A Fair Review The Movie Hit Exiled
Exiled is really its own thing in the world of action movies. If you’ve grown bored with the recent Hollywood trend of shaky cameras, incoherent action scenes and split second editing, Exiled is a breath of fresh air. If you want to see action that’s clear, coherent, and carries a sort of odd, dreamlike quality, put Exiled on your movie downloads queue.
We follow a gangster who betrayed his boss years ago, and his since gotten married and had a baby. The boss sends a couple of hitmen to take him out, while at the same time, two other former members of the gang show up to protect him. This is where the movie begins.
These characters are all friends since their youth, and there’s a sense of warmth and sentimentality as the five characters come to a compromise and decide to honor friendship before duty. They decide to pull off a big score to help support the hero’s wife and child before settling their differences. The result is something much more personal than the usual “It’s Just Business” approach to violence in gangster movies.
The movie was directed by Johnnie To, the Hong Kong legend, who came out with his first films around the same time as John Woo and Ringo Lam were defining the Heroic Bloodshed genre of HK action flicks. Where those earlier films were defined by the anger at the Chinese takeover of the city, this one has a sense of forgiveness, compassion and understanding, having been made after the takeover.
The dreamlike quality to the film is really something. Shootouts take place in slow motion, with action that takes only thirty seconds being expanded to several minutes. One incredible scene begins with a character throwing a Red Bull can into the air, and climaxes just as the empty can hits the floor, with bullets flying and people dying over the course of an incredible slow motion bullet ballet.
The story isn’t always quite as clear as the action, but this actually helps to improve the dreamlike quality of the film. To himself has admitted that he finds the film confusing and still hasn’t quite made sense of it. Watch it for the characters and the action, though, and you’ll be able to appreciate the movie in full.
The genre of Heroic Bloodshed was defined by angry violence, often showing one man up against an army as a parallel to the independent people of Hong Kong and their anger against the Communist China. After Woo and Lam went to Hollywood, Johnnie To stayed behind and redefined the genre on his own terms, turning it into something a little less vitriolic.
It’s truly a rare spectacle in the world of action. Even if you’ve seen everything John Woo and Ringo Lam have ever made, this movie will show you something you haven’t seen before. It’s definitely something to watch if you’re looking for an action scene with its own approach to the usual shootouts and fight scenes.
Sir Thomas refuses to either endorse or denounce the King’s action, and remains a man of principle. films This closely resembles theacting that we see today. People want to make the latest hit track as their ring tones.
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