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Mad Detective

Rated - 4 stars

You know those signs, “You don’t have to be mad to work here, but it helps”? That should be the motto for the Hong Kong police department, if this exhilaratingly daffy thriller is anything to go by.

The first time we see Inspector Bun (Ching Wan Lau) he’s giving multiple-stab wounds to a hanging slab of meat. The second time, he crawls up inside a suitcase and instructs a junior colleague to kick him down several flights of stairs. When he reemerges he announces the identity of the killer. (“The ice cream seller,” as it happens.)

His technique – if it can be called that – involves identifying with the victim to the point that the guilty party is revealed to him. It’s unorthodox, but it seems to work. “Don’t use logic to investigate,” he says. “Use your feelings.”

A tad short on impulse control, Bun goes too far when he chops off his ear as a retirement gift to a senior officer. A few years later Inspector Ho (Andy On) looks him up to ask for his assistance. A cop has been missing for months, and ballistics show his gun has been involved in two robberies, one of which ended in murder. The case has gone cold, but Ho remembers Bun from the old days, maybe he could help from the sidelines?

It’s somewhere around here that things start to get really strange. Bun has a fight with his wife about it – but the editing is off, as if co-directors Johnnie To (Election; Exiled) and his frequent screenwriting collaborator Ka-Fai Wai didn’t have all the coverage they needed. (Later, the real reason becomes clear.) Then Bun starts to trail the obvious suspect – the missing cop’s partner. But in some shots he seems to be watching not one man, but seven (including one woman), who walk and whistle in unison. “I can see the inner-person,” Bun explains. The suspect suffers from seven split personalities, and he sees them all.

It’s hard to imagine anyone in Hollywood daring to take this idea and play it straight – Tony Scott in Déjà vu mode might have some fun with it, but I doubt even he would push it to the extremes that To and Wai have here.

I say “play it straight”, and on one level this is a psychological suspense thriller, complete with all the action, chase and shootouts you would expect. But it’s also a wild comedy about a crazy cop, and it’s a technical experiment with contrasting point- of-view shots altering our perception of almost every scene: there’s the world as Bun sees it, and then there’s the world everyone else recognises.

Crucially, it’s not just a movie about a detective with second sight. As Ho soon realizes, Bun really is a lunatic. (It’s a nice touch that Lau plays him with a bandaged head through the second half of the picture.) Yet there are moments when his vision seems no crazier than anyone else’s.

Granted, the case under investigation is disappointingly routine – maybe the filmmakers figured the movie was confusing enough without pressing the whodunit aspect. They may be right at that. If you’re after offbeat thrills and something different Mad Detective more than qualifies. Lau is terrific in the lead role, and while this constitutes a change of pace for Johnny To, it’s more proof of his virtuoso talent for re-jigging genre movies to astonishing effect.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out

A good cop requires intuition, or so you learn when you watch cop movies. Facts get you only so far. But does intuition... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 3 starsCinematically great, dramatically a bit turgid.

Northernsky Northernsky from Halifax [Highly rated reviewer] , 27/10/2008

You would think a film about a detective who can see peoples inner personalities or alter ego's would be a fascinating and compelling experience. And Mad Detective does indeed prove to be so. But it is made so more by the skill of the true cinematic arts of cinematography and use of sound rather than through the machinations of the plot or any of the performances.

Inspector Chan Kwai-Bun ( Lau Ching-Wan) is forced to retire when he presents his own severed ear as a retirement present ( Allusions to Vincent Van Gogh here as well with the tortured genius thing) Bun believes fervently in understanding a case through empirical means even if this means being buried alive or pushed down the stairs in a suitcase.

He is called back into action when Inspector Ho Ka-On ( Andy On) is investigating the disappearance of a colleague whose gun has since been used in a series of armed ( obviously) robberies. It turns out the suspect is a collective of seven spirits( alluding to the seven deadly sins this time) which means Bun has plenty to chew on.

Mad Detective takes these elements and contrives to make a film that for all it's intense performances ( Bun looks like he is suffering from perpetual constipation) and kinetic action somehow drags along ponderously . The real joy of watching this film is to be found in the composition of some of the shots- an audacious high overhead shot of a man running down a street bathed in yellow lights or the way the camera prowls through a moonlight lit wood . This and the use of sound on the 5:1 ( the menu gives the option of this or the standard 2.0 ) option is terrific adding real punch to some of the set pieces .

With plenty of extras and a comprehensive but fawning booklet this Masters of cinema DVD offers a thorough examination of this multi award winning( In Hong Kong and Asia anyway) film. Hardcore fans of Hong Kong cinema will love it. Others like me will find it a bit of a slog while simultaneously admiring much of what is on show. Not enough to watch it again in a hurry though.

  10 out of 11 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 3 starsNot Bad

A customer from Bourne End , 20/01/2009

Would have been better if it was in english, as reading the subtitles can take you away from the fast paced story line.

  8 out of 9 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsRead me!

A customer from Iver , 03/12/2008

I nearly went four stars, but there was something about this movie, I just loved it! If you're slightly mad, it will probably make sense when you watch it. Beautiful in places, absurd in others, but what seems like an unoriginal idea becomes original and I throughly enjoyed watching it. If you like eastern cinema and not quite bored of cop movies, then rent it now.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 3 starsinteresting

A customer from London , 13/05/2009

the plot twists and turns and keeps the viewer guessing as to what happens next.

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsCinematically great, dramatically a bit turgid.

Northernsky Northernsky from Halifax [Highly rated reviewer] , 27/10/2008

You would think a film about a detective who can see peoples inner personalities or alter ego's would be a fascinating and compelling experience. And Mad Detective does indeed prove to be so. But it is made so more by the skill of the true cinematic arts of cinematography and use of sound rather than through the machinations of the plot or any of the performances.

Inspector Chan Kwai-Bun ( Lau Ching-Wan) is forced to retire when he presents his own severed ear as a retirement present ( Allusions to Vincent Van Gogh here as well with the tortured genius thing) Bun believes fervently in understanding a case through empirical means even if this means being buried alive or pushed down the stairs in a suitcase.

He is called back into action when Inspector Ho Ka-On ( Andy On) is investigating the disappearance of a colleague whose gun has since been used in a series of armed ( obviously) robberies. It turns out the suspect is a collective of seven spirits( alluding to the seven deadly sins this time) which means Bun has plenty to chew on.

Mad Detective takes these elements and contrives to make a film that for all it's intense performances ( Bun looks like he is suffering from perpetual constipation) and kinetic action somehow drags along ponderously . The real joy of watching this film is to be found in the composition of some of the shots- an audacious high overhead shot of a man running down a street bathed in yellow lights or the way the camera prowls through a moonlight lit wood . This and the use of sound on the 5:1 ( the menu gives the option of this or the standard 2.0 ) option is terrific adding real punch to some of the set pieces .

With plenty of extras and a comprehensive but fawning booklet this Masters of cinema DVD offers a thorough examination of this multi award winning( In Hong Kong and Asia anyway) film. Hardcore fans of Hong Kong cinema will love it. Others like me will find it a bit of a slog while simultaneously admiring much of what is on show. Not enough to watch it again in a hurry though.

  10 out of 11 people found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews

Rated - 3 starsNot Bad

A customer from Bourne End , 20/01/2009

Would have been better if it was in english, as reading the subtitles can take you away from the fast paced story line.

  8 out of 9 people found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews