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Cast:
Jay
Chou
Anne
Suzuki
Edison
Chen
Anthony
Wong
Shawn
Yue
Chapman
To
Jordan
Chan
Kenny
Bee
Writer:
Felix
Chong
Shuichi
Shigeno (comic)
Producer:
Andrew
Lau
Director:
Andrew
Lau
Alan
Mak
Score:
    
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INITIAL
D
AKA:
Initial D - Drift Racer
Year:
2005 Reviewer: Hannah
Lin
Beginning
life as a much loved manga by Shuichi Shigeno, 'Initial D'
made the transition to a popular Anime series before it was
finally brought to the big screen in 2005 by Infernal Affairs'
directing duo Lau Wai Keung and Alan Mak. With versatile
actors and newcomers alike, as well as fast paced race scenes
and inventive direction, 'Initial D' has enough sparkle and
energy to please most viewers, but long time fans may be left
scratching their heads at the condensed timeline and those
expecting Lau and Mak to deliver another 'Infernal
Affairs' will likely be under whelmed by it's simplicity.
Takumi
Fujiwara (Singing sensation Jay Chou) is a 17 year old Tofu
delivery boy who's biggest troubles are caring for his abusive
and regularly drunken father, Bunta Fujiwara (HK Cinema
veteran Anthony Wong) and trying to woo his beautiful
classmate Natsuki Mogi (Anne Suzuki - 'Returner',
'Hana &
Alice'). That is until he unwittingly beats street
racing 'Night Kid' Takeshi Nakazato (Shawn Yue - 'Infernal
Affairs', 'Gong Wu') as he is on his way down Mount Akina to
make a Tofu delivery. This leads to all manor of challenges
from other street racers and even professionals. What Takumi
and the other racers do not realise is that he has unknowingly
perfected the art of drifting, a technique which allows him to
take corners at the highest possible speed. As each race leads
to another more dangerous one, Takumi begins to realise his unrivalled
ability. He finally wins Natsuki's heart and the couple share
a romantic day out but all is not as it seems. Takumi's
friend, Itsuki (Chapman To - 'Infernal Affairs', 'Twins
Effect'), happens to see Natsuki enter a love hotel
(brothel) with a much older man. Hearing his newfound love is
a prostitute; Takumi's world begins to fall apart. Can he keep
it together long enough to win one last race against
Professional racer Kyouichi Sudou? (Jordan Chan - 'Young and
Dangerous', 'Diva ah Hey').
The
previous plot description is as in depth as 'Initial D' gets.
It never meanders outside its central themes of racing and
young love. There is never any real threat to our hero and a
definable villain (except that little thing called love) is
nowhere to be seen. While some, like me, may find this
refreshing, I suspect many will be looking for something a bit
more emotionally taxing. Especially as this is coming from the
directing duo who made the critically acclaimed 'Infernal
Affairs' series. The race scenes are often quite remarkable
and all the more so for being mostly achieved with real
drivers, not the aid of CGI as in other films. Trouble is,
race scenes make up for most of 'Initial D's run time, and if
you don't like racing you'll be hard pressed to like the film
at all. This is the movies weakness and ultimately greatest
achievement. Rather than a fault of the directors this is more
to do with honesty to the material. 'Initial D' the Manga was,
after all, a story of boy racers. A sub-plot involving Police,
Drugs, Guns and explosions could have been added to make the
film seem more exciting but it would have alienated the fan
base and also stretched credibility too far.
Of
the many actors, Jay Chou has the most screen time and pulls
off his first ever movie role adequately. Just about. But it's
hard to tell as the character of Takumi is very quiet, a
little unenthusiastic even. The central caveat of the film is
that he has these incredible racing skills without realising
it, so even in the race scenes he is very laid back. Jay is
never required to show much emotion here and so will have to
wait for another venue to show us if he has the acting skills
to match his rather remarkable musical ones. Anthony Wong is
splendid as always and I wonder if there is anything he can't
do? Required to be slightly abusive and drunken and at the
same time show the love for his son. Mr. Wong never puts a
foot wrong. Chapman To practically revives his bumbling
gangster Keung from 'Infernal Affairs' to great effect and
Anne Suzuki has slimmed down considerably since 2002's 'Returner',
to play the beautiful love interest. Edison Chen and Shawn Yue
both give good performances in their small roles and Jordan
Chan is Charismatic as ever in his limited screen time.
Andrew
Lau Wai Keung and Alan Mak direct the film with an over
abundance of style. Split screens, slow motion and odd frame
rates seem to litter every scene. Much of this reminded me of
'Chungking
Express', which Andrew Lau worked on as cinematographer,
and it is this style and verve, which may just about keep the
non-race fans watching. 'Initial D' is certainly a high
quality film and looks as expensive as any Hollywood effort.
That alone should be enough to generate interest, but the
linear narrative and lack of real danger in the story may
limit what would otherwise be a sure-fire hit.
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