Monday, 16 July 2012

PTU

This is another film purchased on DVD while in Hong Kong last summer and that for some reason or other I never got round to watching, which is a shame, because it’s a good little film. ‘PTU’ – or ‘Police Tactical Unit’ (do you want to see my unit?) – follows the plight of Detective Lo, as he searches for his gun; lost to street punks. Enlisting the help of fellow officers, he roams the streets on Tsim Sha Tsui in hope of retrieving it by dawn.



Directed by Johnnie to, this feels like one of those fun films that gets made quickly in between much larger productions, a la ‘Chungking Express’, also set in Hong Kong. The plot is simple enough – though the characters may not always be – and it is easy to dip in and out of without too much thought.

Filmed with wide-angled lenses, with close-up shots, this is classic Hong Kong cinema: capturing the claustrophobic nature of the milieu, with bright lights, dingy streets and an endless array of colourful characters trading blows through the night. Hardly To’s best work, but a further stamp in his place as the John Woo for the new millennium and probably the best director from the SAR over the last decade.

Using regular collaborators, such as Simon Yam and big-and-beautiful Suet Lam, To’s police are a far cry from the hapless characters of Jackie Chan’s 1980s, giving the impression that if one thing is illegal in Hong Kong: it’s smiling. The look and feel are both slick and stylish and cult at the same time, though the music – typically a weak point in Hong Kong films, bar the work of Wong Kar-wai – is, at times, more sixth-form college hopeful with a synthesizer after a two litre bottle of Tizer than professional. But that’s minor, and along with ‘Breaking News’ and ‘Exiled’, ‘PTU’ shows that To is the master of the roaming groups of loners…in Hong Kong and Macau, at least.


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