Losing the plot

By Amy Mullins | HK EDITION | Updated: 2022-08-19 13:58
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From left: Michael Chow, Tony Leung, Aaron Kwok and Patrick Tam make up the nefarious quartet in Philip Yung's film Where the Wind Blows, one of the two opening films of the 46th Hong Kong International Film Festival. [PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY]

The focus then switches to two of Hong Kong's most notorious cops. Aaron Kwok stars as Lui Lok, a jaded idealist who finally gives in to the rot around him and takes a leading role. He's joined by the affluent son of a lawyer, Nam Kong (Tony Leung Chiu-wai), who provides the strategy to Lui's flash. Also on the crew are Fat Bee (Michael Chow) and drug trafficker Yim Hung (Patrick Tam), who together come up with a plan to forge an alliance with the city's powerful triads to get rich and, as a side bonus, keep the peace. Over the course of their partnership, Lui and Nam go from friends to rivals.

Both the protagonists as well as the pulpy cops-and-robbers action are staples of Hong Kong film. Lui has been portrayed by Andy Lau in Lee Rock (1991) and Tony Leung Ka-fai in I Corrupt All Cops (2009).

Yung's ambitions to reimagine them are grand. The period detailing is impeccable and the script doesn't shy away from making it clear that there are no good guys in this particular crime drama — with a hint of 1950s musical tossed in. When times are good and Lui's police-force star is on the rise, the cop and his eventual wife, Tsai Zhen (model Du Juan), break into a Christmastime soft shoe.  Conversely, the more felonious the men get, the more bathed in shadow the film becomes.

It's a shame that Yung can't keep the camera still long enough to let the audience revel in the film's visuals, having packed such an enormous amount of material into the script that it ultimately loses the plot, literally. At nearly two-and-a-half hours, Wind finds time for a detour into Lui's infidelity and lingering guilt over a woman he knew during the war, and Nam's own lingering guilt over befriending a Japanese war commander and marrying a woman he doesn't love. None of these elements tell us anything about the duo's motivations or rationalizations. Characters drop in and out, and viewers are forced to make narrative leaps to get from one moment to the next. It's when Yung gets away from the domestic drama and focuses on rotten cops that the film sparks into life. Yung's aim is clear, but broken hearts won't tell this story.

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