Besieged City (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Numbed by the destitution that surrounds him everyday, Tin Shui Wai teen Ling (Tang Tak Po) just wants to mind his own business and get out of his present life and neighborhood as soon as possible. He can't stay apathetic any longer though when cops show up to inform him that his runaway younger brother Jun (Wong Yat Ho) is lying comatose in the hospital and being charged with murder. To make matters worse, gangsters are demanding that Ling hand over a drug stash that Jun supposedly has. To find the drugs and the truth, Ling retraces the steps of his younger brother who ran away from home a while ago. Befriending a gang of troubled youth led by brassy teen mother Panadol (Wong Hau Yan), Jun enters a fast and fragile world of drugs, violence, and crime. At first, living fast comes as a liberation for Jun, but everything soon spins dangerously out of control.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Besieged City (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) 圍城 (2008) (DVD) (香港版) 围城 (2008) (DVD) (香港版) 圍城 (DVD) (香港版) Besieged City (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Tang Tak Po (Actor) | Wong Hau Yan (Actor) | Wong Yat Ho (Actor) | Joman Chiang 鄧 德保 (Actor) | 黃 孝恩 (Actor) | 黃 溢豪 (Actor) | 蔣祖曼 邓 德保 (Actor) | 黄 孝恩 (Actor) | 黄 溢豪 (Actor) | 蒋祖曼 Tang Tak Po (Actor) | Wong Hau Yan (Actor) | Wong Yat Ho (Actor) | 蒋祖曼(ジョーマン・チャン) Tang Tak Po (Actor) | Wong Hau Yan (Actor) | Wong Yat Ho (Actor) | Joman Chiang |
| Director: | Lawrence Lau 劉國昌 刘国昌 劉國昌 (ローレンス・ラウ) Lau Kwok Cheung |
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| Release Date: | 2008-06-23 |
| Language: | Cantonese |
| Subtitles: | English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | Hong Kong |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Aspect Ratio: | 1.78 : 1 |
| Widescreen Anamorphic: | Yes |
| Sound Information: | Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS Digital Surround |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD-9, DVD |
| Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
| Rating: | III |
| Duration: | 97 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Mei Ah (HK) |
| Package Weight: | 120 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1011019562 |
Product Information
* Sound Mix: DTS, Dolby Digital 5.1
* DVD Type: DVD-9
導演 : 劉國昌
Director: Lau Kwok Cheung
何靈傑外表就如一般天水圍的學生一樣,可是他比一眾學生勤奮好學,力爭上游,為著沖出天水圍的目標而奮鬥。除此以外,他對所有無關於己的事情漠不關心。靈傑來至一個不健全的問題家庭,除了要照顧患有精神病的母親,還要面對嗜賭的暴力父親,此外,靈傑還有一個離家出走多年的弟弟俊傑。
一天放學,靈傑被天水圍黑幫頭目拗柴擄往廢車場,要靈傑在一個月內交出俊傑昏迷前所收藏的貨物,儘管靈傑完全不知拗柴所言何物,可是拗柴堅決要靈傑負上責任。靈傑的生活從此被惡勢力入侵,就連學校也變得不安全,靈傑被拗柴的手下所誣詆傷人及收取保護費,更被校方勒令停學......
Ling-Kit HO is just like one of many other students in Tin Shui Wai. However, he is a lot more hard-working than all the others as he wants to get away from this besieged city. Apart from his study, he is indifferent to everything because he comes from a defunct family. Having to take care of his mentally-ill mother, Ling Kit is also forced to face his Dad – a heavy drunker and a heavy gambler. His younger brother Chun-Kit has left the family for years. At that time, Chun-Kit was heavily bullied by his classmates in school and he was always beaten by his drunken father. Being the elder brother, however, Ling-Kit did not protect Chun-Kit from being beaten so Chun-Kit left in great panic.
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Professional Review of "Besieged City (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"
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If Besieged City is to be believed, then Tin Shui Wai is probably not a place you want to visit. Director Lawrence Lau returns to his Gangs and Spacked Out screwed-up youth stomping grounds for this look at young people in the notorious New Territories town, and how their lives basically suck. Ling (Tang Tak-Po) is a secondary school student whose daily life is an increasingly out-of-control nightmare. He wakes up to find a domestic squabble involving underage prostitution going on across the hall, and pushes his way through nearby cops and reporters simply so he can get to the elevator and go to school. Somebody soon turns up dead, but Ling can't be bothered - he's off to get an education. But things aren't much better at school. Ling's education involves classrooms in constant disorder, and trips to a washroom where evil schoolgirls attempt to give young boys hair rinses in the urinals. At home, Ling's mother is in a morose state, and won't even object when her husband beats youngest son Jun (Wong Yat-Ho) for interrupting the horse race on television. The physical abuse drives Jun away, and nobody in the family seems to mind much when he stops coming home at all. Ling experiences moments of regret, but most of the time he's too busy trying to study so he can get out of Tin Shui Wai. However, even when he's taking a test, he's bothered by kids making noise and throwing things in the classroom - and then the cops interrupt his test to drag him into the hall for a little chat. Somebody stop the rain on poor Ling! News flash, kid: your life absolutely blows. But Ling's life is an unending supply of Hershey's Kisses when compared to that of his younger brother Jun. The cops inform Ling that Jun is now in a coma after he allegedly murdered teenage mother Panadol (Wong Hau-Yan) and then tried to kill himself. Let's look at this situation: there's a comatose kid handcuffed to a hospital bed, who's due to go to trial for killing another kid who was also a single mother. Shocking, isn't it? And if that isn't enough bad fortune for one single thirteen year-old boy, annoying teen triads are also after Jun because they think he may know the location of a stash of drugs that Panadol was in possession of before she died. Even though Ling had nothing to do with Jun's or Panadol's activities, he's guilty by association - or so those annoying teen triads believe. If his brother won't give up the goods, they want Ling to do it instead. Of course, Ling has no idea where the drugs are - and the threats apparently rattle him - so starts digging into his younger brother's recent past. He soon meets Yee-Wah (Joman Chaing), the older sister of the deceased Panadol, as well as a few of Jun's and Panadol's common friends. What Ling learns is that Panadol was a serious poster child for trouble; not only was she into drugs and theft (and that's in addition to teen motherhood, mind you) but she consorted with a local gang leader and may even have been doing some distribution on the side. As Ling digs deeper, he discovers more and more about the crappy things going on around him, and the problems only begin with lousy public education, drugs, triad activity, domestic abuse, theft, teen parenthood, and murder. Factor in gang rape, betrayal, peer pressure, absent parents, homelessness, online gaming addiction, sexual abuse, and blackmail, and you get the point: life in Tin Shui Wai is completely screwed. But that was probably mentioned already. Tin Shui Wai is a controversial setting for a current youth gang film, as the New Territories-located town has been dubbed a "City of Sadness" thanks to an abundance of social problems. In October 2007, a mother allegedly threw her two children out of a high-rise house estate window before jumping to her own death, and tales of unemployment, gang activity, and domestic violence are common in the area. The depiction of the town as a den of vice has not gone unnoticed; Tin Shui Wai has received plenty of negative media attention, but there have been positive takes on the town too. Ann Hui's The Way We Are, which premiered at the 2008 Hong Kong International Film Festival, depicts a Tin Shui Wai with citizens and problems that are local and identifiable, and not sensational or sordid like the ones the media is more likely to report. According to Hui, Tin Shui Wai is a place with common people and universal truths, and isn't just the "City of Sadness" it's made out to be. In a sense, Besieged City can also be given the "universal" label, as many of the problems on display could conceivably take place in any city with disenfranchised youth. Lawrence Lau doesn't focus on Tin Shui Wai's ills as some sort of socio-political critique. Though the government's poor handling of the town is largely blamed for its social ills, these issues don't really pop up in Besieged City. The town's name is mentioned only a few times, most notably in a "I'm in Hell in Tin Shui Wai" singsong uttered by a depressed, drug-addled teen, but overall the film possesses little overt judgement for the area. However, Lau does get critical in an oblique manner, his camera frequently tilting upwards to gaze at Tin Shui Wai's high-rise housing estates, concrete monuments to the rapid urban development that the town is known for. Even though Lau isn't assessing blame, he is pointing out, most definitely, that this film is taking place in Tin Shui Wai. Considering the town's recent media attention and the overriding public perspective that Tin Shui Wai is a lousy place to live, and you have a film with a loaded and inescapable context. Does Besieged City really succeed as a portrait of Tin Shui Wai, the City of Sadness? Probably not, as the film only uses Tin Shui Wai as a setting and doesn't really connect its portrait of crappy lives to anything more telling about the town or its situation. However, its portrait of wayward youth is a harrowing and even compelling one. Lau uses mostly unknowns and wrings effective performances from them. As the sisters, Joman Chiang and Wong Hau-Yan form a tragic twosome, and Wong Yat-Ho's innocent youth plays a strong counterpoint to the horrors that he faces as the unfortunate Jun. Lead Tang Tak-Po is probably the weakest link, though his stiff-necked role gives him some license to be wooden. The lack of glamour, plus the dirty settings and unknown faces gives the film an immediate credibility, as the actors feel like people and not personalities. Nobody here is a popstar, and the most well-known actors are probably Joman Chiang from Butterfly and Jonathan Lee Yat-Sing, who played Simon Yam's son in the Election movies. Belief that these are real kids acting in real ways is easy to come by. However, the film loses points for its clumsily-handily pseudo-mystery narrative. Ling's investigation into his brother's life comes with multiple flashbacks, each occurring when a new piece of information is gleamed in the present. Somebody utters a line of revealing dialogue, there's a quick reaction, and then we get the visual explanation via flashback. The technique is effective, but a little too hammy, as the revelations come with loaded, frequently cloying surprise. Since every revelation in Besieged City is resoundingly negative, one can almost call the film predictable. It helps that the characters seem real, as they manage recognition if not actual empathy during the course of the escalating atrocities. But the shock and sadness start to wear off, as the spiral of misfortune becomes never-ending. Everything terrible short of a bloody massacre occurs in Besieged City, and the parade of unhappy times can get didactic, tiring, and even numbing. What buoys the film is Lawrence Lau's engaging style, and the involving storytelling and images. Besieged City starts on a harrowing note, but it does manage to make its characters and their situations matter. Thanks to the film's flashback structure, we know that everything is going to end badly for Jun and his friends, and waiting for things to turn rotten makes for some acute tension. We witness Jun form a friendship with the girl he eventually confesses to killing, and even when the kids engage in petty theft and minor drug use, they retain some sympathy. So what went wrong that made Jun into a murderer? Why did the kids' friendship fall apart? These are strong questions, and Lau assembles his elements in such a way that it feels worth it to hang around for the answers. Unfortunately, the answers come buried under layer after layer of "wow, that sucks" atrocities, such that "City of Sadness" doesn't even begin to describe Besieged City's version of Tin Shui Wai. "City of Escalating Misfortune" or "City of Oppressive Human Crappiness" would perhaps be better names. The film doesn't really succeed as a social drama, as its descent into droning negativity lacks greater significance beyond an immediate reaction. Still, that immediate reaction is quite strong, and packs more punch than most current Hong Kong movies can. Regardless of its greater impact, Besieged City is still worth a visit for its craft, its intentions, and simply its effort. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
Customer Review of "Besieged City (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"
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July 17, 2008
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Really well made film, powerful and brilliantly filmed If you prefer to see the world as a perfect place then don't watch this film, but if you want to know what's really out there, there this film does a damn good job. Really good film. a few bits of the plot i didn't like, but over all i enjoyed it. the acting was very good too, specially considering their age. |












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