A Hero Never Dies,” “Fulltime Killer”), To cuts to the chase, as it were, jettisoning all plot elements that don’t directly relate to the battle of Sphinx-like police captain Zhang (Sun Honglei) and his nemesis, the handsome young drug lord Timmy Choi (Louis Koo). Choi is introduced in a simple but highly effective opening scene, weaving down the highway at high speed while foaming at the mouth, until he crashes through the glass walls of a restaurant in a spectacular end-of-ride.

    Elsewhere, a dilapidated bus approaches a highway toll booth, under the watchful eye of a foxy young woman attendant, Xiao Bei (Crystal Huang). Suddenly, the poor-looking bus passengers panic and make a run for it, and she leaps out to lead a surprise anti-drug operation, capturing them all. They have swallowed capsules of something potent and are made to painfully expel them while unsympathetic cops look on.

    The stone-faced Xiao Bei, it turns out, works for Captain Zhang, who heads one of the coolest undercover narcotics teams on film. Telling Choi he’s sure to get the death sentence (in China producing 50 grams is sufficient, and he has manufactured tons), they convince him to play ball and walk Zhang and Xiao Bei into the lion’s den. Masquerading as the jovial mega-drug dealer Haha (Hao Ping) and his moll-wife, the two cops infiltrate a top level meeting in a swanky hotel, surrounded by an organization whose choreographed efficiency would make M’s MI6 blush. Switching costumes and hotel rooms with split-second timing, the police look like a regimented version of the “Ocean’s Eleven” team, complete with micro-cameras on cigarette holders.

    Zhang discovers Choi runs a secret drug lab on the outskirts of the city, where an explosion has killed his wife and her brothers. Only later do the police uncover a second hidden factory where Choi’s loyal team of deaf-mutes fabricate the white stuff (whether it is heroin or coke is of little import to the story).

    The action proceeds at a consistently fast pace, pushed by the pulsating beat of Xavier Jamaux’s music with barely space for a breather. Choi’s battered face begs the police to believe he’s on their side, but his shifty eyes speak otherwise. A harbor sequence confirms the screenplay’s ability to reinvent genre clichés in a last, tension-heavy masquerade where US$30 million in heroin gets bartered in the midst of a fleet of fishing boats.

    The satisfying end takes place in a wild and woolly shoot-out in front of an elementary school, a bloodbath so punishing that the good guys and bad guys can hardly be distinguished anymore. Perhaps that’s the point, however: the thing that links the cops’ silent teamwork and the criminals’ ruthless organization is the blinders they wear, excluding everything from their line of sight except their “mission.”

    While the cast plays dead serious, etching their very distinct characters through action, To takes a playful approach shuffling the story elements and confusing the audience. Superior stunt-work gives even the most violent battles a realistic look, while scenes are swept along on an elegant stream of breathtaking shots and cinematography.

    The movie is now being screened in Shenzhen. (SD-Agencies)

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