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Bullet in the Head
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Directed by John Woo.
Following up on his 1989 masterpiece The Killer, superstar action director John Woo directs this emotionally wrenching look at three friends waylaid in war-torn Vietnam. Set in 1967, when clashes between leftists protesting British rule and the police were tearing the colony apart, the film opens with Frank (Jacky Cheung Hok-yau) offering the deed to his parents' home as collateral to a loan shark, so that he can pay for his buddy Ben's (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai) wedding party. Unfortunately, Frank is ambushed by a thug named Ringo and his associates who make off with the money. Ben and Frank vow revenge and end up accidentally killing the guy. Wanted by both the law and the triads, Frank, Ben, and their pal Paul (Waise Lee Chi-hung) head for Vietnam with a case of fake Rolexes and dreams of making a quick buck. Immediately upon arrival, those dreams are dashed -- their wares are blown up in a tin-can military coup, they are almost shot by the South Vietnamese army, and their passports are seized. Though tempted to throw in the towel, Frank and Ben are convinced by Paul into joining forces with shady hit man named Luke (Simon Yam Tat-wah) to shake down club owner Leong (Lam Chung). The scheme goes horribly wrong, ending with the death of a beautiful drug-addled singer named Sally (Yolinda Yan Chi-sin) and our three heroes accused of being CIA agents in a North Vietnamese POW camp. Later, though, Frank saves Paul's live and get injured in the process, Paul can only think of financial gain and saving his own neck. He shoots Frank in the head when he fears his friend's cries of agony will tip off the Vietcong. Unfortunately, the bullet doesn't kill Frank, leaving him brain damaged, drug-addled, and in chronic pain. After Ben learns of Frank's condition, he confronts Paul who has since returned to Hong Kong to become a prominent businessman. John Woo was originally planning to make this film under the name A Better Tomorrow 3 until Tsui Hark took the franchise away from him, fashioning his own version. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
An exhausting and harrowing study of loyalty, friendship, and greed in the darkest depths of the human soul, Bullet in the Head found Hong Kong action director John Woo helming one of his most personal efforts to date when the film was released in 1990. Inspired by the horrors of the Tiananmen Square massacre, Woo has crafted an almost overwhelmingly violent anti-war film, which also happens to be one of his strongest in regards to his common subjects of brotherhood and betrayal. As three young men who escape Hong Kong in order to make a profit in the chaos of war, Tony Leung, Jacky Cheung, and Waise Lee are all convincingly effective as a trio of recklessly naïve troublemakers forced into unimaginable situations in the black abyss of Vietnam. Their friendship put to the test when greed comes into play, their decisions and reactions offer a much needed dramatic backbone for a film filled with such nonstop graphic violence. Though Woo would later return to the war field (and explore many of the same themes) with the clichéd Windtalkers, that film comes nowhere near to his work here. With images that are just impossible to shake from memory for days after viewing it, Woo's film has drawn frequent comparisons to such American efforts as The Deer Hunter (1978) and Apocalypse Now (1979); and though Bullet in the Head may not be quite as epic in scope, it is no less emotionally devastating in terms of presenting the brutality of war. Released in various truncated forms, viewers are best advised to seek out the definitive 136-minute version in order to experience the film's intended emotional impact. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
 



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