Beast Cops: Reviews

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Beast Cops
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    by Mega Star

ALTERNATE SYNOPSIS:
When triad gangster Fai (Roy Cheung) is forced to leave town, his turf becomes the battleground for a showdown between local thugs and the law. The mismatched cop partners Chao (Anthony Wong) and Mike (Michael Fitzgerald Wong) are forced to survive both the mean streets and each other.
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    by John Richards




Anthony Wong gives one of the best performances of his career as a cop treading the fine line between law and disorder. He's ably backed by a strong cast who each manage to flesh out their characters to create an involving and innovative experience that's a cut above the usual triad movie.

Michael Wong plays a newly appointed police officer who arrives in Tsim Tsa Shui to find that the old hands take a rather more subtle and relaxed approach to policing than he is used to. While Michael complains at the appalling track record of his team, Anthony is happy to perpetuate the finely balanced co-existence between the police and triads. Contributing to this is the fact that Anthony is not above accepting a bribe or two and his gambling in the illegal dens have brought him into debt to the very people he is trying to police. Michael plays along to a point, becoming involved with the girlfriend of one of the local 'big brothers' (Roy Cheung) who is on the run for the murder of a rival boss. Also on the team is young upstart Sam Lee in an early role.

In Roy Cheung's absence his right hand man (Patrick Tam) steps up to take control and starts to run things in an altogether more aggressive manner. The fine balance is destroyed as Michael in turn takes a more pro-active approach to tackling the problem and all out war between police and triads breaks out culminating in the film's terrific climax.

Rather than glamorise life in the triads the film portrays a life that is far from easy and quite desperate, even for those at the top. Roy Cheung and Patrick Tam certainly don't seem to be having that good a time of it with Tam reaching boiling point in the final reel. Filmed at a a time when the Hong Kong film industry was at its lowest ebb and most under attack from piracy, the budget for 'Beast Cops' was a conservative $10MHK. However this in no way detracts from the film's style and the film features excellent camerawork and editing, especially during the action scenes. For the first half the film plays almost like a documentary with its gritty street level view of life in Hong Kong. This feeling of realism is emphasised when the key characters address the camera directly; a nice touch and a good way to get across the motivation behind them. The action scenes are graphically violent making this view of gang life anything other than glamorous but the scenes still maintain a sense of drama and never become senseless unwatchable gore. Rather they are extremely gripping.

Anthony Wong steals the show here with a performance that won him the 'Best Actor' award at the Hong Kong Film Awards that year. Its the subtlety and naturalness in the way he plays the role that puts him a level above other actors, though he still gets to act like a maniac at the end. Actually there isn't a single bad performance in this film and Patrick Tam also deserves his award for Best Supporting Actor. Roy Cheung is someone who I've always had high regard for as an actor and here he doesn't disappoint (its a shame he hasn't gone further). Sam Lee is as entertaining as ever playing his role with his usual geekiness. There have been a lot of critical comments about Michael Wong's performance in Beast Cops, especially for his delivery of Cantonese. I thought he fitted the role quite well as a fish out of water. His straightforward nature plays well against Anthony Wong's contradictions and his dialogue delivery just emphasises the feeling of unnaturalness and contributes to the character. After all the character was written as an American born Chinese.

While it's not as action packed as you might expect from the title, 'Beast Cops' is still an enjoyable cop/triad drama that remains intelligent and engaging throughout. Also while the action scenes are some of the most intense seen in the late nineties, there are plenty of other elements that make this film stand out.

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    by So Good... - Hong Kong DVD Movie Reviews
    www.sogoodreviews.com



Awards at the Hong Kong Film Awards 1999:
  • Best Picture
  • Best Director (Gordon Chan & Dante Lam)
  • Best Screenplay (Gordon Chan & Chan Hing-Kar)
  • Best Actor (Anthony Wong)
  • Best Supporting Actor (Patrick Tam)

    Nominations at the Hong Kong Film Awards 1999:

  • Best Supporting Actress (Stephanie Che)
  • Best Film Editing (Chan Ki-Hop)
  • Best Sound Design

    Awards at the Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards 1999:

  • Best Picture
  • Best Actor (Anthony Wong)

    On the surface Gordon Chan & Dante Lam's movie look like another by the books Triad/Gunplay movie. Patient viewers will soon know and appreciate this characterdrama set in the police and triad world.

    Policeman Tung (Anthony Wong from The Untold Story) is secretly working with the triads and that has resulted in respect for him but also an eventless and perhaps an already lost life. Even his young partner Sam (Sam Lee from Bio Zombie) doesn't seem concerned that he's basically following someone elses downhill footsteps. It's when the team gets a new boss called Cheung (Michael Wong from Option Zero) that Tung, for the first time in a long while, gets to see what he should be or maybe once was; a cop with good moral standards. Cheung does get to be involved in the events and people who crosses paths with Tung but he's never let in on the secret he and Sam shares. But after he engages in a relationship with the girlfriend of the local triadboss, a confrontation approaches...

    I had heard beforehand, even though the HKL trailer suggested otherwise, that Beast Cops wasn't really an action movie but a very deliberatly slowbuilding characterpiece. Right from the start I was impressed by the natural approach, in terms of directing and camerawork, that the directors had choosen to go with. It's sometimes handheld but it's still stabile and never at anytime are we confused as to where we are. The first scene after the moody credits takes place in the gambling den, which will figure as a key setting later in the movie. If I know myself correctly, I would've hated the look of this scene. The colour scheme is basically neon blue here and normally I see it employed in a wrong distracting way . Here the cinematographer Tony Cheung (Drunken Master II) makes it click so well and it creates, what most movies using this is trying to achieve, a really good atmosphere. So from the beginning Beast Cops looked good.

    The direction during the course of the movie is very held back and the camera sometimes feel like it's looking in at peoples lives and for once I felt I almost lived this world. It's a rare feeling in movies and it sure must be a sign that the filmmakers have done their job right. I haven't seen many of Gordon Chan's movies but it feels like he wanted to test his audience out by giving the impression that Beast Cops was a more wild movie. That worked both as an advantage and an disadvantage for him since not all viewers were willing to invest time in the movie. Movie fans who stuck with it got to peel of the layers and discover what a brilliant and subtle film this is.

    I've heard people complain that it's a slow paced and dialogue heavy film. I can understand their concern but I feel that people may have gone into this expecting another movie in the vein of the Young And Dangerous-series. It certainly is not and the first 40 minutes proves that. Our main characters gets a slow but a very compellingly made build up and development which may not sound exciting but when the acting is so good, I'm immediatly hooked. In Anthony Wong case it's very easy to forget that he's an actor playing Tung. As a character he still seems mentally stabile despite the fact that he no more has the good moral he may have started out with as a cop.

    Tung is such an interesting character to follow and in the hands of a lesser known or less skillful actor, he wouldn't have achieved the depth and texture that Anthony brings to it. I felt seeing Tung was a realistic insight into how low one an sink inside but on the outside you're still able to keep your head high. Not all of what the character is made up of is talked about so it's up to us viewers to want to get to know him to fully understand some of the reasons behind his actions.

    This is an ensemble piece and to talk about all the actors would've taken too much time, so I've choosen to concentrate on three of them.

    Beast Cops wouldn't work so well without the precense of Anthony Wong. He didn't get his award because it was a really emotional role. It's instead the way he merges with the character that is the brilltant part of his acting. You probably noticed that Anthony is a lot heavier than usual, which was the effects of a the cure he took for the viral disease he got before filming. Ironically, his looks and body language worked so well for the overall character and makes it even more realistic I think. I can talk a lot more about Anthonys performance but I'll summarize it in one word: natural.

    Michael Wong hasn't shown much flair for the acting profession and has mostly done the sterotypical cop role in the past, something he does seem to barely pull off. Beast Cops was the perfect script for him though. The american-chinese manners and mentality that Michael has in real life is exactly what his character also has. That way it's easier for Michael to find a flow in his acting, even though he is pretty stiff in certain scenes. But backed up by a solid screenplay and a duo of directors who knew how to get the best performance possible out of him, he brings to the screen his best performance yet.

    Patrick Tam plays a power hungry young triadmember and manages, during the last third of the movie, show us why he got his best supporting actor award that year. Patrick's characterarc during most of the running time is someone we've seen before in triadmovies. It's the scene in Kathy Chow's doorway that Patrick starts to show a minor human and soft side and from here he finds his rhythm. One of the themes of the movie is that even triads have hearts and humanity at times and Patrick really brings forward that theme nicely in this scene. His dark and brutal side is also really on display in a confrontational scene with Roy Cheung towards the end.

    The rest of the cast is assembled by, to me, both unknown and known actors starting with Roy Cheung. For once he has a less stereotypical role to play and the slightly elderly and emotionally drained triadboss is portrayed nicely by Roy. Sam Lee is really held back in his acting and even if he is slightly goofy, he never strays from what is suiting behaviour for his character. Kathy Chow and Stephanie Che rounds up the ensemble which is almost perfectly cast.

    The action we do get consists of three main set pieces. The first one is the chase between the hummer and the bus which is really well put together considering the two were NEVER shot at the same time! An unexpected and brutal attack by the triads on Cheung is a well edited and choreographed scene but the standout action scene is of course the end confrontation between Anthony Wong & Patrick Tam and his henchmen. I read reviews that people thought this machete filled finale was way over the top but I think some are missing out on a point regarding Tung's behaviour in this scene. I won't spoil it for you but look what he does in the car before entering the gambling den. In there we're treated to an intensive and gory finale which is part a little shocking but the crazy surfmusic (inspired by Pulp Fiction perhaps?) creates and almost dark comedic tone at times. I did feel that element was slightly out of place though and should probably have been scrapped at the idea stage.

    One negative point I have to raise is that the motivation of Anthony Wong's character feels unclear up to a certain point and the script could have elaborated on this slightly more. In the end everything was clear and somehow I think not saying too much about Tung this was a concious choice made by the directors.

    The Hong Kong Film Academy understood Beast Cops and it deserved being named the best picture of that year. I wouldn't recommend it to casual fans of Hong Kong cinema but you avid fans should stick with this til the end. You may not understand it at once but examine it's subtle texture and message and you'll get an excellent addition to the world of Hong Kong Cinema.

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    Gordon Chan, best known for directing Jet Li in the action-packed Fist of Legend, trades in hard-hitting kung fu for moody modern street life in the police drama Beast Cops. Anthony Wong (Full Contact) plays Tung, a sloppy, whoring, gambling street cop who lives in the gray area between the law and lawlessness in the most volatile neighborhood in the city. When Mike Cheung (Michael Wong of John Woo's TV-movie version of his Once a Thief), a fastidious, by-the-book officer newly assigned to the beat, becomes his boss and his roommate, they form a veritable odd couple with a surprising influence on each another as a mob war brews on the streets. Chan is more interested in the toll of the job and the influence of temptation on the law enforcers than the usual display of Hong Kong kinetics, but he delivers the goods in a few impressive sequences of mob brawls and vicious machete attacks. The loose mix of street realism, sleek MTV-style visuals, and brooding character drama is more meandering than compelling and the film loses itself as the characters scatter in disconnected stories pulled together only at the conclusion, but Anthony Wong holds it together with an understated performance of a cop faced with his compromises and pushed into violent action by the murder of a friend.
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    Acclaimed in some circles as a new breed of police drama, Beast Cops is an uneven attempt at a more gritty, realistic look at the interaction between Hong Kong cops and the criminal triads. In fact, the film goes out of its way to distance itself from the popular crime / action films, with a slow, moody pace, flawed characters and some uninteresting relationship sub-plots. There is little action throughout the film, apart from the occasional violent murder or labored knife-fighting, until the climax, where the veteran cop goes face-to-face with the young up-and-coming triad leader in a long bloody sequence. Beast Cops ends up being a decent (if repetitive) cop-buddy movie with an interesting style but one that doesn't quite live up to its potential either as a drama or as an action film.
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        by Albert Valentin




    Sgt. Tung of the Hong Kong Police Department is not your ordinary cop. He is a friend to a respected Triad boss, Alphonse. When Alphonse leaves his girlfriend on the lam, Tung does his usual activities, like partying and getting prostitutes. His partner is Sam, a young hip officer who is a literal sex maniac. When Tung gets a new boss, the boss comes in the form of Michael Chung, a by-the-book officer. However, Tung shows Mike the dark world of Hong Kong, and Mike ends up falling for Alphonse's girl, Yoyo, a hooker. At first, Yoyo didn't want to change herself, but soon realized she loved Mike and the two begin dating. Meanwhile, Alphonse's boy Ted begins to take over the gang and does things his way.

    A blockbuster hit in Hong Kong, the film also earned an award for Best Newcomer with Sam Lee, the future Gen-X Cop Alien. The film, like The Corruptor, takes the viewer into the dark side of Hong Kong. Anthony Wong gives his best performance in a while with his role as antihero Sgt. Tung. Chinese-American Michael Wong gives a great performance as Mike, the young officer who falls into Tung's world yet falls in love in the process. But the one to look out for is Lee, who shows he can be one of the funniest stars in a film with his portrayal of sex maniac Sam. Almost every scene he appears in, he talks about sex. The finale, between Tung and Ted, is one of the most violent and bloody scenes I have seen in an action film since Ringo Lam's tour de force Full Contact. The film is well worth seeing!!! If you haven't seen it, see it now!!!

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        by HK Film
        www.hkfilm.net




    Tung (A. Wong), a slightly dirty cop, has managed to keep a truce between the local gangs through his friendship with the local Big Brother (Cheung). However, when Big Brother must flee to the mainland after a botched hit, a young Triad named Push-pin decides to step in. Things go from bad to worse when Push-pin finds out Tung's new boss, Mike (M. Wong), is sleeping with Big Brother's ex-girlfriend. Tung must decide which side of the fence he is on and who to support.

    Despite the title, Beast Cops is not the over-the-top action extravaganza you might expect. Rather, it is a GoodFellas-style look into the lives of the cops and Triads. The film has an almost documentary-like feeling in parts, such as when characters speak directly into the camera or through the use of steadicams. Like GoodFellas, Beast Cops also has a healthy dose of violence, often popping up when you least expect it.

    All of the leads are good -- even Michael Wong, one of the worst actors I have ever seen on either side of the ocean, who can simultaneously butcher lines in both English and Cantonese is suprisingly decent. However, the real standout is Anthony Wong. A little paunchier than in previous films and with a scraggly goatee and perpetual rings under his eyes, it's very easy to see him as the world-weary Tung. And his over-the-top psycho performance at the end is just simply great. It's worth seeing this movie just to see the young Triads run like schoolgirls from the crazed, seemingly invincible Tung.

    I only have a couple of nitpicks with Beast Cops. While the soundtrack is very good for the most part, the Pulp Fiction-ish surf music at the end really takes away from the ultra-violent turn in the action. Also, the last scene is far too cheery and seems to have been tacked on to please the audience. Overall, though, Beast Cops is one of the best crime movies I have seen in years. The ending leaves room for a sequel, which I would happily welcome.

    As a side note, I was quite happy when I heard Beast Cops took home a few Hong Kong Film Awards, including best picture, best actor, best supporting actor, best director and best screenplay.

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