Close Escape (1989)
Chinese Title: 飛越危牆
Translation: Leaping Over Dangerous
Walls
Starring:
Aaron Kwok, Max Mok, Michael Miu Kiu-Wai, Charine Chan Ka-Ling, Dick
Wei, Yukari Oshima, Chan Chik-Wai, Albert Cheung Miu-Hau, Pomson Shi
Director:
Chow Jan-Wing
Action Director:
Phillip Kwok
Although nominally
considered a Girls n’ Guns film because of the presence of Yukari
Oshima in the cast, this is actually a more male-centric crime
thriller with Oshima showing up in a supporting role. She delivers
the film’s second best fighting performance, with top honors going
to Dick Wei, whose speed and power were legendary during the heyday
of his career.
Max Mox plays Lam Wai-Leung,
a fencing student who has dreams of going abroad to study.
Unfortunately, he is not all that well off in terms of money and his
brother, a widower named Wai-Tung (Michael Miu, of Fatal
Termination and The
Fortune Code) isn’t much better.
Wai-Tung lost a lot of money on the Stock Market in recent years and
these days only has his apartment and a second property, a bungalow
that he shared with his deceased wife (and his one major memory of
her). The two men talk of selling it to finance Wai-Leung’s trip,
but Wai-Tung has other ideas.
Another person who was hit
by bad Stock Market decisions is a suave businessman named Chiu
Ying-Kau (Dick Wei, of Project A
and Yes, Madam!).
Chiu, however, is the unscrupulous sort whose shift into crime was
almost a given after legitimate investing went south. His current
racket is diamonds, which involves buying diamonds and selling them
to wealthier collectors for a small profit. Although, like many
criminals in these movies, he is always looking for a way to get out
of paying, which is where Wai-Tung comes in. Wai-Tung rigs the
hotel’s AV system to fill the seller/buyers’ room with smoke and
then breaks in and steals the diamonds.
Unfortunately, the criminal
who betrays his vendor’s trust will ultimately betray the hired
help he needed to swindle the former in the first place. When Leung
Wai-Tung meets up with Chiu Ying-Kau the next night to hand over the
diamonds, Chiu has him ambushed and killed on his way home. The
murder is witnessed by both his brother and his brother’s best
friend, Sgt. Ben Kwok (Aaron Kwok, of Divergence and The Storm Riders) of the Hong Kong Royal Police. Ben
identifies one of the killers, Big Head Man (Albert Cheung), whom
Ben’s colleague Uncle Kwut (Chan Chik-Wai, of Dragon
Strikes and Return
to Action) identifies as being one of
Chiu’s men.
Much to Chiu Ying-Kau’s
dismay, the diamonds that Lam Wai-Tung gave him were fake, a sort of
guarantee on for his life (or a life insurance policy for his
brother). Chiu sends his men to trash the Lam residence (and murder
their dog) in search of the diamonds. When that doesn’t work, they
kidnap Wai-Leung and try to torture the information out of him. When
that also
doesn’t produce results, Chiu murders Big Head Man—the police
were already snooping around about him—and frames Lam Wai-Leung for
it. He flees and is hit by a car driven by a Japanese reporter, Miko
(Yukari Oshima, of A Book of Heroes and Ultracop 2000). Wai-Leung takes her hostage (he still has the gun
that Chiu left in his hands) and forces her to go to his bungalow
while he recovers and hides from the police. And maybe, just maybe,
that may be where Chiu left the diamonds…
Although Close
Escape’s plot is perfectly
serviceable for a low-budget 80s/early 90s action flick, the film
does suffer from a paucity of action, especially in the draggy middle
act. There is a period of 30-40 minutes where Wai-Leung is
convalescing in his brother’s bungalow and Sgt. Kwok is going above
the law and observing Chiu, whom he knows
has framed Wai-Leung. This section of the film may test any viewer’s
patience.
It does start to pick up in
the last half hour or so, starting with a fight between Yukari Oshima
and chopsockey veteran Pomson Shi (Snake
in the Monkey’s Shadow), who plays
Chiu’s lead enforcer. There is an assassination attempt by
Wai-Leung on Chiu, which leads to some fighting. And then there is
the final fight in the cramped bungalow, where Yukari Oshima throws
down with Dick Wei while Aaron Kwok and Max Mok team up against
Pomson (what an interesting Anglican name). There is some good
martial arts on display and that finale is very brutal and vicious. I
would even venture to nominate this for Phillip Kwok’s best
choreographed martial arts sequence of his post-Venom Mob career.
Aaron Kwok and Max Mok do
well with the choreography, but it is really Yukari Oshima and Dick
Wei who shine. Dick Wei, a Taekwondo
expert, was never the flashiest of the kickers, especially given his
particular style. But what Dick could do is the basics with speed,
precision and ferocity. His roundhouse, side, and spin kicks look
and feel like
they hurt—oftentimes because they actually did. Yukari Oshima looks
as good as ever, even though she only gets two fight sequences. We
get to see her perform an “over-the-shoulder” kick and a scorpion
kick, which is great.
The two are well matched,
even though the script foregoes the usual HK action approach of “a
sufficiently-trained woman is just as good as an equally-trained man” (which us fans can easily suspend our disbelief on) and goes for something a little more realistic: if two individuals, a
man and a woman, have about equal training and skills in the absolute
sense, the man will stay at the advantage based on his musculature
and body structure. Dick Wei did it in Angel Enforcers and he does it again here.