Drug War

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Résumés(1)

Lors d'une enquête, le capitaine de la brigade anti-drogue de Tianjin met sous les verrous un homme accusé d'être à la tête d'une importante fabrique de stupéfiants. Afin d'éviter la peine de mort, ce dernier apporte son aide à la police pour éradiquer le trafic et faire tomber le chef du réseau. Mais alors qu'un raid est lancé, le capitaine et sa brigade se retrouvent pris dans une spirale de violence que rien ne semble pouvoir arrêter... Grand Prix du Festival International du Film Policier de Beaune, la nouvelle production de Johnnie To surpasse ses précédentes réalisations grâce à l'excellence de la mise en scène et à un récit riche en rebondissements, le tout servi par une distribution sans faille portée par Louis Koo dans son meilleur rôle à ce jour. (Metropolitan FilmExport)

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Critiques (3)

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The poster is excellent. It sets the ground for an uncompromising crime story with a relentless policeman on one side and a criminal who has to cooperate whether he wants to or not, on the other side. The result? The Asians have already showed us similar crime movies, for example with the film Internal Affairs, so they should have some experience. However, for me, the relationship of the two was just not believable. The drug dealer snitched something, then there was some fuck up, he admitted to not saying everything, the police threatened him with death, he started crying and started talking. There were countless moments like this in the film. The scene with drug overdosing is quite good, but the final shoot off looks like it was happening on a playground. In a Chinese film I wouldn’t expect to see such differences in quality. ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A darn long shift for a provincial narcotics unit. For To, a surprisingly toned-down, raw, realistic, dark and the first movie I’ve seen by him where “style and form above all else" applies; unusually he chose a Mannesque style and approach, so it centers on atmosphere and what goes unsaid between the characters on opposite sides of the barricades. Simply a very well-made variation on Heat with all the trimmings. The problem is the final twenty minutes which would so love to be something like a shootout in the street like in Heat, but instead turns into classic To-ism. Hitherto intelligent characters suddenly begin behaving like dumb asses. Don’t get me wrong, the shootout is entertaining, uncompromising and stylish. It’s just that it comes from a completely different movie. ()

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