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Protégé

Titre original : Moon to
  • 2007
  • R
  • 1h 46min
NOTE IMDb
7,2/10
6 k
MA NOTE
Louis Koo, Andy Lau, Daniel Wu, Anita Yuen, and Jingchu Zhang in Protégé (2007)
Official Trailer
Lire trailer2:39
2 Videos
99+ photos
CriminalitéDrameThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA special agent has for 8 years been deep undercover in Asia's lucrative organized crime trade as he plays protégé to one of the key players, Banker. Now, Nick has but he has started to feel... Tout lireA special agent has for 8 years been deep undercover in Asia's lucrative organized crime trade as he plays protégé to one of the key players, Banker. Now, Nick has but he has started to feel loyalty to his new environment and to the money.A special agent has for 8 years been deep undercover in Asia's lucrative organized crime trade as he plays protégé to one of the key players, Banker. Now, Nick has but he has started to feel loyalty to his new environment and to the money.

  • Réalisation
    • Derek Tung-Sing Yee
  • Scénario
    • Derek Tung-Sing Yee
    • Man Hong Lung
    • Sun Go
  • Casting principal
    • Andy Lau
    • Daniel Wu
    • Louis Koo
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,2/10
    6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Derek Tung-Sing Yee
    • Scénario
      • Derek Tung-Sing Yee
      • Man Hong Lung
      • Sun Go
    • Casting principal
      • Andy Lau
      • Daniel Wu
      • Louis Koo
    • 32avis d'utilisateurs
    • 34avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 7 victoires et 16 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Protégé
    Trailer 2:39
    Protégé
    A Child's Cry For Help
    Clip 1:26
    A Child's Cry For Help
    A Child's Cry For Help
    Clip 1:26
    A Child's Cry For Help

    Photos184

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    + 179
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux32

    Modifier
    Andy Lau
    Andy Lau
    • Lin Quin
    Daniel Wu
    Daniel Wu
    • Nick
    Louis Koo
    Louis Koo
    • Fan's Husband
    Jingchu Zhang
    Jingchu Zhang
    • Fan
    • (as Zhang Jing Chu)
    Anita Yuen
    Anita Yuen
    • Quin's Wife
    Nirut Sirichanya
    Nirut Sirichanya
    • General Chachai
    • (as Nirut Sirijanya)
    Mei-tian He
    • Quin's Sister-in-law
    • (as He Mei Tian)
    Kai-Chi Liu
    Kai-Chi Liu
    • Head of Customs Officers
    • (as Liu Kai Chi)
    Cheong Cheung
    • Drug Factory Helper
    • (as Cheung Cheong)
    Derek Tung-Sing Yee
    Derek Tung-Sing Yee
    • Officer Miu Chi-wah
    • (as Derek Yee)
    Tak-Cheung Tang
    • Quin's Drug Chef
    • (as Tang Tak)
    Bo Yuen
    • Cal
    • (as Yuen Po)
    Tsz Tung Tsei
    • Fan's Daughter
    • (as Tsei Tsz Tung)
    Christina Tang
    • Quin's Elder Daughter
    Kylie Wong
    • Quin's Younger Daughter
    Ga-Leung Chan
    • Chef's Apprentice
    Sze-Leung Chan
      Ka Sing Chau
      • Customs Officer
      • Réalisation
        • Derek Tung-Sing Yee
      • Scénario
        • Derek Tung-Sing Yee
        • Man Hong Lung
        • Sun Go
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs32

      7,26K
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      Avis à la une

      7themovieclub

      Big story, big names, but can be bigger on characterisation

      Boosting some of Hong Kong's film industry biggest with producer Peter Chan (Perhaps Love) and director Derek Yee (C'est La Vie and One Night in Mongkok), "Protégé" looks set to become this Hong Kong biggest film this Chinese New Year.

      The Protégé here is Nick (Daniel Wu), trained to take over Jong's (Andy Lau) heroin trafficking business, but is in fact a police officer. His inner conflict is between the loyalty towards his 'teacher', and duty towards his job and justice. Things get more complicated when he falls in love with a heroin-addict (Zhang Jingchu), forced to detriment by her husband (Louis Koo).

      The story of an undercover police would remind many of "Infernal Affairs", especially when both stars Andy Lau. The difference lies in its subtlety. While there are still police chase scenes and fights, the focus of the film is on the character development more than its actions.

      Daniel has proved his acting abilities in One Night In Mongkok. Though he is playing the lead role in "Protégé", his character lacks of a very distinct quality to showcase his acting skills. This is so for Andy Lau's 'baddie' role as well, and you can't put across strongly how you should feel for him. Anita Yuen has very little screen time, perhaps due to the fact she was six months pregnant, and there could be more chemistry between her and Andy Lau.

      The scene stealer is the refreshing China actress Zhang Jingchu who breathes an air of vulnerability and frenzy as a woman forced by circumstances. We should expect more from her as she moves on to a Hollywood in Rush Hour 3. Louis Kook, in stained teeth and tattered clothes, changes his image successfully playing her abusive husband.

      Starting off slowly, the movie picks up after moving to the Golden Triangle, where audience are treated to the eye-opening sight of heroin plantations and produce.

      "Protégé" may not be adrenalin pumping or mass audience entertainment, as director Derek Yee probably wanted to weave in a social message in a subtle and restrained manner. The last scene was enough for me to understand the story, though you wished he had pushed the movie forward a little more.

      http://themovieclub.blogspot.com
      shu-fen

      It's just a matter of demand and supply.

      Ordinary development, good research on today's drug-dealing, satisfactory (only) acting, a just so-so plot plus a perfunctorily didactic story, nevertheless, I still recommend this as a light Sunday afternoon amuse-bouche.

      We are living in a world of mixed, confusing values. What is right? What is wrong? Lin Quin is an extremely careful businessman. He has a clean family and clean life (he doesn't even smoke, not to mention drug). He is very clear-minded to the point of having a frozen heart without much feeling for the others. He knows, very rationally, all the tricks and danger of drug and drug-dealing. He knows, super-sensibly, the wants and behaviour of the drug consumers. Trafficking drug to him is only a means of accumulating wealth regardless whether it is harmful or evil. He even makes an analogy between cigarette and drug. According to the world system and world values, he is correct: as there is a demand, I supply. As the buyers (drug users) get what they want and I get what (the money) I want, we are both happy. Isn't that the world we are living in? Nick's remark at the opening and closing of the film somehow is a futile didactic statement. "For long, I didn't understand why people take drug.... actually it's all because of emptiness (loneliness). And, which is more horrible? Loneliness or drug? I really can't tell." No philosophy class but loneliness kills more, for sure, more destructive than drugs.

      What touches my heart is the ending. Nick promises to continue his duty as a special agent (undercover). When loneliness comes, he also intends to take drug but at last his salvation is brought by "innocence" (personified by Jane's little daughter) who dumps the syringe for him. Only when we come to purity and innocence, goodness and kindness can we have a way out from evil.
      10misterhappy-1

      You don't have to like Chinese films to appreciate this.

      I saw this movie in the Hong Kong IFC mall before I got the train to the airport. It is one of the best films I have ever seen. I am a huge Daniel Wu fan anyway, and I related to his relationship with his smack-head neighbour straight away, having lived with a smack-head with a little daughter. Some of the "it's not my fault" statements by the neighbour and her slimy husband seemed very familiar to me. Judging by the reaction of other (Chinese) people in the cinema, it was familiar to them as well. I expect this film to be available soon on DVD. When it does I will buy it instantly. I can recommend it totally to any HK film fan, and to anyone else who appreciates films that make you think.
      10DICK STEEL

      A Nutshell Review: Protégé

      The Hong Kong crime movie genre has another worthy addition to its collection, hot off the heels of the Infernal Affairs creative team's Confession of Pain. While movies of the genre of late are almost always gearing toward sophistication, Protégé plays out its story in surprisingly straight forward fashion, although the characters are draped in shades of grey. What makes the movie compelling, are the relationships formed between the principle characters.

      If any synopsis suggests anything complex in the cops-and-robbers treatment of its key characters, it sure didn't play out that way. Daniel Wu is Nick, an undercover cop spending the last 7 years working for Andy Lau's "Banker", one of the top drug lords in HK. Ill health has forced Banker to look for a successor, and as all crime lords without natural heirs go, it sure is difficult to trust an outsider to takeover the business without stabbing you in the back. In fact, instead of Asian superstar Andy Lau, Protégé as the name implies, is actually a Daniel Wu vehicle, as we see events unfold through his eyes, and in two concurrent threads. The first being his contacts with the suppliers, and the second, his personal relations from someone who is part of the demand pool. If you were to add an additional dimension, his allegiance with the law enforcers serves as a minor subplot. No wonder Nick is one confused chap!

      In contrast to the slick production look of its peers, Protégé turned out rather grimy, in deliberate fashion, as much of the time we're stuck in the doldrums of society, the ready market of those willing to abuse drugs for that quick fix in escaping their woes. And it is in this part of society that we spend much of our time in. Nick befriends a single mom played by Chinese actress Zhang Jingchu, who is a drug junkie, unable to break out of her habit, try as she might. They form a reluctant friendship, more because of the fact that Nick takes pity on Jing-jing the little girl, the innocent sufferer of her mom's ineptness to break out of addiction.

      Written and directed by Derek Yee, Protégé covers the whole spectrum of the heroin supply chain, from the farmers right down to the individual junkie, and examines the concerns of each layer. It's basically a roadmap 101 to drug production, with loads of cash to be made, especially for those willing to take big risks in dealing, trafficking and producing. It's a showcase on the drug operations, with its low tech, high manpower operations in the extensive network of runners, and its compartmentalization of roles and responsibilities. You can't but be impressed by how things are run, akin to any large organization, only clandestine, led by businessmen in it for the money, with warped morals and a sense of being the bridge for sellers to satisfy demand.

      Despite top billing for Anita Yuen and Louis Koo, they actually have only bit parts in the movie, the former as the pregnant wife of Banker, and the latter as yet another junkie, husband to Zhang Jingchu's Jane. Somehow, with the audience I'm with, Louis Koo seems to be the one drawing in the laughter, perhaps for his general wardrobe and make up in the movie. Zhang Jinchu's performance managed to highlight the plight that junkies go through, in either trying to resist their urges, or succumbing to temptation, and the natural willingness to lie their way, even sell their souls, just for that quick fix. It's one thing to show compassion and trying to help, but totally a different ball game altogether as professional and sustained rehabilitation seems the only way to go. Hers and Louis' roles are probably to send out strong anti-drug messages.

      On the other hand, Andy Lau's role, although muted in some ways, seem to want to endear him to audiences, with his character's penchant for candy, and all round nice family man. Never one who spends extravagantly on home turf, you'll probably not even suspect he's the head honcho of a multi-million dollar syndicate. And it is this harmless facade, that complicates Nick's relationship with his mentor, should he embark on following through with his mission. The mentor unreservedly showing you the ropes, making you a rich man in the process, and that his family takes a liking for you as well, but as the undercover, how could you draw the line, especially when its dealing with human emotions, of deep friendship, trust, and betrayal?

      Daniel Wu played his role really well, and I'm surprised that he's super charismatic here, holding his own against Lau by playing the many facades of Nick excellently. His role too offers a comparison between members from both sides of the law, of trust and loyalties amongst in the force, albeit from another division, who spare no hesitation in using him for personal glory, and contrasted against the unwritten law of brotherhood, anonymity and trust of those in the illicit business.

      One of the biggest movies hitting screens in Asia during this Chinese New Year period, it won't be difficult for Protégé to make a killing at the box office, given its powerful, engaging storyline which doesn't complicate, and the star-studded cast. As Raintree Pictures had a hand in co-producing the movie, expect to see one scene shot here, which reiterates our long no-nonsense approach to drug traffickers.

      P.S. While I'm quite surprised at the many cinematically detailed instruction of drug production and drug use that remained intact in the version shown here, what was snipped instead was a sexy scene (damn!). What gives? Yes, so besides having to watch this movie dubbed in Mandarin, it's an edited version to boot.
      angelsfang

      Protégé pulls NO PUNCHES.

      Right hook! BAM! The HK audience is knocked out!

      Protégé pulls no punches at all. It is by far one of the most disturbing mainstream films I've ever seen (from Hong Kong), with certain scenes resembling those of Nicolas Cage's 8mm. This makes Protégé quite unique, and delivers a powerful and thought provoking message to those curious about hard drugs. Very Hollywood feel here.

      However, I have a mixed response to the movie itself. While it's certainly not bad, it never really "wow'd" me either. It's decent, which gets it a 7 rating, and if you have the stomach for some very sick and disturbing scenes (like I said, it pulls no punches, it pushes the rating to the limit), go ahead and rent it. I think perhaps that I'm not used to seeing Daniel Wu in this sort of role, I won't reveal too much but let's just say he's come a long way in his acting career, this particular role might've been suited to someone else, someone newer and more raw. Don't get me wrong he is good, but it's very different to his more recent projects.

      Daniel Wu - Good ..... Andy Lau - Good/Great ..... Louis Koo - Great ..... Jingchu Zhang - Brilliant, memorable ..... Anita Yuen - Fat! ..... The little girl - Very cute!

      Oh, last but not least, watch out for the raid scene. It's friggin awesome, it's evidence that Hong Kong cinema is finally moving forward again, and it's picking up speed!

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      FAQ

      • How long is Protégé?Alimenté par Alexa

      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 13 février 2007 (Hong Kong)
      • Pays d’origine
        • Hong Kong
      • Site officiel
        • Official site
      • Langues
        • Cantonais
        • Anglais
        • Thai
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • Những Tay Chuyên Nghiệp
      • Lieux de tournage
        • Thaïlande
      • Sociétés de production
        • Artforce International
        • Mediacorp Raintree Pictures
        • Global Entertainment Group Co.
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Box-office

      Modifier
      • Budget
        • 4 500 000 $US (estimé)
      • Montant brut mondial
        • 11 764 129 $US
      Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        1 heure 46 minutes
      • Couleur
        • Color
      • Mixage
        • Dolby Digital
      • Rapport de forme
        • 2.35 : 1

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