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The Pye-Dog (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) VCD

Eason Chan (Actor) | George Lam (Actor) | Eric Tsang (Actor) | Gia Lin (Actor)
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The Pye-Dog (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)
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All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5.3 out of 10 (3)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Eason Chan may be making more headlines with his music career, but 2007 has been an equally remarkable year for the star in terms of movies. Clearly emerging as one of Hong Kong's most versatile actors, Chan goes three-for-three this year with Hooked on You, Brother, and The Pye-Dog. Director Derek Kwok's underrated debut feature is a subtle and eminently entertaining character drama that draws effectively from a wide range of genre influences for an uncommon film experience. A name to be watched in the coming years, Derek Kwok pulls great performances from not just Eason Chan, but also child actor Wen Jun Hui and actress Gia Lin (Men Suddenly in Black 2), not to mention screen veterans Eric Tsang, George Lam, Cheung Kwok Keung, and Siu Yam Yam. Sprinkled with offbeat details and perfectly crafted moments of genuine humor and emotion, The Pye-Dog easily qualifies as one of the year's best Hong Kong films.

Languid low-level triad Dui (Eason Chan) is less than thrilled when he gets sent on a special assignment by the boss. His task: go undercover as a janitor at an elementary school to find a rival gangster's son. Lumbering about in an apathetic, unrushed manner, Dui makes little headway into locating his target. Instead he strikes up an unlikely friendship with lonely student Wang (Wen Jun Hui) and cute new teacher Miss Cheung (Gia Lin). Time slows down as the three oddballs bond over field trips and school fairs, but nothing is as it seems when the triad conflicts that brought Dui to the school creep up to threaten the happiness he's found.

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Technical Information

Product Title: The Pye-Dog (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) 野.良犬 (VCD) (香港版) 野.良犬 (VCD) (香港版) 野.良犬 (VCD) (香港版) The Pye-Dog (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Eason Chan (Actor) | George Lam (Actor) | Eric Tsang (Actor) | Gia Lin (Actor) | Wen Jun Hui (Actor) | Siu Yam Yam | Teddy Robin | Derek Kwok 陳奕迅 (Actor) | 林子祥 (Actor) | 曾志偉 (Actor) | 林苑 (Actor) | 文俊輝 (Actor) | 邵音音 | 泰迪羅賓 | 郭子健 陈奕迅 (Actor) | 林子祥 (Actor) | 曾志伟 (Actor) | 林苑 (Actor) | 文俊辉 (Actor) | 邵音音 | 泰迪罗宾 | 郭子健 陳奕迅(イーソン・チャン) (Actor) | 林子祥(ジョージ・ラム) (Actor) | 曾志偉 (エリック・ツァン) (Actor) | 林苑 (ジア・リン) (Actor) | Wen Jun Hui (Actor) | 邵音音(シウ・ヤムヤム) | 秦迪羅賓(テディー・ロビン) | Derek Kwok Eason Chan (Actor) | George Lam (Actor) | Eric Tsang (Actor) | Gia Lin (Actor) | Wen Jun Hui (Actor) | Siu Yam Yam | Teddy Robin | Derek Kwok
Director: Derek Kwok 郭子健 郭子健 Derek Kwok Derek Kwok
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Release Date: 2008-01-28
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Disc Format(s): VCD
Duration: 90 (mins)
Publisher: Mei Ah (HK)
Other Information: 2VCDs
Package Weight: 110 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004802413

Product Information

導演︰郭子健
Director: Derek Kwok

十二歲的林志宏(林俊輝飾)與婆婆(邵音音飾)相依為命。小時候媽媽常對宏說爸爸飛去了遠方,還向著一朵膠花說只要花開爸爸便會回來。六歲那年,宏的媽媽從掛滿魚骨天線的天台往下一躍後,宏再沒有見過媽媽,他知道媽媽已飛去找爸爸了。

自此,宏沒有再說過一句話。

蓬頭垢面的陳滿堆(陳奕迅飾)來了宏的學校當校工。他是游手好閒的古惑仔,混入學校只為了老大(曾志偉飾)給他的任務:把黑幫頭子鈕喬澤(林子祥飾)的兒子找出來。這裡,堆沒有想過會遇上兩個與他各不相干,但卻命運相連的人:宏與代課老師Miss張(林苑飾)。

謊言的掩飾下,陳滿堆與倔強的宏建立起真摰的友誼,打開了Miss張一直封閉的心扉,一同走進了屬於他們三人的天空。但隨著宏的父親鈕喬澤出現,美麗的謊言被拆穿、殘酷的真相被揭開、一直不為人知的真實身份終於曝光。幸福驟然崩潰,半輩子一直無所事事的堆終於作了他人生中的第一個決定 — 他第一次清楚知道自己想要甚麼。

可是他不知道,一場無情的廝殺正在歡樂彌漫的校園中靜靜地等待著…

Dui, a triad gofer who has a particular affinity for assembling, though not necessarily shooting guns, is sent undercover in an elementary school to ferret out the kid of a powerful gangster. The gangster is on his way back to Hong Kong to assume power, which threatens all sorts of triad muck-a-mucks who don't want anyone messing with the status quo. Dui's bosses are among the threatened, so they order Dui to find the kid to use him as a bargaining chip. Dui takes up a job as a janitor at the kid's school and sets about finding the boy, but his oddball personality soon attracts another oddball: young Wang, a seemingly mute kid who first catches Dui's eye when he's roughhousing with a bunch of kids over a collectible Japanese trading card. Their first encounter puts Dui at odds with Wang, but before long, the two forge some sort of common bond. Joining them is new teacher Miss Cheung who's a bit of an oddball herself. Together, the trio brave messed up field trips and difficult art assignments. Meanwhile, there's triad action afoot, as Dui can't spend all this time screwing around in school on someone else's dime. Soon, people start asking how his mission is going, and Dui has to respond.
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Awards

This film has won 1 award(s) and received 3 award nomination(s). All Award-Winning Asian Films

YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "The Pye-Dog (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"

December 21, 2007

This professional review refers to The Pye-Dog (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
There's plenty worth recommending in The Pye-Dog, but I'll single out two things. One, director Derek Kwok is a young filmmaker to watch. The first-time director delivers a surprisingly assured and entertaining movie that's well worth the Hong Kong Cinema label. Two, the movie stars Eason Chan. Chan's last film was the excellent Crazy N' The City, and while Pye-Dog isn't as good as Crazy, it's similar in that it takes genre elements, mixes in a whole lot of character, and delivers a cinema experience that feels uniquely Hong Kong. That Chan is in both films is a bit ironic. While Chan has always shown obvious potential, his penchant for obscene overacting and showy mugging once branded him as more of a screen nuisance than someone worth watching. No longer; the guy has graduated from an undisciplined, sometimes wasted talent into one of Hong Kong Cinema's best actors. We can forgive him for Cop Shop Babes because right now, Eason Chan is money. Life is full of surprises, isn't it?

Chan is Dui, a triad gofer who has a particular affinity for assembling, though not necessarily shooting guns. He's sent undercover in an elementary school to ferret out the kid of a powerful gangster. The gangster is on his way back to Hong Kong to assume power, which threatens all sorts of triad muck-a-mucks who don't want anyone messing with the status quo. Dui's bosses are among the threatened, so they order Dui to find the kid to use him as a bargaining chip. Dui takes up a job as a janitor at the kid's school and sets about finding the boy, but his oddball personality soon attracts another oddball: young Wang (Wen Jun-Hui), a seemingly mute kid who first catches Dui's eye when he's roughhousing with a bunch of kids over a collectible Japanese trading card.

Their first encounter puts Dui at odds with Wang, but before long, the two forge some sort of common bond. Joining them is new teacher Miss Cheung (Gia Lin), who's a bit of an oddball herself. Together, the trio brave messed up field trips and difficult art assignments - oh, the horror! Meanwhile, there's triad action afoot, as Dui can't spend all this time screwing around in school on someone else's dime. Soon, people start asking how his mission is going, and Dui has to respond. Despite the innocuous, warm-and-fuzzy storyline going on, guns and the men who carry them will soon make an appearance. Will the bullets and blood shatter Dui's idyllic new life?

The story of Pye-Dog doesn't seem too spectacular; it's a genre mishmash mixing themes and iconography seen in gangster films, heroic bloodshed, and father-son bonding flicks. None of these genres is referenced in an overt fashion. Nobody flies through the air with guns held akimbo, nor is this a hyperemotional, sweaty affair. The genre elements are grounded, and even subdued, and instead used to support the film's character elements. And those character elements? Somewhat maudlin and decidedly quirky. Sure, these people are involved in some kind of triad turf war, but they're more concerned with putting together a makeshift stage for the upcoming Christmas pageant. This is one of those films where quirky oddballs form heartwarming bonds, and love blossoms (between Dui and Miss Cheung) in a largely unspoken, indirect fashion. It would be safe to see that this sort of storyline and these sorts of genre elements have been seen before.

But hey, genre/character flicks are probably what Hong Kong does best - or at least, it did them best once upon a time. Pye-Dog seems cut from the same cloth as the earlier films of Wilson Yip, e.g. Yip's excellent 1998 crimer Bullets Over Summer. That film was ostensibly about a cop stakeout, but it was deceptively aimless, meandering along but also delivering characters and relationships that were most definitely felt. Pye-Dog has gangster film elements, but it's really a character piece about oddballs connecting, frequently through fantasy or simply playing around. Dui bonds with Wang over lots of make believe; when caught raiding the school files by Wang, Dui cons him by pretending he's an undercover cop. A trip to the woods includes a dream sequence involving an imaginary boogeyman, and the construction of an eclectic, fanciful Christmas Pageant stage manages to connect Dui, Wang, and Miss Cheung. There's a likable innocence in the characters' relationships; they're all very much children, and seeing them bond is quite enjoyable and surprisingly affecting.

Once again, Derek Kwok gets plenty of credit. He and cinematographer O Sing-Pui give the film a dirty/pretty look, with a dark, but rich palette of colors and a keen use of shadow to add depth to each frame. Pye-Dog looks like quality cinema, which is actually pretty rare for a Hong Kong film. More importantly, the film is told in a remarkably assured manner. Kwok gives the film many funny moments, but they're not "haha" guffaws, and instead mine irony and a familiarity with the actors and the genres being referenced. Besides yet another patented Eric Tsang supporting turn, Pye-Dog features appearances from Loletta Lee, George Lam, Shaw Brothers veteran Siu Yam-Yam, and even Cheung Kwok-Keung (AKA: K.K. Cheung in some parts) in a surprisingly effective turn as a hitman. Cheung gets soulful, wannabe meaningful dialogue that would probably ring false in most films. Hell, it's still paper-thin here, but Pye-Dog does enough right that its forays into the hackneyed bowels of genre cinema are easily accepted and forgiven.

It's not all great in Pye-Dog. The combination of genre and character does lead to some out-of-nowhere plot revelations, and some of the twists don't entirely convince. Certain characters are revealed to be more than they are, and while some are expected, others feel too far-fetched to completely buy. Also, the film has the chutzpah to sell its emotional baggage with a key montage set to the strains of "You Light Up My Life", a directorial move that can either A) emotionally move, or B) completely alienate. If Dog Bite Dog is any evidence, the presence of a sappy song at a crucial moment can discredit a film, and in Pye-Dog, that eventuality comes dangerously close to happening.

But Derek Kwok manages to sell his moment of sap through solid direction, and very endearing characters. Young Wen Jun-Hui is no Goum Ian Iskandar, but he gives Wang a felt innocence, and as mentioned before, Eason Chan has grown into a solid screen presence. Dui is a character who rediscovers his moral center as a result of his contact with Wang and Miss Cheung, and Eason Chan handles Dui's character arc with affecting dignity. Dui is rude and a bit of a lout, but Chan makes his eventual nobility and decency easy to believe in. Gia Lin is a bit less convincing as Miss Cheung, though her pairing with Eason Chan manages to be effective. Pye-Dog mixes subdued emotions with gooshy, soaring moments of feeling, and that balancing act is frequently a dangerous one. The film's sentimentality may lose it a few points among harder-edged moviegoers, but the odd wit, welcome genre nods, and felt emotions are hard to resist. Given all its excesses, the film could easily have been seen as cloying, or perhaps too sure of its own cleverness. However, Derek Kwok and company manage to pull it off. Pye-Dog could have been a bad movie, but gratefully, it's far from it.

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.

Customer Review of "The Pye-Dog (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5.3 out of 10 (3)

ENG KONG LEE
See all my reviews


May 11, 2008

This customer review refers to The Pye-Dog (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Susan Shaw Yin Yin shines! Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
I must admit I bought this DVD to witness Susan Shaw Yin Yin's amazing performance which I thought was worth the price of the DVD. What a marvellous performance! She has come a long way from those Li Han-hsiang's Shaw flicks!!
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Weng Zu
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February 29, 2008

This customer review refers to The Pye-Dog (DVD) (US Version)
1 people found the following helpful

Pye-Dog is a fabulous film. Customer Review Rated Bad 1 - 1 out of 10
This movie deserves the awards it is nominated for HonG Kong Film Festival.

Another great movie from Film Devision of Mystaru.com. They are becomng a force in film and this movie adds to the record of recent hits including Big Movie 1 and 2.

This movie will also appear soon on IPTV. Its a bigb hit.
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numinair
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February 14, 2008

This customer review refers to The Pye-Dog (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
1 people found the following helpful

Two Lost Hearts Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
This is a strange sort of movie that you don't know quite which audience its really intended for. Its not quite recommended for the hard core fan of hard edged action types or gangster flicks, but even though this is also not quite a wholesome romantic film, either, it could be for this latter category. Maybe a gritty family drama, with a bit of dampened gun play at the end. Well, its certainly a gritty situation drama, as it deals with two orphaned characters, both finding a rare companion ability and trust in each other, due to their gangster related worlds.

Basically, the plot outline is about Dui, an erratic triad gangster member, who having lost both his parents in his childhood, was taken under the wing of a gangster boss (played by Eric Tsang). And Wang, a 12 year old boy who has an emotional speech problem, who is also parent less after his father leaves home due to his own gangster life style and his alcoholic mother had committed suicide - leaving Wang only the support of his elderly grandmother. Due to Wang's father (played by George Lam) causing the death of Eric Tsang's own gang boss, a retaliation is set up with Dui being sent to locate Wang at his local school in the guise of a janitor, and as a means of finding Wang's father. But after Dui comes across Wang at first, unknowing that he is the boy he is looking for (duh), strikes up and eventual friendship with him and his teacher at the school. Thereafter, for a while anyway, the film then becomes a sort of family entertainment type with gangster, teacher and possible kidnap victim going on field trips, amusement parks together and living it up. So......Dui's not you're usual assassin in dark shades lurking in litter filled and screeching cat alleyways, then? Indeedy not! But, as this is Eason Chan in the main role, you can probably guess that his character is going to be slightly bumbling, erratic and generally amusing here - which he is, and brilliantly and sympathetically portrayed, too.

Even so, I had anticipation of this film being a bit of a tension movie, when I first saw the DVD cover. You know, tense action drama with three characters holed up in an amusement park and against the clock type! Certainly seems like that with triads and revenge pacts. But this isn't exactly expressed in that sort of way. It certainly concerns all those character types and plot elements mentioned, as Dui is sent on instruction by his boss to find and possibly assassinate Wang, if he has to. But the plot pitch is not fashioned as a high dramatic movie (it has action parts, but more dampened to the film's style), and, in essence, is a somewhat flighty, oddball and feel good movie about two orphaned people facing the plight of being cast out in the wilderness at childhood, and then trying to survive and re-ignite some sort of credible life and love, that was blunted by their bleak starts in life. Both Wang and Dui are empathetically united here.

Eason plays a very commendable role as Dui, becoming the undercover janitor at Wang's school, keeping the school in trim, kids in check and his antenna honed to locate Wang. But what further develops is more a father/elder brother chumminess between him and Wang, and Wang becoming close in feelings with Dui, as he learns that Dui also lost his parents in his childhood. This procures quite a heart warming set of situations, as Wang begins to look upon Dui as a sort of father figure, and Dui himself looking after the boy's back, rescuing Wang at one stage from nearly drowning, after he gets lost on a school field trip.

A funny part in the film is when Dui teaches Wang to salute, as at the beginning Dui pretends to be an undercover policeman (which previous to this knowledge, Wang had given Dui an electric handshake shock, as he thought he was a weird janitor), and in a playful military style, asks Wang to keep his eyes peeled for any unusual circumstances with other boys. Which of course means that Dui is asking Wang to look out for the boy which is himself, right under his nose. Wang's constant little salutes to Dui are also touching at times, too. Dui is no real ominous character here, more a soft centered, but hard edged survivalist, who just happens to have landed up in a criminal world due to his past (a reflection of Wang's own father) and is a good person deep down.

Additionally, there is the mysterious 'anime looking' Miss Cheung (who is played by lovely Gia Lin, and adorably cute looking, sporting a Trinity 'Matrix' type hair cut - and demeanor), who is Wang's school teacher and Dui's love interest. These three eventually become characters that are more like family members going out on picnic treats (and fun fairs, as in the DVD cover), than a trio mix of gangster, protectorate and potential victim. Still, that does change for the worse as the story progresses and the more dangerous elements occur, with Dui going against the wishes of his boss and when another assassin is sent in. Also, Miss Cheung is a little bit more 'Trinity Matrix' than you may at first think, too! Not your usual 'apple for the teacher' type. (The clue of course - is in the hair do!) As mentioned, Dui doesn't have a clue that the boy he is looking for is Wang at first, and only when this discovery is met, does the plot move into a more emotional and dramatic level. And emotion there is, too. Young actor Wen Jui Hui who plays Wang is excellent, and one feisty, cute and tear jerking boy, who cuts into your heart at the latter part when he learns of Dui's true identity. You might shed a few tears here, too, reaching for your 12 ply 'Korean Drama Tissues' from your inventory at this point.

So, not to be anticipated as being a gritty action drama. I know it sounds like it is, but it really is more a sensitive story about blunt social circumstances, touching relationships, reconciliations and inevitable loving understandings....with a bit of tragedy and guns and talk at the end. Quite enjoyed this film as a whole (and it doesn't have to be an action drama type for me to enjoy as such), and for many I think this will be an interesting film concerning Eason's acting, as in the role of Dui, here, he has certainly added another good character display.

For extras, the single disk features a "Making Of" (no subs), a trailer (with Mandarin and English subs) and a data bank of synopsis, cast and crews that have English texts.
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