6 reviews
The film is fun to watch and has some depth. But Suet-Ying Chung is terrible- she is 26 and playing a 16 year old - totally overplays the role. With better acting it would be 8 points.
Time is part-affecting drama and part-oddball black comedy about neglected senior citizens that features strong performances from its three leads: Patrick Tse, Petrina Fung and Lam Suet.
Chau, a retired mob assassin notorious for his quick knife in the sixties, now slices noodles in a restaurant stall.
Let go from his job, Chau seeks out his two previous partners-in-crime, including Chung, the once getaway driver who now drives a delivery van and in love with a young prostitute, and Fung, the once contract manager who now runs an old nightclub and is being pressured by her son to sell her property.
Feeling neglected as senior citizens, the old trio proceed to restart their assassin business. The clientele ironically consists of other neglected senior citizens who wished to be euthanised, which the trio begin to profit from performing mercy killings.
First-time director Ricky Ko does a solid job balancing the tone between the black comedy and the emotional drama in Gordon Lam and Ching-Yi Ho's quirky script. It is deceptively heartwarming.
The black comedy does not produce thigh-slapping laughs. It evokes a strong sense of irony that embodies the film's message: old people often are forgotten and neglected. This casts a looming sadness over the three characters that makes the audience to care and root for them. We hope they all come out okay.
Patrick Tse, internationally most well known as the villain from Shaolin Soccer and pop star Nicolas Tse's father, delivers a refined minimal performance as mob assassin Chau.
The film draws on Tse's image as a famed longtime leading man, deconstructing the archetypal image of a Hong Kong movie gangster hero. What if these movie gangsters were real and got old one day? What would happen to him?
Tse does a great job portraying Chau's inner monologue. As a practiced man of action, he doesn't speak much and now as an old man, he doesn't know what to say and is incapable of asking for help.
Oozing movie coolness and occasionally spouting movie gangster dialogue to no desired response, the Chau character is ultimately an archetype whose function is to lead the audience into its story through movie language and genre conventions. As good as Tse is in his role, it rests like a statue and stands posed over the other two lead performances that were more dramatically engaging.
Petrina Fung and Lam Suet are the heart of the piece as their stories were much more relatable on a human level.
It's gut-wrenching to watch Petrina Fung's mother character being guilted and bullied by her son and daughter-in-law into selling her own property, which is a more common occurrence than I would like to think.
Lam Suet, has perhaps landed his best dramatic role yet in Time, showcasing an emotional range he's never had the chance to do that tugs at the heartstrings.
Time will expectedly receive a lot of much-deserved attention come Hong Kong awards season and I expect it would be nominated for the three performances, screenplay and best film.
Chau, a retired mob assassin notorious for his quick knife in the sixties, now slices noodles in a restaurant stall.
Let go from his job, Chau seeks out his two previous partners-in-crime, including Chung, the once getaway driver who now drives a delivery van and in love with a young prostitute, and Fung, the once contract manager who now runs an old nightclub and is being pressured by her son to sell her property.
Feeling neglected as senior citizens, the old trio proceed to restart their assassin business. The clientele ironically consists of other neglected senior citizens who wished to be euthanised, which the trio begin to profit from performing mercy killings.
First-time director Ricky Ko does a solid job balancing the tone between the black comedy and the emotional drama in Gordon Lam and Ching-Yi Ho's quirky script. It is deceptively heartwarming.
The black comedy does not produce thigh-slapping laughs. It evokes a strong sense of irony that embodies the film's message: old people often are forgotten and neglected. This casts a looming sadness over the three characters that makes the audience to care and root for them. We hope they all come out okay.
Patrick Tse, internationally most well known as the villain from Shaolin Soccer and pop star Nicolas Tse's father, delivers a refined minimal performance as mob assassin Chau.
The film draws on Tse's image as a famed longtime leading man, deconstructing the archetypal image of a Hong Kong movie gangster hero. What if these movie gangsters were real and got old one day? What would happen to him?
Tse does a great job portraying Chau's inner monologue. As a practiced man of action, he doesn't speak much and now as an old man, he doesn't know what to say and is incapable of asking for help.
Oozing movie coolness and occasionally spouting movie gangster dialogue to no desired response, the Chau character is ultimately an archetype whose function is to lead the audience into its story through movie language and genre conventions. As good as Tse is in his role, it rests like a statue and stands posed over the other two lead performances that were more dramatically engaging.
Petrina Fung and Lam Suet are the heart of the piece as their stories were much more relatable on a human level.
It's gut-wrenching to watch Petrina Fung's mother character being guilted and bullied by her son and daughter-in-law into selling her own property, which is a more common occurrence than I would like to think.
Lam Suet, has perhaps landed his best dramatic role yet in Time, showcasing an emotional range he's never had the chance to do that tugs at the heartstrings.
Time will expectedly receive a lot of much-deserved attention come Hong Kong awards season and I expect it would be nominated for the three performances, screenplay and best film.
- ObsessiveCinemaDisorder
- Sep 5, 2021
- Permalink
Using an entertaining way to look at a serious social issue which narrowly views the aging population as "problem"; this movie is like the "Departure" movie in Japan, but with realistic modern city context eg Hong Kong.
- ronaldhongkongwork
- Jul 17, 2021
- Permalink
Top notch performances by each of the 3 main characters. I remember watching Lam Suet from his gangster films with Johnnie To at the helm. He was a supporting character in those movies but really expanded his range as a main character in this movie. The other 2 actors I did not follow as much, as their movies were before my time. But that makes this 3 past their prime actors perfect for this kind of movie.
The characters in this movie go through trials and tribulations that make it easy to root for them. The plot twist ending was most appropriate and not too surprising given the camaraderie and bond setup throughout the whole between the 3 main characters - it was all leading up to the final and satisfying conclusion.
Great quality movie, quality acting and worth a re-watch for sure.
The characters in this movie go through trials and tribulations that make it easy to root for them. The plot twist ending was most appropriate and not too surprising given the camaraderie and bond setup throughout the whole between the 3 main characters - it was all leading up to the final and satisfying conclusion.
Great quality movie, quality acting and worth a re-watch for sure.
- phileo-88526
- Feb 12, 2022
- Permalink
For long time viewers of HK cinema, this film has special poignancy. Patrick Tse was a charismatic leading man from the hey days of HK cinema. Patrina Fung was a prodigy child actress often compared to Shirley Temple. Like both of them, Lam Suet is a veteran actor who has given his life to cinema. This backward look into their unique styles echoes the journey of the characters. Various social problems were touched upon. Through comedic and touching flow of events, the film ends on a hopeful note of finding a way to build a new life in the very foreign world of today.
Very well put together, this off beat comedy drama manages to amuse, entertain, surprise and generate real emotion and empathy on a variety of both individual and family centric themes. Directing and filming are top rate and the acting is excellent with the all main and supporting characters very believable and convincing.
I was quickly drawn into the film and particularly enjoyed the variety of 'cameos' involving the each of the three 'elderly' on their own, such as Fung's cabaret singing, so authentic, which transported me back to some of the different bars and haunts in HK I have known, Lam Suet and Yan Zi Fei just perfect with client / working girl relationship and of course Patrick Tse and Suet Ying Chung also bringing out the elderly vs youth relationship theme in a more complex and developed story line.
Set and background locations are well chosen and evocative, matching the mood and twists and turns in the plot. I came away surprised by how touched I was by the depth of this film which works really well on several levels.
I was quickly drawn into the film and particularly enjoyed the variety of 'cameos' involving the each of the three 'elderly' on their own, such as Fung's cabaret singing, so authentic, which transported me back to some of the different bars and haunts in HK I have known, Lam Suet and Yan Zi Fei just perfect with client / working girl relationship and of course Patrick Tse and Suet Ying Chung also bringing out the elderly vs youth relationship theme in a more complex and developed story line.
Set and background locations are well chosen and evocative, matching the mood and twists and turns in the plot. I came away surprised by how touched I was by the depth of this film which works really well on several levels.