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I Did It My Way: Andy Lau plays an enigmatic crime lord in silly thriller

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I Did It My Way: Andy Lau plays an enigmatic crime lord in silly thriller

2/5 stars

The drug-trafficking business meets the internet’s live-stream shopping craze in this most bizarrely conceived crime thriller, which sees producer and lead actor Andy Lau Tak-wah play a drug lord so foolhardy and unreasonable that it would take his biggest fan to feel any sympathy for his character.
I Did It My Way marks the second solo directing effort of veteran cinematographer Jason Kwan Chi-yiu ( A Nail Clipper Romance), who last worked with Lau when he co-directed the 2017 crime epic Chasing the Dragon with Wong Jing.
Kwan’s film begins with an engaging first act that positions Chan Chiu-sang (Philip Keung Ho-man) as an enigmatic drug dealer nicknamed The Boss – the “founder of Asia’s dark web” – and barrister George Lam (Lau) and assassin Sau Ho ( Lam Ka-tung) as his chief accomplices.

On their case are Eddie Fong (Eddie Peng Yu-yan), police superintendent of the cybercrime investigation unit, and his superior, Chung Kam-ming (Simon Yam Tat-wah), who believe that The Boss is set to do one last drug transaction in person before moving his entire business model online.

By the time the film has raced through a thrilling series of plot twists and reached the half-hour mark, we’ve already seen Chan kill himself while in police custody, Sau reveal himself to be a conflicted undercover policeman, and Lam confirmed as The Boss himself.

Andy Lau (left) and Lam Ka-tung in a still from “I Did It My Way”.

Alas, it is all downhill from here as the narrative soon loses all semblance of reason. After Lam inexplicably decides to screw up a major deal with a South American drug dealer, a mercenary army shows up at his beachside wedding ceremony in Malaysia for a cold-blooded massacre as payback.

If the heroic participation of the Hong Kong police in the ensuing shoot-out isn’t enough to strain your suspension of disbelief, Lam’s determination to then blame the misfortune of his pregnant fiancée (Cya Liu Ya-se) entirely on the police – and, somehow, not himself – will certainly do just that.

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After being sidelined in the recent release The Goldfinger by Tony Leung Chiu-wai’s larger-than-life criminal protagonist, this is meant to be Andy Lau’s turn to revel in the opportunity to dominate. But his ambition is doused by an illogical screenplay that, through his character’s misplaced vendetta, turns the film into an unintended comedy.
Eddie Peng (left) and Lau in a still from “I Did It My Way”.

Lam Ka-tung’s performance is a highlight, even if his character’s motivation remains utterly confusing. One minute he is destroying incriminating evidence, and putting a bullet in the head of a fellow police officer to preserve his own undercover mission; the next he is alienating himself from the villain for nothing.

The less said about the depiction of the internet, the better. As the second Hong Kong film in two years to be set around a rather superficial rendering of the dark web (after Cyber Heist), I Did It My Way looks foolish whenever it tries to visualise the shenanigans happening in the digital world.
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Movie Reviews

Nishaanchi 2 Movie Review: Not perfect, but hard to look away

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Nishaanchi 2 Movie Review: Not perfect, but hard to look away

Story: Babloo returns from jail to find that Dabloo and Rinki are in love and planning to marry. He tries to turn his life around, but Ambika Prasad pulls him back in with a dangerous demand—to kill the party president.Review: In ‘Nishaanchi 2,’ Anurag Kashyap takes a small detour from his usual grit and turns his attention to the push-and-pull between relationships and power. The film still circles around redemption and revenge, but the tone is gentler for a Kashyap outing. It checks most of the boxes of an engaging watch and holds your attention, yet it never quite lifts off. The climax, especially, lands with a thud—it starts with promise and then loses steam, almost as if it could have been placed anywhere in the film without changing much. At nearly two and a half hours, the story spends a long stretch building toward this moment, only for it to feel oddly muted.The narrative picks up with Rinki (Vedika Pinto) trying to push her dancing talent forward, hopping from one audition to the next, while Dabloo (Aaishvary Thackeray) hunts for steady work to keep the household afloat after Babloo’s imprisonment. Rinki eventually grabs a shot at featuring in a music video. Around the same time, Babloo steps out of jail after a decade and immediately begins asking questions about Rinki. Dabloo stalls, unsure how to tell him about her relationship and her knowledge of the man behind their father’s death. Meanwhile, Ambika Prasad (Kumud Mishra) has climbed his way up the political ladder and now sits comfortably as a minister. When a notorious gangster is killed in a Noida encounter linked to Prasad, his party prepares to offer him up as the fall guy. Cornered, Prasad decides to track down Babloo for his sharpshooting skills—unaware that this move will completely shift the ground beneath him.‘Nishaanchi 2’ neatly ties up most of the loose threads from the first film and moves the action from Kanpur to Lucknow. The dialogue, the beat of the language, and the overall rhythm feel rooted in both cities, lending the film a grounded texture. This time, the story leans harder into the emotional knots between the brothers and their bond with Rinki. At heart, it’s still a commercial entertainer, and Kashyap clearly nods to the Bollywood revenge sagas of the ’70s and ’80s in his own peculiar way. Some of it clicks; some of it doesn’t. But there’s no denying that the eccentric characters keep the film alive. The second half also digs deeper into Babloo’s arc, which plays out well on screen. Yet the climax—Babloo discovering the truth about his father’s death and Manjari poisoning Ambika’s security team—feels strangely abrupt and slightly off-key.Aaishvary Thackeray is easily the revelation here. It’s hard to believe this is his debut—the control in his performance and his ability to switch between Dabloo and Babloo, two completely opposite personalities, is genuinely impressive. His body language, his dialect, his small mannerisms—he owns all of it. Vedika Pinto also finds stronger footing this time, benefiting from more screen time and delivering with ease. Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, as the shady cop Kamal Ajeeb, steals every scene he walks into, while Kumud Mishra’s Ambika Prasad is surprisingly underused. Monica Panwar brings a sharp confidence to Manjari. And yes, by the end, the film finally answers the lingering question—who exactly is Nishaanchi?In the end, ‘Nishaanchi 2’ leaves you with a nagging thought—did this story really need a second chapter? Viewed in hindsight, the two films could easily have been trimmed, tightened, and shaped into one sharper, more impactful narrative. There’s a good film buried in here, but it often feels stretched when it should have been sprinting. Hardcore Kashyap fans will still find plenty to chew on—the familiar flavours, the rough edges, the bursts of energy—but for the rest, this will settle somewhere in the middle of his filmography, neither a misfire nor a standout, just a film that passes by without leaving a mark.

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Movie Reviews

Movie Review | Bugonia

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Movie Review | Bugonia

a scary face Bugonia (Photo – Focus Features)

Part body horror, science fiction, and a fractured mirror reflecting our troubled times, Bugonia, directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, is a big-screen, kick-in-the-pants kind of movie.

House of Bugonia
Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos – 2025
Reviewed by Garrett Rowlan

Starring Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons, the film plays out like a chamber piece after Plemons’s character, the unstable Teddy, kidnaps Stone’s character, the “pure corporate evil” (his words), Michelle Fuller, with the reluctant help of Teddy’s cousin Donnie, played by newcomer Aidan Delois.

The reason for the kidnapping is best described as idiosyncratic.

After being subjected to a brutal ordeal—she’s shown in the opening minutes undergoing extensive martial arts training—Michelle is confined to a basement, where she and Teddy engage in a tense game of cat-and-mouse. The direction these exchanges take was not what I expected.

The cast is excellent. Of Emma Stone, I can only quote Celluloid Heroes by The Kinks: “If you cover him with garbage, George Sanders would still have style.” Well, Stone’s Michelle Fuller isn’t covered in garbage, but she is drenched in blood, some of it her own, shot with electricity, beaten, tackled, shorn, and chained. And yet, there’s that voice, those green eyes, and the way she’s photographed in corporate power attire at the start: from the bottom of the frame, she looks ten feet tall, every bit the star.

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I first saw Jesse Plemons shooting a kid in cold blood on Breaking Bad, and with his recessed eyes and jutting chin, he retains that ruthlessness with a hint of madness. He’s like an auto wreck you can’t look away from. Aidan Delois, though his lines grow sparser as the movie progresses, does a remarkable job of acting with his eyes. They seem to know what his confused mind doesn’t.

There’s cruelty in Bugonia, to be sure, but it’s nothing like the impaling of a black cat I recall from Lanthimos’s otherwise-excellent Dogtooth. In fact, given the film’s underlying themes of allegiances, the shocking scenes are stomach-turning but motivated.

I liked Poor Things, Lanthimos’s last film, but Bugonia is even better.

> Playing at Regency Academy Cinemas, Regal Paseo, IPIC Theaters, Regal Edwards Alhambra Renaissance, Landmark Pasadena Playhouse, AMC Atlantic Times Square 14, AMC Santa Anita 16, Regal UA La Canada, AMC Laemmle Glendale, and LOOK Dine-In Cinemas Monrovia.

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Nouvelle Vague

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Nouvelle Vague

Netflix delivers a black-and-white biopic of famed French New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard and the making of his first feature film, Breathless. The movie delivers a compelling look at the filmmaking process. But harsh (if limited) language, suggestive moments, some spiritual fumbling and constant smoking could make this a tricky film to navigate.

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