My Top TenAlso known as: A few foreign films you should check out.[/b]
1. Infernal Affairs Triology
Starring: Tony Leung Chiu-Wai - Andy Lau - Anthony Wong - Eric Tsang - Leon Lai - Edison Chen - Shawn Yue - Daoming Chen - Sammi Cheng - Carina Lau
Director(s): Alan Mak - Andrew Lau[/size]
SynopsisThe setting is the never-ending war between the police and the traids of Hong Kong. Chan is a cop who's been assigned to undercover work inside the traids for so long that he's been able to rise through the ranks to a position of some authority. Lau, meanwhile, is a secret member of the triads who has infiltrated the police force with an equal level of success. As they feed their bosses information on the plans and counter-plans of the organizations they pretend to serve, they both begin to feel the stresses of their double lives as they become torn between the oppressive obligations they owe to their superiors and the growing camaraderie they share with the foot soldiers around them. As the two organizations become increasingly aware of the moles in their midsts, the race is on for Chan and Lau to try and get out of the game alive.[/size]
My complete favourite. I've loved this film since I first saw it, i've seen it a little too many times, it is just plain great. The characters are fantastic, the acting is unbelievable, and the storyline is beautifully done. Great stuff.
2. Brotherhood
Starring: Dong-Kun Jang - Bin Won - Eun-ju Lee - Hyeong-jin Kong - Yeong-ran Lee - Choi Min Sik
Director(s): Je-gyu Kang[/size]
SynopsisA group of Korean archeologists find a skeleton and identify it as Lee Jin-Seok. But Lee Jin-Seok is still alive and he is now an old man. It is his brother Jin-Tae who went missing in the Korean War. We travel from the present to 1950, when the Korean War started. Jin-Seok and Jin-Tae, Jin-Seok's brother, are young men who suddenly find themselves catapulted into a bloody world so different from their quiet, rural lives. As the war progresses, the war begins to poison Jin-Tae's mind. Jin-Seok is lost when he finds that he no longer knows who his brother is.[/size]
This is pretty much the Korean version of Saving Private Ryan. I'm not going to compare the two, usually people say this is better, but I'm not going to take sides. This film is one hell of an emotional bombshell. There's also a hell of alot of fighting. Some rambo-esque missions and smoothly done gore. All you want from a good war film. The shots are incredible, and the acting is brilliant. Say no more.
3. Happy Together
Starring: Tony Leung Chiu-Wai - Leslie Cheung - Chen Chang
Director(s): Wong Kai Wai[/size]
SynopsisYiu-Fai and Po-Wing arrive in Argentina from Hong Kong and take to the road for a holiday. Something is wrong and their relationship goes adrift. A disillusioned Yiu-Fai starts working at a tango bar to save up for his trip home. When a beaten and bruised Po-Wing reappears, Yiu-Fai is empathetic but is unable to enter a more intimate relationship. After all, Po-Wing is not ready to settle down. Yiu-Fai now works in a Chinese restaurant and meets the youthful Chang from Taiwan. Yiu-Fai's life takes on a new spin, while Po-Wing's life shatters continually in contrast.[/size]
Now, it might seem a bit weird that I have a film of a homosexual nature, but the film itself is just incredible. It's provocative (that would be the homosexual side), the acting is mind blowing, Tony Leung Chiu Wai and Leslie Cheung (RIP) together on screen is a masterpiece. If there was one, this would be classed as a hard boiled drama. It's gritty, it's hella emotional, lots of shouting, suicide attempts. It's all there. And it comes out as an incredible, incredible film. Well worth the watch, if you can pass the sex scene at the start.
4. All About Lily Chou-Chou
Starring: Hayato Ichihara - Shûgo Oshinari - Ayumi Ito - Takao Osawa - Miwako Ichikawa - Izumi Inamori - Yû Aoi - Kazusa Matsuda
Director(s): Shunji Iwai[/size]
SynopsisLife isn't easy for a group of high school kids growing up absurd in Japan's pervasive pop/cyber culture. As they negotiate teen badlands- school bullies, parents from another planet, lurid snapshots of sex and death- these everyday rebels without a cause seek sanctuary, even salvation, through pop star savior Lily Chou-Chou, embracing her sad, dreamy songs and sharing their fears and secrets in Lilyholic chat rooms. Immersed in the speed of everyday troubles, their lives inevitably climax in a fatal collision between real and virtual identities, a final logging-off from innocence.[/size]
Now, this is the hardest film to describe. It's a teenage-drama, just filled with suicide, murder, rape and so on. I think the only word to describe this film is traumatic. It's not sad, it's really difficult to watch. The rape scene is really difficult to watch. But there's some dark beauty behind this, possibly from the mellow piano playing over most of the scenes. But this film is an experience, and definately a good one.
5. Election/Election 2
Starring: Simon Yam - Tony Leung Ka-Fai - Louis Koo - Nick Cheung - Ka Tung Lam - Siu-Fai Cheung - Suet Lam - Tian-lin Wang - Maggie Siu
Director(s): Johnnie To[/size]
SynopsisA drama-thriller centered on a democratic election within an organized crime society.[/size]
I apoligise for the poor synopsis, blame IMDB. It's because it hasn't arrived in America or, anywhere for that matter. Election is plain amazing. Both films infact. It's the Hong Kong version of any gangster film around, and brings it up to another level. If there is one thing that brings the film down is the fact Johnnie To gives in to the mainland China censors. But he doesn't tone down the violence, he tones down the blood. So in some scenes from both films, where there should be blood, often theres not. If you're getting hit by a large and heavy blunt object, you're going to bleed. But that aside, Election is amazing. The cast is top-notch, the cast is pretty much a Hong Kong version of Oceans Eleven. Get ready when it hits the cinemas near you. You'll love it.
6. Sympathy for Mr Vengeance
Starring: Kang-ho Song - Ha-kyun Shin - Du-na Bae - Ji-Eun Lim - Bo-bae Han - Se-dong Kim - Dae-yeon Lee
Director(s): Park Chan-Wook[/size]
SynopsisThis is the story of Ryu, a deaf man, and his sister, who requires a kidney transplant. Ryu's boss, Park, has just laid him off, and in order to afford the transplant, Ryu and his girlfriend develop a plan to kidnap Park's daughter. Things go horribly wrong, and the situation spirals rapidly into a cycle of violence and revenge.[/size]
Sympathy for Mr Vengeance is the first in the Vengeance Triology. Many say Oldboy is the best, I disagree and favour the original. Why? I don't know. The gritty backdrop for the film, the gut-twisting violence and gore, the amazing acting. If you've seen Oldboy, and you havent seen this, you really need to. It's beautifully shot (something the Koreans seem to have in a bag) and the dark humour shines throughout. I highly recommend this film.
7. In The Mood for Love
Starring: Tony Leung Chiu Wai - Maggie Cheung - Ping Lam Siu
Director(s): Wong Kar-Wai[/size]
SynopsisSet in Hong Kong, 1962, Chow Mo-Wan is a newspaper editor who moves into a new building with his wife. At approximately the same time, Su Li-zhen, a beautiful secretary and her executive husband also move in to the crowded building. With their spouses often away, Chow and Li-zhen spend most of their time together as friends. They have everything in common from noodle shops to martial arts. Soon, they are shocked to discover that their spouses are having an affair. Hurt and angry, they find comfort in their growing friendship even as they resolve not to be like their unfaithful mates.[/size]
Yes, even I, hardman Esh has a weak spot for the odd romance film. And this is the best of it's kind. Beautifully acted, beautifully told, everything is beautiful. If you do like the odd romance story, or period dramas, I do recommend. But I doubt there are any guys who do. All I can say is, if you like Wong Kar-Wai, check this film out.
8. Oldboy
Starring: Choi Min Sik - Ji-tae Yu - Hye-jeong Kang - Dae-han Ji - Dal-su Oh - Byeong-ok Kim
Director(s): Park Chan-Wook[/size]
SynopsisOn the day of his daughter's birthday, Ho Dae-su (Min-sik Choi) gets completely drunk and is arrested. His best friend No Joo-hwan (Dae-han Ji) releases him from the police station, and while calling home from a phone booth, Dae-su vanishes. Indeed he has been abducted and imprisoned in a room for fifteen years. One day, he is suddenly released, receives clothes, money and a cellular and meets the Japanese chef Mido (Hye-jeong Kang), and they feel a great attraction for each other. However, Dae-su seeks for his captor and the reason of his long imprisonment. While looking for revenge, Dae-su discloses deep secrets from the past.[/size]
It's really unsuprising this is on my list. It's one of the first to be mentioned for people who want to get into Asian cinema. Oldboy is breathtaking, the fight scenes are incredible, and it has humour and flair. And a beauty of a twist on the end. Saying that, it is indeed overrated. And I have to place it down here, and I know people won't agree, but 8th out of the many many films I have seen is a great feat. Oh well, amazing film, again I recommend.
9. Amelie
Starring: Audrey Tautou - Mathieu Kassovitz - Rufus - Jamel Debbouze
Director(s): Jean-Pierre Jeunet[/size]
SynopsisAmélie is looking for love, and perhaps for the meaning of life in general. We see her grow up in an original if slightly dysfunctional family. Now a waitress in central Paris, she interacts curiously with her neighbors and customers, as well as a mysterious Photomaton-image collector and one of his even more mysterious photo subjects. Little by little, Amélie realizes that the way to happiness (and yet more subtle humor) requires her to take her own initiative and reach out to others.[/size]
This film is infectious. It's crazy, it's beautiful. If you've had a bad day, and are looking for a film to cheer you up, this does the job right from the first scene. Audrey Tautou is brilliant in this, and the cast is superb, especially the actor above. Recommended.
10. Battle Royale
Starring: Takashi Kitano - Tatsuya Fujiwara - Aki Maeda - Chiaki Kuriyama - Taro Yamamoto
Director(s): Kinji Fukasaku[/size]
SynopsisAt the dawn of the new millennium, Japan is in a state of near-collapse. Unemployment is at an all-time high, and violence amongst the nations youth is spiralling out of control. With school children boycotting their lessons and physically abusing their teachers, a beleaguered and near-defeated government decides to introduce a radical new measure: the Battle Royale Act Overseen by their former teacher, Kitano ('Beat' Takeshi) and requiring that a randomly chosen school class be taken to a deserted island and forced to fight each other to the death, the Act dictates that only one pupil be allowed to survive the punishment. He or she will return, not as the victor, but as the ultimate proof of the lengths to which the government are prepared to go to curb the tide of juvenile disobedience.[/size]
Again! This film is amazingly overrated. For a long time, this was my favourite film (before I discovered Infernal Affairs), the film is a cult classic, it's kids shooting each other? Why wouldn't you love it? But it gets so damn repetitive after a while. The cracks really do begin to show with this film. But it's still such a classic, and I do recommend it to people who hasn't seen it. But who wasn't?
So, there's my Top 10. Posted in such a ridiculous way that it took several hours. I do really question why I bother bulking it up with the graphics and so on, I do it with all my topics. And fail to win the 'Best Topicmaker' awards everytime oh well.
Point of this topic: What are your Top Ten films? And don't forget to discuss the films mentioned.