Kamis, 05 November 2009

So Close

Chicks with kicks

Two hit-woman sisters and a maverick cop take on Hong Kong's bad guys in "So Close," a fun ride if what you want in a movie is long, shapely legs kicking ass.

Angels, your assignment today is to turn yourselves Chinese and kick some evil Hong Kong corporate mafia butt.

In "So Close," the beautiful but deadly Chen sisters have become fallen angels of a sort after the murder of their loving parents over their father's brilliant worldwide security-cam invention.

SO CLOSE
Original title: Chik yeung tin sai.
Directed by: Corey Yuen.
Written by: Jeff Lau.
Cast: Shu Qi, Vicki Zhao, Karen Mok, Seung-heon Song, Michael Wei, Yasuaki Kurata, Derek Wan, Shek Sau, Ricardo Mamood.
In Mandarin Chinese with English subtitles.

Related links: Official site
RELATED ARTICLES
Asian Films Are Go! 2003
# Overview
# Double Agent
# Double Vision
# Out

# Ping Pong
# Runaway Pistol
# So Close
# Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance

Previous years' festivals
# When Korean Cinema Attacks! (2001)
# Asian Films Are Go! (2002)

# Official site

Sue (Vicki Zhao), the techie angel, runs dad's massive computer network, guiding big sister Lynn (Shu Qi), the glamorous angel, through high-security office towers to whack people.

In case the "Charlie's Angels" parallels aren't obvious enough, authorities dub her "the Computer Angel" after a she makes a dazzling, high-energy hit on a corporate executive, eludes a dozen henchman, and, cornered on the roof, rips off her surgical white uniform and vanishes over the edge. Another job well done.

Our story would be incomplete without a third deadly beauty, and who shows up but Detective Hung (Karen Mok), the brainy angel, who has not only fists of death but also a photographic memory for bad guys' faces and the full dossiers behind them. While her male colleagues scratch their heads over the daring crime, she's quickly onto the sisters' unorthodox trail as they pursue bigger and bigger corporate prey.

So Close
That would really be more than enough plot for what's basically a martial-arts kick-em-up with some very long, willowy legs doing the kicking. But we also have a tragically earnest romance to complicate Lynn's life, as destiny brings the one man in the world for her, the emptily handsome Yan (Seung-heon Song), back into her life. She wants to quit the hit-woman business, marry him, and live happily ever after. But as always in such situations, there's one more job to do.

So Close
One could criticize "So Close" for its silly contrivances, Hallmark-inspired emotions and repeated infliction of the cloying Carpenters hit "Close to You," but that's beside the point. The point being: good girls, bad guys, long legs, gee-whiz technology, spectacular fistfights, swordfights, gunfights and car chases.

The climactic scene pits two of our martial maidens against a sword master in a board room conveniently appointed with tasteful artifacts that can also double as weapons, and that's a pretty good one. But the real showdown comes midway through the movie, when bad girl Shu Qi and honest cop Karen Mok go at it — with firearms, then whip-fast limbs, then with their wits as they unexpectedly find themselves handcuffed to each other. If you're going to watch a Hong Kong action movie, you couldn't ask for a much better extravaganza.

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