The Other Side Of Gentleman: Reviews

Reviews Reviews:
The Other Side Of Gentleman
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    by Kung Fu Cinema
    www.KungFuCinema.com



The course of true love never runs smoothly, but it crashes about hopelessly for 86 long minutes in this sophomoric Ringo Lam romantic misfire. Those drawn by Lam or Brigitte Lin expecting a taut thriller are implored to steer clear.

Tam is Alan Ng, an apparent example of the amoral youth of today (today being the early eighties). Not that Alan indulges in crime, drugs or assault; in fact he is merely a boorish Casanova with an unsuccessful track record. But church folk and university psychology professors enlist fresh-faced undergraduate Jo Jo (Lin) to woo Alan then dump him, thereby teaching him social responsibility. But, for reasons kept to herself Jo Jo begins to fall for Al, much to the chagrin of her professor fiancé. There follows a tortuous and tortured series of lame comic set pieces and clumsy melodrama, culminating in a tragic-then-happy-ending so perverse it would make Romeo slap Juliet.

Lam later proved himself a minor master of suspense, but is adrift when tackling matters of the heart. A hectoring tone veers between lame pratfalls and sub-Mills & Boon amorous histrionics, and Tam and Lin have all the spark of two wet fish rubbed together.

Lam’s indifference to The Other Side of Gentleman is evident from his pedestrian direction, showing interest only in a brief, but impressively staged road accident that leads to that weird ending. More offensive than Lam’s bland visuals is the eighties fashion the cast sport, looking like rejects from some abandoned Flashdance sequel. Alan works in a fashion store, and his climactic wedding day gate-crashing “I’m a pair of jeans, but you want me to be trousers” sermon is an all-time worst movie moment, even allowing for dodgy subtitling.

With all characters underwritten it seems churlish to criticize performances, but eighties Asian singing sensation Tam is a charisma vacuum and not even the legendary Lin can convince in her thankless damp squib of a role. Hard to imagine Quentin Tarantino borrowing from this one.

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    by Deltamac

ALTERNATE SYNOPSIS:
A group of intellectuals who all actively involved in a psychological research, Alan (Alan Tam) as the subject. To set off the plot, Jo Jo (Lin Ching-shia) is the chosen girl to excute the mission. The intellectuals are putting up mazes after mazes for Alan to run about: in the car park, in the disco, in the jean boutique and in the party. They lead Alan into their prepared traps. They help him to build confidence, then give him frustrations. The test is well-planned and consequences are supposed to be foreseen. However, for many times, Alan does outsmart those people by their own game...
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