Genre: Mystery/Thriller
Director: Oxide Pang
Cast: Aaron Kwok, Liu Kai Chi, Patrick Tam,
Izz Tsui, Cheung Siu-Fai
Runtime: 1 hr 41 mins
Released By: Shaw & InnoForm Media
Rating: PG (Some Intense Sequence)
Official Website:
Opening Day: 12 May 2011
Synopsis:
Mysteries keep revolving around TAM's life. Not only
does the ex-police officer and now private detective struggle to make sense of the mysterious
death of his parents, TAM is entangled in a case which escalates
out of control into serial killings since his childhood buddy
FUNG showed him some crime scenes photos. Pressure runs high
as more people are being dragged into the serial murders -
a man is found dead in his home, a female body is dumped in
garbage dump and a teenage girl died of uncertain cause. All
the clues indicate that the murderer is a psychopathic killer.
Can TAM find the real killer and solve the case?
Movie Review:
What
do we remember of Oxide Pang’s 2007 movie “The
Detective”? Well for one, it was one of the very few
movies from the Pang Brothers that didn’t suck- thanks
to an intriguing buildup, some nice character acting from
Aaron Kwok and a gritty but lively setting down in Bangkok,
Thailand. It seems reasonable then that Oxide would attempt
to make a sequel to the movie, since it does count as one
of their most successful efforts outside of “The Eye”
series. But alas, despite an equally campy but entertaining
performance by Aaron, “The Detective 2” falls
way short of its predecessor’s standards.
Aaron once again plays the showy private detective Tam, and
like the original, the case before him is a string of murders
that has been seemingly committed by the same person. While
the first movie brought out a tightly plotted investigation,
the mystery here is far less satisfying and perhaps no more
than a half-baked attempt at connecting the dots. Indeed,
how else would you describe Kwok’s private detective
Tam’s rationale for thinking the killings are related
just by the fact that the killer was trying to cover his tracks?
Endeavouring to maintain continuity with the first film, Tam
is brought in by his old pal Chak (Liu Kai-Chi) who thinks
that their successful partnership may once again yield the
same analytical insight as in the past. Oxide tries to convince
his audience of this, but even with the benefit of hindsight,
it’s hard to buy into this when all Tam does is walk
around the crime scenes and then just somehow put it all together
in his head. Sure, Tam is again using his camera phone to
take pictures of the crime scene, and piecing it together
with his blackboard scribbles, but the connection Oxide tries
to draw is too convenient.
In fact, it seems as if Oxide himself were aware of this-
he sets up a parallel story thread involving a young schoolboy
who develops an obsession on his older sister and who becomes
prone to violent outbursts whenever he sees her with another
guy. Right from the beginning, it’s clear that said
young boy is somehow connected to the murders, and true enough,
the revelation when it comes is too predictable. Equally disappointing
is the motivation behind these killings, more abstract than
in the first movie, and undoubtedly less convincing.
Oxide has also apparently pandered to the Chinese market,
so unlike the original, there isn’t any supernatural
twist here which made the mystery the first time round more
fascinating. There are hints of Tam’s past as an orphan
after both his parents went missing, but that is quickly forgotten
for the most part of the movie, and then perplexingly revived
at the end to set up the possibility of another sequel. Ditto
for Patrick Tam’s supporting role as a chief inspector
Chak is made to report to, the supposedly tense relationship
between the two fizzling out all too quickly.
As if to compensate for the lacklustre story, Aaron’s
tendency to overact seems to have gone into overdrive. While
certainly not as bad as the utterly deplorable “Murderer”,
there is a distinct sense that Aaron is straining to give
his character more depth than the screenplay allows- especially
in the climax where Tam comes face to face with the murderer
holding Chak hostage. Still, Aaron exudes the same playful
charisma he did in the first movie when he isn’t trying
too hard to emote, and manages to carry the whole movie with
the able help of veterans Kai-Chi and Eddie Cheung (who plays
a psychopathic suspect).
Unfortunately for the film too, Oxide goes for a less down
and dirty feel compared to the first film, and the result
is a movie that loses the visual style which enhanced the
original. Couple that with a less than satisfying mystery,
and a pared-down performance from lead star Aaron Kwok, and
you’ll find that this sequel is yet another disappointing
entry in the Pang Brothers’ filmography lacking in the
very elements which made the first movie an unexpected success.
Movie
Rating:
(The title here may be “B+” instead of
the original’s “C+”, but this sequel with
its lazy plotting is more than a grade down from the original)
Review by Gabriel Chong
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