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新房客 (1995)
New Tenant


Reviewed by: mrblue
Date: 05/24/2007

Anthony Wong has long been known as not only one of Hong Kong's most prolific actors, but somewhat of an odd egg as well. After all, this was the man who, after winning a Hong Kong Film Award, announced to the audience that he would be promptly be taking the award into the bathroom with him. So it should come as no surprise that his directorial debut New Tenant is a bit quirky to say the least.

The film centers around a writer played by Wong named Alan Tam (yes, the character's name was chosen on purpose) who has spent the last decade in a mental hospital. Upon leaving, he rents an apartment in an abandoned building which contains a clock that sends him back to 1984. The only person that can hear Alan during this time is one of the previous tenants, a young girl named Dolphin (played by Dolphin Chan). A strange romance soon develops between the two, and so when her sister Whale (Perrie Lai) begins dating a suspicious professor (Lawrence Ng), Alan helps Dolphin to find out the shocking truth about her sister's beau.

At some points drama, some others romance, some others dopey comedy, and with a liberal dose of ghost story thrown in, New Tenant (like Wong himself) is hard to categorize. In many ways, this film should have been destined to fail, and in fact, it only played for a week in theatres upon it's release. The movie obviously had no budget and looks cheap, the acting is uneven, and the story (even though there were three screenwriters working on it) has some huge plot holes. Most damningly, the ending comes off as more than a bit of a cop-out. I'm not going to directly ruin anything, but it definitely like Wong didn't know exactly how to finish the movie and went for the most convienient way out.

Despite the bad taste in the viewer's mouth that the ending leaves, Wong does manage to generate some genuinely creepy moments without having to resort to the splatter one might expect from the star of such movies as The Untold Story. And, at the end of the day, the characters actually come off as likeable, which draws the viewer into the movie. Even if their final fate isn't what most people might want or expect, the journey to get there makes New Tenant worth a viewing for fans of Hong Kong suspense movies. It's certainly better than many of the more recent entries in the genre coming from Hong Kong, which seem to mistake CGI or cute pop stars as a replacement for competent film-making.

[review from www.hkfilm.net]

Reviewer Score: 7

Reviewed by: pablo
Date: 12/09/1999

Writer Alan Tam moves into abandoned apartment complex scheduledfor destruction, where weird things start happening. To say anymore would spoil what I found fun about the movie. I'm not sure why I like this movie. It's got everything going against it - nonsensical plot (although everything gets tied up neatly by the end), random gratuitous scenes, and some poor acting. But it all works. Maybe it's because Anthony does a good job of setting the mood of the film early on.


Reviewed by: hkcinema
Date: 12/08/1999

Especially great. It is really creative. I had no idea what was going to happen from one scene to the next. At one point I was really on the edge of my seat in suspense, like watching an old Hammer horror movie.

[Reviewed by Anonymous]


Reviewed by: hkcinema
Date: 12/08/1999

Anthony Wong stars and co-writes the screenplay and music for his directing debut. Despite a cul-de-sac story (not to mention numerous plot holes) there's some mesmerising quality about it which allow me to persevere until a rather pathetic ending. However, what more can you expected from a film "dedicated to a dead tortoise"?

(5.2/10)



[Reviewed by Christopher Fu]


Reviewed by: hkcinema
Date: 12/08/1999

Anthony Wong is Alan Tam, a writer who is just released from the mental hospital, having had a complimentary haircut from a guy in Kiss make-up. He rents a flat, where the previous tenant had left a clock that works on and off. But when it does start ticking, he's transported back 10 years in time, where he slowly merges into the life of a spunky girl named Dolphin. Anthony Wong wears many hats for this film, including writer. I can't help but to think that most of the events of this movie were from his actual dreams, as there are some very odd scenarios. A few scenes don't connect but they are visually strong, some comical (like Dayo Wong tai-chi'ing slowly out of frame). There is also a very frightening, nightmarish sequence involving a chase through the sewer tunnels. I applaud Anthony embracing his wierdness. This one will occassionally leave you perplexed but nevertheless manage to keep you in suspense.

[Reviewed by Jennie Tam]