Pages

Saturday, August 16, 2025

Soi Cheang Spotlight

Spotlight on the following 5 films of Soi Cheang:

Accident (2009)

Motorway (2012)

Kill Zone 2 (2015)

Limbo (2021)

Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In (2024)

I have to thank Filipe Furtado in inspiring me to finally do a spotlight on Soi Cheang. I often saw Filipe mention films of Soi Cheang in his end of the year film lists yet I hadn’t seen any of Soi Cheang’s films. I finally decided to address my cinematic gap after seeing both Filipe place Twilight of the Warriors #8 in his top 100 of 2024 and also seeing Srikanth place the same film at #2 in his list.

Hong Kong Nostalgia

Seeing Soi Cheang’s films reminded me of a time when Hong King cinema felt top of the world. This was two decades ago when I looked forward to seeing the newest crime, thriller or romantic comedies from Hong Kong. It wasn’t just the newest Johnnie To film (PTU, Breaking News, Election, Election 2, Exiled) or the Infernal Affairs Trilogy because there was plenty of discoveries to be had on a weekly/monthly basis. These discoveries happened shortly after I came across David Bordwell’s essential Planet Hong Kong book which emphasized the need to keep up with Hong Kong cinema.

My task to keep up with Hong Kong cinema was easier in those days. A local video shop carried the newest DVDs/VCDs of Hong Kong films. I just had to show on a weekly and bi-weekly basis and select what seemed to catch my eye. Once that video store closed, then my struggles to keep up with Hong Kong started and I was down to only seeing a few films from Hong Kong per year. The last decade has resulted in many blind spots for Hong Kong cinema for me and this is around the time when many of Soi Cheang’s films were released. Watching his films took me instantly back in time to when my regular viewing consisted of watching crime, gangster, police and action thrillers from Hong Kong.

Planning, Speeding, Chasing and Fighting

Hong Kong Cinema has shown many police procedural films but Accident shows planning and procedures from a group of criminals who make their murders look like accidents. The early stages of the film show them planning out their execution strategy and with a few trial runs. However, when things don’t go as per their plan, the leader begins to doubt if they were setup and starts questioning everything including the loyalty of his group. The film shows that wafer thin line between trust and paranoia, which isn’t surprising since the group goes to great lengths to make their plans look like chance. The surveillance and scenes of waiting echo Coppola’s The Conversation. Of interest is that this is the first Soi Cheang film produced by Johnnie To’s MilkyWay production.That makes sense as this film compliments the police films of Johnnie To such as PTU.

As the title indicates, Motorway involves fast cars. Fast police cars against those driven by criminals, or specifically one cop with an aching need for speed vs a criminal with similar need. The film echoes Fast and Furious films. Importantly, Motorway came out a few years after The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006). Tokyo Drift featured those remarkable drift sequences but Motorway has its own unique car movements, a near impossible side-way turn through a narrow street. The trick for such a turn? 8000 rpm, 2 km/hr and a steady hand as per the advice given out by veteran cop Lo Fung (Anthony Chau-Sang Wong, a regular in Johnnie To films) to the young Chan Cheung (Shawn Yue), mentor to trainee. The film also features a backstory which shows the chase for the speedy criminal goes back decades. On a separate note, the enhancing of the car to add more speed also foreshadows the recent Lost Bullet trilogy.

A cop’s missing gun is a big component of Johnnie To’s PTU (2003) but that missing gun plays a minor part in Limbo which is a serial killer hunt film. The black and white depiction of the film is an excellent choice as it enhances the darkness and filth of the surroundings. The film has a separate thread, featuring an experienced cop Cham Lau (Ka-Tung Lam), seeking revenge from the young girl who killed his wife in an accident. That separate thread is weaved into the main serial thread segment resulting in an emotional conclusion.

Emotions are also notched up near the end of Kill Zone 2 even though majority of the film focuses on fights in confined areas. Given the presence of Tony Jaa (Ong-Bak), one expects such fights and on that note, the film delivers. The story is not as refined and instead layered with plenty of melodrama, similar to that of 1980-90s Hindi language cinema. Still, Kill Zone 2 has some merit in showcasing fights that Soi Cheang would hone to perfection in Twilight of the Warriors.

Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In is easily the most accomplished of the 5 films in this spotlight and a perfect distillation of what one expects from Hong Cinema: incredible choregraphed fights, larger than life characters, social relevant topic, a touch of supernatural and mythology. The film recreates the demolished Kowloon Walled City and has a strong story which matches the visual language. The success of the film means that Soi Cheang is working on both a prequel and sequel, both of which will be shot back-to-back.

Ranking of these 5 Soi Cheang films in order of preference:

1. Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In (2024)

2. Motorway (2012)

3. Accident (2009)

4. Limbo (2021)

5. Kill Zone 2 (2015)

No comments: