Agrega una trama en tu idiomaFollows Lui Lok, a police officer who decides to make a name for himself within the police force by controlling organized crime.Follows Lui Lok, a police officer who decides to make a name for himself within the police force by controlling organized crime.Follows Lui Lok, a police officer who decides to make a name for himself within the police force by controlling organized crime.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 6 premios ganados y 13 nominaciones en total
Tony Leung Chiu-wai
- Nam Kong
- (as Tony Chiu-Wai Leung)
Opiniones destacadas
7.5 /10 rating. Original title is Theory of Ambitions, Crime drama set in Hong Kong spanning 1960's to 80's.
Tony Leung, Aaron Kwok, Richard Ng are the big names here in this really well acted and tough film about police corruption, set in British controlled Hong kong, back in the day. Everyone is dirty, they try their hardest to keep things in order, amongst them selves, along with the British, and the crime gangs- The Triads.
Things get very messy, as drug lords try assert control and even the cops do try to do their jobs, law and order is not an easy game with so much at stake here. The wives do their fair share of power games and violence breaks out with guns and knives. Things, after a time ruin family life and spiral out of control on the streets and the offices.
Tony Leung and Aaron Kwok are the corrupt cops play cat and mouse with each other, but have a respect with each other. But the fallout is coming at some point.
A well told true story about a time of Hong kong where who had power, is anybodies guess?
Tony Leung, Aaron Kwok, Richard Ng are the big names here in this really well acted and tough film about police corruption, set in British controlled Hong kong, back in the day. Everyone is dirty, they try their hardest to keep things in order, amongst them selves, along with the British, and the crime gangs- The Triads.
Things get very messy, as drug lords try assert control and even the cops do try to do their jobs, law and order is not an easy game with so much at stake here. The wives do their fair share of power games and violence breaks out with guns and knives. Things, after a time ruin family life and spiral out of control on the streets and the offices.
Tony Leung and Aaron Kwok are the corrupt cops play cat and mouse with each other, but have a respect with each other. But the fallout is coming at some point.
A well told true story about a time of Hong kong where who had power, is anybodies guess?
Where the Wind Blows boasts two super stars in Tony Leung and Aaron Kwok, but it is a total snooze fest at 2h 24min. The story is about a few good men in a sea of dirty cops and politicians. The storytelling is so choppy that after a while you will feel like puking out all the rubbish history lessons forced down your throat. It is well-acted no doubt but the story is not even coherent. It's like in any scene there is a beginning, a middle and an ending, but the director will just show you one out of the three and wants you to connect the dots. Such an utter waste of good actors. The moral lesson is that you should be the baddest bad guy because you can retire to Canada or Thailand and nothing will happen to you. Avoid this like it's the newest variant of COVID-19.
I know many people came to see this movie because of the two big stars, Tony Leung and Aaron Kwok, and that's completely understandable. Both male leads still have their charisma and have portrayed the detective's hardships and glory very convincingly. However, I highly recommend everyone to pay close attention to the performance of the female lead, played by Du Juan. She truly shines and takes the audience back to the old Hong Kong era. In the past, men needed women to take care of all aspects of their lives in order to look good in public, even if it meant eliminating adversaries. Du Juan's charm and tactics are portrayed excellently, giving a performance that rivals her previous collaboration with Tony Leung's Tang Wei. Aside from the familiar story, the acting prowess of these big stars is something I highly recommend to everyone.
Extraordinary casting with incredibly accurate production design but...
This is by far the most humiliating, disrespectful, disgusting Hong Kong film that I have ever seen. Politically the director has chosen to twist the history of what had actually happened during and after the world war. Accusing Kuomingtan to cause the riots during 50s-60s instead of the communist party who actually caused it. This director and production is so afraid of the CCP now that they decided to change the history with the silly movie that they have shot.
Despite all the historical non sense. This movie is so unbearable and hard to watch. It's a disgrace of the Hong Kong film industry. Waste of talents, waste of resources, waste of audience's patience's and time. Plain rubbish.
This is by far the most humiliating, disrespectful, disgusting Hong Kong film that I have ever seen. Politically the director has chosen to twist the history of what had actually happened during and after the world war. Accusing Kuomingtan to cause the riots during 50s-60s instead of the communist party who actually caused it. This director and production is so afraid of the CCP now that they decided to change the history with the silly movie that they have shot.
Despite all the historical non sense. This movie is so unbearable and hard to watch. It's a disgrace of the Hong Kong film industry. Waste of talents, waste of resources, waste of audience's patience's and time. Plain rubbish.
Most of the time, Hk movies that are financed elsewhere has a two dimensional problem. They look good, damn good. And with big stars. International stars at that.
But that's it. In this case, a possibly 12 hr miNi series cut to 2.5 hrs. So editing chops the story to bits and pieces. Feels like shot by 2-3 2nd unit directors and then multi edited. The plot is too sprawling, ambitious, yet also too condensed for its own good.
The dancing attributes are just tailor made for Aaron.
Dancing doesn't make sense to this kind of story. Mixed genre here doesn't jive. The rhythm to the speeches, dialogue, monologue scenes for Tony seemed very off, rushed, one take-ish, had no drama, no underlying thoughts.
The camera wants to be romantic and stays between 85mm to 180mm. Very distracting, some obviously can be seen as homage/copying old Tony Leung's movies.
All body, not content. All show and no depth. Walked off around 45min mark.
But that's it. In this case, a possibly 12 hr miNi series cut to 2.5 hrs. So editing chops the story to bits and pieces. Feels like shot by 2-3 2nd unit directors and then multi edited. The plot is too sprawling, ambitious, yet also too condensed for its own good.
The dancing attributes are just tailor made for Aaron.
Dancing doesn't make sense to this kind of story. Mixed genre here doesn't jive. The rhythm to the speeches, dialogue, monologue scenes for Tony seemed very off, rushed, one take-ish, had no drama, no underlying thoughts.
The camera wants to be romantic and stays between 85mm to 180mm. Very distracting, some obviously can be seen as homage/copying old Tony Leung's movies.
All body, not content. All show and no depth. Walked off around 45min mark.
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- How long is Where the Wind Blows?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Where the Wind Blows
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- HKD 200,000,000 (estimado)
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 1,398,659
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 24 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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