Cecilia Yip

  • Kirk Wong – Chung ngon sat luk: O gei AKA Organized Crime & Triad Bureau (1994)

    1991-2000ActionCrimeHong KongKirk Wong

    Synopsis:
    The eternal cop of Hong Kong cinema, Danny Lee teams up with genre master Kirk Wong for this blistering crime thriller. He’s Inspector Lee, derisively nicknamed “Crazy Dragon”, the obsessed, uncompromising head of the Royal Hong Kong Police’s Organized Crime & Triad Bureau. Surrounded on all sides by political scheming and bureaucratic red-tape, dogged by C.A.P.O. (Complaint Against Police Office, aka HK’s internal affairs) for perceived injustices, it is O.C.T.B. alone that stands the as last line of defense against the crime overruning the city. Read More »

  • Tung Cho ‘Joe’ Cheung – Dui bu qi duo xie ni (1997)

    1991-2000ComedyHong KongTung Cho 'Joe' Cheung

    Lee Lap Cheung is a slacker who is going nowhere. His ex-wife Yip Ting has become powerful in the business world. In a moment of anger Cheung requests Ting to allow him and his son Jason to spend some time together.Read More »

  • Patrick Tam – Lie huo qing chun AKA Nomad (1982)

    1981-1990AdventureCultHong KongPatrick Tam
    Lie huo qing chun (1982)
    Lie huo qing chun (1982)

    Nomad (Chinese: 烈火青春) is a 1982 Hong Kong film directed by Patrick Tam. It is about the experiences of a group of youngsters who feel lost and try to find the true meaning of life. Nomad is considered as one of the representatives of the Hong Kong New Wave films.Read More »

  • Ka-Fai Wai – He ping fan dian AKA Peace Hotel (1995)

    Ka-Fai Wai1991-2000ActionAsianHong Kong

    Quote:
    Chow Yun Fat’s last film in the pre-Handover Hong Kong film industry before he went on to try his luck in Hollywood, Peace Hotel was directed by regular Johnnie To collaborator Wai Ka Fai, produced by John Woo, and has the feel of a swan song. Indeed Chow Yun Fat’s next Hong Kong Cantonese-speaking film would come almost 20 years later. So it is quite suitable that his character in the film is known only as “the Killer”, echoing arguably the apex of his Hong Kong career and his legendary collaboration with John Woo. The Killer, as a gorgeous black-and-white prologue tells us, once wiped out an entire gang of horse thieves responsible for the death of his wife (Wu Chien Lien). His killing spree led him to an abandoned hotel, where after an experiencing an epiphany he spared the life of the last gang member. 10 years later, the hotel is not abandoned anymore : it has become a safe haven for fugitives and outlaws, run by the Killer himself. Read More »

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