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Rule#1 (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All

Ekin Cheng (Actor) | Shawn Yue (Actor) | Stephanie Che (Actor) | Fiona Xie (Actor)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Rule #1: there are no ghosts.

Shawn Yue (Shamo) and Ekin Cheng (Heavenly Mission) form a ghost-busting tag team in the supernatural buddy-cop thriller Rule #1. Helmed by Singapore director Kelvin Tong (The Maid, Love Story), this engaging and entertaining film revolves around a special paranormal crime unit of the Hong Kong police force, and the two weary cops tasked to contain the city's malicious ghosts while keeping it all a secret. Rule #1's premise is similar to X-Files or Hong Kong's own 2002, but delves deeper into horror elements with a moody intensity. Putting on weight to play the charismatic veteran cop with the world on his shoulders, Ekin Cheng shared the Best Actor Award with skeptical partner Shawn Yue at the 12th Pucheon Fantastic Film Festival for their outstanding performances in the film.

Tired beat cop Lee (Shawn Yue) gets more than he bargained for when he stops a car for a driving violation, and finds a dead woman in the trunk and a gun in his face. Just as the psychotic driver is about to shoot, the woman's corpse suddenly sits up, and Lee shoots dead the momentarily distracted killer. After relaying his ghostly encounter to his superior, Lee gets shuffled to the orphan Miscellaneous Affairs Department where paranormal cases are handled. The first day on the job, Inspector Wong (Ekin Cheng) tells Lee their job is to uphold Rule #1 and reassure citizens that there are no ghosts, even as they put their lives on the edge hunting down the ghost responsible for a series of mysterious deaths. While most ghosts are harmless, there are some powerful, vengeful spirits that spread like virus to all humans they touch, and this particular ghost seems to be out to get Lee and Wong.

© 2008-2009 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: Rule#1 (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) 第一誡 (DVD) (香港版) 第一诫 (DVD) (香港版) 第一誡 (香港版) Rule#1 (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Also known as: Rule One / Rule No.1 / Rule Number One / Rule Number 1 / Rule #1 第1誡 第1诫 Rule One / Rule No.1 / Rule Number One / Rule Number 1 / Rule #1 Rule One / Rule No.1 / Rule Number One / Rule Number 1 / Rule #1
Artist Name(s): Ekin Cheng (Actor) | Shawn Yue (Actor) | Stephanie Che (Actor) | Fiona Xie (Actor) 鄭伊健 (Actor) | 余文樂 (Actor) | 車婉婉 (Actor) | 謝宛諭 (Actor) 郑伊健 (Actor) | 余文乐 (Actor) | 车婉婉 (Actor) | Fiona Xie (Actor) 鄭伊健(イーキン・チェン) (Actor) | 余文樂(ショーン・ユー) (Actor) | 車婉婉(ステファニー・チェー) (Actor) | Fiona Xie (Actor) Ekin Cheng (Actor) | Shawn Yue (Actor) | Stephanie Che (Actor) | Fiona Xie (Actor)
Director: Kelvin Tong 唐永健 唐永健 唐永健 (ケルヴィン・トン) Kelvin Tong
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Release Date: 2008-10-24
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
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: IIB
Duration: 93 (mins)
Publisher: Joy Sales (HK)
Package Weight: 110 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1012259851

Product Information

* Special Features:
- Ghosts File
- Making Of
- Trailer

Director : Kelvin Tong

Every day, the Police Force receives 185 phone calls. 180 of them are about burglaries, murders, rapes and kidnappings. The remaining 5 begin with: “There is something strange in my house, can you please send someone over to take a look?”
For rookie Sergeant Lee (Shawn Yu), being a cop means running down crooks and upholding the law. Injured in a shoot-out, he finds out to his horror that he is reassigned to the dubious-sounding Miscellaneous Affairs Department (MAD).
There, he is paired up with Inspector Wong (Ekin Cheng), a jaded and alcoholic veteran who explains that MAD’s role is to answer supernatural calls.
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 "Rule#1 (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"

January 21, 2009

Rule#1 is the latest offering from young Singaporean director and former critic Kelvin Tong, who has quickly established himself as one of the more interesting and quirky film makers working in Asian cinema today thanks to the likes of Love Story and The Maid. Although he has dabbled in the horror genre before with the comedy Men in White, here he thankfully takes a far more serious and downbeat approach, managing to temper his eccentric sense of humour with genuine chills and surprising unpleasantness. The result is his best effort yet, and what is probably one of the most accomplished and indeed effective genre films to have come from Hong Kong in recent years.

The film opens in suitably shocking and unexpected fashion, as a man called Lee (Shawn Yue, recently in the excellent Shamo and an actor who deserves more credit for his frequently offbeat choice of roles) shoots a beautiful woman on a bus for no discernable reason. Winding back the clock, the viewer learns that Lee is actually a policeman, who one day randomly stops a man trying to speed his way from an underground car park. It turns out that the man is a particularly nasty serial killer with a corpse in the trunk, and he soon gets the better of the inexperienced officer, shooting him several times. Just as he is about to deliver the coupe de grace, the dead body seems to stand up, giving Lee the chance to kill the murderer. After he reports his macabre vision to his superior, he is immediately transferred to the obscure Miscellaneous Affairs Department to work with the mysterious Inspector Wong (Ekin Cheng, recently in Heavenly Mission) in protecting the public from the paranormal. Despite his initial disbelief, he is quickly thrown into the thick of things as a series of grisly and unexplained murders seem to point to a ghost with a grudge against him and Wong.

Although the whole ghosts and cops gag has been done before, and the premise may sound suspiciously familiar to Wilson Yip's 2002, Tong has actually crafted a very different film, thankfully playing things straight instead of taking the easy route and going for the usual wacky gags. Certainly, the violent opening scene very much sets the mood for the rest of the film, and as it progresses the plot takes the viewer to some very dark, grim places. Tong does balance this with a few moments of humour and warmth, but for the most part he takes the film's concept seriously and explores the darker possibilities that it suggests. The film's treatment of ghosts, whilst not entirely consistent, is interesting, and the idea of evil ghosts acting like a virus as they pass between people, effectively wearing them like suits and leaving them as empty shells, is an effectively creepy one that is exploited for maximum tension and cruel surprises. Although the story does meander somewhat during the early stages, it soon finds its way, and thanks to the fast pace and a number of well implemented twists, it grips right through to the horrifying and ruthless shock conclusion, which hits the viewer like a knife in the back.

The film is entertaining as well as engaging, with a high quotient of action and supernatural goings on. Again, Tong manages to pull off an impressive balancing act, working in both gritty thrills and ghostly frights in equal measures without the proceedings ever becoming too chaotic. The film is actually quite unnerving in places, and although there are a few obligatory cheap scares and nods to the perhaps unavoidable cliche of the modern Asian ghost genre, it does feature a good few scenes which are imaginative and creative enough to give even the most jaded fan a few chills. It certainly helps that the special effects are of a higher standard than usual, and are well used rather than being simply thrown in randomly as they often are. The film also benefits from the fact that it is a determinedly adult and visceral affair, and packs in plenty of blood and guts along the way. This also ensures that it stands out from the crowd and makes it far more mature than the setup might have suggested.

As a result, Rule#1 comes not only as likely the best genre offering, but also as one of the best films of any description from Hong Kong in 2008. Tong again shows himself to be a director worth watching, serving up a tightly wound and highly entertaining mixture which never pulls its punches en route to a genuinely harrowing climax.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com

Editor's Pick of "Rule#1 (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"

Picked By dian
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December 13, 2008

MAD about Yue
On the upper deck of a bus sits a sexy and alluring woman. When her lipstick drops to the floor, the only other passenger, a man sitting across the aisle with desires raging in his eyes, picks it up and, slowly, reaches his hand out to hers. Just as their hands are about to meet, a guy with a gun (played by Shawn Yue) pops into the scene and bang! He shoots the woman right in the forehead.

This opening sequence is crosscut with a scene showing a policeman chasing a man, overlaid by Shawn's narration saying, "the truth is not what it seems". Now when a ghost movie defies genre convention by starting more like a cop/killer actioner, the director is either very confident or just utterly clueless. In Rule #1's case, it is probably the former.

Knowing too much beforehand could ruin the experience (damn the spoilerish poster!), so we'll go light on plot details. Three months before he kills the woman on the bus, Sergeant Lee (Shawn) had a supernatural encounter during an incident that left him heavily wounded. After he recovers, he is transferred to another police unit - the mysterious "MAD", short for Miscellaneous Affairs Department, which handles cases of a paranormal nature.

There, Lee learns from his heavy-drinking new boss, Inspector Wong (Ekin Cheng), that the Rule #1 of MAD is "there are no ghosts". While this is a catchy marketing tagline comparable to "I see dead people", it isn't really that central to the story, which offers plenty of twists and turns in the ghostbusting duo's investigation that gets more and more dangerous and terrifying.

Shawn and Ekin give subdued performances required of their roles and their admirable efforts earned them the Best Actor award at Korea's Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival. Both actors are undeniably great, but this editor is a little more impressed with Shawn playing the tortured cop. Stephanie Che and Fiona Xie co-star as the estranged better half to Wong and Lee respectively, and they have their moments, too.

Singaporean director Kelvin Tong, whose credits include a couple low-budget scare fares, has shown great promise in directing horror. He keeps the pace tight throughout, and as the story unfolds, the tension builds and doesn't let up until the end credits roll, putting the audience on the edge of their seats with little use of cheap jump scares.

The cold, sharp cinematography by Venus Keung (In Love with the Dead) sets a spooky and sad tone to the film, and by dressing Hong Kong - where the film is set and shot - in an anonymous and alienated atmosphere, makes the chiller even more unnerving.
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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