wba wrote: ↑Fri Jun 28, 2019 7:30 am
been watching some 90s Johnnie To this month, and boy did To evolve as a filmmaker! He had to, though, cause judging by these films, he must have been one of the lesser HK directors out there in the "earlier" stages of his career, or at least completely uninterested in some stuff he did or had to do for a living.
This is funny because I was just about to post that I have been watching some 90s Johnnie To recently too and this was the previous post
I've found that 90s Johnnie To is much inferior to the underrated 80s Johnnie To. In the 80s he made the lovably eccentric
Happy Ghost III and the surprisingly mean-spirited comedy
The Eighth Happiness. I think his best film from that decade was
All About Ah-Long, a very solid melodrama starring Chow Yun-fat and Sylvia Chang.
Then came the 90s, and these are films I saw this month.
The Fun, the Luck & the Tycoon (1990): This is a more amiable comedic effort from To, and therefore a less interesting one. The story is based on
Coming To America, Chow Yun-fat and Sylvia Chang turn in some of their most forgettable performances, and there are some effective gags including a pretty masterful one featuring a table and an innumerable about of people under it. Decent, but only worth watching for people who love HK comedies as I do and Johnnie To completists of course.
The Story of My Son (1990): I wish I hated this film more than I do because everyone seems to not like this one. It's an overly wrought melodrama about a father and his children after his wife dies. He falls into debt from some loan sharks because of his gambling friend, and suffers the consequences. The son mentioned in the title is the older son who suffers from neglect and outright abuse from his father. I won't say more, except that there's a very over-the-top ending that many will hate (I actually enjoyed it). I don't know, this is probably a bad film, but I have a fondness for the way late-SB films look, the colors are nice and vivid and there is a lot of depth to these images. Johnnie To adds nothing interesting to the film though, it really could have been directed by Taylor Wong or Alfred Cheung (though in the latter case I think it would have turned out to be a better film). Decent, but I'm probably wrong about that.
The Royal Scoundrel (1991): I was prepared to hate this movie when I saw it was about some weird cops who work inside of a mailbox. The movie gets better when Waise Lee comes into the picture, menacing as always, as the corrupt and sadistic superior to the cops played by Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Ng Man Tat. I think the cinematography here is worse than in earlier To films which is crazy because none of his early films looks particularly good. I really enjoyed the romantic-comedic digressions with Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Wu Chien-Lien which is basically what saved the film from me disliking it. The only interesting thing about the film though is that it problematizes a lot of the police brutality we see in other HK films of this sort. In most HK films police brutality is presented in a comedic fashion or as a necessary evil, in this one Waise Lee is so sadistic that it threatens the future enjoyment of any scenes of police brutality in HK cinema!
The Royal Scoundrel (1992): OK, this is bottom of the barrel stuff. It is sort of like a new version of Happy Ghost, but a lot worse, it'll make you think those films were masterpieces. There's a very annoying soundtrack, a nonsensical plot, and an Anthony Wong that is as irritating as he is eccentric. Tony Leung Chiu-wai is paired with Kent Cheng in this one, and they are at their worst. Even the romantic sub-plot generates no laughs or feels, it's an utterly forgettable film that makes me want to skip the rest of 90s To. But I won't because I'm a completist!
Anyone who is on the fence about watching 1990s Johnnie To probably shouldn't watch his pre-Loving You stuff. It's mostly third-tier HK fare that could have been directed by anyone else. I quite enjoy this kind of stuff, but it really is sub-par even by third-tier HK standards. The only film from this period that is probably worth watching is
A Moment of Romance which To supposedly ghost-directed. I don't know if that's true, but that movie is actually very solid.