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poster of The Killer
Rating: 7.615/10 by 787 users

The Killer (1989)

Mob assassin Jeffrey is no ordinary hired gun; the best in his business, he views his chosen profession as a calling rather than simply a job. So, when beautiful nightclub chanteuse Jennie is blinded in the crossfire of his most recent hit, Jeffrey chooses to retire after one last job to pay for his unintended victim's sight-restoring operation. But when Jeffrey is double-crossed, he reluctantly joins forces with a rogue policeman to make things right.

Release Date: Fri, Mar 24, 1989

Rating: 7.615/10 by 787 users

Alternative Title:
喋血雙雄 - CN
The Killer - US
The Killer - FR
Blast Killer - DE
첩혈쌍웅 - KR
Наемный убийца - RU
Dip huet seung hung - CN
The Killer - NL
Bloodshed of Two Heroes - NL
喋血双雄 - NL
El asesino - ES
The Killer - ES
喋血双雄 - CN
牒血雙雄 - CN

Country:
Hong Kong
Language:
广州话 / 廣州話
普通话
日本語
Runtime: 01 hour 50 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $2,350,174

Plot Keyword: blindness and impaired vision, police, hitman, hong kong, heroic bloodshed

Danny Lee Sau-Yin
Insp. Li Ying / Little Eagle
Shing Fui-On
Hay Wong Hoi
Paul Chu Kong
Sidney Fung
Kenneth Tsang
Sgt. Tsang Yeh
Tommy Wong
Teddy Wong Hung
Teddy Yip Wing-Cho
Tony Wong Tung Yuen
Barry Wong
Chief Inspector Tu
Parkman Wong
Inspector Chan
Lam Chung
Cheung Wan
Ridley Tsui Bo-wah
Frank's Killer
Yang Sheng
Bodyguard A
Chuen Chiang
Shooter At Beach (uncredited)
Lo Hung
Review Board Officer (uncredited)
Fan Chin-Hung
Shooter at Beach (uncredited)
Lung Fei
Gangster (uncredited)
Hau Woon-Ling
Trash Lady (uncredited)
Lau Shung-Fung
Wong Hoi's Thug (uncredited)
Man Hua Lin
Gangster (uncredited)
Mak Wai-Cheung
Gangster (uncredited)
Wan Fat
Gangster (uncredited)
Wong Wai-Fai
Gangster (uncredited)
Hsiang Lin Yin
Gangster (uncredited)
Yue Tau-Wan
Gangster (uncredited)

Filipe Manuel Neto

**Action, lots of action, in a slow but elegant film.** It was the first time, to my knowledge, that I saw a film made in Hong Kong. John Woo, its director, gained some international notoriety and would even, long after this film, have some work in western cinema. In general, I liked the movie. I'm not an undefeated fan of action cinema, but I felt that this film manages to balance the explosive action (even better and more intense than in North American films) with a satisfying script. The story revolves around a professional killer who, after accidentally blinding a bar singer, starts to protect her. He will, however, have to kill a mobster and escape from the police, who understand the relationship between the singer and the bandit and start to watch her. Chow Yun-Fat is the film's lead actor, and the only actor I somehow remember seeing, though I can't say where. He is charismatic and intense, and makes his character a tough man but, at the same time, able to capture the audience's sympathy. Danny Lee, in the role of a police inspector, and Sally Yeh, as the singer, also give us a pleasant job. The film's focal point is the intense, explosive action. No means were spared in achieving impressive fight and shootout scenes, and in that respect, both the stuntmen and the special effects team deserve praise. The film has good sets and costumes, and the cinematography has a visual beauty very typical of oriental films, where the color is intense, vivid, something important and always valued. The film is about an hour and a half long, but the pace is quite slow, denoting a certain stretch of the script, and this is the biggest negative criticism I can give it.


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