Police Confidential (1995)
Reviewed by: shelly on 1999-12-09
This is a big, rich, exciting, slightly out-of-control movie thatstill leaves me unsettled. I'm not sure that it's a completely coherent whole, but that's all right: genre mixing in HK cinema has its own pleasures. PC is part psychological/political/erotic thriller, part police-action dazzler. The first half hour is incredible: plot twists pile up so fast that they barely have time to register: there's a manic restlessness to the pacing that's kind of disturbing, and kind of exhilarating. Unfortunately, the accumulated tension of a go-for-broke thriller is dispelled by a late turn to courtroom drama (legislative hearing, in this case, but structurally the same sort of thing). I don't know why HK filmmakers are so fond of this sort of scene: it's almost always static, cliche-ridden, an anti-kinetic let-down after so much built up energy. And PC has some other problems: it can swing into scenes of cheesey melodrama whose necessity escapes me. PC's narrative style may owe something to recent Wong Kar-Wai: the story loops back on itself, and Officer Lui's (Simon Yam) self-conscious narration tries to bind it all together. But PC's politics are pure Kirk Wong. And this troubles me. Both _Rock and Roll Cop_ and _Organized Crime and Triad Bureau_ seem to be about letting police be (freely, violently) police. His movies have an utterly cynical view of political institutions: the HK Legislative Council here seems hopelessly corrupted, seeking power instead of justice. The HK police themselves are divided. The ICAC, lead by a crooked Alex Chiang (Zhang Fengyi), is deeply implicated in the very illegality it is supposed to be fighting. Simon Yam's Officer Lui is a clean cop, but his own unrestrained sexual life seems to have caused the break up of his family. In the face of this kind of (inner and outer) world out of control, Kirk Wong's films conceal a virtually libidinal investment in total surveillance (PC celebrates the entire range, from Lui's productive peeping-Tom-ism to the most massive high-tech police surveillance operation I've yet seen on film) and total control (the necessity of violently reconstructing order in a corrupted and anarchic world). PC doesn't go nearly as far as _Rock and Roll Cop_ (which seems actually to yearn for the mainland's takeover in 1997). And PC's complexity complicates its politics, for the better. Yam's character is fighting *for* something, here: ostensibly the old standards of honesty and loyalty. But what might really be at stake for Lui is something much more interesting: the possibility of sustaining an integrated idea of who he is in an incoherent, dis-integrating world.
Reviewer Score: 9