HK police thrillers keep audiences on edge of their seats


On Aug 13, during a Hong Kong screening of Wilson Yip's 1999 film Bullets Over Summer at Tai Kwun Center for Heritage and Arts, many audience members said they had gained from the struggling characters a sense of cynicism and pessimism in society during the post-1997 Asian financial crisis, which they could relate to.
As audience members left the theater, they were told by organizers to watch out for a long flight of stairs and a small shop next door.
The stairs and shop appeared in the film's first scene, when the store was robbed-introducing Francis Ng and Louis Koo's characters as the responding officers.
Since COVID-19 travel restrictions were imposed, mainland fans of Raging Fire have been unable to visit Hong Kong locations used for the movie. These include a parking lot in Kennedy Town, where Yen leaped from a high rise to chase Tse fleeing on a motorcycle, and Cha Kwo Ling, where police battle the underworld all night.
Peking Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, was also used for scenes in which the gangsters are besieged by police-although many of these sequences were shot in a studio backlot.
One day, such locations could again be thronged with tourists eager to relive a fascinating crime story.