旺角卡門 aka As Tears Go By, C+

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2 min readMay 2, 2024

Another Asian movie from the late 80s where our main character is involved in gang activities, and tries to make life better for his junior peers. Best comparisons are A Better Tomorrow, Violent Cop. To be honest, it should have garnered some additional acclaim but didn’t because of the off-putting incest love story thrown in.

Starring Andy Wong as Wau, a low level enforcer in Hong Kong with 2 subordinates under his wing, the movie goes into detail to explain the contemporary understanding of clout in gang life. Many people don’t understand that this is what drives a majority of inner city violence, not financial transactions or turf wars, making it a concept hard to explain today that was well dissected by the writer/directors.

Additionally, the love story is one of redemption and not realizing when you’ve got a good thing going. Maggie Cheung was at her peak attractiveness in this film. She continued to get roles after the 90s but sort of disappeared (exception: Supercop). She plays the fish out of water very well in all of her films during the era. However, she’s a cousin to the main character making their relationship heavily incestual and the audience doesn’t accept that anywhere.

Other faults I have are the slow-mo scenes during action sequences. Ever since watching Best of the Worst with the McNamara Brothers, I can’t take slow-mo seriously. It’s something where the director is deficient.

In conclusion, worth a watch due to how it relates to modern society but will definitely turn your stomach.

First screened April 28, 2024 on Criterion Collection.

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Quick Takes! Short media reviews. All reviews within a day of viewing unless noted.