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Exiled
Reviewed by Rich Drees
It would be easy to dismiss Hong Kong director Johnny To’s Exiled
as yet another Asian gangster film dealing with themes of
friendship, honor and loyalty. One could similarly dismiss High
Noon as a just another Western that climaxes in a gun fight. But
doing so in either case would be doing the film in question a
large disservice.
Wo (Nick
Cheung), a former Hong Kong Triad hit man, has fled to Macau
following his failed attempt to kill his boss, Boss Fay (Simon Yam).
Fay dispatches two hit men (Anthony Wong and Suet Lam) to kill Wo,
but they are intercepted by two other men (Francis Ng and Roy
Cheung) from Fay’s organization who want to protect Wo. All five men
were once friends before having to place their duty as members of
Fay’s crime family first. Discovering that Wo has a wife and newborn
son, the five search for a way out of their predicament that will
satisfy both honor and friendship.
Although Exiled
finds To reunited with many of the cast and crew of his
landmark 1999 film The Mission and explores some of the same
themes, it is in no ways a sequel to the earlier work. Instead,
Exiled plays out as a spaghetti western transplanted to the
Asian Pacific rim. Long takes of silence pass as combatants silently
take each other’s measure before violence erupts in a blaze of
gunfire.
As perhaps the
premier director of action working in Hong Kong today, To’s work
here defines the category of what film fans have dubbed “bullet
ballet.” He establishes the geography of an action scene skillfully
and subtly, so that when the mayhem erupts the audience can follow
it with ease. Knowing that tried and true filmmaking is the best, To
keeps his camera work fluid. Combined with editing that doesn’t cut
away before one can make sense of the shot, To’s camera work has an
energy and a rhythm that enhance the action set pieces rather than
distracts in the way that much of the handheld shakey-cam use in
Hollywood productions does. Through careful choreography, camera
work and editing, To’s gun fights take on a graceful, almost
elegant, quality. The confusion potential of a multi-sided gunfight
in a restaurant, complete with several betrayals, plays out cleanly,
allowing the audience to follow the action and reversals easily.
That’s not to say that To spoonfeeds his audience. At first, there
is nothing that overtly indicates the past friendship that the five
gangsters used to share. It is only through subtle characterization
between the group and a glimpse of one photo that the film sketches
very lightly this past. There are very few actual details of what
there friendship was, only that it existed and that it still impacts
the decisions they are still making today.
Along with
longtime collaborator, cinematographer Cheng Siu Keung, To has
chosen a palette of browns and earth tones, moving his characters in
and out of shadows. Even during the few scenes set during the day,
the photography is shot through with beams of golden sunlight. The
overall effect suggests twilight. As the film is set just a little
over a year before Macau and Hong Kong were to change over from
being European colonies to part of the People’s Republic of China,
To seems to be using it as a visual metaphor for the sun setting on
the way of life that the gangsters know. |