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The Longest Summer (1999)

Five middle-aged ex-soldiers ditched when the British garrison left town, their identity and allegiances murky, set about re-entering the workforce in a rapidly changing Hong Kong. Set against the lead-up to the big 1997 event, the group fall into a bank heist with the help of triad kid Ga Suen (Sam Lee). This plot becomes a shell to follow elder brother Ga Yin (Tony Ho); the film's principal character. The Longest Summer examines how his direction is lost, how he comes to question himself and why he actually resorts to joining Hong Kong's underside. But from the startling first scenes, you know Chan's telling more than one story here.

An immense amount of ground is covered during the film's two hours. The camera focuses straight on Hong Kong people's feelings as the colony changed hands - from schoolgirls' comments on mainlanders to the changing ideals of the young and old. The atmosphere of the raindrenched handover is captured with remarkable clarity and with the spirit of that period intact. As the ultimate "handover movie", there's a huge amount of the SAR covered in this film. Not just the backdrops (many skilfully staged and shot in mid-'97) but also the rare (at this depth) celluloid insight into Hong Kong people. Even the triad-kids scene works wonders. The actors in The Longest Summer are nearly all newcomers again, and that means you can visualise them as ordinary Hongkongers. Known actors with the baggage of previous roles would have killed it for me. And two of the five leads are ex-servicemen in reality. Fruit Chan's picked new actors to keep an eye out for, particularly Jo Kuk as gangster's girl Jane, if they choose to stick with acting at all.

Credits:

Written & directed by Fruit Chan
Producer: Daniel Yu
Executive producer: Andy Lau
Cinematographer: Lam Wah-chuen
Art director: Yeung Sau-shing
Music: Lam Wah-chuen & Kenneth Bi
Starring Tony Ho, Sam Lee, Jo Kuk, Gary Lai Chi-ho, Pang Yik-wai, Chan Sang, Yeung Yiu-wa, Bobby Lam, Wilson Ng, Robby Cheung and Jessica Lee

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