Skip over navigation

Exiled

Rated - 3.5 stars

Exiled

Fate knocking at the door: If it was good enough for Beethoven's Fifth, it's good enough for Johnnie To's 43rd.

Fate, in this case, comes in the form of Cat (Roy Cheung), a Triad foot soldier looking for an old friend, Wo (Nick Cheung). His knock is echoed shortly afterwards by Blaze (Anthony Wong), a hitman sporting the appropriate Hong Kong killer look: trenchcoat and shades. He's looking for Wo too. He has been sent to kill him, while Cat is determined that's not going to happen.

After a long, long wait for Wo to show - it's a full ten minutes before the gunfire breaks out - it turns out the hitman's heart isn't in the job either. Having shot the place up without spilling any blood to speak of, he then agrees to sit down for a spot of tea with the others. Because Wo and his wife and infant have only just moved in, that means he has to lend a hand unpacking the furniture.

By now several things are becoming clear:

(1) Johnnie To has enough clout in the Hong Kong film industry to do exactly as he pleases (in fact he has a formidable box office record and runs his own film company, which is credited with reviving the fortunes of the local industry after its 1990s slump).

(2) While he's a terrific action director, he's also a dab hand at inaction.

(3) He's seen a few Sergio Leone spaghetti westerns in his time

(4) He's in much more playful a mood here than we saw in Election and its sequel.

The next morning Blaze still says he's duty bound to carry out the job, but he's willing to muck in with the rest to pull off a last big payday to see that Wo's widow and son will be cared for. Unfortunately this act of altruism brings them face-to-face with Blaze's boss, Fay (Simon Yam), who is none too impressed with this turn of events. More gunplay ensues and more and more.

Five shoot-outs in 100 minutes, two of them absolute scorchers; it's like the good old heroic bloodshed days of John Woo's prime.

Exiled

Set in Macau in 1998 - just as the former Portugese colony reverted to Chinese rule - Exiled makes good use of its unusual location, and is so attractively shot it could boost the tourist trade. Assuming audiences are willing to put its portrait of ruthless gangsters shooting up restaurants with absolute impunity down to genre convention.

Although the film is not a sequel to what may be To's best, The Mission, most of the cast from his 1999 hit are reunited here, which helps explain why camaraderie and loyalty resonate so strongly this time round. (A very visually-orientated director, To refrains from spelling out the ties in words, but not without some confusion - at least for me.)

It helps that these are some of the best actors in Hong Kong. Anthony Wong should be familiar from the Infernal Affairs trilogy (the role Martin Sheen played in The Departed, though it lost plenty in translation). Simon Yam (Fulltime Killer) makes an excellent villain, and several supporting performances register strongly.

Exiled

To (pronounced 'Doe') tends to alternate between commercial films for the Hong Kong market (farces and special effects pictures for example) and darker thrillers that he finds more satisfying, and which tend to travel better. It's easy to see how much he enjoyed making Exiled, which often seems prompted by nothing more profound than a desire to watch his favourite actors rag each other and pull some cool stunts against a jangly guitar score.

Amen to that: this movie is a lot of fun. To even contrives to rework the climax to Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch. His karma must be good. In its funny, cockeyed way it's even quite touching.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

View Details

More information about Exiled »

Critics' Reviews

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Trevor Johnston, Time Out

Although Hong Kong crime movies too often scream for credible characterisation to complement their gunplay, that... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsJohnnieTo Does Sergio Leone

stevecole from Swindon , 15/06/2007

The best asian film of 2006 by a mile great movie stars the best that HK has to offer Francis Ng and Anthony Wong ,great acting , great action scenes in the vein of John Woo ,wonderful music like the westerns music, almost perfect film. A must watch for all HK and Action film fans

  15 out of 15 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 2 starsAn exercise in style over substance

A customer from Aberfeldy , 01/11/2007

An exercise in style over substance. The film is almost operatic in as much as it relies on image and effect rather than its plot. The story, which takes place in a deserted Macao, (what happened to all the people?) in fact makes about as much sense as most opera plots. A simple tale of love, loyalty, betrayal & death, although a stock comic character in the form of a policeman about to retire and desperate to avoid trouble seem to be about the only other person driving around Macao at the time. It’s along way from earlier Hong Kong a gangster movies or recent very superior offerings from Korea. Quentin Tarantino has a lot to answer for. Heavy going

  10 out of 12 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 2 starsNot the "gun play" I expected

FalloutBBT , 13/11/2007

I found this movie quite dull. The plot is pretty simple, and as such it's lacking in story and substance. I kind of expected this though, and was just up for watching some well directed gun fights with classy moves from cool characters. However, I just found them tedious. They were slow paced and not very creative. There were no killer moves, or stand offs, the sequences weren't exciting and the gore factor wasn't there either. Not bad, but not the 'cool' gun play movie I was expecting.

  8 out of 9 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 5 starsAnother exmaple of Asian cinema's greatness!!

A customer from Orpington, Kent , 19/10/2007

Johnnie To is fast approaching legendary status in Hong Kong cinema and with films the quality of Exiled to his credit, that comes as little surprise. Ever since John Woo defected to Hollywood, to has taken over the mantle of the “shoot ‘em up” picture in Asia but has surpassed Wo with his incredible storytelling skills and his uncanny ability to create such an empathetic bond between the audience and the characters in his films. In the case of Exiled, you know that everyone involved is a murdering criminal yet you find yourself totally rooting for Wo and friends to the point where you forget that they are bad too!

Relying on his usual cast of Simon Yam, Nick Cheung, Richie Jen, Lam Suet, Roy Cheung and Francis Ng as well as the welcome additions of Anthony Wong (Infernal Affairs, Hard Boiled) and Josie Ho (Purple Storm) To brings us a wonderful tale of friendship, loyalty, camaraderie, and about how crucial the effects of the choices we make in life have can be not just for ourselves but for others. Despite the copious bloodshed as a result of the gun fights this film is overly violent although there is one graphic surgery scene. There are also short bursts of dark humour that never once seem incongruous.

A truly excellent film that is another startling reminder of why Asian cinema is setting the standards that Hollywood could only wish of reaching. Well deserving of five stars!!

  6 out of 8 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 2 starsCheaply made, no plot. Poor

A customer from OXON , 11/02/2009

A tedious film that's as unrealistic as it is dull. Avoid at all costs.

  3 out of 4 people found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews

Rated - 2 starsAn exercise in style over substance

A customer from Aberfeldy , 01/11/2007

An exercise in style over substance. The film is almost operatic in as much as it relies on image and effect rather than its plot. The story, which takes place in a deserted Macao, (what happened to all the people?) in fact makes about as much sense as most opera plots. A simple tale of love, loyalty, betrayal & death, although a stock comic character in the form of a policeman about to retire and desperate to avoid trouble seem to be about the only other person driving around Macao at the time. It’s along way from earlier Hong Kong a gangster movies or recent very superior offerings from Korea. Quentin Tarantino has a lot to answer for. Heavy going

  10 out of 12 people found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews