9 reviews
- tiffanyyongwt
- May 7, 2014
- Permalink
Cinematography is great. Dark and gritty with commendable performances, but the plot (if you can call it that) has holes so big an elephant could walk through them. I wonder how others can say it has a great twist. It's not a twist, it's a cliche ending that makes absolutely no sense if you really think about it.
- Leofwine_draca
- Jul 26, 2019
- Permalink
My quick rating - 5,9/10. Another well-made action movie out of Hong Kong. I know they are well known for that and this one isn't as high brow as some but still is a good, solid flick. My problem is even though it was subtitled, I fell asleep watching it. That is abnormal for me so that says something about overall rating. But that being said, this was well acted and had a nice, fluid story to it. By a strange twist of fate, dutiful Hong Kong policeman Dan saves the life of the leader of a violent gang of armed robbers. When they commit another crime, Dan is determined to put an end to their activities. He works with the leader, whom the gang had betrayed, to engineer a plan to wreak havoc within the gang and let the gangsters kill one another. But it becomes increasingly obvious to Dan and to his colleagues that Dan is suffering from a severe mental disorder, and Dan finds that instead of upholding the law as a righteous police officer, he has now become a fugitive wanted for murder.
Story telling plot = Not good(a little bit confusing)
Horror scene = Boring
Action = very less
Thriller = Ok.
Movie got both STORY and ACTORS but somehow didn't get the output.
Movie got both STORY and ACTORS but somehow didn't get the output.
After the success of Unbeatable (激战), The Stool Pigeon (线人) and Beast Stalker (证人), Dante Lam is back again with Nick Cheung for That Demon Within (魔警), a dark, intense, riveting, character-driven psychological crime drama action thriller. But this time around, Daniel Wu plays the central lead character instead of Nick Cheung, who has lesser screen time compared to Dante's previous films.
The film explores the evil that exists in every single one of us, no matter how righteous we seemed to be on the surface. The story is about an overly-righteous policeman with a troubled past, Dave who ignorantly donate his blood to save Hong Kong's most dangerous criminal Hon, who is seriously injured after trying to escape from a heist. This random act of kindness causes more problems, as Hon continue his villainous work, leaving more cops and innocent people harmed and killed in the process. This has put serious strain on Dave as he tries to salvage the situation. Eventually, he becomes so obsessed in hunting down Hon that his dark past starts to haunt him again, providing further damage to his fragile psyche.
The cinematography is superb as usual and the gritty, violent action sequences are not over-the-top, frenetic or shaky compared to many recent released Hong Kong/China production nowadays, which is commendable. The location and setting for the film (the rooms, streets, buildings) provides a moody and grim atmosphere in an otherwise bleak film. The film has some pretty good pacing, plot developments as it keeps me engaged in it without a look at my watch.
Daniel Wu managed to deliver a good performance as the emotionally unstable police officer, has some great on-screen psychotic moments as he breaks down. The moments are taken in close camera shots (it looked as if the camera is strapped to his chest), providing the audience a closer, impactful view of his trauma. Over the years, Nick Cheung has successfully established himself as a credible actor with award-winning worthy performance. Despite his minimal involvement in the film, his villainous performance as Hon still manage to provide an impact to the audience.
Overall, the film managed to provide an interesting, exciting new take on the cop-thriller genre, which is not easy in my opinion. (Hong Kong has done many successful cop-thrillers in the past, themes or plot devices are heavily overused in many past productions) It's a recommended watch.
The film explores the evil that exists in every single one of us, no matter how righteous we seemed to be on the surface. The story is about an overly-righteous policeman with a troubled past, Dave who ignorantly donate his blood to save Hong Kong's most dangerous criminal Hon, who is seriously injured after trying to escape from a heist. This random act of kindness causes more problems, as Hon continue his villainous work, leaving more cops and innocent people harmed and killed in the process. This has put serious strain on Dave as he tries to salvage the situation. Eventually, he becomes so obsessed in hunting down Hon that his dark past starts to haunt him again, providing further damage to his fragile psyche.
The cinematography is superb as usual and the gritty, violent action sequences are not over-the-top, frenetic or shaky compared to many recent released Hong Kong/China production nowadays, which is commendable. The location and setting for the film (the rooms, streets, buildings) provides a moody and grim atmosphere in an otherwise bleak film. The film has some pretty good pacing, plot developments as it keeps me engaged in it without a look at my watch.
Daniel Wu managed to deliver a good performance as the emotionally unstable police officer, has some great on-screen psychotic moments as he breaks down. The moments are taken in close camera shots (it looked as if the camera is strapped to his chest), providing the audience a closer, impactful view of his trauma. Over the years, Nick Cheung has successfully established himself as a credible actor with award-winning worthy performance. Despite his minimal involvement in the film, his villainous performance as Hon still manage to provide an impact to the audience.
Overall, the film managed to provide an interesting, exciting new take on the cop-thriller genre, which is not easy in my opinion. (Hong Kong has done many successful cop-thrillers in the past, themes or plot devices are heavily overused in many past productions) It's a recommended watch.
Not a physical one that is, but a psychological one if you want to call it that. The movie itself gets pretty intense and I was surprised it was shown at the Internationl Festival in Berlin this February. The stars were also there and the movie was very well received, though I wasn't able to talk to any of them.
Even without them there to watch the movie with you, the movie experience is more than intense and suspenseful. Daniel Wu is also known to Western audiences because he has ventured to the West, but most of the other actors are well known too, just not to the West. The job they're doing is impeachable though. If you like your mystery movies to try new things (especially with its lead roles), you will more than delighted with this
Even without them there to watch the movie with you, the movie experience is more than intense and suspenseful. Daniel Wu is also known to Western audiences because he has ventured to the West, but most of the other actors are well known too, just not to the West. The job they're doing is impeachable though. If you like your mystery movies to try new things (especially with its lead roles), you will more than delighted with this
After a detour into Hollywood blockbuster territory and another more successful one into the world of MMA, Dante Lam returns to the cop thriller genre that he has carved a name out of in recent years with the critically acclaimed character driven pieces 'The Stool Pigeon' and 'The Beast Stalker'. Reuniting with his frequent muse/ writing partner Jack Ng, 'that Demon Within' sees Lam fusing the themes of good versus evil in his earlier movies with the design of a supernatural horror to create what is possibly his most mature, intense, and compelling masterpiece to date.
In the titular role of the troubled cop is the upright constable Dave Wong (Daniel Wu), whose ignorance leads him to dutifully donate blood when Hong Kong's most wanted criminal Hon stumbles into the A&E of a hospital bleeding and heavily injured. Turns out that Hon (also known as the Demon King) had just escaped from being caught by the police in his flat after he and his gang of violent criminals engaged the cops in a fierce shootout following a diamond heist worth $80 million dollars; and Dave's act of kindness earns the consternation of Senior Inspector Mok (Dominic Lam), bent on putting Hon and his gang before bars before his imminent retirement.
That single event turns Dave's carefully constructed world inside out. Though it may seem at first that Dave is simply over-righteous, we realise that he is a person with his own issues to deal, a loner prone to bouts of intense anger and paranoia. In fact, joining the police force was his way of finding some semblance of stability in his life, a safe harbour if you will that becomes anything but as his guilt manifests itself in hallucinations, impulses and even occasional episodes of self-flagellation as a form of anger management. And slowly but surely, Dave becomes obsessed with Hon, seeing visions of the two of them merging together as one, or of Hon's apparition in the form of a visual representation of the Demon King (depicted as a burning face) goading him into relenting to his savage instincts.
While it may seem as if he has his sights squarely on Hon at the start, Lam's intents for his film to be a character study on Dave becomes much clearer later on. Eschewing the more affluent parts of Hong Kong, Lam chooses instead for his characters to inhabit the squalid housing estates of Kowloon City and Sai Ying Pun, the choice of location especially befitting of the dark tone he opts for here. It isn't just Hon whose worship of the Demon King proves extremely unsettling, but the image of Dave framed against metal gates and sealed windows in his apartment adds to the disquieting mood that Lam conveys with panache.
More so than in any of his movies, Lam explores, as its title suggests, the latent evil that exists within an individual. That is plainly evident in Hon, but much more complex in Dave, whose "personality issues" come to light in hynopsis sessions with his sister Stephanie (Astrid Chan) that hinges on his traumatic childhood with a strict and sadistic father. As Dave struggles to contain his "demon within", Lam steeps his film in the kind of religious symbolism which he alluded to in his 'Fire of Conscience', whether is it with the choice of locations in funeral parlours and morgues or with his choice of emotively unsettling visual imagery commonplace in horror films, in particular recurrent images of human immolation.
Those who are fans of Lam's brand of urban action however need not be disappointed; right from the get-go, Lam impresses with a thrilling opening gunfight in the streets more violent than his usual and certainly more malevolent, especially with Hon's gang donning the masks of the Demon King. Another equally if not more exhilarating one unfolds on an overpass, and Lam reserves a petrol station for a fiery ending which aptly bears a blazing symbol of hell. Even as he ventures into dark psychological territory, it is indeed heartening to know that Lam hasn't lost his touch with delivering the sort of thrills which a large part of his early career was built on.
Certainly one could use the same to describe Daniel Wu's performance here, which easily surpasses anything he's done before. Digging deep to play a critically flawed character who has to confront his own monsters while attempting to stop another, Wu delivers one of his most challenging and therefore captivating roles to date. He is also well- matched with Lam regular Nick Cheung, who gets to ooze menace in every frame. It is as diametrically different a role from that of his award- winning one in 'Unbeatable', but one which cements his reputation as one of Hong Kong's most versatile actors around.
And with 'That Demon Within', Lam officially makes his cop thrillers with Cheung a trilogy, the latter of which also starred in 'Beast Stalker' and 'The Stool Pigeon'. It is as outstanding a trilogy capper as any fan can ask for, combining the earlier films' blend of gritty action and character-driven drama with psychological horror elements into a riveting whole that grabs you from the start and never lets go. It is also testament to a director who continues to push the envelope, certainly one of the most unique and original films to come out of Hong Kong this year.
In the titular role of the troubled cop is the upright constable Dave Wong (Daniel Wu), whose ignorance leads him to dutifully donate blood when Hong Kong's most wanted criminal Hon stumbles into the A&E of a hospital bleeding and heavily injured. Turns out that Hon (also known as the Demon King) had just escaped from being caught by the police in his flat after he and his gang of violent criminals engaged the cops in a fierce shootout following a diamond heist worth $80 million dollars; and Dave's act of kindness earns the consternation of Senior Inspector Mok (Dominic Lam), bent on putting Hon and his gang before bars before his imminent retirement.
That single event turns Dave's carefully constructed world inside out. Though it may seem at first that Dave is simply over-righteous, we realise that he is a person with his own issues to deal, a loner prone to bouts of intense anger and paranoia. In fact, joining the police force was his way of finding some semblance of stability in his life, a safe harbour if you will that becomes anything but as his guilt manifests itself in hallucinations, impulses and even occasional episodes of self-flagellation as a form of anger management. And slowly but surely, Dave becomes obsessed with Hon, seeing visions of the two of them merging together as one, or of Hon's apparition in the form of a visual representation of the Demon King (depicted as a burning face) goading him into relenting to his savage instincts.
While it may seem as if he has his sights squarely on Hon at the start, Lam's intents for his film to be a character study on Dave becomes much clearer later on. Eschewing the more affluent parts of Hong Kong, Lam chooses instead for his characters to inhabit the squalid housing estates of Kowloon City and Sai Ying Pun, the choice of location especially befitting of the dark tone he opts for here. It isn't just Hon whose worship of the Demon King proves extremely unsettling, but the image of Dave framed against metal gates and sealed windows in his apartment adds to the disquieting mood that Lam conveys with panache.
More so than in any of his movies, Lam explores, as its title suggests, the latent evil that exists within an individual. That is plainly evident in Hon, but much more complex in Dave, whose "personality issues" come to light in hynopsis sessions with his sister Stephanie (Astrid Chan) that hinges on his traumatic childhood with a strict and sadistic father. As Dave struggles to contain his "demon within", Lam steeps his film in the kind of religious symbolism which he alluded to in his 'Fire of Conscience', whether is it with the choice of locations in funeral parlours and morgues or with his choice of emotively unsettling visual imagery commonplace in horror films, in particular recurrent images of human immolation.
Those who are fans of Lam's brand of urban action however need not be disappointed; right from the get-go, Lam impresses with a thrilling opening gunfight in the streets more violent than his usual and certainly more malevolent, especially with Hon's gang donning the masks of the Demon King. Another equally if not more exhilarating one unfolds on an overpass, and Lam reserves a petrol station for a fiery ending which aptly bears a blazing symbol of hell. Even as he ventures into dark psychological territory, it is indeed heartening to know that Lam hasn't lost his touch with delivering the sort of thrills which a large part of his early career was built on.
Certainly one could use the same to describe Daniel Wu's performance here, which easily surpasses anything he's done before. Digging deep to play a critically flawed character who has to confront his own monsters while attempting to stop another, Wu delivers one of his most challenging and therefore captivating roles to date. He is also well- matched with Lam regular Nick Cheung, who gets to ooze menace in every frame. It is as diametrically different a role from that of his award- winning one in 'Unbeatable', but one which cements his reputation as one of Hong Kong's most versatile actors around.
And with 'That Demon Within', Lam officially makes his cop thrillers with Cheung a trilogy, the latter of which also starred in 'Beast Stalker' and 'The Stool Pigeon'. It is as outstanding a trilogy capper as any fan can ask for, combining the earlier films' blend of gritty action and character-driven drama with psychological horror elements into a riveting whole that grabs you from the start and never lets go. It is also testament to a director who continues to push the envelope, certainly one of the most unique and original films to come out of Hong Kong this year.
- moviexclusive
- Apr 14, 2014
- Permalink
Well i watched this movie in cinema, watched trailer & give a chance to watch it & i was quite surprise after watch this movie because movie was much better then my expectation Direction,Script,acting all was Awesome ,Story was unique twist was mindblowing
- jsaleem-89705
- Apr 2, 2020
- Permalink