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Black Ransom (Blu-ray) (US Version) Blu-ray Region A

Simon Yam (Actor) | Michael Miu (Actor) | Keung Kwok Man (Director) | Andy On (Actor)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Written and produced by veteran Hong Kong filmmaker Wong Jing and stylishly directed by cinematographer Keung Kwok Man, Black Ransom faces off Hong Kong old-school TVB actors Simon Yam (SPL) and Michael Miu (Brothers) in an exciting battle of wits. Along with explosive action scenes performed by Andy On (Invisible Target) and Xing Yu (Flash Point), Black Ransom is a classic example of Hong Kong commercial genre film at its entertaining best.

A powerful triad boss has been kidnapped, and the new police superintendent Koo (Fala Chen) decides to recruit the help of Mann (Simon Yam), a former supercop who has since been relegated to back-up duty. Mann has his work cut out for him when he realizes his opponent is Sam (Michael Miu), a former cop with plenty of grudges. When Sam takes the fight to Mann's family, Mann is more than determined to bring down the dangerous kidnapper and his gang.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Black Ransom (Blu-ray) (US Version) 撕票風雲 (Blu-ray) (美國版) 撕票风云 (Blu-ray) (美国版) 撕票風雲 (Blu-ray) (US版) Black Ransom (Blu-ray) (US Version)
Artist Name(s): Simon Yam (Actor) | Michael Miu (Actor) | Andy On (Actor) | Fala Chen (Actor) | Chu Ying (Actor) | Kenny Wong Tak Bun (Actor) | Cheung Lui (Actor) | Liu Yang (Actor) | Shi Yan Neng (Actor) | Vincent Wong (Actor) | Wang Ching (Actor) | Parkman Wong (Actor) | Zuki Lee (Actor) | Leung Man Yee (Actor) | Samuel Pang (Actor) | Ng Chi Hung (Actor) | Wada Hiromi (Actor) 任達華 (Actor) | 苗僑偉 (Actor) | 安 志杰 (Actor) | 陳 法拉 (Actor) | 瞿穎 (Actor) | 黃德斌 (Actor) | 張雷 (Actor) | 劉洋 (Actor) | 釋延能 (行宇) (Actor) | 王浩信 (Actor) | 王青 (Actor) | 黃柏文 (Actor) | 李思蓓 (Actor) | 梁敏儀 (Actor) | 彭敬慈 (Actor) | 吳志雄 (Actor) | 裕美 (Actor) 任达华 (Actor) | 苗侨伟 (Actor) | 安 志杰 (Actor) | 陈 法拉 (Actor) | 瞿颖 (Actor) | 黄德斌 (Actor) | 张雷 (Actor) | 刘洋 (Actor) | 释延能 (行宇) 延能 (Actor) | 王浩信 (Actor) | 王青 (Actor) | 黄柏文 (Actor) | 李思蓓 (Actor) | 梁敏仪 (Actor) | 彭敬慈 (Actor) | 吴志雄 (Actor) | 裕美 (Actor) 任達華 (サイモン・ヤム) (Actor) | 苗僑偉(ミウ・キウワイ) (Actor) | 安志杰(アンディ・オン) (Actor) | 陳法拉(ファラ・チェン) (Actor) | 瞿穎(チュー・イン) (Actor) | 黄徳斌(ケニー・ウォン) (Actor) | 張雷(チョン・ルイ) (Actor) | Liu Yang (Actor) | 釋行宇 (シー・シンユー) (Actor) | 王浩信 (ビンセント・ウォン) (Actor) | Wang Ching (Actor) | 黄柏文(パークマン・ウォン) (Actor) | 李思蓓 (リー・チープイ) (Actor) | 梁敏儀 (ウィニー・リョン) (Actor) | 彭敬慈 (サミュエル・パン) (Actor) | Ng Chi Hung (Actor) | 裕美 (Actor) Simon Yam (Actor) | Michael Miu (Actor) | Andy On (Actor) | Fala Chen (Actor) | Chu Ying (Actor) | Kenny Wong Tak Bun (Actor) | Cheung Lui (Actor) | Liu Yang (Actor) | Shi Yan Neng (Actor) | Vincent Wong (Actor) | Wang Ching (Actor) | Parkman Wong (Actor) | Zuki Lee (Actor) | Leung Man Yee (Actor) | Samuel Pang (Actor) | Ng Chi Hung (Actor) | Wada Hiromi (Actor)
Director: Keung Kwok Man 姜國民 姜国民 姜國民(ケン・クォクマン) Keung Kwok Man
Producer: Wong Jing 王晶 王晶 王晶 (バリー・ウォン) Wong Jing
Blu-ray Region Code: A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it?
Release Date: 2010-06-29
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: [HD] High Definition What is it?
Aspect Ratio: Widescreen
Sound Information: DTS-HD Master Audio, Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): Blu-ray, 25 GB - Single Layer
Screen Resolution: 1080p (1920 x 1080 progressive scan)
Duration: 94 (mins)
Publisher: Tai Seng Video (US)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1022845284

Product Information

Director: Keung Kwok Man

Cheung Bo-Man used to be an elite in the police force. he was an idol among the younger police cadets for being an ace shooter, highly observant and a calm mind. However, after the murder of his wife by triads, he lost the motivation to live and sunk into depression. His relationship with his daughter also deteriorated. During this time, he encountered the greatest challenge of his life. He is sent to investigate a series of kidnappings and murders of triad leaders by the newly posted Chief superintendent of Police, Ku Kwok kiong. The perpetrators of the crimes were higher organized, profesional, curel and violent. After investigation, he found that the leader of the perpetrators was an expolice officer (michael Miu) and all his underlings were ex-SDU members. Therefore, they were familiar with police procedures and techniques which enabled them to predict the police's moves. He soon found that cheung Bo-Man is after his trails and a life-death battle of courage and wits unfolds.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Black Ransom (Blu-ray) (US Version)"

July 17, 2010

This professional review refers to Black Ransom (DVD) (US Version)
Bullet and Brain director Keung Kwok Man teams again with writer producer Wong Jing for triad kidnap thriller Black Ransom. Unsurprisingly, the result is a film which is both stoically generic and gloriously weird, making for uneven though unexpectedly entertaining viewing. The film pulls together an impressive cast, headlined by veterans Simon Yam and Michael Miu as the good guy and bad guy respectively, with support from martial artists Andy On (True Legend) and Xing Yu (Flash Point, and the always lovely Fala Chen (recently in Turning Point).

Yam stars as Mann, a former top cop who has fallen on tough times since the death of his wife at the hands of the triads. Everything changes when ex-police star Sam (Michael Miu) starts kidnapping various gang bosses as part of some shady master plan, causing a great furore in the criminal underworld. The new and rather young Chief Superintendent Koo (a gorgeous, though underused Fala Chen) puts Mann in charge of the investigation, having heard tales of his legendary prowess from her father, and soon enough he is hot on Sam's trail. Although the two quickly form some kind of strange bond, the action heats up, and Sam kidnaps Mann's daughter to try and force him off the case.

Very much like Bullet and Brain before it, Black Ransom is a film which walks a strange line between being generic and weirdly offbeat. Here, the line is even more blurred, and at times it is genuinely hard to tell whether Keung Kwok Man and Wong Jing have their tongues firmly in their cheeks, or if the film's resolutely straight faced daftness is a happy accident. Most of the highly entertaining strangeness comes thanks to Simon Yam's Mann, a bizarre figure who despite appearing to be a crumpled deadbeat is actually some kind of zen-like master. Large parts of the plot revolve around him using his powers to figure things out, which generally translates to him closing his eyes, concentrating (usually looking like he's either asleep or is about to have a sudden bowel movement), and then suddenly working out a vital piece of the puzzle. His skills also extend to being a supernaturally good shot, and though the film tries to justify this by throwing in flashbacks of him being a crack marksman as a cadet, these never really explain why he is able to take down far off snipers with his eyes closed (cue CGI slow motion effects as the bullet winds its way towards its target, though the gun sight and into his eye).

The only possible reason for the awakening of his near psychic abilities seems to be some kind of attraction to or inspiration he feels at the challenge laid down by Michael Miu's vicious but sort of honourable villain. Although the film would perhaps have benefitted from a Red Cliff style homoerotic musical duel or similar, the two do at least get to engage in some odd online chat sparring, a scene which gives Yam yet another chance to show his mind reading powers. Although all of this makes Black Ransom a film which is difficult to take seriously, it also adds considerable entertainment value, making it a lot of fun to watch and helping it to stand out from the overcrowded playing field.

On more traditional terms, the film functions perfectly well, if without much originality. The plot itself is engaging, and though too familiar to be truly gripping it does manage a few twists in Wong Jing's trademark tangential and melodramatic style. As usual, Keung Kwok Man includes some interesting visuals, and the film combines the modern noir style with a few touches of grit and some enjoyably flashy flourishes. Clocking in at just over an hour and a half, it moves along at a decent pace and does have a few exciting scenes and set pieces, with just about enough action to keep genre fans happy. There's a good mix of shoot outs and martial arts battles, with standouts that include the afore mentioned sniper scene and the suitably over the top final duel between Xing Yu and Andy On.

Really though, the main reason why Black Ransom is worth watching, and why it stands as one of the more entertaining thrillers of the last few months, is Simon Yam and his psychic cop. Without quite pushing the film into the realms of the surreal, this does give it a very different flavour, and whether intentional or not, makes it much more palatable than it would have been if po-faced and sensible.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com

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