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> Prison On Fire
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Tequila
Ecrit le : Mardi 25 Juillet 2006 04h25
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Dragon



Hey All,
What do you think about this awesome Chow Yun Fat movie? I really love it, it's one of my favorite movies ever. I don't know how to express this, but Prison On Fire is just a punch in the stomach sometimes, but the movie keeps the nice image of friendship and the humor is still there. It's the blood, the violence of the prison, but in other view everything that make someone fight to live and to learn, the friendship and happiness shown even in a place where humans are treated like shit. Like I said, for me an awesome movie.

I'll post a review of it that probably many of you had already seen that but i'll post it:

From LoveHKFilm:

The Hong Kong prison movie against which all others are measured. Ringo Lam's near-plotless portrait of brotherhood and political chicanery in a Hong Kong prison is terrific storytelling, and more than adequate justification for his celebrated career. Also, Prison on Fire features a sensational performance from Chow Yun-Fat. Chow plays seasoned inmate Mad Dog, whose carefree attitude towards life in prison belies a deep understanding of the dangers of prison politics. He shows the ropes to new inmate Lo Ka-Yia (Tony Leung Ka-Fai), who's in for involuntary manslaughter. Unfortunately, his righteous attitude gets him in immediate trouble. It isn't until Mad Dog steps in that Lo learns how he's going to survive his sentence.
If only it were that easy. The prison is also home to Boss Hung (a menacing Roy Cheung), a high-ranking prison guard who uses wily tactics to control the inmates. He plays the various prison gangs against one another, leading to infighting and numerous inmate betrayals. Ultimately, things come to a head in a harrowing prison riot which leaves more than one inmate - and prison guard - scarred.
Though the acting and events are occasionally histrionic, the film manages to involve rather than alienate. This is partially due to Ringo Lam's celebrated grim and gritty style, which is a far cry from the Full Contact excess some might expect of him. His focus in Prison on Fire is character and circumstance, and not really plot. Events seem to happen with minor development, though the consequences of even the most minor incidents have a great effect on our protagonists. Tony Leung Ka-Fai turns in an effective performance as stiff inmate Lo, but the film is pretty much Chow Yun-Fat's show. As Mad Dog, he goes from glib playfulness to terrifying rage during the course of the film. It's an incredibly charming performance that astonishes in its utter versatility.
Prison on Fire is ultimately a genre film, but it's one of the purest ones you'll ever find. Moments aren't wasted on hijinks or needless exposition, and instead are given to necessary minutiae and a slow, building intensity. When everything finally concludes, there isn't a gigantic verbal epiphany, nor are there major lessons to be learned. The ending is simply uncompromising and appropriate. Ringo Lam doesn't waste any effort trying to make the film more than it is. It's just a film about a bunch of guys stuck in prison, and that's all Lam cares about. And more importantly, he gets the audience to care, too. (Kozo 1996/2001)

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