Gwai wik (2006), Hong Kong
Synopsis
Re-Cycle is one of the
mostly well-achieved works of the Pang brothers (Danny and Oxide Pang), screened
at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. The film describes the story of a successful
writer Tsui Ting-Yin (Angelica Lee) who founds
herself with no inspiration for her new novel (entitled Re-Cycle), after
writing one best-seller based on her own personal experiences. Battling against
writer’s block and an obstinate publisher, her attempts to start
the book appear to become even more dissipated with the reappearance of her former
boyfriend after his divorce. After discarding a draft of
the first chapter of the new book, a series of incidents start to happen in her
own apartment, including mysterious phone calls and a few frightening elements
that the Pang Brothers have previously proven to master.
Review
Until the release of
Re-Cycle, the directors appeared to have struggled for a few years in order to
achieve the same success obtained with The Eye. Following the predictable The
Eye 2 and the absurd The Eye 10, Re-Cycle was mostly likely expected to
continuously repeat the same formula and scares that have guaranteed before the
success of the Pang Brothers. Therefore, when elements of The
Eye, Dark Water and Ringu started to appear, I truly believed that Re-Cycle would
most likely turned out to be just another unoriginal installment of the
“series” and a new 108-minutes exercise of patience. The first thirty minutes, classifiable as tedious and predictable, have therefore comprised the
supernatural long-haired woman cliché, the scene inside a lift as previously observed
in The Eye, mysterious sounds from the other side of the phone, water running
down walls, figures, shadows and endless calculable scares. Hopefully after
thirty minutes the viewer is introduced to a new world in the Pang brothers’
universe and to a new series of elements where the viewer can no longer
distinguish the line between horror and fantasy, leaving behind the concept of
another (effortlessly created) ghost story.
From a technical point
of view, the Pang Brothers have clearly surpassed themselves. Alongside with
the plot, and Lee’s performance, the explosion of visual effects are the
undoubtedly the third pillar of the movie. Visually superb, with a rich use of
colour and a thin line between the opaque monochromatic tones and a few
extremely saturated moments (as the screenshots above and below respectively demonstrate), Re-cycle is probably the most brilliantly
masterpiece achieved by the Pang brothers in the technical field. Despite the
vast number of events during the movie, the plot is conducted in a particularly
slow pace up to the very end of the film. Angelica Lee is the main character of
the film, delivering a particularly convincing and satisfactory performance,
with only a few smaller roles being present during the whole movie. The
character development follows the same path as the plot itself, which tends to
be important when the movie depends on only one character.
Re-cycle is still a
good movie especially if one is able to disregard the exacerbated number of
similar elements that are presented in the same movie. For someone who is not
particularly familiarized with the directors’ universe, the Pang Brothers will
prove to be genuinely competent in the Asian horror scene, providing a couple
of particularly suspenseful and nerve-racking scenes. The movie is however able
to write a conclusion for the successful formula that was pitifully dragged for
too long after the release of The Eye.
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