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Scare 2 Die! (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) VCD

Sam Lee (Actor) | Elanne Kwong (Actor) | Tommy Yuen (Actor) | Lawrence Chou
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Scare 2 Die! (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

The prolific Pang Brothers have been behind a string of horror hits dating back to 2002's critically-acclaimed The Eye - and there seems to be no stopping them. Six years later, people have yet to tire of Pang-produced horror, which is where Scare 2 Die comes in. Directed by the Pangs' longtime assistant director Cub Chien, Scare 2 Die is an omnibus horror movie featuring three gory tales of supernatural discontent. Chien varies his approach in this commercial chiller, going for cultural frights, a gore-filled cautionary tale, and a spectacularly intense twenty-minute chase involving disembowelment, the living dead, and rising star Elanne Kwong (Invisible Target) swinging an axe. Joining Kwong in this trio of horror tales is the ubiquitous Sam Lee, as well as Pang Brothers veteran Lawrence Chou (The Eye), and Tommy Yuen of boy band E-kids.

Down-on-his-luck gambler Kan Au (Sam Lee) owes a big sum of money, and needs to go on a winning streak soon or the loan sharks will take the interest from his hide. Luckily, Kan finds a blessed coin that allows him to draw the unbeatable "13 Unique Wonders" hand of mahjong on 13 consecutive nights, which should be enough for him to pay his debts. The problem: every time he uses the coin to win, somebody dies a gruesome, gory death. Meanwhile, fetching Luk Wing (Elanne Kwong) wakes up one morning to discover her family being eaten! Everyone around her has become a zombie, and Wing has to pick up an axe and fight back, or her heart will be come lunch for the living dead. Finally, slacker Chan (Tommy Yuen) signs up for "Scare 2 Die" a reality game show with a prize purse of $130,000. He's supposed to survive a haunted house, but for some reason, the game show's manufactured scares are following him everywhere - even to his apartment! Is "Scare 2 Die" trying to surprise Chan, or are real ghosts trying to take him out of the game early?

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Technical Information

Product Title: Scare 2 Die! (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) 嚇死你! (VCD) (香港版) 吓死你! (VCD) (香港版) 嚇死[イ尓]! (香港版) Scare 2 Die! (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Sam Lee (Actor) | Elanne Kwong (Actor) | Tommy Yuen (Actor) | Lawrence Chou | Raymond Wong | Derek Tsang 李燦森 (Actor) | 江若琳 (Actor) | 阮民安 (Actor) | 周俊偉 | 黃浩然 | 曾國祥 李灿森 (Actor) | 江若琳 (Actor) | 阮民安 (Actor) | 周浚伟 | 黄浩然 | 曾国祥 李燦森(サム・リー) (Actor) | 江若琳(エレイン・コン) (Actor) | Tommy Yuen (Actor) | 周俊偉(ローレンス・チョウ) | 黄浩然(レイモンド・ウォン) | 曾國祥(デレク・ツァン) Sam Lee (Actor) | Elanne Kwong (Actor) | Tommy Yuen (Actor) | Lawrence Chou | Raymond Wong | Derek Tsang
Director: Cub Qian 錢 江漢 钱 江汉 Cub Qian Cub Qian
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Release Date: 2008-05-23
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Disc Format(s): VCD
Rating: IIB
Duration: 85 (mins)
Publisher: Universe Laser (HK)
Other Information: 2VCDs
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1010896867

Product Information

13 ORPHANS
Au Cun is a morbid gambler, addicted to mahjong game. He ignores his pregnant wife, ruins his job and accumulates big debts. His gambling partner Wong Tsuen gives him an ancient coin to bring good luck, he is told that when he holds it in his mouth during gambling, he will win for 13 days with the help of the spirits of "13 Orphans". However he can only win one big game per day and may not quit till he wins totally 13 games. Au Cun plays mahjong with the coin in his mouth and the lucky thing really comes true. But later the losers die one by one. Eventually he is hunted down by the spirits... Does the "13 orphans" give good luck to trade one's life?

13%
Luk Wing (starring Elanne KONG) wakes up from her dream and realizes that she is in a world of Cannibal! Her lover Sunny (starring Tommy YUEN) is being butchered and boild. Her father is dismembered by her mother and served as a delicacy. Wing is besieged by crowds of zombie when she goes down to the street and then she faints with fears... When she becomes conscious, she finds something is missing from her body...

NO.13
Chan (starring Sam LEE) is a teenager with no school, no job and no qualifications. Attracted by a USD 130, 000 cash prize, he decides to join a TV programme called "Scare 2 Die". The winner is the one who survives in the haunted house for 13days.
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 "Scare 2 Die! (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"

June 23, 2008

This professional review refers to Scare 2 Die! (DVD) (US Version)
A gambling addicted man drowning in debt accepts a magic coin that will reverse his luck for thirteen days, but at a terrible cost. A young woman is pursued by cannibals and zombies through the thirteenth floor of her apartment building. A young man signs up for a reality show that will pay a large cash prize to whoever can last thirteen days in a haunted house. Welcome to the world of Scare 2 Die, the directorial debut from regular Pang Brothers collaborator Cub Chien.

Now, when you hear that the film comes from a Pang underling with many other Pang regulars in support roles and Danny Pang serving as a producer, you may very will conclude that what you'll get with Chien's film is a sort of Pang-lite. And in many ways you're right, that is what you get and that's both a good and a bad thing. Chien's work is light on story and character, factors that many complain about in Pang Brothers films and factors that are a major issue here when Chien tries to rely on narrative to drive the film. His writing simply isn't good enough to go down that road convincingly. However Chien is a solid idea man and a stellar stylist and when he chooses to indulge those urges he is capable of producing some stellar work.

Though the first and third segments each have their solid moments - the gambling piece stars Sam Lee and features a truly gruesome moment that will horrify dog lovers - it is the middle segment where Chien's really hits his stride. The story of a young woman who awakes to find herself in a building populated by cannibals and zombies, the piece plays out almost entirely without dialogue, beginning with an aggressively edited sequence of images that lays out the entire work before going back and playing it out again in more detail. It's a surprisingly effective trick, one that works in much the same way that the original Japanese Ju-On films' tipping the name of the person who would die did: you know where you're going but not how you're going to get there and the tension comes from the route rather than the destination.

Anthology projects are always a mixed bag and this is no exception. It's an inconsistent film, often frustratingly so, but the high points are certainly high enough to mark Chien as a talent worth watching. It he gets the chance to develop his own voice a little bit more he could prove to be something fairly unique.

by Todd Brown - Twitchfilm.net

May 27, 2008

This professional review refers to Scare 2 Die! (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Another horror piece with Pang Brother paws on it, scare 2 die serves up effective technique and atmosphere without much logic or lasting impact to distract. Danny Pang produced this effort, which boasts the debut of director Cub Chien, a longtime assistant director of the Pang Brothers. Chien seems to be concerned mainly with the editing and visuals in scare 2 die, eschewing anything that would qualify this as an actual story. The result is a horror-comedy that's not really quality, but isn't bottom of the barrel either, as it possesses some effective frights and some nifty cultural detail that take it beyond your usual "kids misbehave and then bump into ghosts" flicks that pass for horror films in Hong Kong.

scare 2 die is separated into three stories, all interrelated but not in a substantial or overt manner. Story one is "Gambling Man", and features Sam Lee as deadbeat mahjong player Kan Au. Even though he's heavily in debt, Kan continues to gamble, and his debt is growing ever larger. His luck changes when he comes into possession of a lucky coin that grants him the ability to pull the "13 Unique Wonders" (an insane winning hand in mahjong) a total of 13 times. The problem is he can only win once per day, and each win usually comes with someone's untimely death. Can he make enough at the mahjong table to pay off his massive debt before the pile of corpses starts to bother him?

As usual, Sam Lee is a fun performer, and "Gambling Man" manages a few moments of tension or cleverness. However, the segment is rather predictable, and feels not unlike one of the minor segments you'd find in a Troublesome Night film - with the added caveat of a lot more gore. scare 2 die seems to take pleasure in serving up fleshy red bits whenever it has the chance, though not to a truly Category III level. The make-up effects are usually too fake or too disconnected to scare or unnerve, and without a really interesting story, the lasting effect is one of mild diversion. But hey, gore is gore. Get it while you can.

Segment two, titled "Running Girl", amps the gore because it has the perfect reason to. Elanne Kong stars as a girl who wakes up, puts on a red button-up shirt and no pants (yow!) and proceeds to find out that everyone in her nearby vicinity has become a flesh-eating zombie. Or at least, they're probably zombies. The film doesn't really tell us if they are but they pretty much have to be, because why else would everyone in her housing estate become grey-skinned flesh-eaters? Obviously perturbed, Elanne runs all over the estate in fear while people chase her trying to eat her heart. Eventually she strikes back by picking up an axe, though there may be far too many zombies for her to take down. Elanne Kong is a petite young woman.

Cub Chien starts "Running Girl" with a quick montage of shock images and quick cuts, relating the entire segment in a fast and confusing manner. Then, the whole segment unfolds again normally, with the story related via normal storytelling. This uncommon technique helps make the segment far more interesting than it should be because the audience spends their time piecing together the story based on the opening montage, matching previous images to actual onscreen development. The worst thing is that the story is hardly substantial in montage or non-montage form, as it's nothing more than a common horror situation given physical, visceral form.

"Running Girl" is entertaining enough on a technical level, as Chien keeps the adrenaline and blood pumping for the segment's full running time. However, the segment suffers from possible omission. scare 2 die's released promotional stills reveal many details and images from the segment that never appear in the final cut of the film. Maybe it was all excised to secure a more teen-friendly Category IIB rating, but the photos hint at stuff that was probably a little more disturbing than the segment's current content. Still, Elanne Kong is a fetching horror victim, and Cub Chien gets plenty of mileage out of her twitchy eyes and long, dark hair. After all, what's an Asian horror film without long, dark hair?

Story three is "Dying Boy", and features Tommy Yuen as a slacker who signs up to be in a reality show called Hak Sei Nei or "scare you to death" (trivia: this is also the Chinese title of the film). Then, scary stuff starts happening to him left and right, which he believes must be the reality show people messing with him. Meanwhile, he returns home to his grandfather and encounters more potential frights, most having to do with Chinese cultural traditions, which means it may not make total sense to everyone who tunes in. Then again, the segment may not make that much sense anyway, because it abandons logic for a continuing parade of horror film technique.

Oddly, the last segment may actually be the most haunting because it references actual Chinese customs and superstition, and takes place in a genuinely scary place that doesn't need much maniuplation to appear scarier. Anybody can freak out people in a hospital bathed in blood, but actual rundown Hong Kong housing estates are downright creepy with the right lighting or camera angles. Add in an ppearance by Hau Woon-Ling (the scary old lady from ten trillion Hong Kong movies), and some decent cinematography and lighting, and you have a half-hour that's more interesting than actually boring - though the ratio of interest to boredom is debatable. It may all depend on how frightening one finds Chinese superstitions and empty housing estates.

Overall, scare 2 die is a minor little diversion that never pretends to be more than it is. It purports no meaning or pretension, and instead tries to shock, scare, and scare some more - with its success predicated on just how susceptible a person is to the usual Pang Brothers scare tactics of shock images, loud sounds, and scenes that take place in elevators (the last segment, in particular, is elevator-o-rama). That said, scare 2 die won't make instant Hong Kong horror fans out of anyone, as it's simply too minor and disconnected, and its lack of a substantial story makes it throwaway. The film is ultimately best reserved for people who like to experience some minor frights, or enjoy seeing fresh idols like Elanne Kong run around with an axe while wearing only an oversized men's shirt. Given Kong's recent surge in local popularity, the above image probably qualifies as a genuine selling point. Time to get in line.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

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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