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Review | Where the Wind Blows movie review: Aaron Kwok, Tony Leung play corrupt police sergeants in Philip Yung’s wildly ambitious period crime drama

  • This story of Hong Kong police corruption in the 1960s and ’70s, starring Aaron Kwok and Tony Leung as corrupt officers, is an ambitious undertaking
  • Artfully shot with sumptuous scenes, it’s a sprawling epic that sometimes loses its plot momentum, focusing on the leads’ romances rather than their crimes

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Aaron Kwok (left) and Tony Leung Chiu-wai in a still from Where the Wind Blows (category IIB; Cantonese), directed by Philip Yung Tsz-kwong, based on the true-life stories of two notoriously corrupt Royal Hong Kong Police officers.

3.5/5 stars

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Philip Yung Tsz-kwong’s Where the Wind Blows is an artistically accomplished, genre-bending epic of the sort that is rarely attempted in Hong Kong cinema.

The writer-director takes the true-life stories of two of the “Four Great Sergeants” – the most notoriously corrupt police officers in 1960s and ’70s Hong Kong – and freely turns them into tragic heroes in a fever dream of gangland bravado, star-crossed romances and wartime trauma.
The film, which marks Yung’s first feature since 2015’s acclaimed Port of Call, may appear at times to be echoing Wong Kar-wai’s aesthetics with its slow-motion shots of smoking, repeated use of poetic onscreen texts, and sights of Tony Leung Chiu-wai pining for the one who got away.

But Where the Wind Blows offers so much more of everything else – from its sweeping historical scope to its ambivalent depiction of police corruption – that it is very much its own beast. This is a period biopic stapled to a crime thriller and decorated with a healthy sprinkling of history.

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