In the end, The Killer was issued on Blu-Ray, at a reasonable price, by Dragon Dynasty and it's easy to visually understand the grumblings and general gripes by fans over its technical flaws. Techies want pristine. I prefer it myself, but when you're a beggar you simply can't be a chooser, and in this rare case I fell somewhere closer to the former camp. The Blu-Ray was my one and only option without filing for bankruptcy and for what it's worth I'm pleased to own this piece of cinema history.
My initial reactions to Director John Woo's film in the first quarter of the film were varied. There were moments of cringe-inducing 80s cheese complete with the noteworthy fashions of the day. There were even a few moments where the film semmed to crackle along with a kind of amateurish energy. This combined with the slightly dated look and technical imperfections forced me to proceed with some caution after years of building high expectations.
But, as the Cantonese-based film rolled along I found myself slowly won over by Chow Yun-Fat's character, the emotional subtext that first felt mildly cheesy as well as John Woo's approach, style and pacing. It became apparent this was an actioner with a dose of sincerity and heart. While there was a distinct 80s sensibility to the fashion and soundtrack it seems something of a minor miracle this film looks as astounding as it does hailing from Canton, Southern China home to Hong Kong. This sequence is where the worm really turned for me in the story. How often does an action film pause like this? Wonderful.
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Truthfully, one of the things that drew me to the film, was not so much the amazing or much heralded resume of Director John Woo [Mission: Impossible 2, Face Off, Hard Target, Hard Boiled], as deserved as it may be, but rather my affection for actor Chow Yun-Fat. Woo's work is certainly notable, but I am more deeply enamored with actor Yun-Fat's resume [see below]. Like actors Kurt Russell, Ian McShane, Christopher Walken or Rutger Hauer, I was immediately taken by the actor's screen presence upon my first personal introduction to his work. Since then, like the films of those aforementioned actors, I have been a close observer of the work of Chow Yun-Fat ever since.
My first exposure to Yun-Fat was not with a Woo picture, but rather Director Antoine Fuqua's debut feature film The Replacement Killers [1998]. While Yun-Fat and Woo clearly created a beautiful artistic marriage working together on a host of films, the two ultimately broke into the American markets in the 1990s to varying degrees of success, but ultimately both would make their marks internationally. The Replacement Killers stylish action instantly spoke to me, but was hardly original. In fact, it's clearly a far inferior work to many of the Woo/ Fat productions pre-Hollywood.
Fuqua's The Replacement Killers captured the essence of The Killer with a seemingly bigger budget including sequences [Mira Sorvino with Chow Yun-Fat] that look like copies of scenes extracted directly from The Killer [Chow Yun-Fat with Danny Lee]. Fuqua was a fan. The concept of a hired assassin was applied for Fuqua's film with a twist. Instead of Yun-Fat's character, another assassin, carrying out an assassination tasked to him, he opts out of his assignment due to the age of his next young target. His affection for the innocent would not allow him to cross such an ethical/ moral boundary. His personal code would not allow for such a violation. These moral codes are also at the heart of many of Woo's own Cantonese pictures. Following his decision, Yun-Fat's assassin character is primary target number one. Ultimately, the direction of both films are setups for Yun-Fat to act the part of an assassin on the run. The stories are essentially told by image and through visceral action complete with wonderful slow motions shots. Fuqua even takes a page from Woo's pictures and applies them to his own Hollywood production. The Replacement Killers [28 million budget] was Yun-Fat's introduction to the American marketplace and it's is a terrific little Honk Kong-styled action gem without actually being one. One thing is clear, The Killer's influence on Director Fuqua and others is undeniable.
The Killer is indeed one of John Woo's original best for its pure, single-minded focus. At the heart of the action is a simple tale about two men at odds with their own personal codes of conduct and their relationship fused with a love story and a few guns.
The Killer is an extremely violent action picture with a heart. It's easily a template for much of Woo's oeuvre. It may not be a technically perfect film a la Hollywood, but for an overseas picture with a limited budget it achieves a visionary style that is unrelenting and influential. Like Antoine Fuqua, Quentin Tarantino and Luc Besson both clearly absorbed much from Woo. Woo's style is vivid and he clearly compensated for any limitations he might have experienced in the film's making to bring a classic to the screen.
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It was also clear to me by the end of the picture that my adoration for Chow Yun-Fat is not unjustified. The man is clearly the uncontested agent of cool. He is the man. In fact, while
The Replacement Killers is very good,
The Killer has an emotional resonance within its moral narrative that had me connected to the characters that much more. Chow Yun-Fat's character, Ah Jong, becomes embroiled in a cat and mouse game opposite Li Ying [played by Danny Lee], a police detective that dogs him at every turn perhaps more determined than the assassin himself. While certainly not wholly original the pairing of the two actors adds real depth to the story intercut with minutes of splendidly choreographed action. You begin to understand the worlds of these two men. You also begin to realize they are not that different. Both men are persistent, intelligent, professional with a healthy respect for loyalty and honor. Both are subject to variations in code and beholden to external expectations and pressures. In fact, later in the film, Ah Jong points out these similarities and the exposition spelling out their connection is entirely unnecessary for the audience. There are complex moral questions in play as the film reaches its rousing conclusion. The complicated nature of the two men keep things from devolving into stereotypical cardboard cutouts between the action sequences. Ah Jong doubts his commitment to the assassin's life and yearns to escape it; Li Ying doubts his commitment to the law without support of the institution and yearns to escape it.
The Killer makes James Bond look like child's play. The gloves come off in the final act and the bloody shoot out echoes a kind of Asian version of
Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid [1969]. I immediately felt the connection to that film especially when Ah Jong references the idea of shooting his way out of the church. In fact, as much as
The Replacement Killers owes a debt of gratitude to Woo's
The Killer, there is clear evidence Woo is paying homage to Director George Roy Hill's
Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid [1969] among others.
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Apart from a slight bit of melodrama,a syrupy Cantonese pop number and the cheesy synthetic Asian score my wife dubs as porn music that runs the course of the film,
The Killer is positively epic. It's easy to account for the hordes of fans that love the cinematic style of
The Killer. I would rank myself among them along with the work of Chow Yun-Fat. He has a unique charisma that is very physical. There isn't a great deal of dialogue and with Yun-Fat none is required. His guns speak for him. Dancing throughout a thrilling ballet of violence, the stunning Yun-Fat is a consummate professional killer with a heart. I always knew the 80s had it in spades, film, music, you name it. In fact, there's a lot more going on in
The Killer than
The Replacement Killers, which is higher on style than substance. While that film was a stylistic achievement, this one is the original with a more substantive plot. So, my mission to learn more about the vast world of Yun-Fat and to experience for myself this long heralded classic that is
The Killer proved to be a revealing and rewarding one. The film was everything and a bit more.
The Killer is a classic piece of cinema history.
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One final point, the
Triad [the criminal syndicate from which Ah Jong and his friend, Fung Sei, hailed] is changing. The concept of honor and loyalty and respect is dying. I loved this aspect of the film and it reminded me of
The Syndicate from
Cowboy Bebop [1998-1999], clearly influenced by the Hong Kong pictures, and how the elders were wiped out by the younger replacements like Vicious who had no respect for honor. Honor and a code of ethics are by-gone aspects of the criminal life in film and this is underlined in both
Cowboy Bebop and
The Killer. Good and evil are represented by the symbolic flight of birds [doves or crows]. There were moments in
Cowboy Bebop that reminded me of
The Replacement Killers, but it was clearly
The Killer and other Hong Kong cinema that influenced the aforementioned anime series and other contemporary action films. There's nothing Hollywood about
The Killer and the fates of its principals. It's modern Asian tragedy with stylish excess. Still, how does the killer load those gun clips so quickly? Guns would seemingly empty their chambers in seconds, but miraculously continue to fire. Okay, maybe that's asking a bit too much.
The Killer is a wild, sometimes messy, ultimately beautiful triumph of style and images as a vehicle for telling Woo's emotional story that weaves like a stream of visual poetry. This combination of action and story produced a clearly universal message, which may explain its wide international appeal. This is pure, complete, unscripted [literally shot without a finished script] classic John Woo [with little to no outside influence]. Together, with Chow Yun-Fat,
The Killer remains one of their Hong Kong best and one of their best films period.
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The Killer: A
Writer: John Woo
Director: John Woo
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The Cast:
Chow Yun-Fat [Ah Jong]
Sally Yeh [Jennie]
Danny Lee [Detective Li Ying]
Kenneth Sang [Sgt. Tsang Yeh]
Paul Chu Kong [Fung Sei]
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Chow Yun-Fat [1955-present]. Cantonese born. His film highlights include:
A Better Tomorrow [1986],
A Better Tomorrow II [1987],
City On Fire [1987],
The Killer [1989],
A Better Tomorrow III [1990],
Full Contact [1992],
Hard Boiled [1992],
Once A Thief [1994],
The Replacement Killers [1998],
The Corruptor [1999],
Anna And The King [1999],
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon [2000],
Bulletproof Monk [2003],
Curse Of The Golden Flower [2006] and
The Children Of Huang Shi [2008].
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DVD Extra highlights include an exclusive interview with Director John Woo [25 min], an American Cinema Q&A on The Killer [2002] and Hard Boiled [2002].