Here is something different. A slow-burn, gory slasher film based on the vagaries of capitalism, in particular, the Hong Kong housing market. Writer/Director Pang Ho-Cheung has been making ‘against the grain’ Hong Kong genre busters for some time now. One his previous films, the deadpan-absurdist feminist conspiracy noir, Exodus left a lot of people scratching their heads trying to find the joke. While Pang has yet to make his masterpiece, and Dream Home isn’t it, it is strange and weird and off-putting in all the right ways. So the film is a bit of a treasure nonetheless.
Cheng Li-sheung (Josie Ho) is working multiple service-industry jobs (from retail to telemarketing to prostitution) with one clear goal in mind. She wants to live in a harbour facing apartment in an upscale neighborhood Hong Kong. These types of residences run at exorbitant rates and is clearly beyond her means. But the year is 2007 and really this type of consideration seemed moot for many, at that point. When a choice flat opens up at a very good price, she jumps at the opportunity. However when the deal falls through, (the owners realize that they underbid their own real-estate) Cheng decides to take matters into her own hands to drive property values down.
These are the times we live in, magnified by a factor of 1000. The slippery slope of capitalism gone wild, is somewhat akin to David Cronenberg’s look at violence in the media with Videodrome. If the opening scene, a clever, and brutal use of industrial strength lock-ties, doesn’t turn you off from the queasy, explicit, nonchalant execution of the film and you can look by some down-right-odd cinematography (It is often quite experimental and off-putting), then you are in for a treat. Eschewing the usual suspense and stalk antics of the slasher/giallo, Pang plays it out in a very clear-headed way. Somehow, and this is a minor miracle of sorts, he even makes you care for Cheng, even though she is clearly the villain (delightfully focused as she is.) The film is structured in flash back so as to flesh how some of her motivations, but her clear-headed sociopath evening of mayhem (the movie basically takes place over 24 hours) is well realized for its absurdity, both at the detail level, and at in the big picture.
The final joke, not unlike Exodus, is a real winner. Welcome to the horror of new-millennium capitalism folks.













I reviewed this here back in October as part of the Celluloid Screams festival: http://www.rowthree.com/2010/11/05/celluloid-screams-festival-roundup/
I didn’t get into the flashbacks to before the massacre, they didn’t gel for me and felt a bit too melodramatic against the carnage (I guess this should be expected from a Hong Kong genre film). When it works the film really works though and the set-pieces were insane.
I quite liked “Exodus” – it was a head scratcher in many ways, but I loved how it played with the concept of women taking over the power structure and did so with beautiful cinematography, wonderful locations and lots of dark humour. So if this is anything like that, count me in…
I remember Dave’s earlier review, but I’m gonna go back to it again and start looking for this…
Oh I’m with you on EXODUS, I was baffled originally, but the film stuck with me for weeks…rare in a busy festival environment…