Genre: Action/Comics
Director: Andrew Lau, Alan Mak
Starring: Jay Chou, Edison Chen, Shawn Yue,
Anne Suzuki, Anthony Wong, Jordan Chan, Chapman To, Kenny Bee,
Liu Keng Hung, Tsuyoshi Abe, Chie Tanaka, Kazuyuki Tsumura
RunTime: 1 hr 52 mins
Released By: Shaw
Official Movie Website: http://www.initialdthemovie.com
Rating: PG
Released Date: 23 June 2005
Synopsis:
For five years, 18-year old Takumi has been delivering tofu
in his father’s obsolescent Toyota AE86 every morning.
Not only has he become an outstanding racer, but he has also
unwittingly perfected the art of drifting. He was never partial
to hill racing until he is nudged by his father to drive his
AE86 in a David and Goliath race against RX-7 FD. A glorious
but unexpected victory awakens the competitive genes in his
body, while his overnight fame inevitably leads to hell-raising
races one after another, each one more perilous and exciting
than the previous one.
Movie Review:
Without much elaboration, a great portion of the X and Y generation
would have heard or have mesmerised with this immensely popular
Japanese manga, "Initial D". Since 1995, it has
spawned itself into anime, novels and PS2. Now, directors
Andrew Lau and Alan Mak (the dynamic duo behind the superb
“Infernal Affairs” trilogy) has joined hands to
bring us the first ever live action version of this racing
gem.
Basically,
it’s evitable why both men and women will adore this
live-version of “Initial D”. Men will be swooned
by the whole range of cool, sleek cars liked the Nissan Skyline,
Mitsubishi Lancer and the old charming Toyota AE86. Women
on the other side will be smitten by the most charming, handsome
young cast ever assembled on screen. Pop prince Jay Chou in
his movie debut plays Takumi who inadvertently mastered the
art of drifting while delivering toufu on behalf of his father
(Anthony Wong who is convincingly funny as Takumi’s
dad, a drunkard, ex-top racer and child wrecker all rolled
into one). Seriously, there isn’t much to say about
Chou’s acting, firstly his character doesn’t really
requires him to say much and he has achieved top grades for
his display of towering coyness and aloofness. Edison Chen
surprisingly puts in a subdued performance as Ryousuke, a
technical geek and a keen racer as well. Contributing to the
movie funny bits is Chapman To (Takumi’s best friend),
a street racer with pathetic racing skills who ironically
inspired to be the world champion. Listen to his theory about
men and god and get a good laugh out of it.
This
can’t be a Jay Chou movie without good music to company.
“Initial D” is filled with rap, hip-hop music
pieces throughout. Chou himself contributed two songs (one
which you can hear while the credits are rolling at the end)
and a slow ballad. Good enough to satisfy fans and non-fans
alike.
Director
Andrew Lau with his firm background as a cinematographer who
has worked on HK classics such as “Chungking Express”
and has established himself as a director for comic-based
hits “Stormriders” and “A Man Called Hero”
gave “Initial D” a dreamy, picturesque feel. The
end results captured the beauty of the original black-and-white
comics, at the same time achieved the realism of extreme car
racing. Filmed entirely in Japan, Mount Haruna stands in for
the fictional Mount Akina whereby the numerous “drifting”
and hair-raising race sequences are shot. Abandoning fake
CG effects for real-life car stunts performed by actual racers
seem to pay off. Seeing the cars negotiating sharp bends,
narrow curves and speeding down the mountainous roads on the
big screen is a lavishness to the eyes, the screeching sound
effects endorsed realistically by the Dolby sound system is
a plus.
Apparently
it will be most unfair to compare “Initial D”
to the directors’ “Infernal Affairs”. The
latter is a gritty, dark tale of the struggle between good
and evil while the former documents a simple tale of how a
young man learns to pursue his dreams. “Initial D”
in short is fluffy, lightweight commercial material, full
of eye-candy and tastes as sweet as strawberry cheesecake
ice cream. Not a good potential for a trilogy but satisfying
enough to pave way for a sequel.
Movie Rating: B+
Review
by Linus.T.
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