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Review | Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In movie review – Kowloon Walled City reimagined in Soi Cheang martial arts spectacle
- Raymond Lam plays an illegal migrant from China to Hong Kong, who crosses one gangster and befriends others as he finds a second home in the Kowloon Walled City
- An exhilarating display of bone-crunching violence, Soi Cheang’s film recreates the lawless walled-city enclave to memorable effect. Yet narratively it is weak
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3/5 stars
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Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In is a mega-budget martial arts spectacle that emphatically delivers on its two main promises: an exhilarating display of bone-crunching violence and an immersive recreation of the sights and sounds of the Kowloon Walled City, the fabled slum area in Hong Kong that was demolished in 1993.
Soi Cheang Pou-soi’s 1980s-set film is one that he is perfectly equipped to make at this point of his highly versatile career.
It blends the dark, primal edge of his early films (Dog Bite Dog and Shamo) and the scale of the well-funded Hong Kong-China co-production model with which he got acquainted making the Monkey King trilogy. The result is a stylish action showcase – one that’s reminiscent of his SPL 2: A Time of Consequences – and has a faint echo of the social zeitgeist he alluded to in Limbo and Mad Fate.
Leading the all-male ensemble cast is the former TV actor Raymond Lam Fung, who made a refreshing impression in the 2022 thriller Detective vs Sleuths but really comes into his own here as Chan Lok-kwun, a Chinese man who has just illegally smuggled himself into Hong Kong in search of a better life.
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The thrilling opening of Twilight of the Warriors follows Chan as he takes part in a brutal underground fight; robs the gang boss responsible, Mr. Big (Sammo Hung Kam-bo), who has scammed him out of his earnings; makes his escape in a marvellously staged fight scene on a double-decker bus moving along Nathan Road, Kowloon; and stumbles into the rabbit hole that is the Kowloon Walled City.
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