As The Light Goes Out (2014) (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version) Blu-ray Region All
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Christmas Eve, Hong Kong. Temperature is at an all-time high, and so is the tension between young firefighters Sum (Nicholas Tse), Bong (Shawn Yue) and Fai (Andy On) at the Lung Kwu Tang Fire Station. A year earlier, Bong took the fall for a deadly incident, and Fai took advantage of it to get ahead. Since then, Bong and Sum's friendship with Fai has been sour and hostile. Meanwhile, Hai Yang (Hu Jun) is a newly transferred firefighter from Mainland China, and hard-line veteran Pui (Simon Yam) is determined to break him in before he enters retirement. When a seemingly small fire at a local distillery leads to an explosion at a nearby power plant, Hong Kong falls into a citywide blackout. Now, the Lung Kwu Tang firefighters must band together to stop the fire at the power plant and rescue those trapped inside.
This edition includes a visual commentary by director Derek Kwok, star Shawn Yue, special effects supervisor Henri Wong and cinematographer Jason Kwan, as well as making of, interviews and trailers.
Technical Information
Product Title: | As The Light Goes Out (2014) (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version) 救火英雄 (2014) (Blu-ray) (香港版) 救火英雄 (2014) (Blu-ray) (香港版) 救火英雄 (2014) (Blu-ray) (香港版) As The Light Goes Out (2014) (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version) |
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Artist Name(s): | Nicholas Tse (Actor) | Simon Yam (Actor) | Shawn Yue (Actor) | Hu Jun (Actor) | Andy On (Actor) | Jackie Chan (Actor) | Patrick Tam Yiu Man (Actor) | Liu Kai Chi (Actor) | Siu Yam Yam (Actor) | Wang Zhi Fei (Actor) | Kenny Kwan (Actor) | Deep Ng (Actor) | Andrew Lau (Actor) | Michelle Bai (Actor) | Bonnie Xian (Actor) | Ken Hung (Actor) | William Chan (Actor) | Michelle Wai (Actor) | Alice Li (Actor) 謝 霆鋒 (Actor) | 任達華 (Actor) | 余文樂 (Actor) | 胡軍 (Actor) | 安 志杰 (Actor) | 成龍 (Actor) | 譚耀文 (Actor) | 廖啟智 (Actor) | 邵音音 (Actor) | 王志飛 (Actor) | 關智斌 (Actor) | 吳浩康 (Actor) | 劉偉強 (Actor) | 白 冰 (Actor) | 冼色麗 (Actor) | 洪卓立 (Actor) | 陳 偉霆 (Actor) | 詩雅 (Actor) | 洛詩 (Actor) 谢 霆锋 (Actor) | 任达华 (Actor) | 余文乐 (Actor) | 胡军 (Actor) | 安 志杰 (Actor) | 成龙 (Actor) | 谭耀文 (Actor) | 廖启智 (Actor) | 邵音音 (Actor) | 王志飞 (Actor) | 关智斌 (Actor) | 吴浩康 (Actor) | 刘伟强 (Actor) | 白 冰 (Actor) | 冼色丽 (Actor) | 洪卓立 (Actor) | 陈 伟霆 (Actor) | 诗雅 (Actor) | 洛诗 (Actor) 謝霆鋒(ニコラス・ツェー) (Actor) | 任達華 (サイモン・ヤム) (Actor) | 余文樂(ショーン・ユー) (Actor) | 胡軍(フー・ジュン) (Actor) | 安志杰(アンディ・オン) (Actor) | 成龍(ジャッキー・チェン) (Actor) | 譚耀文(パトリック・タム) (Actor) | 廖啓智(リウ・カイチー) (Actor) | 邵音音(シウ・ヤムヤム) (Actor) | Wang Zhi Fei (Actor) | 關智斌 (ケニー・クァン) (Actor) | 呉浩康(ディープ・ン) (Actor) | 劉偉強(アンドリュー・ラウ) (Actor) | ミシェル・バイ (Actor) | 冼色麗(ボニー・シァン) (Actor) | 洪卓立(ケン・ホン) (Actor) | 陳偉霆(ウィリアム・チャン) (Actor) | 詩雅 (ミシェル・ワイ) (Actor) | Alice Li (Actor) 사 정봉 (Actor) | 임 달화 (Actor) | 여 문락 (Actor) | 후 준 (Actor) | Andy On (Actor) | 성룡 (Actor) | 담 요문 (Actor) | 요 계지 (Actor) | Siu Yam Yam (Actor) | Wang Zhi Fei (Actor) | Kenny Kwan (Actor) | Deep Ng (Actor) | Andrew Lau (Actor) | 백 빙 (Actor) | Bonnie Xian (Actor) | Ken Hung (Actor) | William Chan (Actor) | Michelle Wai (Actor) | Alice Li (Actor) |
Director: | Derek Kwok 郭子健 郭子健 郭子健 (デレク・クォック) 곽 자건 |
Blu-ray Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
Release Date: | 2014-05-22 |
Language: | Cantonese, Mandarin |
Subtitles: | English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese |
Place of Origin: | Hong Kong |
Sound Information: | 7.1, DTS-HD Master Audio |
Disc Format(s): | Blu-ray |
Rating: | IIA |
Publisher: | Vicol Entertainment Ltd. (HK) |
Package Weight: | 140 (g) |
Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1035630995 |
Product Information
As a fire rages, so does mistrust.
The firefighters of Hong Kong’s Pillar Point division who are expecting a quiet night to see off their retiring chief find their faith in each other stretched to the limits when a small fire at a liquor warehouse threatens to plunge the whole of Hong Kong into darkness if it spreads to a nearby power plant supplying natural gas. Politics, rivalry, and suspicion all come into play when dubious decisions are made, warnings are ignored and colleagues start to fall. Can the Pillar Point brotherhood survive the night, if not the fire, with their trust in each other intact?
* Disc 2 Special Features: [DVD/ALL/NTSC]
- Trailers
- The Making-of
- Behind the Scenes
- Special Effects
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Awards
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Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival 2014
- Best Action Choreography Winner
- Best Visual Effects Nomination
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "As The Light Goes Out (2014) (Blu-ray) (Hong Kong Version)"
Bromance and bombast abound in As the Light Goes Out, the big-budget firefighter flick from director Derek Kwok. This EEG-funded behemoth stars Nicholas Tse as firefighter Ho Wing-Sam, who, along with fellow firemen Yip Chi-Fai (Andy On) and Chill (Shawn Yue), breaks firefighter protocol during a deadly building blaze in order to save more lives. Their actions come with consequences, and while Chill takes responsibility, Sam avoids it and Fai throws his buddies under the bus. A year later, their friendships are strained, and Fai has risen to the rank of Station Chief at the Lung Kwu Tan Fire Station, with Sam and Chill now serving beneath him. On the hottest Christmas Eve on record, the station has plenty of comings and goings. Sam is being transferred out, while senior officer Lee Pui-Tao a.k.a. the "King of Ladder" (Simon Yam) is due for retirement. At the same time, rookie firefighter Kin (William Chan) and mainland transfer Ocean (Hu Jun) arrive at Lung Kwu Tan Station. Politics abound at the station. While Sam covers for Chill, who's misusing department vehicles to drive his son to a field trip at a power plant, Fai is lording over Sam, and reminding him that he's always been his friend. That statement is debatable, as there's plenty of passive-aggressive ball-busting going on between these men. There's also standard firehouse hazing and rivalries happening, including minor friction between the grizzled Tao and the newly-arrived Ocean. More soap opera plotting: Chill's son is embarrassed by his dad, who's always choosing firefighting over hanging with mom, and Sam is on the outs with his girlfriend. Meanwhile, the tension between Sam, Chill and Fai remains thick, and factors into Fai and Sam's mishandling of a factory fire. Add that to a nearby natural gas pipe, an untimely funeral and terrible management at the main power plant (you know, the one that Chill's kid is currently visiting), and you have the makings of a disaster like a Hong Kong-wide blackout. Just imagine the potential chaos. Keep imagining. While the blackout occurs and Hong Kong is sent into territory-wide alarm, As the Light Goes Out stays clear of street-level problems, instead concentrating on the fire at the power plant. The fire makes for a strong second-half set piece but the journey there is unconvincing. There are temporal jumps that make no sense; in the amount of time it takes for one character to travel from the factory to the power plant, another character goes to the factory, witnesses an accident, goes to the hospital, files a report, returns to the fire station and then broods for an hour. Also, the film portrays an incredible amount of ineptitude from government employees, who let their egos override their professionalism and common sense. The screenplay features many moving parts that meet far too conveniently, plus everything happens in a single day, the "hottest Christmas Eve ever", and there's even a typhoon approaching! If the filmmakers included a terrorist attack in this collection of events it would only be slightly less believable. Labored set-up aside, the film's second half manages greater power as the firemen attempt to rescue people trapped in the power plant. The action is sometimes incoherent, with shaky camerawork and even shakier editing used to transmit the chaos, and the emotions never stray from the expected ones. However, the conflicts between the firemen are understandably trumped by the need to do their jobs, and their dedication and teamwork is portrayed in rousing fashion. Not every relationship is resolved but the unspoken honor and heroism compensates. The cacophony of actors yelling, emoting and escaping from smoke and fire keeps tensions high, and helps to camouflage the innumerable plot holes and logic issues. Derek Kwok occasionally slows things down, using faux artistic flourishes to create overblown moments, particularly during one over-the-top montage at the climax. However, the combination of lyricism and pyrotechnics provides a final and also satisfying emotional catharsis. As the Light Goes Out ain't art, but it comes off better than it should. Kwok's attempts at meaning don't work as well on the script level. There's voiceover and spoken dialogue that pretentiously uses smoke as a metaphor. People talk about escaping smoke, running from it, conquering it, etc., and Kwok adds to this attempt at profundity with visuals. Smoke is portrayed almost like a living creature, snaking and billowing in search of its prey. Basically, Kwok brings the Smoke Monster from Lost to Hong Kong as a stand-in for fear, insecurity, doubt, etc. The metaphor is stretched rather thin and is never as convincing as it should be, but Kwok has more than smoke to get his meaning out there. The visuals, montage, editing and strong character archetypes all work in Kwok's favor, and compensate for the clumsy metaphor, expository speeches and intrusive voiceover. As the Light Goes Out is messy, baroque and frequently overblown, but its mixture of elements results in something with surprising emotional power. The actors are all over the map; on the overacting side, Nic Tse emotes convincingly but also alarmingly, while Simon Yam presses as the more-grizzled-than-he-should-be "King of Ladder." Meanwhile, Shawn Yue is admirably cool and righteous, while Hu Jun is memorable as basically the greatest firefighter in the world – a man who's so awesome that he memorizes floorplans in one glance and oozes deep passion without changing his tone of voice. Andy On furthers his quest to become the new Michael Wong by needlessly switching between English and Cantonese. Female characters are sidelined, but that's not surprising. This is a film about men and brotherhood, and an entertaining one despite its many flaws. The recent Out of Inferno was a more straightforward firefighter film, but also a more mechanical and predictable one. As the Light Goes Out sweats and struggles to put its passions on the screen, and the result stirs, thrillingly and sometimes inexplicably. Passion plus fire can be a pretty potent mix. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
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