Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA killer wears women's clothing and stalks others that wear fish-net stockings.A killer wears women's clothing and stalks others that wear fish-net stockings.A killer wears women's clothing and stalks others that wear fish-net stockings.
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- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale
Recensioni in evidenza
He Lives By Night is what you get if you mix a giallo movie with a Hong Kong comedy, the film combining stylish, mean spirited murder scenes (the killer using a retractable craft knife before strangling his victims) with really daft humour of the kind that often leaves me baffled. The result is a strange concoction, but one that is certainly never boring.
The film opens with a murder set-piece that immediately draws comparison with Argento: a women walking home alone at night encounters the maniac while navigating her way through washing lines hung with coloured sheets. The killer cuts the sheets, the woman running wildly amidst the fabric, her terrified face framed by one of the slashes (shades of Tenebre). Suffering several wounds, the lady crawls free of the sheets, but is grabbed by the maniac, who uses the victim's white fishnet stockings to strangle her.
The film then enters comedy mode as we are introduced to policeman Lousy Wong (an early role for Simon Yam), his overweight buffoon of a boss, Dragon (Kent Cheng), and tomboy radio DJ Sissy (Sylvia Chang), who Dragon takes an immediate liking to. Dragon's attraction to Sissy provides much of the film's goofy humour. But Dragon isn't the only man interested in the disc jockey: a nut-job obsessed with Sissy keeps calling the radio station, and makes violent threats when his advances are rebuffed. He, it is quickly revealed, is a red herring, as it is not long before the real killer is shown to be a transvestite (inspired by De Palma's Dressed to Kill?), who lost his marbles when he caught his wife (wearing white stockings) in bed with another man (dressed as a woman). Now, his murderous rage is triggered whenever he sees a woman wearing white silk stockings.
There's a little more wacky comedy, when Dragon takes Lousy and Sissy to a restaurant for a slap up feed, but the film returns to horror after the nutter - a shoe's salesman by day - serves two women, one of whom is wearing stockings. He breaks into their home, and attacks one of the women while her friend is taking a bath, using his trusty knife/strangulation modus operandi. He doesn't notice the other lady hiding behind the shower curtain, but she sees him, wrongly identifying him to the police as a woman. Fortunately for Dragon and Lousy, Sissy is something of a sleuth herself, and works out that the killer is a man in drag. She agrees to act as bait for the sicko, appearing on TV in stockings, luring the murderer to her radio station.
The final act is a lot of fun, the DJ having to keep the killer at bay while the police wrongly pursue the red herring. The action gets more and more insane, Sissy defending herself with a samurai sword, electrocuting the maniac, and finally defeating her attacker when he tries to crush her with a drinks dispensing machine (the product placement for 7-Up is hardly subtle).
6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for Eric Tsang in punk/new wave make-up, and for two inexplicably strange comedic scenes: Dragon tries to woo Sissy in his apartment by wearing glittery eyeshadow and PVC trousers (always a winner with the ladies), and Sissy and Dragon doing a silly dance in dungarees. Oh, and be sure to watch to the very end of the credits for a surprise.
The film opens with a murder set-piece that immediately draws comparison with Argento: a women walking home alone at night encounters the maniac while navigating her way through washing lines hung with coloured sheets. The killer cuts the sheets, the woman running wildly amidst the fabric, her terrified face framed by one of the slashes (shades of Tenebre). Suffering several wounds, the lady crawls free of the sheets, but is grabbed by the maniac, who uses the victim's white fishnet stockings to strangle her.
The film then enters comedy mode as we are introduced to policeman Lousy Wong (an early role for Simon Yam), his overweight buffoon of a boss, Dragon (Kent Cheng), and tomboy radio DJ Sissy (Sylvia Chang), who Dragon takes an immediate liking to. Dragon's attraction to Sissy provides much of the film's goofy humour. But Dragon isn't the only man interested in the disc jockey: a nut-job obsessed with Sissy keeps calling the radio station, and makes violent threats when his advances are rebuffed. He, it is quickly revealed, is a red herring, as it is not long before the real killer is shown to be a transvestite (inspired by De Palma's Dressed to Kill?), who lost his marbles when he caught his wife (wearing white stockings) in bed with another man (dressed as a woman). Now, his murderous rage is triggered whenever he sees a woman wearing white silk stockings.
There's a little more wacky comedy, when Dragon takes Lousy and Sissy to a restaurant for a slap up feed, but the film returns to horror after the nutter - a shoe's salesman by day - serves two women, one of whom is wearing stockings. He breaks into their home, and attacks one of the women while her friend is taking a bath, using his trusty knife/strangulation modus operandi. He doesn't notice the other lady hiding behind the shower curtain, but she sees him, wrongly identifying him to the police as a woman. Fortunately for Dragon and Lousy, Sissy is something of a sleuth herself, and works out that the killer is a man in drag. She agrees to act as bait for the sicko, appearing on TV in stockings, luring the murderer to her radio station.
The final act is a lot of fun, the DJ having to keep the killer at bay while the police wrongly pursue the red herring. The action gets more and more insane, Sissy defending herself with a samurai sword, electrocuting the maniac, and finally defeating her attacker when he tries to crush her with a drinks dispensing machine (the product placement for 7-Up is hardly subtle).
6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for Eric Tsang in punk/new wave make-up, and for two inexplicably strange comedic scenes: Dragon tries to woo Sissy in his apartment by wearing glittery eyeshadow and PVC trousers (always a winner with the ladies), and Sissy and Dragon doing a silly dance in dungarees. Oh, and be sure to watch to the very end of the credits for a surprise.
This is a horror comedy from Hong Kong, where a serial killer stalks women who wears white silk stockings.
The main plot is the psychopathic killer, who is obsessed with women who wear white silk stalkings because his adulterous wife wore white silk stalkings. This balances out well with the subplot of radio DJ Sissy (Sylvia Chang) who reports the crimes on her station while police detective Dragon (Kent Chang) tries to woo her. The two make a great team and had great on-screen chemistry. Even the character of Lousy Wong (Simon Yam) made a good addition to the team. All three of them serves up some good old-fashion comedy, Hong Kong cinema-style, while not swaying too much away from the main serial killer plot.
When the psychopath stalks up his victims, the scenes were intense and does creep you out and the purpose behind his motive is a great suspense builder. There are some exciting cat and mouse chase scenes and a classic detective-style music score. Great acting and, overall, a fun film.
Grade B+
The main plot is the psychopathic killer, who is obsessed with women who wear white silk stalkings because his adulterous wife wore white silk stalkings. This balances out well with the subplot of radio DJ Sissy (Sylvia Chang) who reports the crimes on her station while police detective Dragon (Kent Chang) tries to woo her. The two make a great team and had great on-screen chemistry. Even the character of Lousy Wong (Simon Yam) made a good addition to the team. All three of them serves up some good old-fashion comedy, Hong Kong cinema-style, while not swaying too much away from the main serial killer plot.
When the psychopath stalks up his victims, the scenes were intense and does creep you out and the purpose behind his motive is a great suspense builder. There are some exciting cat and mouse chase scenes and a classic detective-style music score. Great acting and, overall, a fun film.
Grade B+
He Lives by Night is a little known, yet excellent, Hong Kong slasher flick! Unfortunately I don't have a lot to compare it to having seen less than half a dozen of this sort of film; but as a film in its own right; this is an excellent mix of horror, romance and comedy! Director Po-Chih Leong takes a basic idea for a plot and really runs with it; managing to inject a cheesy love story and a boatload of twisted humour into the tale without it seeming forced or out of place. The film takes place in an urban metropolis and focuses on a killer that stalks and kills female victims; the only similarity between the murders being the fact that they were all committed with a similar weapon; that being the victims' own white stockings! Meanwhile, a young 'tomboy' radio DJ known as Sissy is covering the murders while getting attention from the town's fat police chief. It later transpires that the female killer is actually a man in drag and the two central plot lines combine when the radio DJ is stalked by the psychopathic killer.
The cinematography in this film is great and despite the plot line, He Lives by Night is very beautiful. Hong Kong's cinema is generally known for being bloody and brutal; but this film isn't. There's a surprising lack of blood and even the murder scenes are tame compared to those seen in later films such as The Untold Story. They are very well done, however, and one that takes place in a bathroom is very well shot. There's not a great deal of sex and sleaze either - and this is mostly made up for by the comedy. That's not a big problem, however. The comedy is very funny and the storyline itself is deliciously sick and twisted enough to account for a lack of visceral horror. The idea of a transvestite killer has been used many times before in horror films; but it's a bit different here as the fact that the killer is a transvestite is never really dwelt on and provides the story with little more than a bizarre twist. Overall, He Lives by Night is a stylishly shot and very interesting slice of Hong Kong horror and comes highly recommended to fans of this stuff.
The cinematography in this film is great and despite the plot line, He Lives by Night is very beautiful. Hong Kong's cinema is generally known for being bloody and brutal; but this film isn't. There's a surprising lack of blood and even the murder scenes are tame compared to those seen in later films such as The Untold Story. They are very well done, however, and one that takes place in a bathroom is very well shot. There's not a great deal of sex and sleaze either - and this is mostly made up for by the comedy. That's not a big problem, however. The comedy is very funny and the storyline itself is deliciously sick and twisted enough to account for a lack of visceral horror. The idea of a transvestite killer has been used many times before in horror films; but it's a bit different here as the fact that the killer is a transvestite is never really dwelt on and provides the story with little more than a bizarre twist. Overall, He Lives by Night is a stylishly shot and very interesting slice of Hong Kong horror and comes highly recommended to fans of this stuff.
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of He Lives By Night; here's the breakdown of my ratings:
Story: 1.25 Direction: 1.50 Pace: 1.25 Acting: 1.50 Enjoyment: 1.50
TOTAL: 7 out of 10.00
He Lives By Night is a superb Dark Thriller with comedic elements. It tells the story of Sissy, a radio DJ and sometimes reporter. She stumbles into the ongoing investigation of strangled females in the city. The only clue the police possess is the victims' white stockings, which asphyxiated them. As the nights in Hong Kong pass, more women expire as they fall foul of the stocking strangler. It doesn't take long before Sissy finds herself on the mysterious throttler's hit list. Will she solve the secret of the crime before the killer chokes the last breath from her body?
Writer Kin Lo adds to this thriller a dark and twisted modus vivendi for the killer - well, back in the early 80s, some people still considered it deviant for a man to dress as a woman, and it's still frowned upon in some cultures and religions. But if you ignore the idea that being a transvestite meant you were likely to be an aberrant psychopath, you'll get along fine with the concept that the transvestite could be your regular type of psycho: And the women's clothes didn't turn them into Los Locos. Lo also scatters in a sprinkling of humour. Though I wouldn't say He Lives By Night is a comedy, it certainly has its funnier moments. Like the concept of the oddball romance of rotund police chief Dragon and the tomboy reporter and radio DJ Sissy. These two are seriously mismatched, and it's Dragon's persistence and actions to woo and win Sissy that possesses the most humour. Many of the comedic scenes are smile producers; there are only a few that may tickle you enough to make you laugh out loud.
What I enjoyed most about this production was Po-Chih Leong's direction. He has an excellent eye for composition, and the first murder displays this thoroughly. A woman walks home alone, and we watch her as she approaches a few lines of pegged-out washing. But this isn't your usual washing line of shirts, trousers, and various smalls. Leong has, in rotation, arranged a profusion of red and yellow sheets on the washing lines. The colours scream a warning of danger and the viewers know something nasty is about to happen. He plays the pace and the camera angles flawlessly to create a sense of tension, dread, and fear. And when the victim's inevitable murder is complete, you will have witnessed a beautifully designed and captured killing. Leong, also knows that less is more. Not every scene is as stylised, and that's a great thing because it stops the audience from becoming complacent with the cinematography. He also possesses the skill to add visual comedic elements. Such as the segment where Sissy initially and actually stumbles across the case. Leong gives the audience some humourous shadows, which are a homage and a parody of Alfred Hitchcock's famous side profile. I particularly liked the scene when Sissy steps out of the shower room. You see her posing sexily in the bathroom doorway. But things aren't as they appear. The sensual image is merely a novelty swinging door. It was easy to imagine Leong seeing the swing door in a shop and thinking - I could use that.
The cast is first-rate, and each gives a more than credible and enjoyable performance. I particularly like Kent Cheng as Dragon. He owns a presence made for the screen. You feel confident that when he's on-screen that all will be well. Add to this the chemistry he has with Sylvia Chang, who plays his reluctant love interest, Sissy, and you have a charming and delightfully bizarre coupling that can't fail to entertain.
I am amazed at how few people have watched He Lives By Night. I would easily recommend it to all movie lovers. It's a dark thriller that is sometimes funny and always expertly filmed, thanks to the writer, director, cast and crew. So if you get the chance to watch the movie, do yourself a favour, and don't miss the opportunity.
Take Off those white fishnets because you're not going out tonight. No, you're going to check out my Killer Thriller Chillers and The Game Is Afoot lists to see where I ranked He Lives By Night.
Take Care & Stay Well.
Story: 1.25 Direction: 1.50 Pace: 1.25 Acting: 1.50 Enjoyment: 1.50
TOTAL: 7 out of 10.00
He Lives By Night is a superb Dark Thriller with comedic elements. It tells the story of Sissy, a radio DJ and sometimes reporter. She stumbles into the ongoing investigation of strangled females in the city. The only clue the police possess is the victims' white stockings, which asphyxiated them. As the nights in Hong Kong pass, more women expire as they fall foul of the stocking strangler. It doesn't take long before Sissy finds herself on the mysterious throttler's hit list. Will she solve the secret of the crime before the killer chokes the last breath from her body?
Writer Kin Lo adds to this thriller a dark and twisted modus vivendi for the killer - well, back in the early 80s, some people still considered it deviant for a man to dress as a woman, and it's still frowned upon in some cultures and religions. But if you ignore the idea that being a transvestite meant you were likely to be an aberrant psychopath, you'll get along fine with the concept that the transvestite could be your regular type of psycho: And the women's clothes didn't turn them into Los Locos. Lo also scatters in a sprinkling of humour. Though I wouldn't say He Lives By Night is a comedy, it certainly has its funnier moments. Like the concept of the oddball romance of rotund police chief Dragon and the tomboy reporter and radio DJ Sissy. These two are seriously mismatched, and it's Dragon's persistence and actions to woo and win Sissy that possesses the most humour. Many of the comedic scenes are smile producers; there are only a few that may tickle you enough to make you laugh out loud.
What I enjoyed most about this production was Po-Chih Leong's direction. He has an excellent eye for composition, and the first murder displays this thoroughly. A woman walks home alone, and we watch her as she approaches a few lines of pegged-out washing. But this isn't your usual washing line of shirts, trousers, and various smalls. Leong has, in rotation, arranged a profusion of red and yellow sheets on the washing lines. The colours scream a warning of danger and the viewers know something nasty is about to happen. He plays the pace and the camera angles flawlessly to create a sense of tension, dread, and fear. And when the victim's inevitable murder is complete, you will have witnessed a beautifully designed and captured killing. Leong, also knows that less is more. Not every scene is as stylised, and that's a great thing because it stops the audience from becoming complacent with the cinematography. He also possesses the skill to add visual comedic elements. Such as the segment where Sissy initially and actually stumbles across the case. Leong gives the audience some humourous shadows, which are a homage and a parody of Alfred Hitchcock's famous side profile. I particularly liked the scene when Sissy steps out of the shower room. You see her posing sexily in the bathroom doorway. But things aren't as they appear. The sensual image is merely a novelty swinging door. It was easy to imagine Leong seeing the swing door in a shop and thinking - I could use that.
The cast is first-rate, and each gives a more than credible and enjoyable performance. I particularly like Kent Cheng as Dragon. He owns a presence made for the screen. You feel confident that when he's on-screen that all will be well. Add to this the chemistry he has with Sylvia Chang, who plays his reluctant love interest, Sissy, and you have a charming and delightfully bizarre coupling that can't fail to entertain.
I am amazed at how few people have watched He Lives By Night. I would easily recommend it to all movie lovers. It's a dark thriller that is sometimes funny and always expertly filmed, thanks to the writer, director, cast and crew. So if you get the chance to watch the movie, do yourself a favour, and don't miss the opportunity.
Take Off those white fishnets because you're not going out tonight. No, you're going to check out my Killer Thriller Chillers and The Game Is Afoot lists to see where I ranked He Lives By Night.
Take Care & Stay Well.
This is a great fun slasher comedy. Unlike 'Scream' the comedy is not dependent upon knowledge of modern horror films but effectively makes its own humour. The killings remain horrific despite the comedy, although the film is more serious at the start, more comedic at the end and there is a great scene in the middle where we successfully get both because the victim and her girlfriend are trying to scare each other as the killer prowls about.
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