The Four (film)

The Four

Film poster
Traditional 四大名捕
Simplified 四大名捕
Mandarin Sì Dà Míng Bǔ
Cantonese Sei3 Daai6 Ming4 Bou6
Directed by Gordon Chan
Janet Chun
Produced by Gordon Chan
Abe Kwong
Screenplay by Gordon Chan
Maria Wong
Frankie Tam
Story by Woon Swee Oan
Starring Deng Chao
Liu Yifei
Collin Chou
Ronald Cheng
Anthony Wong
Music by Henry Lai
Cinematography Lai Yiu-fai
Edited by Chan Ki-hop
Release dates
  • 12 July 2012 (2012-07-12)
Running time
117 minutes
Country China
Hong Kong
Language Mandarin
Budget RMB80 million ($12.5 million)[1]

The Four is a 2012 Chinese-Hong Kong wuxia film directed by Gordon Chan and Janet Chun. It is the first film adaptation of Woon Swee Oan's novel series Si Da Ming Bu (四大名捕; The Four Great Constables), which has previously been adapted to a television series. In all adaptations and interpretations, the nicknames of the Four remained the same — Emotionless, Iron Hands, Life Snatcher and Cold Blood. They dedicated their special skills to the service of their chief, Master Zhuge, in solving crimes and apprehending powerful criminals.

The film is the first in an announced trilogy, the second instalment of which started shooting in 2012.[2] The Four II was released on December 6, 2013. The last film, The Four III, was released on August 22, 2014.

Plot

The movie is set during the reign of Emperor Huizong in the late Northern Song Dynasty. The government department known as the "Department Six" customarily has full jurisdiction over all criminal investigations in the imperial capital. Department Six is well-staffed and operates in a highly disciplined manner. Their chief, Commandant Liu, ranks the investigators by clearance rate and dangles the prospect of an operator to be named one of the "Great Four".

The story begins with the country experiencing a significant increase in circulation of counterfeit coin currency, leading to growing unrest and instability. Official investigators from the Department Six, acting on a tip-off, rush in full force to apprehend a suspect who is trying to sell a coin die stolen from the imperial mint, only to find the suspect and the evidence being taken into custody by agents of a hitherto unknown secret service, known as the Divine Constabulary, which is commissioned by the Emperor himself.

This arouses jealousy in Commandant Liu, who openly fires Cold Blood, one of his best men. Liu secretly orders Cold Blood to infiltrate the Divine Constabulary to find a way to bring down the rival agency. Liu is unaware that his own establishment has been infiltrated by double-agents dispatched by the mastermind behind the counterfeit currency.

Despite being aware of Cold Blood's true mission, the chief of the Divine Constabulary seeks out Cold Blood and welcomes him into the agency. Once inside, Cold Blood is surprised to observe that the Divine Constabulary staff live and work together more like a family than a highly formalised professional security force. Despite their small size, the Constabulary works efficiently and effectively through a few individuals with very specialised skills which are useful in solving crimes. Cold Blood finds his loyalties divided, and things are made harder as he becomes tangled in a love triangle with two girls, one from each agency.

Cast

Production

The Four features characters from a continuing series of wuxia novels by Malaysian Chinese writer Woon Swee Oan. The novels have been adapted for some television series in Hong Kong, Taiwan and China, including ATV's The Undercover Agents[2] and TVB's The Four. Gordon Chan had started shooting the film by April 2011.[3]

Release

The Four was released in China and Hong Kong on 12 July 2012.[2] In Hong Kong, the film premiered at 5th place at the weekend box office grossing HK$125,607.[4] The film grossed a total of $252,829 in Hong Kong.[5]

Reception

The Global Times stated that "Most critics lambasted heroes of The Four...for being too similar to those in Marvel Comics' X-Men." and referred to the film as "a poor imitation with Chinese characteristics of X-Men (2000), Van Helsing (2004) or Resident Evil (2002) garnished with kung fu."[6] Film Business Asia gave the film a five out of ten rating, stating that The Four "isn't exactly boring — thanks to the crowded plot and cast — but just very average, with no real tension, drama or thrills."[2]

Notes

  1. Frater, Patrick (November 5, 2011). "Arclight adds one in Four". Film Business Asia. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Elley, Derek (July 19, 2012). "The Four". Film Business Asia. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  3. Cremin, Stephan. "Four Detectives reteam". Film Business Asia. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  4. "Hong Kong Box Office, July 12-15 2012". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  5. "The Four". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  6. Zihan, Zhang (July 30, 2012). "Not so awesome foursome". Global Times. Retrieved August 28, 2012.

External links

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