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5.5/10
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A police sniper teams up with a hot-headed rookie to take down his former friend and teammate, who is exacting revenge on the police force.A police sniper teams up with a hot-headed rookie to take down his former friend and teammate, who is exacting revenge on the police force.A police sniper teams up with a hot-headed rookie to take down his former friend and teammate, who is exacting revenge on the police force.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Richie Jen
- Hartman
- (as Richie Ren)
Gregory Lam Nag
- Commissioner of Police
- (as Gregory Lam)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
(2009) The Sniper
(In Chinese with English subtitles)
PSYCHOLOGICAL ACTION THRILLER
Co-written and directed by Dante Lam that motivates OJ (Edison Chen) motivated to be involve into being a sharpshooter from just being a regular police officer. And as a result of a misunderstanding of a particular task,turned one of the best sharp shooters to turn against his own officers. OJ figures his mentor, Lincoln (Xiaoming Huang) is seeking retribution for the way police and the entire police academy had dissed him.
As a fan of action movies, I did not think there was very much of it for there was more tension a little suspense than anything. The backstory was dumb whereas the police are not going to just ignore any former sharper shooter who used to work for the police force, there clearly would be an APB on him since he himself appear to be way more dangerous than the crime boss he had helped freed.
Co-written and directed by Dante Lam that motivates OJ (Edison Chen) motivated to be involve into being a sharpshooter from just being a regular police officer. And as a result of a misunderstanding of a particular task,turned one of the best sharp shooters to turn against his own officers. OJ figures his mentor, Lincoln (Xiaoming Huang) is seeking retribution for the way police and the entire police academy had dissed him.
As a fan of action movies, I did not think there was very much of it for there was more tension a little suspense than anything. The backstory was dumb whereas the police are not going to just ignore any former sharper shooter who used to work for the police force, there clearly would be an APB on him since he himself appear to be way more dangerous than the crime boss he had helped freed.
The Sniper is not going to reinvent the wheel, but it does approach its plot with a certain snazz that you just can't help but smile at. The basic thrust of the film is that a Hong Kong police sniper team have just recruited a new hotshot shooter (Edison Chen) who is shaping up to be just as good as their last top shooter. Turns out, that last guy (Xiaoming Huang) went to prison for head-shotting a hostage during a cluster. Now he's out of prison and decides to go rogue. Uh-oh. Needless to say, the sniper scenes (both the action and training ones) are very cool. The rest? Not so much. One of the good guy snipers has a sub plot about his suicidal wife that goes absolutely nowhere. The villains of the film have nothing to do but serve as devices for the rogue sniper's plot arc. They could have been more important to the story and still have co-existed with Huang's character. Aside from the young hotshot and two other snipers (including Richie Ren as the team leader), the rest of the team remains virtually silent and unknown. They have cool code names like Forest King, Iceman and Rabbit - but no back story or anything memorable about them whatsoever. Again, The Sniper isn't doing anything new, but what it does do is entertaining enough to enjoy it. The English translation of the original title is Godly Gunslingers. How cool is that? Makes a nice double feature with Tom Berenger and Billy Zane's Sniper.
This movie was rather enjoyable. Sure, it wasn't a revolutionary movie in the Hong Kong cinema, but it was actually quite entertaining.
Writers Wai Lun Ng and Dante Lam managed to put together a storyline and script that proved entertaining from start to end. Sure, the movie was crammed with cliché characters, but it actually worked out well enough, given the concept of the story.
"San Cheung Sau" (aka "The Sniper") is an action- and adrenaline-driven crime thriller with an adequately written storyline that was predictable and generic at times, but was helped along nicely by the action. It should be said that while director Dante Lam is good at taking the audience from A to B throughout the movie, then there isn't room for surprises and twists to the storyline, so it was a somewhat predictable storyline.
The cast ensemble for the movie was good and there are some familiar faces on the cast list, if you are familiar with Hong Kong cinema. Edison Chen (playing OJ) and Richie Jen (playing Hartman) are in the leading roles, but the movie was actually carried mostly by Xiaoming Huang (playing Lincoln).
There is a good amount of action and shooting in the movie, and that is definitely something that gives the movie an injection and keeps it from falling into a slump.
My rating of "San Cheung Sau" lands on a six out of ten stars.
Writers Wai Lun Ng and Dante Lam managed to put together a storyline and script that proved entertaining from start to end. Sure, the movie was crammed with cliché characters, but it actually worked out well enough, given the concept of the story.
"San Cheung Sau" (aka "The Sniper") is an action- and adrenaline-driven crime thriller with an adequately written storyline that was predictable and generic at times, but was helped along nicely by the action. It should be said that while director Dante Lam is good at taking the audience from A to B throughout the movie, then there isn't room for surprises and twists to the storyline, so it was a somewhat predictable storyline.
The cast ensemble for the movie was good and there are some familiar faces on the cast list, if you are familiar with Hong Kong cinema. Edison Chen (playing OJ) and Richie Jen (playing Hartman) are in the leading roles, but the movie was actually carried mostly by Xiaoming Huang (playing Lincoln).
There is a good amount of action and shooting in the movie, and that is definitely something that gives the movie an injection and keeps it from falling into a slump.
My rating of "San Cheung Sau" lands on a six out of ten stars.
If not for the picture scandal, this film would have been released about a year ago, and would likely have solidified Edison Chen's position as box office draw given his stellar performance in crime-action flicks like Dog Eat Dog and Blood Brothers, and pop idol fare such as Initial D. But we know what had happened over the span of a year, though I suppose the decision to hold this film back would have helped it in increasing the curiosity surrounding this, given his last / first performance since the scandal. After all, the producers have to make the best out of the situation.
His character in Sniper is a typical Edison Chen persona – young, brash and impatient, toeing the line of the good and possessing that streak of arrogance. As OJ, he aspires to be the top shooter amongst the SDU Sniper Unit, and is mentored by the team leader Hartman (Richie Jen, who also starred as a sharpshooter in Johnnie To's Exiled) who discovered him during a mission, and is impressed by the upstart. Given the attributes of a sniper – confidence, decisiveness and ruthlessly accurate, egos are swelled and clashes are part of the game, where while it's a team effort, you can't deny those strong individual desire to excel above the rest.
The unfinished business of the earlier generation comes back to haunt the team in the form of the disgraced, and once top shooter Lincoln (Huang Xiaoming), who in a rash, negligent act gets sentenced to imprisonment, and upon release swears revenge on his once buddies. For a moment there was a tussle for the apprentice ala Star Wars style, where the young one found his training under his mentor too stifling and never appreciative of his abilities, and on the other, darker side, becomes seduced by sexier techniques which seem to be the path toward instant results and glory.
But alas the story unfortunately becomes quite fluffy, with the dramatic moments just excuses to string the action sequences together. The runtime under 90 minutes also provided a feeling that the film has been super summarized, given a lot of sub plots being introduced briefly, but never really reaching second base, especially with the relationships of the snipers and the opposite sex. You would wonder why they had even bothered to devote time to this aspect, just to know that the crazed nut Lincoln is terribly infatuated with his girlfriend, OJ's girlfriend is a one scene wonder, and Hartman's estranged wife lies comatose most of the time, waking only to shed tears and raise her voice. I guess in a sniper's life, the only "wife" they take care of, as in the prologue, is their rifles, to protect it with their life or professionally, they're screwed.
Dante Lam's star has been shining rather brightly, and I have enjoyed his recent effort in Beast Stalker. Here, he crafted some wonderful sniper action scenes without resorting too much on the looking-through-the-scope syndrome, striking a balance in being instructional, yet adequately paced to be tension-filled. What I appreciated is his fusion of that psychological element a sniper brings to the table, of the ability of how one man well hidden, and well trained, can take out a platoon or company, because of that element of fear that is introduced. Too bad for the many cardboard supporting villains and victims though, and that strange need to CG some dark clouds and fake lightning to drape many scenes.
Undoubtedly the show belongs to the ensemble cast in oozing machismo as they do battle, but you can't help but to feel that it is Edison who's pulling in the crowds in what could be his last hurrah. In a cruel twist of irony, his character here can't wait to talk to and provide snide remarks to the media, which is a far cry in the real situation he's in now. One can only wonder how things would have turned out if not for that moment of accidental folly.
His character in Sniper is a typical Edison Chen persona – young, brash and impatient, toeing the line of the good and possessing that streak of arrogance. As OJ, he aspires to be the top shooter amongst the SDU Sniper Unit, and is mentored by the team leader Hartman (Richie Jen, who also starred as a sharpshooter in Johnnie To's Exiled) who discovered him during a mission, and is impressed by the upstart. Given the attributes of a sniper – confidence, decisiveness and ruthlessly accurate, egos are swelled and clashes are part of the game, where while it's a team effort, you can't deny those strong individual desire to excel above the rest.
The unfinished business of the earlier generation comes back to haunt the team in the form of the disgraced, and once top shooter Lincoln (Huang Xiaoming), who in a rash, negligent act gets sentenced to imprisonment, and upon release swears revenge on his once buddies. For a moment there was a tussle for the apprentice ala Star Wars style, where the young one found his training under his mentor too stifling and never appreciative of his abilities, and on the other, darker side, becomes seduced by sexier techniques which seem to be the path toward instant results and glory.
But alas the story unfortunately becomes quite fluffy, with the dramatic moments just excuses to string the action sequences together. The runtime under 90 minutes also provided a feeling that the film has been super summarized, given a lot of sub plots being introduced briefly, but never really reaching second base, especially with the relationships of the snipers and the opposite sex. You would wonder why they had even bothered to devote time to this aspect, just to know that the crazed nut Lincoln is terribly infatuated with his girlfriend, OJ's girlfriend is a one scene wonder, and Hartman's estranged wife lies comatose most of the time, waking only to shed tears and raise her voice. I guess in a sniper's life, the only "wife" they take care of, as in the prologue, is their rifles, to protect it with their life or professionally, they're screwed.
Dante Lam's star has been shining rather brightly, and I have enjoyed his recent effort in Beast Stalker. Here, he crafted some wonderful sniper action scenes without resorting too much on the looking-through-the-scope syndrome, striking a balance in being instructional, yet adequately paced to be tension-filled. What I appreciated is his fusion of that psychological element a sniper brings to the table, of the ability of how one man well hidden, and well trained, can take out a platoon or company, because of that element of fear that is introduced. Too bad for the many cardboard supporting villains and victims though, and that strange need to CG some dark clouds and fake lightning to drape many scenes.
Undoubtedly the show belongs to the ensemble cast in oozing machismo as they do battle, but you can't help but to feel that it is Edison who's pulling in the crowds in what could be his last hurrah. In a cruel twist of irony, his character here can't wait to talk to and provide snide remarks to the media, which is a far cry in the real situation he's in now. One can only wonder how things would have turned out if not for that moment of accidental folly.
I'm an avid fan of HK action in general. There are many great HK action movies. And even after John Woo went Hollywood (although he went back, his recent movie being Red Cliff, which was produced in Asia) there was someone (Johnnie To) who filled in his shoes. And he did a great job in doing so.
But this is a completely different "beast" we get here. This is obviously very "Hollywood"-style, very fast and unfortunately not very good. It has some good action scenes and the intentions of it's filmmaker is noble, but unfortunately it takes too long to get to places, which makes it drag a little. Not bad by any means, but not really what you could/would expect from a good HK Action movie either.
But this is a completely different "beast" we get here. This is obviously very "Hollywood"-style, very fast and unfortunately not very good. It has some good action scenes and the intentions of it's filmmaker is noble, but unfortunately it takes too long to get to places, which makes it drag a little. Not bad by any means, but not really what you could/would expect from a good HK Action movie either.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaShot in 2007, the film was initially set to premiere in May 2008. However in early 2008, hundreds of photographs featuring actor Edison Chen engaged in sexual acts with various female Hong Kong celebrities were leaked online, in what was dubbed the "Edison Chen photo scandal", leading the film to be delayed a year, and Chen's scenes to be edited down.
- GoofsAt first, the police dispatch says on the radio "India-November 995" (IN995), however that suspect vehicle's plate is LN995.
- SoundtracksDeath of a Friend
Composed by Henry Lai
- How long is The Sniper?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- HK$30,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $329,945
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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