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  • First impression... directorial tour de force, if (dont kill me for saying this) light on character development. I suspect Johnnie To did a minor miracle getting what was (or may have been) fairly thin stuff on the page via other writers to be far more (dare I say) poetic and lyrical (and even innocent) vibe than it would be in the hands of a Journeyman. This flows much more like a something Id actually expect to see in, I dont know, an animayed feature than live action, like from the fluidity of the tracking shots and movements of the camera as well as the slow motion.

    It's the work of a dedicated Smuggler, bringing something deeper about how some of us out there - like the Gambling addict nightclub owner, more clear-eyed and pragmatic (would be) Nightclub singer, and ex Judo champion who may or may not find redemption as the plot summary says - are in an exiential rainstorm and its hard to run fast enough to find shelter or what to do. If I even tried to break down "story beats" it would sound silly, and rightfully so. Its an expressionistic experiment first, kick-ass action-crime thriller second.

    Maybe a little too much sappy synth music for my taste to lift up the mood, maybe one or two flourishes that I didn't love (the guy singing mournfully during the nightclub fight, hmm gotta sleep on that). But this is often sumptuously directed, which is not what I was expecting, albeit I think my exposure to To has been the Election films and not a lot else (shame I can hear you crying), and I'd love to analyze the lighting and shots with a class or a film club or something. If it ever plays Alamo or the like, count me in.

    And when I say To did a lot with the direction here, I also can tell he worked with the actors - Kwan and Ying but Ko especially in the kind of expressive/tortured masculine role Mickey Rourke could've crushed 20 years prior- and I felt depth from them in the style. If nothing else, it makes Judo fighting seem the most like a calling I've seen in any other film I can think of (even more than the directly cited Sanshiro Sugata by AK).

    Raise my rating or lower it by tomorrow? Place your bets.
  • Director/writer Johnnie To throws down lots of HK movie clichés: The Heist, The Young Challenger, The Fighting, The Master, The Rival, The Gangsters, The Gambling. But all of it's entertaining nonsense used to set up his usual innovative scenes and a little drama.

    Give Director To credit for parodying these clichés to a fault.

    This movie is challenging. This is not easy to digest chop sockey flash bang action.

    So what is this movie about? A lot: Rediscovering relations from happier times, rediscovering oneself, and a director having fun and dropping references to Kurosawa's "Sugata Sanshiro" (1943).
  • I have gone into this film very excited as I have become a Johnnie To fan only recently. After seeing both Election movies and PTU, I have been totally amazed at the quality of director he is and how good his films can be. Throw Down continues my fan-ship of Mr To in style. I have always felt that wires and stunt doubles ruin films, no matter what the genre, and this is something Mr To seems to share with me. The fighting style of Judo is perfect for the physical aspect of the film. The actors can get close and throw each other to the ground without need of propelling themselves over bamboo trees, which is great.

    The three main leads, Sze-To, Tony and Mona are pretty good. Though Mona seems to aimlessly wonder through the film and really only serve as a third wheel at times, she is a nice enough support for the muscle of the film. Louise Koo is amazing as Sze-To, the former champ turned club owner. His drunken and dazed, followed by angered and determined emotions are all portrayed brilliantly. I was even surprised by Aaron Kwok, who is great as the eager Judo fighter, travelling from fight to fight, and spurring Sze-To into his renewed sense of fight.

    The photography is spot on. The massive fight in the club is so perfectly filmed and cut with the Japanese vocal that it was a joy to watch. Even the simple scenes of clubs, night life, computer games room, restaurant, are all magnificently shot. And then, as if the film were not good enough already, the soundtrack, sound editing, production design (such as the Ext Judo Championship scene) and the screenplay are all as good as you could want. The first hour and ten minutes had me on the edge of my seat. The following twenty minutes had a more mysterious, what can happen now, feel, but it is all just perfect.

    If you haven't seen a Johnny To film, this might be a good starting point, but be warned, he makes no excuses and feels no obligation to explain anything about anything, it's often left to the viewer to determine the why and the how. This, for me, is what film-making is all about.
  • Anyone who watches a Johnnie To movie only for the fight scenes is rather missing the point by a few country miles. This is a director with an impeccable dramatic sense, for whom the violence is purely a by-product of the fallibility of his characters. How on Earth can anyone watch a movie in a language they do not understand, without subtitles, and expect to come away with any feeling but disappointment? It would be like watching The Godfather in Croatian. The point with Throwdown, as with most of Johnnie To's movies, is the CHARACTERS! This may not be his all time greatest film (I would still go for All About Ah - Long), but it is still a great piece of drama. I would recommend anyone to check this out, the subtitled version, not the mainland Chinese pirate version, which is all they sell in Pacific mall, and enjoy a very entertaining piece of film making from one of Hong Kong's masters.
  • A utopian "judo" circle was constructed, in which the bar manager, the boy, the gangland boss, and the psycho were all equal when faced with "judo".

    No win or lose, no inspiration, just a kind of feelings of acura......

    If you don't understand, you can try to understand:

    We sometimes want to curry favor with the customer, and sometimes to reprimand angrily to competitors, sometimes, though we reserved, but also try to show some dignity, we are not equal, not free, not happy, but when we see customers, competitors, leadership, subordinates also play king glory of time, will feel welcome and people nature are playful, everybody is no different, we have both nature from each other, that also has a soul interlinked feelings, "judo" is synonymous with this emotion.

    People always have to step into the circle of like-minded people can best find this spirit, only the most equal - you are blind, I blindfolded with you, the kind of equality.
  • Akira Kurosawa's first film was a martial arts film: Sanshiro Sugata. This is almost never seen in the west; and I confess I haven't seen it. But I know what Akira Kurosawa did in film, and I have more than a general sense of his style and his concerns - what makes a Kurosawa film identifiably Kurosawa.

    Johnnie To's tribute to Akira Kurosawa comes as a very splendid surprise. Not really a martial - arts film, this is the story of champion judo wrestler who, going blind, wallows in drink, gambling, petty theft and jazz (do these all go together?) Anyway, although the final 20 minutes of the film gets a little heavy, for the most part this is a humorous look at some Hong Kong low-lives, and how their redemption comes through the personal discipline necessary to learn judo. Even if you don't like judo, you will enjoy this film - very professionally crafted and acted.
  • stu_x27 May 2006
    When I saw Throwdown at the video store, I didn't think it would be that great. However, I had never seen a judo movie before, so I decided to give it a try.

    First of all, the action scenes in the movie are great. I think people who are knowledgeable about ground fighting (eg Brazilian jiujitsu or judo) will appreciate the fight scenes. The fight scenes display both take-downs (throws and trips) when the fighters are standing up and ground fighting (joint locks and chokes) when the fights go to the ground. The transitions between the judo moves also flow very well. The actors in the movie even demonstrate proper techniques to break their falls when they get thrown to the ground.

    In addition to the fight scenes, I love how the characters all have obstacles in their lives that they must overcome. I love how judo is used as a metaphor for the lives of these characters. When practicing judo, a person will fall many times and find it hard to continue. To be successful, the person must get up after falling down and continue to train. Similarly, a person will experience hardships in life and often find it difficult to continue living. Despite these hardships, one must put in his best effort and continue doing what he has to do.

    If you're expecting this movie to have actors flying in the air like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, you might be disappointed. But if you want to see a movie with more realistic fight scenes and an inspirational message about perseverance, I recommend this movie.
  • This movie was just barely watchable. I kept wishing it would end already and if it weren't for the fact that my friend was actually really into it (he liked the judo scenes, but admitted to having no idea what the movie what about) I would have walked out.

    Perhaps it has to do with a Hong Kong movie style, but the plot was all over the place and I had only the vaguest idea as to what was going on. I didn;t even really know or care about the characters. Why did Sun Tzo need money? WHy did he leave judo? Why did the other guy want to fight so badly? What is the girl's relationships to the men? Why are they suddenly lightheartedly grasping for a balloon? Why is the guy at the end wearing a blindfold? I appreciate subtlety but, perhaps because of the translation or cultural differences, I found this movie was unbearable.
  • Throw Down from 2004 is slightly different, retaining the technical qualities his films are known to exhibit, but having a storyline with themes that are more personal, and in essence a shout out to anyone found struggling with whichever aspects of life at a point in time. There are no guns nor weapons galore, nor are there cops and clear cut villains who are baying for blood. While it's about Judo, don't come to expect a fight-a-minute film because this is not that movie, with action sequences kept to a bare minimum, though it does boast a scene which I thought was pandemonium done poetically with wonderful choreography that looked like a Judo free for all tournament is in progress, set within the confines of a crammed pub premises that spilt over to the sidewalk and roads outside.

    Amongst the various Asian martial arts, I never really come to understand the spirit of Judo, and thus was my least favourite of them all, until this film. Almost every martial art would have found a representative film to promote the art or the sport version, and I haven't seen one that focused on Judo until Throw Down came along, and the metaphor couldn't be more pronounced. In essence it may seem like a series of throws to get your opponent off balance and gaining an upper hand, but it's truer of its spirit and intent. the message of dusting oneself off the ground when one gets defeated, to get up on one's feet and try again. It is this spirit of perseverance and encouragement that is very much alive through the protagonists in the film, a spirit that To explores in this movie.

    Written by Yau Nai-Hoi, Au Kin-Yee and Yip Tin-Shing, Throw Down follows the story of Sze- To (Louis Koo), a one time Judo champion who decided to abruptly call it quits, and now manages a karaoke pub and lounge, spending his time wasted in drink and gambling, void of the zest of life. Nobody knows the real reason behind this sudden change, and it is we the audience who will journey with him down the trodden path of redemption. I think this film also marks Aaron Kwok's rare acting tutelage under Johnnie To as he plays the youngster Tony, a Judo enthusiast who seeks out Sze-To for a genuine challenge, and decided to stick around when he doesn't get the quality of challenge he's looking for. And Cherrie Ying rounds up the protagonist trio as Mona, a cannot-make-it singer wannabe from Taiwan who tries hard to make it to the entertainment scene, ending up at Sze-To's pub looking for a job.

    Each character is vastly different and encapsulates the different approaches toward this journey we call life. In Sze-To we see someone zapped of zeal and spirit, giving up on what he does best and going through the motions, nary wanting to lift a finger to help his one time master Cheng (Lo Hoi Pang) to continue his legacy and fight in an upcoming tournament, much less helping anyone else. In Tony comes optimism, forward looking and almost always seizing the moment, be it the bouncer at the door, or a formidable opponent he knows of, just to spar for the sake of sparring to improve himself, broken arm notwithstanding - where he even designs his own one-arm wrestle. And in Mona's case, one who simply never gives up even with the realization of a void of talent, determined to want to breakthrough no matter what, and seeking out her own opportunities to do so wherever it make take her, home or abroad.

    Perhaps this film had remained Johnnie To's underrated best in terms of very focused characters each who will emerge quite differently by the time the final act rolls by, given the active metaphor of Judo sparring throughout the narrative, of being thrown down hard onto the ground, yet finding strength from within to pick oneself up again. And To doesn't feel the need to be verbose about everything, preferring to let the long takes, with minimal dialogue, allowing the music, and the basic mood and feel of each scene to tell the story, where even a key plot element has to be figured out that provides the answer why Sze-To acts the way he does, and his reason for quitting while at his prime, providing a sort of a mystery for the audience to unravel themselves.

    And the technical strengths of this film is very Milkyway, gorgeously photographed by Cheung Siu Keung in both the interior shots and the outdoor ones that romanticizes the streets of Kowloon, with plenty of light and shadow play being very pronounced in the film, highlighting the state of mind each character find themselves in at any particular point in time. The Judo spars and fights are vividly designed to be real, sans wirework and mats, coupled with an engagingly punchy soundtrack that consistently accentuates the mood of the entire film. A superb support cast like one third of The Grasshoppers Calvin So as an outright homage by Johnnie To to Akira Kurosawa, Eddie Cheung as a ruffian who talks to himself under his breath spewing insults, and Tony Leung Kar-Fai as a mean dojo owner with a menacing single Judo technique, make this journey a classic one to undertake, and definitely one of Johnnie To's best works in his filmography that deserves to be widely seen. Highly recommended!
  • malfurion2 March 2005
    5/10
    imho
    I just watched the version that's dubbed in Mandarin, and found the film to be a disappointment after hearing so much high praise about it. So I would advise everyone to try the original HK version or better subbed version instead. Hopefully you would have a better experience.

    I enjoyed the last two films I saw by the same director (PTU and Breaking News, both subbed), but I found this particular one to be incoherent and the characters hard to relate to. The film hardly makes me sympathize with its main characters, and without that connection, their life and action holds no interest to me, and all the cinematic sequences director employs become only distracting gimmicks (ie the dialog/bathroom scene involve 3 leading characters in the night club, the chasing sequence with female lead, money, a shoe...) The performance by all the actors are great, but the story presents those characters in a way that I don't see enough explanation to how they got to the situation they are in and why they chose to take certain action over other. The pace of the film is all wrong for me, some of the cuts seems to be placed at all the wrong places, On the plus side, the film is beautifully shot. Hopefully all the problem I have with this film is due to bad dubbing, which is entirely possible. But I have no intention to find out after already wasting over an hour of my time.
  • This movie was lots of fun. If you were expecting an all-out fighting movie I can see why you'd be let down. I actually only heard about this movie last week when I borrowed it from a friend. It didn't disappoint at all. If you are a fan of early Kurosawa films (Sanshiro Sugata in particular) you'll love this. It's kind of a modern re-telling of it. Like that film, and this film, there is a sort of suspension of reality. The characters are common archetypes - the has-been master, the wayward girl, the up-and-comer, the bad guy. The film doesn't intend to be a serious drama. Even the "bad guy" really isn't bad. It's more about the spirit of competition and getting back on your feet after you've been knocked down (no pun intended).

    To me the film excels in its visuals. The film is shot beautifully with vivid colors that set the mood perfectly for each scene. And the finale? A duel in the wind-swept grass! How old-school is that?! Throw Down is a great film if you go in with little or no expectations of what it's "suppposed to be like." Just sit back and enjoy the ride.
  • Type-E6 September 2004
    Warning: Spoilers
    I don't get why this movie got such a bad rating? I would give this at least a 9 if not 10. If you are looking for a kung fu movie, then this is not one definitely, but it doesn't make it a bad movie. It's like rating giving a horror movie a 1 because it's not funny.

    The summary that someone put in IMDb is totally misleading. It's none of that. It should be something like "Sze To Bo, the former karate champion did not take part in the final karate championship competition and gave up karate from then on. What happens to him 2 years ago??"

    This movie is worth watching twice in a row just by seeing how the director, Johnny To, hide the fact that the main character is blind. It wasn't until last quarter of the movie does he show more obvious trail that he is blind. If you like Sixth Sense style movie, this is definitely similar. Aside from that, the main plot shows the people got block by problem and by confronting the problem, they found the process enjoyable.

    Sze To Bo: blind but finally continue to enjoy karate at the end Aaron: his arm is wounded but from that, he found new moves to throw with one arm Ying Chow Yee: Her disire to be an actress made her life enjoyable.

    Aside from the main plot, there are several scenes that are handled exceptionally well: - red balloon was block (another metaphor) and see how the 3 main character find getting around the problem enjoyable. - money chase scene where Louis Koo was running and running and running. It was his turning point of the movie where he found life is not meaningless.

    This firm was not meant to be very commerical just like PTU, it's darker and require more thoughts than Breaking News type movies.
  • zillion2915 September 2005
    I thought I was a Johnny To fan. I loved PTU, Running on Karma, and Fulltime Killer. I rank Yesterday Once More as one of my favorite films of all time. But I watched Throwdown with my mouth agape in horror at the sheer lameness of it all.

    I will not even try to lie - I didn't understand what was going on, not even for five minutes. I still can't explain to you what I just watched. Characters' motivations fluctuated wildly, no background was given until your interest had long since waned, and the martial arts sequences were short and unsatisfying in relation to the western marketing and box copy.

    Tai Seng's translation and subtitling department needs a rework. There is one major scene in a restaurant with about 8 characters talking at once - the subtitling does NOTHING to try to keep up with the important dialogue. Instead of taking a note from Animeigo or ADV and using different colors and stacking lines of text, Tai Seng took the cheapie way out and presented it in a way that was frustrating.
  • Another sublime film for Johnnie To, whose narration and progression of the story are exclusively based on the behavior of the characters and not on the dialogues or the things stated by words. That is to say, exclusively on the staging of each scene and on the movements of the characters. A magical film.

    The film follows a trio of characters, first alone, then together: it is their interactions that will make the story evolve until the final resolution. The viewer never knows more than the characters and does not understand or discover their motivation along the way, in small steps. This makes it impossible to guess what will happen next. And that makes the film captivating until its resolution. But also thanks to the staging of each sequence where Johnnie To brilliantly uses the streets of Hong Kong.

    The resolution, by the way, has no real meaning, because nothing much happens in this film, but it still manages to captivate the viewer. Emotional elements arrive regularly and surface even if the characters' motivations are indifferent to us (one is looking for a job as a singer, the other wants to face the great masters of Judo). And this by their interactions: without music or insistent dialogue.

    The cinematography loves the night settings and loves to shoot the city of Hong Kong. The city and its streets are almost a fourth character.

    The judo of the title corresponds to a dramatic arc that motivates one of the three main characters. It is a pretext that does not matter and does not prevent the film from containing elements of pure beauty.

    The film is a tribute to Akira Kurosawa that Johnnie To admires. Very great art.
  • The movie may have a little meaning but honestly the execution and acting is just so bad and extremely disappointing. The script is so empty and boring which is completely flat and cliche, the performance is so overacted, childish and unrealistic, it's doubtful if the actors are even seriously playing their roles. The actions are as well so unconvincing and unprofessional, a lot of the moves aren't even judo but rather MMA. Actually the story is so ridiculous with a terrible ending I really have no idea what the heck am I watching. Again this trash is highly overrated by moronic critics and paid reviewers, if I would allow to rate this movie on a negative scale I would give this a -10 rather than 1, save your time and stay away from this bs.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I've always liked martial arts movies and was excited to hear that there was a movie made about Judo. I bought the movie online and when I finally received it, I watched it right away. I have to tell you, this is not your typical martial arts movie where the good guy just beats up on all the bad guys. This movie has deep characters, all with different motives and ambitions. Although the martial arts sequences are not that long, I think that they were filmed nicely (Although it is a little dark to see sometimes). The parts where Tony is training with Sze-to made me remember my training when I was younger, and that really got to me. After finishing this movie, I had a new sense of renewed vigor and excitement. I immediately went back to all my Judo training books and began practicing again. I haven't felt this good in years, and I even arranged for a trip to Japan to observe Judo in it's homeland.

    I'm not saying that this movie will have the same effect on you, but if you're a martial artist, you just may appreciate what this movie has to offer. If you are not, I think you can still see the message trying to be portrayed in the film - "You can do anything you want in your life, but it's all up to you"
  • Warning: Spoilers
    THROW DOWN is unquestionably filmmaking of the highest caliber and Johnnie To is one of those filmmakers whose movies deserve much more attention than they ever seem to get here in the west. Like John Woo, To has a very distinctive voice, although I think that To is a tad more versatile. There are echoes of Kurosawa throughout THROW DOWN, as one might expect from what amounts to a homage, but To doesn't simply emulate the greatest filmmaker of them all: he tips his hat while at the same time infusing this moving martial arts drama with its own distinctive feel. It's about blindness of all kinds: the characters seem to be trapped each in their own particular vacuum and, while running away from, say, their past, they are at the same time running TOWARD their future(s). There's an amazing three-way conversation that takes place in a nightclub, with overlapping and intertwining dialogue, that has to be seen to be appreciated. THROW DOWN is as much about blindness and transcendental beauty as it is about judo. As someone pointed out to me years ago: one must first learn to fall.
  • After hearing a lot of praise for To's movies and being really excited to finally see one (on the big screen no less), this film ended up being a grand disappointment. I can appreciate hokey melodrama as much as the next guy, but this shite was unbearably trite. My foremost criticism is of the over the top and out of place musical sequences and i don't quite care if To's satirizing other HK movies because it just wasn't funny enough. The movie wasn't totally w waste of time considering a few memorable moments and some brief humorous moments. Maybe if he had just finished the movie after the balloon scene i would respect his audacity but instead he drags this trifling, self indulgent piece on another 20 minutes. Kurosawa you're not, Johnny.
  • Award-winning director Johnnie To is back in action with his recent release Throw Down, which stars heart-throbs Aaron Kwok and Louis Koo in judo-flopping scenes.

    Ex-judo champion Sze-to (Louis Koo) mysteriously retires from the sport and becomes a pub manager until "Leather Jacket" Tony (Aaron Kwok), a spirited judo fighter, revitalizes his fighting desires and challenges him to a match. But there's more to win than just the champion title; Mona, a Taiwanese girl (Cherrie Ying) working at Sze-to's pub, charms both fighters with her singing and dancing skills.

    Pub manager/band leader Sae-To was once the greatest Judo fighter around until he unexpectedly gave up the sport for no apparent reason. Nowadays Sze-To lives the life of an alcoholic gambler with no hope for the futre, until cocky Judo enthusiast Tony shows up at the door and challenges Sze-To into a due; Old foe Kong demands finishing the match that never took place years ago; Sze-To's mentor Master Cheng ask him to man age his rundown Dojo...
  • A tribute to Sanshiro Sugata by the legend Kurosawa ------------------------------------------------------------ Redemption tale

    A washed-up Judo champion is spending his remaining days boozed up, gambling, and racking up debt . A young Judo student addicting to fighting challenges the washed-up legend and promises to never leave his sight until he accepts his challenge.

    Mr. Washed life is changed drastically when old ghosts from his past reappear into his life; former judo lord turned yakuza, his old master, and a hardened rival who's fight he ducked over 2 years ago .

    He joined by the new challenger and a young lady singer - equally as broke as Mr. Washed - as his two companions , whom slowly begin to revive the old champ within ..

    Classic Johnnie To - minus the guns - Judo style
  • kosmasp20 September 2020
    As another reviewer already clearly (and correctly) stated, Johnny To is about characters and drama. This does have fight scenes and violence, don't get it twisted, but character development and relationships is even more important. Watching movies that don't care about those things can be fun too. It is just not what you get served here.

    Not to mention the incredible cinematography. To is very humble and probably would downplay his preparations and why he would choose to film in a certain way, but for those who like to analyze, there is much to find here. Great actors that are obviously needed too. Overall this may not be the best of To, but even so, this is still a rock solid movie to say the least
  • Period.

    I intended to write no more, but it seems I must submit at least ten lines, so I will write the ten lines, but nothing more of interest shall be added. Many times Johnnie To's movies are masterpieces, for example PTU is an involuntary masterpiece, Dung fong saam hap, (The Heroic Trio) is an all-out masterpiece, Breaking News is a crafty self-conscious masterpiece, Yau doh lung fu bong, that is this movie, a serene, and a little facetious, masterpiece (salute to Master Kurosawa included). I don't know Whom but I want to give thanks for the existence of Johnnie To. Still I am short a couple of lines, so I must keep typing my in-praise-of-johnny-to palaver until I don't receive the message saying I did not reach the ten lines I'm required. There is a reviewer who wrote he went back to his Judo after he saw this movie, he also stated he planned to visit Japan in order to know Judo's homeland. Well, I will not resume my Judo training since I never practiced but I will travel to Hong Kong in order to know movie's new homeland, and pay tribute to Sensei To.
  • I expected a clichéd Rocky-like ('underdog fights his way to the top against all odds!') melodrama from the plot description, and was very glad to discover that the Judo only holds a very marginal role in a movie that's driven by its characters. And to make it even more unique is a very cheeky sense of silliness - only once or twice does Throwdown take itself seriously, and, contrary to just about every other Hong Kong movie I've ever seen, the drama doesn't get confused (or overblown to the point of embarrassing melodrama) in the translation. At times it's very subtle (again, alien to most Hong Kong movies I've seen) and poignant, in addition to sometimes being very funny.

    And as for the acting, I don't believe I'd seen Louis Koo act before, but I think this was a fine introduction. The same goes for Cherrie Ying, who nearly steals the show with her performance that's in tune with Faye Wong's in Chungking Express (read: so cute you just want to wear her as a hat). And Aaron Kwok, I believe I'll have to reevaluate my apparently unfair opinion of him. He was excellent -- both funny and intense, and fully convincing as a brawler (let's see an American pop singer get the same review).

    Anyway, if you expect a somber action movie, I can see where you might be disappointed. Personally, I'm very pleased to know of a movie that's so relentlessly fun and charming.
  • My all-time favourite movie from Hong Kong is "Fallen Angels". I am in love with that movie. Filmed only at night, the neon-lit photography and dreamy pop soundtrack captures the vibe and the romance that those big Asian cities have for me. There is a playfulness to all the characters and the way the plot progresses, that I find extremely beautiful and magnetic.

    Few films come close to capturing that same feeling that Fallen Angels evokes for me, and I've seen a few films that almost feel like cheap knockoffs (Johnnie To's own "Fulltime Killer" comes to mind). However, one film that does come close, while very much being its own unique thing, is Johnnie To's "Throw Down".

    A crime movie where all the gangsters appear to be in an apathetic trance. A martial arts movie with only one fight move - the "throw down". A romance with no relationships or hint of sexuality. An obscure tribute to Akira Kurosawa. A musical? Throw Down is completely unclassifiable, and definitely one of To's most original movies.

    Like Fallen Angels, the film captures Hong Kong in an atmospheric, almost mythical fashion. The neon-lit streets, the smoke-filled arcades and nightclubs. The characters are charmingly nonchalant, and the film is playfully paced, with attention not on telling any kind of a story, but just having fun with its characters.

    Cherrie Ying is beautiful and magnetic here. Louis Koo and Tony Ka Fai Leung are hilarious in the way they seem to be sleepwalking through the movie, spaced out from reality. The film is full of odd, humorous, and playfully charming scenes. There is a surreal bar brawl (once again involving only "throw downs"), where all the sound is cut out except a Japanese Kabuki-theatre-type song being performed on the stage.

    My favourite sequence is a most unconventional chase scene in which a lot of cash is dropped on the street. The music makes the film. Here, the score reminds me of some of Joe Hisaishi's best work with Takeshi Kitano. The soundtrack is phenomenal. The film, which I viewed in its new 4K restoration on blu-ray, is an exceptional work of audio-visual art.

    Of around 20 Johnnie To films that I've seen, Throw Down is easily in my top 3, after the masterful absurdist police procedural "Mad Detective" and the insanely stylized actioner "Exiled". Highly recommended to fans of creative Asian cinema.
  • It's been 7 years since I last watched this film and like red wine, it gets better with age. Back then, I didn't appreciate the full perspective displayed by the ever-green Johnnie To. Throw Down is a film that uses the "show not tell" principle to perfection. It does not use words or flashbacks to tell the audience what happened, but rather uses raw emotions, close facial expressions, brutal desire to pursue a dream, a warm brotherly embrace and the simple innate human nature of will power to continue on in life. It is a powerful film that makes the audience works hard and ultimate the result is a film that involves and emotes the senses of the audience. Years ago, I only see the film as just displaying one point – getting thrown down and standing up again. Now the film shows much more and I am sure years down the track, I will find something else in this small little piece of gem…

    Neo rates it 8/10.
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