| Election
(Hong Kong; 100 min.) directed by: Johny To starring: Simon Yam, Tony Leung Ka Fai, Tian-lin Wang |
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Bruce says: "Triads in Hong Kong are similar to Mafia families in Italy and the United States. Each triad controls a specific geographic area and often a certain type of criminal activity such as drug trafficking, gambling, smuggling, prostitution, running night clubs, money laundering and counterfeiting. In the 1930s there were only eight triads; today there are over fifty with some having members in the thousands. Knowing something about triad history helps in understanding the Hong Kong triad films, a genre that enjoys worldwide popularity. Personally I find it frustrating not knowing enough to determine what is fact and what is fiction. "In ELECTION, following tradition, a leader of all triads is chosen every two years. Years ago, the election process and results were held sacred and never discussed. In the words of Uncle Teng (Tian-lin Wang), himself a past leader, 'Years ago the identity of the chairman was kept secret.' What was traditionally a democratic process is now being tested and the rules are changing in the eyes of some triad members. As the election nears two rivals emerge, Lok (Simon Yam) and Big D (Tony Leung Ka Fai). Big D is a loose cannon and quick to lose his temper in public, a characteristic that makes many of the elders nervous. Big D has runners covering Hong Kong buying votes with monetary and promissory bribes. Some elders say Big D is betraying tradition but he claims 'Business is everything now.' "Lok, on the other hand, remains cool as a cucumber. As time passes we learn the clam exterior is strictly for show and he, too, has moved into the modern age. The new chairman will be the keeper of the coveted carved ebony dragon baton; the current chairman has safely hidden the baton in mainland China. The race is on to get possession of the baton thus eliminating the need for an election. "What follows is a modern action packed thriller with an old fashioned
touch. Watching grown men - with zest equaling that of Harry Potter or
Indiana Jones - in hot pursuit of an object (the baton) with inestimable
intrinsic value is hard to take seriously. Since I'm a novice in respect
to Hong Kong triad filmography, I cannot pit ELECTION against anything
other than the INFERNAL AFFAIRS trilogy which, in my opinion, has more
class and pizzazz. To fill in the gap, I'm making sure that some John
Woo's films like A BETTER TOMORROW and HARD BOILED get into my Netflix
queue. |