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Some people think "Hong Kong movie" means "heroic action movie". RUNAWAY PISTOL is a bullet in the face to that idea. Directed by Fruit Chan's cinematographer, Lam Wah Chuen, this is a convention-defying, synapse-frying, anti-gun, anti-humanity, anti-everything flick that follows a hapless handgun from one back-against-the-wall owner to another across Hong Kong's blasted cityscape. Narrated by a lost and lonely handgun, the movie whip pans across a country in economic crisis, and moments of sudden, neon-smeared beauty bloom up like flowers in a graveyard. It's a jet black journey into human nature with a cynical world view and a toxic sense of humor that carbonizes the very air itself. Made for about $250,000 and featuring a cast crammed to bursting with Hong Kong's smartest directors, RUNAWAY PISTOL has a wicked sense of humor, and a low amount of optimism about the human condition: attitudes that have caused it to be both celebrated and condemned by critics. The Hong Kong Film Critics Association chose it as a notable film of 2002, other critics have called it "offensive" and "disgusting". Coming to a city
that has seen more than its share of violence in recent years, in a
world that is full of guns and death, RUNAWAY PISTOL is a welcome, hard-edged,
anti-violence movie that leaves vapid "Give Peace a Chance"
stupidity back in the 60's while savaging those who deal death as the
woman-hating, soul-dead, greedy cowards that they are. Fully armed with
vengeful dogs, nude weatherwomen, foot jobs, and a dejected pistol that
just can't stop bemoaning its fate, this is one of the bleakest and
bravest independent movies of the year. > RUNAWAY PISTOL web site: http://www.runaway-pistol.com/ |
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