Hong Kong 1941 Review

A woman recounts the story of herself and two friends trying to survive in Japanese occupied Hong Kong during WWII. Amidst familiar wartime turmoil, a love triangle develops, but one of the men is captured.

by Justin Bowyer |
Published on
Release Date:

01 Jan 1983

Running Time:

100 minutes

Certificate:

18

Original Title:

Hong Kong 1941

Set against the fall of Hong Kong to the Japanese, the story follows the lives of three friends and contrasts their intimacy with the sweep of monumental events. If Michael Bay and the screenwriters of Pearl Harbour ever wanted to learn how to transpose a love triangle over the top of WWII events, they should have looked to this effort from producer Sammo Hung. Despite the melodrama, the performances are all strong, and careworthy.

This film catapulted Chow Yun-fat to big-screen stardom in his homeland, long before John Woo or Ang Lee introduced him to the West, and deservedly so - his work here as the slick actor Fay is a treat. The cinematography also deserves a mention.

Vivid cinemtography and strong performances turn what could have been - well, Pearl Harbor before it's time, into something far more palletable.
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