LastingAware
The greatest movie ever!
Platicsco
Good story, Not enough for a whole film
Tedfoldol
everything you have heard about this movie is true.
Sammy-Jo Cervantes
There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
J_Charles
It starts off like any modern HK crime thriller... an elite band of cops banding together to battle an elite band of bad guys. The bad guys are going after a triad mob boss who killed the brother of one of their members. The elite bad guys have traps, snipers, elaborate plans, and no sense of morals. Cue the gun violence.The good guys are all sharp shooters, they are all 'complex' with back stories (aka caricatures or clichés) including the guy who can drive really fast, the girl who fell in love on her under cover assignment (insert innuendo here), the rookie, the old timer who is days away from retirement who used to be the boss... you get the picture. These guys spend their time at amusement parks shooting the ducks in the game like they were on a Chinese menu that evening.Midway thru the film, the big confrontation begins. Gee, what can the writers come up with next? Suddenly nobody can hit the broad side of a barn. Snipers run and constantly hit the ledge or the metal railing behind their target. The utter ridiculousness of this long, drawn out gun battle almost made me violently ill.Unfortunately for the viewer, it only gets worse from there. The grand finale, where the bad guys supposedly set an elaborate trap for the baddies is nothing more than getting separated and isolated into a bunch of one-on-one battles with the bad guys. Great plan guys. That way, no one will know who lives and who dies afterwards.Michael Biehn plays a big role as a baddie. I had trouble figuring out if it was Biehn or the Asian dudes who had the worse English. Biehn was sleep walking thru this one or he's just a bad actor. The only thing that got him awake in this movie was getting to kiss a cute Chinese girl. Poor Sammo Hung. Who signed him up for this crap? He tries. He honestly does. But something is wrong... oh yeah, it's called a crappy script. BTW - Sammo's always been chubby but since when did he become morbidly obese? That jogging scene with him in that white shirt as his man-boobs slowly bounced up and down, and up and down must have been horribly embarrassing for him. If not then there's some cultural barriers that I definitely never want to cross there.This movie feels like a bunch of writers started a good movie, then left - to be replaced by a bunch of male high school film students trying to write an action flick. The flashback scenes were done too many times. The first time was fine. The second time was cheesy. The third time... the fourth time? You would do us all a favour and just cut that crap out and make our suffering just a little bit shorter.5/10 - great promise at the beginning followed up by inanity, bad dialog, too much Biehn, not enough work on the script, and WTF is up with the man boobs?
Andrei Pavlov
HK cinema, which has been very successfully keeping on and intensifying the good old traditions of entertainment with human heart, once ignited by Mr Charles Chaplin and Mr Buster Keaton, strikes again. Jokes are put aside this time though.The movie is a must-have for anybody who respects proper action. During my childhood I watched "Lethal Weapon" and thought that it was the best of the best. But now as I watch this HK production, all the memories of "Lethal Weapon" go blank. "Dragon Squad" is tough and stylish. The camera is very jerky sometimes and one should get accustomed to this. But when you get accustomed, you get a real modern action treat.When I bought the movie on DVD I had no info about it. I just noticed some strange title "Dragon Squad" on the shelf. I even could not trace the year of production on the box. Then I saw Mr Sammo Hung among the actors. It was "the final straw". Now I cannot believe my eyes - the rating for this movie on IMDb is ridiculous. If I tend to doze off during "Godfather", I have no such problem during "Dragon Squad". All through the movie the incredible action keeps me up even when I re-watch it and even when I'm dead tired. The original soundtrack plus the English subs is a perfect combination for this film. I am also more than just satisfied with the overall DVD quality: the sound, the picture, the animated menu, the synopsis, the impressive crew photo where every single actor is "showing his character off" - everything is slick.I've always been looking to enjoying a real HK serious modern action (not a comedy HK one, which are abundant with you-know-who starring), and now I have it. It is very unlike the Hollywood productions. It has very bitter oriental flavour (masks, knives, kung fu, very menacing attitude of the bad boys and girls, impressive looks, complicated set of heroes/villains, and I should also mention smoking and jogging at the same time - Mr Sammo Hung is as cool as a Chinese cucumber) and, damn, it has most disturbing violent scenes (artistically shot and reserved at the same time). I despise "Oldboy" kind of violence, when the torture scenes are prolonged, disgusting, and shown in detail. Here it is different - it's more like "BR" violence: quick, quirky, and unexpected (like a gully that all of a sudden pins some character to the wall). Remember the scene with the "mohawked" Chinese, when he was hanging on some hooks and Ku was coming up to him with his trademark knife? The camera just sails away saving the movie from turning into a blood-fest for maniacs. Brilliant. It's not a teen movie, definitely absolutely. It's a movie for those who are 20 and older. And I don't think that even 1% of females can sit through this insane action-packed experience. Well, in my humble opinion, of course. I cannot recall any action movie, which overdoes this one in "action density". The story of each squad member is shown in a few seconds and some episode is shown revealing his or her abilities. If you wink a couple of times, you miss the point. Everything goes cut, cut, and cut with colour scheme changing, titles appearing, etc., like in a newsreel.Last, but not least, this film makes a viewer (me to be sure) feel for the good characters. Their young age intensifies this feeling. The "Dragon Squad" look so young and slim and the sergeant Kong looks so old and depressed, but they work miracles and confront most ruthless villains in the streets of Hong Kong.I've been thinking that the time of perfect action passed long time ago and this action film has challenged my point of view. One scene at the cemetery alone is a treat but there are lots of others not worse than this. A pleasant surprise.The IMDb rating for this action makes me laugh.10 out of 10, HK keeps me wondering, how much more action treats those Chinese guys have. Almost forgot: the movie is free from sex scenes, stupid nakedness, and boring sentiments (modern action/crime flicks suck because of this and this movie rules without it). Thank you for attention.
himboy32
Film: Dragon Squad Year: 2005 Genre(s): Action/Drama Director: Daniel Lee Language(s): Cantonese, Madarin, English Running Time: 111 Mins Format: DVD(Hong Kong Release) Cast: Venness Wu, Shawn Yue, Xia Yu, Eva Haung, Lawrence Chou, Sammo Hung, Micheal Biehn, Simon Yam, Huh Joon Ho, Maggie QSynopsis: Five interpol agents are drafted into Hong Kong to keep watch over a witness in an important trial, while being transported the convoy is ambushed by a gang of masked gun man.The agents, come together to solve who attacked them and, while being mentored by an almost retired officer, decide to take out the gang before more people are killed.Review:So this film has been receiving a lot of negative press, both from fans living in Hong Kong and those who live in other countries, having seen the flick, i's easy to understand why, the pacing is chaotic and the camera work as extremely frantic during it's many action sequences, add in some awkward attempts at character development and some repetitive flashbacks and you'd have a stinker on your hands right?Well, I hate to break it to you guys but no, despite some of the films superficial flaws, it does not fail in being one of the finest films to come out of Hong Kong in 2005 and while it didn't get the box office reception it deserved, this reviewer felt refreshed to find some creativity among the watered down Rom-coms the local film industry have seem to be putting out this past year. So let's start with the plot.It's your typical by the numbers tried and tested plot, there's the bad guys and there's the good guys, they fight, bad guys win, good guys get mentored by wise senior, fight again, good guys win.So really the plot is an excuse for director Daniel Lee is experiment with some very Micheal Mann-esquire camera work, about that, the camera work for the most part does the job right, it creates excitement and tension which kept this reviewer glued o the screen throughout, as it suited the style of the action scene s very well.Now the action, well, the good news is, there's plenty of it, lots of gun play with the odd martial arts sequence thrown in for good measure, the fighting mostly being done by Huh Joon Ho and Sammo Hung who confront each other twice, the second encounter being the most bloody and brutal. The shootouts are very well put together.For a movie which could be considered a mainstream film in Hong Kong, it isn't afraid to be extremely violent when it wants to be, there's plenty of blood on offer here, so if the acting doesn't grab, the blood soaked action will.The acting ranges from sleepy to extremely good. Micheal Biehn, who's a familiar face to Hollywood movie fans as Kyle Reese in James Cameron's seminal classic The Termintor, stars as the lead villain, for a man who's been working in the film industry for so long, I thought he would have brought some much needed acting to the movie but really he seems to be almost sleep walking in his role but one may interpret Biehn's characterisation as a person who's so cold, he shows very little emotion.The actors who played the five interpol agents where all very good, although, really, I would have liked it if they had a little more personality, they all came off as a little bland in place. Eva Huang is extremely easy on the eyes, definitely a face to look out for in future movies. former pop star Vanness Wu gives a credible performance, while Shawn Yue gives his usual calibre of acting but this reviewer felt the best acting had to go to the one and only Sammo Hung, who plays a character reluctant to get involved but realises if he wants to leave the past behind him, he must confront his demons, it's also worth mentioning he has the best fight in the entire movie against Huh Joon Hoo, who plays a chillingly sociopathic villain.So, overall I really liked it, I think it's nowhere near as bad as everyone seems to be making it out to be and deserves at least one viewing by anyone who's a fan of Hong Kong cinema or Micheal Bay.
Jarkko Anttila
Indeed, this is visually the most glorious movie I've seen. The Dircetor Daniel Lee gives us a lot of eye candy and he helms the action scenes well. This movie gives me an eerie feeling as I'm not used to see Asian movies and I like the flashback kind of scenes were we are given some background about the characters. All the actors give us good performances although I found the baddies more interesting. Especially Michael Biehn gives us a first rate performance, it's a shame he doesn't have any martial arts scenes. Maggie Q plays her role with ease, just by looking tough. Overall, this movie is well worth watching, maybe a little minus comes from the too shallow characters this movie creates. Maybe this is because of the fact that there are simply too many characters to plunge into. But the characters are still better improved than in many action movies. A big plus for the great soundtrack.