Mike Thomason wrote:just over the last year or two I feel he's been a bit hit and miss.
Interesting bit of info about MAD DETECTIVE (though no spoilers) in relation to the hit 'n miss nature of To and company (and yes, I'm going a bit off-topic as always
). At the Q&A with To and co-director Wai Ka-fai after the TIFF screening, I was
very tempted to ask them about visual similarities between the ending of this film and the ending of THE LONGEST NITE when suddenly someone else beat me to it. Both of them had a bit of a chuckle to themselves when the question was asked, as if they were actually expecting someone to ask about it all along.
They essentially responded that they aware the film might actually draw criticism for referencing an earlier, well-remembered work, but at the same time, they knew that this particular stylistic device was simply the most ideal way to represent the themes/characters of MAD DETECTIVE. So perhaps its laziness or perhaps its intent, but it should be interesting to see the web reviews when this finally gets a release in HK and elsewhere. Oddly enough, even the usually astute Variety reviewer didn't seem to notice the thievery, but perhaps it's just a sign that it works as well as it does. MAD DETECTIVE is definitely mid-tier To—however one chooses to define that—but even at that it's one of the more inventive crime-dramadies to come out the city in a while.
There's so many retro-reviews out there these days, you'd think that HK stopped producing movies back in the late 80s! Thereby, I'm glad we're
both up there thanks to Bob and the DB...
I have to wonder if the increase in retro-reviews has anything to do with the increase in young newcomers to Hong Kong cinema since the dawn of the internet, and expecially in recent years now that more and more movies from that "golden era" are being re-issued once again and marketed to a younger audience that doesn't have the familiarity with it that a lot of us do around here (gee, thanks Dragon Dynasty!). For that I say more power to 'em, as long as they
eventually realize how vibrant Hong Kong's film culture still is! There's probably more reviews out there
now for old Jackie Chan and John Woo and Jet Li and many other 80's/90's movies than there ever was ten or 15 years ago, and it does tend to marginalize appreciation of the new pictures coming from the region. Guess that's the price we gotta pay for being part of the flat world these days, but I'm just glad
somebody's keeping tabs on the new releases, so keep 'em coming! Regular checks of the "recent reviews" section hereabouts have been rather revealing in recent months/years as well.
so I'm now looking for some people more in tune with my own viewpoints on this stuff. Maybe Bearserk can chime in?
Sad to say I strongly suspect I'd be very much in tune with you on a lot of this stuff, especially after having stumbled (quite literally) across some ages-old threads at DVDManiacs in recent months. You've definitely got a taste for exploitation! Looking forward to more reviews of the cheeky stuff.