Victim: Viewer Comments

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Victim
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    by JP28528


This movie had a little bit of everything: action, thriller, and good acting. Lau Ching Wan is always good.
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    by MilesC



This movie is best described as seven parts "Full Alert" and three parts "The Shining." The horror and crime elements are mixed well, and make for an unusual but satisfying watch. However, my first viewing has left me a little confused; there are a number of things about the film I'm not sure about, but at this point I'm unable to tell how much of it was my fault, how much was Ringo's fault, and how much of my confusion was because of intentional ambiguity. I'm heavily favoring the latter cause at this point; I think much of the supernatural plot was purposefully unexplained to keep the audience guessing, which it certainly does. I do agree with some other reviewers that the supernatural elements peter out a bit in the final third or so; while I didn't want cut-and-dried explanations, the final thirty minutes contain barely a reference to the possession story that is so eerily presented in the first hour. Still, while it'll take me another viewing or two to sort everything out and make up my mind about some of the plot, I absolutely recommend this film to anyone who likes crime films but wants to see something a bit different.

Watching Ringo Lam's Victim, it is easy to think about Stanley Kubrick's films. Like Jack Nicholson in The Shining (US 1979), Lau Ching-wan is a failure in life. A respected computer professional just a short while back, he is now a man with "negative assets", an in-vogue label of late. What drives him and Nicholson to the brink are not ghosts or evil spirits. It is manhood, the notion passed on through generations that men cannot fail. Kubrick's last film, Eyes Wide Shut (US, 1999), is also a man's fable. A successful doctor is shocked by his wife's revelation that she is having sexual fantasies about another man. He turns his anger into a quest for sexual adventure but runs into trouble everywhere, even coming close to losing his life. He eventually returns to his wife, like a defeated rooster, not because he has impeccable morality, but because he is afraid. Both Kubrick and Lam are concerned with the vulnerability of middle-class life and the corrosion of manhood. While Kubrick examines the deterioration of humanity through his concerns, Lam is closer to the everyman. He fixes his attention onto the practical side of surviving everyday life. The family is supposed to be the corner stone that stabilizes our society, but its steadiness turns out to be an illusion. Just as in other "normal" families, the wall in Lau's room is adorned with a childhood photograph with his parents. Just like the one that hangs on the wall of the hotel, where a murderous tragedy occurred. We grew up with the family ideal, our nice home representing our happy family. But peel away the peaceful visage and we see the exposed ugliness. Wong Ain-ling: At the end of the film, Lau puts a bullet through his head. The camera pulls away from him as his wife's wail pierces through the darkness. The days ahead with an empty bed, how is she going to deal with it?

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    by Cathy



I enjoyed this movie. Ringo Lam attempts to merge the genres of the ghost/horror movie with an action movie. I think the movie works better as an action movie than as a ghost story, although both Tony Leung Ka-Fai and Lau Ching Wan both keep the audience guessing up to the very end as to whether they have been possessed by spirits from the haunted house. The bsaic plot is that Manson Ma (played by Lau Chin Wan) has been kidnapped and is found hanging in the haunted house by Inspector Pit (Tony Leung Ka-fai), his collegue Officer Bee and Manson Ma's wife Amy Fu played by Amy Kwok. The house is supposed to be haunted by the previous owners, a man who killed his wife because he thought she was cheating on him and then killed his son and himself. The scenes shot inside the house are appropriately creepy, although relying a little too much on the thunder and lightning cliche of many horror movies. The plot has many twists involving gangsters and loan sharks and there is a really good car chase scene. Lau Ching Wan is especially good as the slowly unravelling Manson Ma.
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    by Bunny Lee

The first half of this film is informed by a relentless severity while the second half a killing spirit. This is Ringo Lam injecting new elements into the crime genre, creating a refreshing approach at once surprising and delightful. Using the structure of crime films and mixing in elements of horror films is an interesting combination. However, it is a mix that does not quite blend. This is especially true of the horror portion, which seems to drop off near the end. As a result, the struggle between cop and robber is too overwhelming and not supported by substance. Its message is also too obscure. If not for the superb direction of Ringo Lam, the film would have been much worse.
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