Check out more about the NYAFF:http://subwaycinema.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=113&Itemid=93 Eric
Tsang produced the youth film project, WINDS OF SEPTEMBER, which
resulted in three feature films about kids coming of age, one set in
Taiwan, one set in Mainland China and one set in Hong Kong. Each movie
is based on the exact same screenplay, written by Tom Lin who directed
the Taiwanese segment, and so you’d expect the same movie three times.
Nope. Each movie reflects the film industry in which it’s been shot and
audiences and critics agree that the one to see is HIGH NOON. Sure it’s
a teen angst movie and we’ve all seen plenty of those before, but few
other movies capture the frenetic energy of Hong Kong and few other
filmmakers are willing to push the youth movie as far as this flick’s
24-year-old director, Mak Hei-yan. Set
in the run-up to the Beijing Olympics, Mak zooms in on seven high
school students who spend their time screwing around, eating, playing
video games and studying. Shot on DV, the visual style is what keeps
things hopping early on, with Mak filling her frame with so much zippy
visual panache that you begin to feel like you’re trapped inside a
sixteen-year-old’s head while they IM their friends, scan Youtube,
watch TV and talk on the phone all at the same time. But then things
take a turn for the worse and the movie begins to live up to its
tagline: “There’s one ridiculous event after another every day.” Most
Hong Kong movies aimed at the teen demographic are shallow sex
comedies, sappy love stories or ponderous lectures about the dangers of
one thing or another. Mak eschews all that guff and sprints into
Category III territory (Hong Kong’s equivalent of the NC-17 rating)
full speed ahead. As the movie turns darker and the unwanted
pregnancies, drug addictions and murders pile up you realize that
you’ve been tricked into lowering your guard just long enough for the
director to get under your skin. Veering wildly between youth drama and
exploitation picture, HIGH NOON pulls itself together in the end to
deliver a powerful punch. As Variety says, “Young Mak is one to watch.”
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