Time and Tide
Seunlau Ngaklau
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 18 May 2001
Speed
Things
move fast in Time and Tide. Tsui Hark's buddy-action movie is all
about keeping up. If you're not wild about one plot, you might find
something to like in another, and if one male lead doesn't appeal to
you, well, there's another. And if the first pregnant woman isn't so
interesting, well, there is a second. And if none of these
storylines is your cup of tea, no matter. Just watch and listen --
the speed and color and tumult will carry you.
Time
and Tide marks the Vietnamese-born Tsui Hark's return to Hong Kong
after making a couple of Jean Claude Van Damme movies, Double Team
(featuring Jean Claude and Dennis Rodman's unforgettable climactic
tussle with a Coke machine) and Knock Off (which was actually shot
in Hong Kong, with Rob Schneider and Lela Rochon alongside the
scrappy Van Damme, who plays a fashion designer --
"strange" doesn't begin to describe it). The new movie is
surely less strained than the U.S. productions, but it is a
curiosity in itself, brimming with themes, in-jokey references, and
desires, not all of which are crystal clear. Then again, this
loosey-goosey verve has a certain offbeat appeal. Its buddies and
action are too irregular to be predictable, and yet they also fit
something approximating a formula -- boys-bonding, boys-ass-kicking,
boys-finally-realizing-the-importance-of-family-and-friends.
The
buddies are twenty-one-year old bartender turned bodyguard-for-hire
Tyler (the Cantonese pop star Nicholas Tse, who also appeared in
1998's Young and Dangerous: The Prequel and 1999's Gen X Cops) and
Jack (Taiwanese rock star Wu Bai), a young Taiwanese mercenary who
spent some time in Brazil training government soldiers, before
returning home disillusioned. Tyler and Jack's affiliation is
accidental, but their loyalty to one another grows exponentially, in
relation to the overwhelming firepower visited on them by Jack's
former associates, led by the surly Miguel (Couto Remotigue, Jr.).
These guys, you learn through flashbacks, seem able to take out
armies without breaking a sweat -- not exactly guys you want to mess
with if you can help it.
Of
course, messing with them is inevitable, though the route to this
confrontation is convoluted. The film opens with Tyler, working at a
bar and ruminating on the beginnings of the world. Within minutes of
first appearing on screen, he's spent the night with an undercover
lesbian cop, Jo (Cathy Chui), and she turns up pregnant. When he
offers financial and emotional support, she turns him away. And so,
the determined father-to-be is reduced to skulking around her
apartment door, under which he repeatedly slips wads of cash (which
are promptly chewed up by her dog). This money comes primarily from
Tyler's new gig as a bodyguard, working for his Uncle Ji (Hong Kong
movie-villain veteran Anthony Wong), whose other
"employees" are scary thug-types who owe him money. Tyler
looks relatively clean-cut compared to these guys, and he's
certainly not so experienced in shooting guns and looking ferocious,
but adapts quickly to his new environs and co-workers, and proves to
be a super-crack shot and martial artist as well. Who knew?
One
of Tyler's first assignments is to guard the influential triad boss
Hong, whose estranged daughter Ah Hui (Candy Lo) has married Tyler's
buddy-to-be, Jack. Tyler and Jack's coincidental meetings (there are
a few jumbled together, including a chance meeting at a supermarket)
lead to a serious male-bond, occasioned by the fact that Jack's
former associates have arrived in town, looking to force his
cooperation on one last job, namely, assassinating his
father-in-law. When Jack resists, the big meanies kidnap Hui, who
happens to be very pregnant at the time. Hui's condition
reminds Tyler of his own idealized lady-love (the very one who wants
nothing to do with him), and so he convinces himself that he must
help Jack to rescue her.
In
search of a huge stash of money ($10 million) hidden in a locker at
the Kowloon Train Station, everyone ends up at the station, where
Hui goes into labor, her water splashes all over the floor as Tyler
drags her to relative safety in a back room. He then works valiantly
to help her give birth, and the scene is not a little awful: his
arms are bloodied to his elbows, as her screams give away their
position. Tyler soon realizes that someone needs to keep watch while
he delivers the baby, and his drastically ingenious solution is to
give Hui his gun, so that, between contractions, she can shoot down
anyone who pokes his head in the doorway. While this image of the
violent collision of life and death will remind some viewers of
Christopher McQuarrie's much uglier version of same in Way of the
Gun (and in Hong Kong last year, both movies were reportedly in
release at the same time), it actually extends the metaphor, in that
Hui does give birth and the infant becomes yet another element that
Tyler must juggle while awaiting Jack's arrival on the scene.
As
the above (incomplete) summary demonstrates, Hark's storylines (this
one is scripted by Koan Hui) tend to be simultaneously fractured and
lushly romantic (not unlike those of his Hong Kong action
contemporaries, Wong Kar-wai and John Woo), and his attentions tend
to focus on displacements and crises. He's best known for his wuxia
pictures (Swordsman II and Dragon Inn) and his Once Upon a Time in
China series with Jet Li, all of which display Hark's interests in
brash stylistics as content: the actual narratives are less
interesting than the techniques he comes up with to tell them.
Together with co-cinematographers Ko Chiu Lam and Herman Yau, Hark
here develops a peculiar hybrid of corny romance, bad FX (the
burning building effect is straight-up lame), and seriously dynamic
action scenes, all enhanced by fashionably jaggedy editing,
time-lapse speediness, slow motion, and ridiculous (in the good way)
camera angles. It's all like a tumultuous "cine-wave"
heading for the shore; catch it, fashion the do-it-yourself
narrative however you like, and don't think too much about what
you're doing.
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Written and
Directed by:
Tsui Hark
Starring:
Nicholas Tse
Wu Bai
Candy Lo
Cathy Tsui
Anthony Wong
Couto Remotigue, Jr.
Rated:
R - Restricted
Under 17 requires
accompanying
parent or adult
guardian
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