Genre: Action
Director: Oxide Pang and Danny Pang
Cast: Nicholas Cage, Steve Baldocchi, Chris
Heebink, James Wearing Smith, Charlie Young, Shahkrit Yamnarm,
Panward Hemmanee, Nirattisai Kaljaruek, Dom Hetrakul
RunTime:
1 hr 40 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: NC-16
(Violence & Some Nudity)
Official Website: http://www.bangkokdangerousmovie.net/
Opening Day: 11 September 2008
Synopsis:
The
life of an anonymous assassin takes an unexpected turn when
he travels to Thailand to complete a series of contract killings.
Joe (Nicolas Cage), a remorseless hitman, is in Bangkok to
execute four enemies of a ruthless crime boss named Surat.
He hires Kong (Shahkrit Yamnarm), a street punk and pickpocket,
to run errands for him with the intention of covering his
tracks by killing him at the end of the assignment. Strangely,
Joe, the ultimate lone wolf, instead finds himself mentoring
the young man while simultaneously being drawn into a tentative
romance with a local shop girl. As he falls further under
the sway of Bangkok's intoxicating beauty, Joe begins to question
his isolated existence and let down his guard... just as Surat
decides it's time to clean house.
Movie Review:
An assassin with a conscience. The concept is synonymous with
Chow Yuen Fatt and
John Woo, whose actor-director collaboration brought us the
evergreen Hong Kong
cinematic classics “A Better Tomorrow” and “The
Killer”. It seems like the
concept has reached its demise in the late 90’s with
Chow’s last outing as an
assassin in “The Replacement Killers” until the
Pang Brothers, Oxide and Danny
came up with their own take with “Bangkok Dangerous”
in 1999, yielding
encouraging response from moviegoers. Now, the Pang Brothers
have re-imagined
“Bangkok Dangerous” by giving it a Hollywood treatment
with Nicolas Cage in the
lead role.
The
film opens by introducing us to Joe (Nicolas Cage), a seasoned
American assassin
who sees killing as nothing more than a profession while strictly
adhering to his
four self-imposed occupational rules, until he is hired by
Surat (Nirattisai
Kaljaruek), a Thai mob boss to take out a few of Surat’s
enemies in Bangkok. As he
proceeds with his assignments in the capital city of Thailand,
he gradually develops
feelings for a local deaf-mute girl named Fon (Charlie Yeung)
while becoming a
mentor to his errand boy, Kong (Shahkritt Yamnarm). Both attachments
lead to Joe’s
pondering over his job, eventually putting his own life on
the line when Surat
realizes his hired hitman has a change of heart.
The
first thing that strikes me upon seeing this remake of “Bangkok
Dangerous”
is the cinematography. The colour saturation for the entire
film is significantly
enhanced – imagine the ‘colour’ setting
of a television tuned to the maximum -
giving it a dark tone that suits the film’s theme. Being
shot on location in
Thailand, the film can easily pass as a tourism advertisement
for the Land of a
Thousand Smiles if it weren’t for the violence and occasional
raunchy scenes.
Action fans will be satisfied with the heart-pounding gunfights
and stunt work, with
a bit of digital effects to tom-yum-spice things up as shown
in a bullet
point-of-view scene à la James McAvoy & Angelina
Jolie’s “Wanted”. There is
also a brief homage to the aforementioned John Woo when Joe
goes on the offensive by
wielding two handguns at once. All these combine to result
in a visually pleasing
film.
Underneath
all the razzle-dazzle though, the film leaves a lot to be
desired when it
comes to its plot and character development. The sudden transformation
of Joe from a
cold-blooded assassin to a conscience-filled one is hardly
convincing, especially
his reason, in his own words for mentoring Kong in the ways
of assassination:
“seeing myself in him”. How this reason can change
a heartless killer’s
opinion towards a mere dispensable errand boy in a matter
of seconds is beyond my
understanding, except for the fact that it is there solely
for the sake of moving
the story forward. Hong Kong actress Charlie Yeung (credited
here as Charlie Young
for some reason) is severely underused, which is really disappointing
considering
her impressive performance in 2006’s “After This
Our Exile” as Aaron Kwok’s
estranged wife. She does a remarkable job of lighting up the
screen with her sweet
and demure manner despite losing the ability to speak and
hear,
but that’s all she has to offer within the scope of
her underdeveloped character.
Then,
there is Nicolas Cage. Sporting the similar mullet hairdo
as seen in “Con
Air”, Cage plays it cool as the hitman in the limelight.
He is effective in
depicting Joe as an all-round tough guy as well as portraying
his softer side during
the emotionally charged scenes. The only problem with his
character is that he
appears to be too invincible for his own good. Nothing seems
to be able to stop him,
to the extent that there is no sense of impending danger whenever
he is threatened.
As exhilarating as he is during the action sequences, it is
within the tender
moments with Charlie Yeung that he gets humanized. The film
could have used more of
such scenes to elevate it further.
While
this new rendition of “Bangkok Dangerous” is not
entirely flawless, I have to commend the Pang Brothers for
their effort. There is a touch of innovation over the 1999
original film in which the hitman is the one with disabilities,
although Oxide Pang was quoted as saying that the change was
made for marketing reasons so that Nicolas Cage can have some
lines to say. Nevertheless, it is encouraging to see a remake
that does not resort to the ‘copy-and-paste’ method.
The road is still long for the Pang Brothers to match John
Woo’s brilliance in action movies. With some improvements
in story-writing and establishing their own trademark, they
can get there.
Movie
Rating:
(Stylish, flashy but not compelling enough in the
story department – that’s “Bangkok Dangerous”
in a bullet shell)
Review by Tan Heng Hau
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