Beast Stalker

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"I never thought that little pieces of glass and slow motion could look so awesome."

- Mighty Peking Man


Beast Stalker (2008)

Director: Dante Lam Chiu-Yin

Cast: Nicholas Tse Ting-Fung, Nick Cheung Ka-Fai, Zhang Jing-Chu, Liu Kai-Chi, Sherman Chung Shu-Man, Miao Pu, Patrick Keung Hiu-Man, Gwok Ching-Hung, Wong Suet-Yin

Running Time: 110 min.

Plot: Tse is Tong, a take-no-prisoner police sergeant who accidentally killed a girl during his relentless pursuit of armed robber Cheung (Ho-man Keung). When Cheung hired the menacing "Beast Stalker" Hung (Cheung) to kidnap the dead girl’s twin sister to avoid prosecution, Tong vows not to let the same fatal mistake happen again.

Availability: This title is available at HKflix.com

Reviews

MIGHTY PEKING MAN'S REVIEW: I just realized it has been years since I’ve seen a Dante Lam flick (last one I saw was 1998’s Beast Cops), let alone any Hong Kong movie. I have to say, popping in a modern Chinese crime film was a nice change of pace for me. I’ve been sort of pissed off at current films lately (all genres, all countries); so most of what I’ve been watching are ones I already love or classics that I’ve never seen. It’s films like Avatar and Transformers 2 that steer me to that backwards direction. (God, those movie sucked.)

This brings us to Dante Lam’s Beast Stalker (which has nothing to do with that Marc Singer or barbarians). This moody action-thriller centers around a hot headed cop (Nicholas Tse), some asshole gangsters, a killed child, a grieving mother, and a kidnapping by a psycho called “Beast” (Nick Cheung). Without giving too much away, the way the story unfolds would make Paul Haggis proud.

Beast Stalker starts out typical, then mellow drama starts to pour in. The next thing you know, tension comes out of nowhere; now you’re glued, and what started out as something you didn’t want to watch, turns out to be very watchable.

Nicholas Tse - who is looking more like a man these days; and less like a gay ass, long-haired teeny bopper with highights - gives us an outstanding performance. To a lesser extent, Nick Cheung also gives us some good acting.

There is a major car accident sequence that is visually impressive. This is very rare for me to say, but I actually appreciate the use of cgi in these particular shots. I never thought that little pieces of glass and slow motion could look so awesome.

Now, if they could only put a stop to that shaky camera and constant zooming crap. Goddamnit, why in the hell is everyone still going for that Jerry Bruckheimer/Michael Bay bullshit? It got old more than 10 years ago. Enough.

MIGHTY PEKING MAN'S RATING: 7/10