Young & Dangerous:
The Prequal

Director: Andrew
Lau
Producer: Manfred Wong
Plot:
When school
students; Ho-Nam (Nicholas Tse),
Pau-Pan (Tsui Ka-Ho) and Chow-Pan (Benjamin Yuen) are kicked out school
and are constantly being bullied by the local triad gangs, they have
no choice to join them. The gangs friend Chicken (Sam
Lee) introduces them to Brother Bee (Ng Chi-Hung), a nobale and
resecpted member of the Hung Hing.
The
boys are then introduced to the glorious sights of the underworld, going
to night clubs, massage parlours and bath houses. All these things can’t
last though Brother Bee decides to test the new blood by having them
attack a rival gang leader - Bill. After carefully planning the attack
out, the boys enjoy up having to attack the gang leader with bamboo
canes rather than the much preferred ‘Triad Choppers’, after
taking a few good stabs at Bill they final manage to kill him, but their
luck turns against them when members of his ‘Tung Sing’
gang are waiting for Ho-Nam.
Ho-Nam
and his friends barely manage to escape, but the consequences for their
actions are yet to be dealt with when Bill’s brother – Sun
Cha seeks vengeance against Ho-Nam.
Review:
Andrew Lau once again brings the legendary characters of Cow-Man’s
‘Teddy Boy’ comics to life in this gritty triad story. I
mention the term gritty as the story seems to be lot darker and violent
than its predecessors, there is frequent beatings, heroin addictions,
Ho-Nam’s mother passing away, Ho-Nam being tortured and Ho-Nam’s
drug related nightmare. The film is also set around the time of the
Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, throughout the film you see many
extras standing around televisions watching the events unfold.
The
movie also has several subplots, there is relationship between Ho-Nam
and one of his class mates Kelly, it’s the obvious bad boy pines
for the rich good girl, but it just seems to sizzle out to nothing.
Then there is the relationship between Big Head (Daniel
Wu) and his girlfriend Fei (Shu Qi),
Head’s hot temper puts a heavy strain on their relationship and
it leads Fei off into a subtle relationship with Ho-Nam, which also
sizzles out to be nothing. There is also the back story of the relationship
between Ho-Nam and his mother and step-father and the storyline of Kwan’s
(Francis
Ng) betrayal to the Hung Hing.
I
must admit Nicholas Tse does a pretty good job, people have started
to rate his performance over Ekin Chengs, mainly because Tse is showing
more emotional, but I think that is because this his how Ho-Nam was
like as a teenager, but growing up he’s became stronger, but that’s
just my opinion.
There
is also a nice little movie reference to Portland Street Blues, which
is a spin-off movie from the Young & Dangerous series which is based
on the past of ‘Sister 13’ played by the lovable Sandra
Ng. There reference is when Ho-Nam and the gang go to kill ‘Bill’,
but with the Tung Sing gang attacking them, the four friends spread
out and Pou-Pan gets lost, he asks two young ladies, ‘Where am
I?’, the young ladies actually are Sandra Ng and Kirsty Yeung.
If you’ve seen PSB’s you’ll find this to be a nice
little in-joke.
Notable
appearances? Well apart from Sandra Ng and Kirsty Yeung, Lee Sui-Kei
makes an appearance as his famous character ‘Kei’, Law Lan
makes her appearance as Ho-Nam’s grandmother, Michael Chan makes
an appearance as the leader of the Tung Sing triads and Yuen Bun makes
an appearance as a police officer.
Final
thoughts, a fine film and worthy watch, enjoy it!
Rating: 7.3 out of 10.0
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