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Hong Kong’s preeminent director, John Woo, transforms genres from both the East and the West to create this explosive and masterful action film. Featuring Hong Kong’s greatest star, Chow Yun-fat, as a killer with a conscience, the film is an exquisite dissection of morals in a corrupt society, highlighted with slow-motion sequences of brilliantly choreographed gun battles on the streets of Hong Kong. (Criterion)

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Reviews (8)

kaylin 

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English I can't help but be impressed by this film. Yes, it's a massacre, no question about it. It also manages to project emotion quite well. But having seen both episodes of A Better Tomorrow, you'd think that this has been here before. It's bloody, no doubt about that, and those slow-motion shots are at their peak here. I'm not completely sold on it, but still, it's a great action flick. ()

Marigold 

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English Where can I find John Woo with some screenwriting quality? It is true that when listening to dialogues, there is a serious risk that characters more subtle and more prone to the aesthetic beauty of language will start spewing nonsense, but let’s be honest, it’s just a matter of connecting more and more phenomenal "one/two people against thirty or more" action scenes. If I take out the dialogues, then everything else works 100%, and even the characters were done quite well. The Killer has a typical atmosphere of heroic bloodshed, a bittersweet, melancholic, sweetened "casio-soundtrack", which seems to want to be inspired by the urgency of Ennio Morricone. Of course, it turns out how it has to turn out, i.e., poorly from the point of view of a nitpicker and perfectly adequate from the point of view of a satisfied viewer. The crazy music hits the turbo tempo of the story and the naive venting of emotions. The Killer flows perfectly, everything is in good proportions - the naivety and the bittersweet aspects. The choreography of the shootouts during the 111 minutes show everything that action-packed Hollywood provenance lives on even today, several dozen bastards will die, heroes from both sides of the law will talk about friendship and finally show side by side what the bloodshed is all about from their own veins. Do you like Hong Kong? Then you have to love The Killer. ()

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Kaka 

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English The Killer is mainly a timeless action romp that is hard to compare with anything. Unlike the action-packed Hard-Boiled, John Woo here places more emphasis on the characters and their personalities. The direction is different, but the outcome is similarly good. ()

novoten 

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English In a direct comparison, a full class better than Hard Boiled. John Woo replaces the endless (although effective) shootouts with shorter but more impactful fights, with a simple but thankfully strong storyline. Besides, Chow Yun-Fat is better as a tough killer than as a tough cop. ()

3DD!3 

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English Chow Yun-Fat is a great character, his killer Jeffrey has charisma, a conscience and is a darn good shot. It’s not every day that you see the kind of action that we get in Killer. Incredible massacres alternate with moments so emotionally intense that you almost feel sad. In places, the theme of friendship and fate play a much greater role than the action itself and John Woo masterfully combines everything to form this riveting picture. ()

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