More Hong Kong genre stuffs.
Middle Man (1990)
Hong Kong CID ‘tec Cynthia Khan finds herself in deep after her soldier cousin is wrongly accused of selling US army secrets to nefarious types in Korea. Difficult to follow and the main baddie isn’t very menacing, but the unusual (for HK film) location shooting in a very wintry looking Seoul gives it a certain flavour and it does pick up a bit in the final act.
Burning Ambition (1989)
Frankie Chan directs and stars in a fast-moving HK update of an earlier Japanese samurai drama, here recreated as the story of a triad family tearing itself apart, following the death of its patriarch. Chan seems a little miscast as the leader of a biker gang brought in to help one side of the family after a brutal attack, but this is an engaging action-drama, much enlivened by an unexpectedly tongue in cheek middle section where chaos erupts in an amusement park.
The Occupant (1984)
Chinese-Canadian student Sally Yeh visits Hong Kong to study traditional superstitions, but gets more than she bargained for when the suspiciously cheap apartment she rents turns out to be haunted by the spirit of a former resident, in this light-hearted supernatural comedy. This is an amiable film with an appealing turn from Yeh, but frequently feels bogged down by co-star/director Raymond Wong as the painfully irritating letting agent who takes a shine to her and tries to do everything he can to win her over. He’s such an absolute goober that it’s difficult to really hate him, but it’s also hard not to see him as a sex pest by contemporary standards, and he often seems to exist only to make her other would-be suitor, Chow Yun Fat, look like a suave himbo by comparison.
The Eighth Happiness (1988)
Three brothers (Jacky Cheung’s sensitive cartoonist, Chow Yun Fat’s feckless actor and Raymond Wong’s lonely TV chef) go looking for love in all the wrong places, in another lightweight HK comedy. This is likeable enough and lands a few good gags, but your mileage will very much depend on how you feel about CYF’s performance as the middle brother, a self-proclaimed ‘sissy’ who uses his flamboyant, camp mannerisms to appear non-threatening when he’s trying to pick up women. For better or worse, he’s certainly hard to ignore, largely overshadowing both Cheung and Wong, but it is nice to see Chow paired up again with Carol Cheng as his long-suffering girlfriend, her sheer sensibility makes her a good foil for him.
Mismatched Couples (1985)
A very young Donnie Yen plays a breakdancing-obsessed teenager, who tries to help a down and out street vendor (Yuen Woo Ping) after seeing him perform dance moves from the Peking Opera to impress a passing tourist, in what can only be described as Hong Kong’s answer to Breakin’. There’s not a lot to it in terms of plot, but the film is infectiously jolly, with plenty of dumb gags and dance-offs to keep things moving along. Unfortunately, it does not treat its female characters well, particularly a young bodybuilder whom the film sees fit to mock for wanting to be strong, instead of conforming to the typical feminine archetypes of the time. Not just mean and insulting, this also feels laughably out of touch, given that the popularity of female action stars exploded in the territory just shortly after this was released. Nevertheless, if you can get past that, a scenery-chewing Dick Wei adds value to the final act as a cackling pantomime villain, and the film’s opening scene is arguably worth the price of admission alone. No-one in human history has ever looked to be having such a good a time as Donnie does breakin’ and poppin’ his way across town, while horribly catchy synthpop bangs away in the background.