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Kidnapper (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3

Christopher Lee (Actor) | Guo Fei Li (Actor) | Kelvin Tong (Director) | Lin De Rong (Actor)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Singaporean director Kelvin Tong (The Maid) returns to his home after the critically acclaimed Rule No.1 with Kidnapper, a riveting thriller about a taxi driver out to rescue his kidnapped son. The script - co-written by Tong and Ken Kwek (The Blue Mansion) - makes up for its simple story with a nail-biting race against time that's packed with plenty of surprising twists. Popular Singaporean actor Christopher Lee gives an intense performance as the man who would go to any length to get his son back. Kidnapper may be a rare Singaporean attempt at the local crime thriller genre, but it will keep viewers of any nationality on the edge of their seats.

Lim (Christopher Lee) is a divorced taxi driver who struggles to take care of his son Wei Siang. One day, Wei Siang is kidnapped by Hu (Jack Lim, Ah Long Pte Ltd) after being wrongly identified as the son of a wealthy man. Forced to pay a ransom of one million Singaporean dollars, Lim goes to desperate measures to raise the money. However, raising the money is just the beginning, as Lim begins to uncover who's behind the botched kidnapping.

© 2011-2012 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Technical Information

Product Title: Kidnapper (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) 綁匪 (DVD) (香港版) 绑匪 (DVD) (香港版) 綁匪 (DVD) (香港版) Kidnapper (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Christopher Lee (Actor) | Guo Fei Li (Actor) | Lin De Rong (Actor) | Chen Jie Le (Actor) 李 銘順 (Actor) | 郭妃麗 (Actor) | 林 德榮 (Actor) | 陳 杰樂 (Actor) 李 铭顺 (Actor) | 郭妃丽 (Actor) | 林 德荣 (Actor) | 陈 杰乐 (Actor) 李銘順 (クリストファー・リー) (Actor) | Guo Fei Li (Actor) | Lin De Rong (Actor) | Chen Jie Le (Actor) Christopher Lee (Actor) | Guo Fei Li (Actor) | Lin De Rong (Actor) | Chen Jie Le (Actor)
Director: Kelvin Tong 唐永健 唐永健 唐永健 (ケルヴィン・トン) Kelvin Tong
Release Date: 2011-05-06
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Singapore
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: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Duration: 98 (mins)
Publisher: Mega Star (HK)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1024353499

Product Information

* Special Features:
- Trailer
- Making Of

Director: Kelvin Tong

Lim, a struggling and obnoxious 40-year-old taxi-driver, is a complete failure. His wife left him years ago, and his only son "Wei Siang" is frequently neglected. Mistaken for a rich man's son, Wei Siang is kidnapped at a shopping mall one day and held for an enormous ransom. Thus begins one father's relentless quest to get his son back.
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Kidnapper (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"

June 7, 2011

It's somewhat of a mystery why Singaporean writer director Kelvin Tong isn't better known than he is, having helmed one of the better modern Asian ghost films in The Maid, found success with romance in Love Story and conquered Hong Kong with his awesomely unpredictable Rule No.1. For his latest outing Kidnapper, Tong returned to Singapore, trying something different with one of the country's very rare hard boiled crime thrillers, co-scripting along with Ken Kwek (The Blue Mansion). A fast paced tale of child snatching and desperate deceptions, the film stars popular local television actor Christopher Lee (The Shaolin Warriors) in the lead, with Jack Lim (Ah Long Pte Ltd) as the ruthless villain of the title.

Lee plays Lim, a taxi driver whose wife has abandoned him and his young son Wei Siang, leaving him struggling to make ends meet. His life is one day thrown into chaos after Wei Siang is mistaken for the son of a rich man and is kidnapped from an arcade by vicious jailbird Hu (Lim). When the original target naturally refuses to pay the ransom of a million dollars, Hu turns up the pressure on Lim, trying to force him to somehow come up with the money within 36 hours. Willing to do anything to save his lad, Lim frantically tries to get his hand on the cash, though even then things are not as straightforward as they seem.

With Kidnapper Kelvin Tong again shows himself to be one of the best directors of genre fare currently working in Asian cinema. Although the plot may sound rather basic, the script gradually works in levels of complexity and moral ambiguity, with a great many intelligent twists along the way that make for a handful of genuine surprises and pulse raising moments. Wisely, Hu is clearly marked from early on as a particularly fiendish and nasty piece of work, and this adds a real sense of danger which suggests it's quite likely that poor Wei Siang may not make it out alive or in one piece. With a few of the Hitchcock style reversals that Tong has also employed in his previous outings, the film is sharp, slick and tense, and moves along fast enough to distract from a few of its plot holes and less plausible developments. The film is remarkably tense throughout, not only regarding the fate of the child, but also due to the ever lurking dark shadow of financial pressure and ruin which hangs over poor Lim.

At the same time, the film also benefits from some solid and multi-layered relationships, which serve well to make its menace all the more effective. Lee is excellent as the tortured father, and his bond with his son believably drives the film and spurs him on, making some of his more extreme later actions perfectly understandable. This lends the film a valuably humanistic edge, with Wei Siang's near constant state of threat and peril never being played upon too cruelly. On the other end of the spectrum, Jack Lim is quite terrifying as the kidnapper, never showing so much of a hint of kindness or remorse. In this the film does have a different feel to the likes of The Beast Stalker though this is not to say that it lacks the same kind of moral grey areas. Tong's direction does resemble that of Dante Lam, with the same tight, gritty approach to action and drama, though perhaps with a slightly more exploitative edge, not that this does the film any harm. Things do get suitably violent in places, though without ever feeling gratuitous, and the film never stoops to throwing in too many pointless victims simply to hammer home its point.

Kidnapper certainly is one of the best films from Singapore of the last year, and easily one of the more entertaining recent Asian crime thrillers in general. Gripping, tense and thrilling in equal measures, it confirms Kelvin Tong as one of the most consistently impressive directors in the business, and will hopefully push him a few steps further to truly getting the recognition he deserves.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com

Editor's Pick of "Kidnapper (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"

Picked By dian
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August 31, 2011

A 90-minute roller-coaster ride that thrills and touches
Award-winning Singaporean director Kelvin Tong scared us witless with his slick ghost films Rule #1 and The Maid. His latest work Kidnapper doesn't rely on supernatural elements to make an impact, but rather follows a desperate father who must save his kidnapped son from a psychopath against all odds. Now, kidnap films are a dime a dozen, and this film doesn't really break any new grounds, but Tong still manages to craft a taut and engaging action thriller with a heart out of that familiar subject.

Singapore's top TV star Christopher Lee plays Lim Seng Huat, an ordinary cab driver and a divorced single father to his 10-year-old son Lim Wei Siang (Jerald Tan). One day, he promises his son to take him to the arcade center after school. Unfortunately, things on the road conspire to prevent him from making good on his words, and the son leaves in disappointment with his classmate, whose father is a multi-millionaire. Then, poor boy Siang is taken by a kidnapper (played by Malaysian radio DJ Jack Lim) who has mistaken him for the rich kid.

Realizing that he has grabbed the wrong boy, the scar-faced kidnapper doesn't have the mercy to return Siang to his father. Rather, he demands Huat to pay a ransom of one million dollars within 36 hours, and threatens him not to call the police. How can this working-class man come up with that much money in such a short period of time? Trembling in fear, Huat has no option but to obey the kidnapper, and boy, does he go to extreme lengths trying to find the money! In the end, he can only raise half of the ransom demanded, and the vicious kidnapper leaves him a bottle of blood drawn from the boy...

Unbeknownst to Huat, the young stepmother (Phyllis Quek) of the intended kidnap target actually has had some secret liaison with the kidnapper, and her actions bring unexpected outcomes to the proceedings. Taking a tight grip on film direction, Tong piles on the twists and turns to keep audiences on the edge of their seats throughout the movie. Granted there are some plot points that necessitate a certain degree of suspension of disbelief, but things happen at such a fast pace that it's easy to overlook the minor shortcomings.

Kidnapper is a star vehicle for Lee, and a showcase of his acting skills. The handsome actor reportedly gained considerable weight and grew scruffy facial hair to look more convincing as a plain, middle-aged average Joe. His portrayal of a father on the verge of mental breakdown, supported only by his profound love and responsibility, is spot-on and really quite affecting. Child actor Jerald Tan also does some amazing acting opposite him, and ultimately the film succeeds on its emotional core of what a heroic father will do and sacrifice for his son.
This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

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