A few years in the life of Ah Kam, starting with her joining action director Master Tung's team of regulars.A few years in the life of Ah Kam, starting with her joining action director Master Tung's team of regulars.A few years in the life of Ah Kam, starting with her joining action director Master Tung's team of regulars.
Jimmy Ga Lok Wong
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The film tries too hard. It tries to be a behind the scenes look at Hong Kong action film making. And a thriller. And a love story. It also intends to give Michelle Yeoh a chance to play three very different aspects of the same woman. The film spends not enough time on the first theme and too much on the others.
That said, it is an extremely effective little film And more important: it gives Michelle Yeoh the chance to do some of the best acting of her career. She creates a wonderfully complete and charming character as a stunt double getting her big break.
The woman she plays is, especially in the first third, different from anything you have seen her do before. It proves that she is one of the greatest living actresses -- and not just in action films.
That said, it is an extremely effective little film And more important: it gives Michelle Yeoh the chance to do some of the best acting of her career. She creates a wonderfully complete and charming character as a stunt double getting her big break.
The woman she plays is, especially in the first third, different from anything you have seen her do before. It proves that she is one of the greatest living actresses -- and not just in action films.
I went into The Stunt Woman expecting it to be about a female stunt performer who takes revenge on the criminal element after they, I don't know, sabotage her film or something. That's not really the case. In fact the movie is a rather slow-paced character study--if this is action filmmaking, it's a very strange approach to it.
Michelle Yeoh plays the title character, who lives in a small apartment with an agreeable roommate and finds work as a "stand-in" with a film crew. There is a criminal underworld at play in the periphery of the film, and they do impact the plot somewhere between the second and third act, but that's not really what the movie is about, per se. It's not a behind-the-scenes glimpse at filmmaking, either. More than anything it strives to be a slice-of-life story about the daily trials and tribulations of a tight-knit below-the-line film crew, focusing on Yeoh in particular.
Despite the slow pace and choppy plot (the movie feels like it was adapted from a novel and the screenwriters never quite settled on what to cut out and what to keep in), I found myself becoming engrossed in The Stunt Woman even as it turned out to be something much different than the kinetic action flick I was expecting. The camaraderie between Yeoh and the rest of her crew is endearing and understated: they take care of each other on and off set, develop an easy familiarity that borders on familial, and pass out on each other after a long night of drinking. You can feel the love that director Ann Hui has for her characters, and probably for her cast and crew; in some ways I imagine The Stunt Woman came from the same place that inspired Tarantino's Once Upon a Time In Hollywood.
The only major downside for me was the cartoonish crime boss villain who shows up two-thirds of the way through. His performance is straight out of a Jackie Chan movie, or something like Kung Fu Hustle. It's out of place in a low-key, quietly observed movie like this.
Michelle Yeoh plays the title character, who lives in a small apartment with an agreeable roommate and finds work as a "stand-in" with a film crew. There is a criminal underworld at play in the periphery of the film, and they do impact the plot somewhere between the second and third act, but that's not really what the movie is about, per se. It's not a behind-the-scenes glimpse at filmmaking, either. More than anything it strives to be a slice-of-life story about the daily trials and tribulations of a tight-knit below-the-line film crew, focusing on Yeoh in particular.
Despite the slow pace and choppy plot (the movie feels like it was adapted from a novel and the screenwriters never quite settled on what to cut out and what to keep in), I found myself becoming engrossed in The Stunt Woman even as it turned out to be something much different than the kinetic action flick I was expecting. The camaraderie between Yeoh and the rest of her crew is endearing and understated: they take care of each other on and off set, develop an easy familiarity that borders on familial, and pass out on each other after a long night of drinking. You can feel the love that director Ann Hui has for her characters, and probably for her cast and crew; in some ways I imagine The Stunt Woman came from the same place that inspired Tarantino's Once Upon a Time In Hollywood.
The only major downside for me was the cartoonish crime boss villain who shows up two-thirds of the way through. His performance is straight out of a Jackie Chan movie, or something like Kung Fu Hustle. It's out of place in a low-key, quietly observed movie like this.
1st watched 1/1/2010 – 3 out of 10 (Dir-Ann Hui): Mixed-up mess of a movie about a stuntwoman and her experiences on and off the set. Michelle Yeah plays the woman who gets work with a crew making what appears to be a low budget kung fu movie in a very un-Hollywood- like set. She is really well liked by the director(Aka. The Boss) and everyone else and then gets more and more responsibilities. A gang randomly attacks the crew every once in awhile and causes havoc(this creates kind of a sub-plot). She has a brief romance with a restaurant owner, goes away from the business, but eventually comes back when this doesn't work out. The gang eventually kills the boss and then she's left to take care of the son, since she feels responsible as part of the crews family. This is basically the whole movie. Every incident seems to happen very quickly without much lead or development done for the characters. The movie comes across like it was chopped to pieces and was intended to be much longer. Characters come in and out of the story, things happen to them, and then we go onto the next scene. There is a central core of characters but in my opinion, this movie shows us a very shoddy bit of directing by an acclaimed Ann Hui. This could have been a good expose on this type of work but instead we get kind of a messed-up soap opera of a movie. If there is a longer director's cut that would be interesting to see but I don't know if it would improve the movie. The makers really come across like they really didn't know what kind of movie they wanted to make and it shows. Avoid this one.
Before the film I was watching the actors list. It seemed impressive with the names Michelle Yeoh and the legendary Sammo Hung. I immediately thought of kung fu fights and action. This is not what the film delivered even if the title suggests it. It's mostly a drama revolving around Yeoh's character Ah Kam. Ah Kam is an ordinary woman trying to get by, having success at some things and bad luck with others, just your typical basic drama plot with some twists thrown in. It starts nicely with scenes on an action movie set where they are shooting the stunts. After that it's downhill and towards the end it gets very jumpy, with weird scenes out of nowhere. I found it very difficult to follow the plot because the scenes felt somehow out of place and inconsistent. So what to expect of this film is Michelle Yeoh and Sammo Hung without the great action sequences you are used to seeing when associated with these names. The film delivers only a couple of average action scenes, but not enough to satisfy the people watching this for the action. Plus the end is totally mixed up and unsatisfactory. Even if I watched this without my "action glasses" as a drama, which it is, I wouldn't find it very good and I like a good drama film every now and then.
Stunt woman Michelle Yeoh finally gets her break in the hardscrabble world of Hong Kong film, when director Sammo Hung's leading lady throws a fit. No, she doesn't get to play the lead, she gets to be a stunt woman on the production, and discovers an unlikely and erratic collection of people who produce the most amazing effects in the sloppiest and most haphazard fashion possible.
Ann Hui's is bolstered by these two performers, as well as the other performers. Like many a Hong Kong production, it has a third act that seems to come out of nowhere to seal the emotional arc of the story, but I'm fine with it and the fine stunt work of Yuk-Sing Ma.
Ann Hui's is bolstered by these two performers, as well as the other performers. Like many a Hong Kong production, it has a third act that seems to come out of nowhere to seal the emotional arc of the story, but I'm fine with it and the fine stunt work of Yuk-Sing Ma.
Did you know
- TriviaMichelle Yeoh suffered a serious injury when she misjudged an 18-foot jump from a bridge onto a truck. She fractured a vertebra and was in traction for a month.
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