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Election, 2005. Directed by Johnny To. Simon Yam, Tony Leung Ka Fai, Louis Koo, Suet Lam, Eddie Cheung.

Synopsis: It's election time for Hong Kong's ruling triad. The choice has come down to the smooth, modern "manager' Lok--backed by the respected Uncle Teng--and the hot-headed Big D, who has been promised the post of chairman by the previous administration. When the electors eventually choose Lok, Big D takes it as an affront. Unfortunately for both bosses, the scepter of office has been secreted on the mainland by neutral parties. Possession of the scepter will ligitimize the power of the boss who holds it, so the race is on. Both sides dispatch agents, some whose loyalties change at a whim. Once the scepter is found, the winner consolidates his power to avoid a war with the losing side. But there is no honor among thieves...

Rumor has it that Johnnie To’s Election was cut down from a three hour running length and that it is the first installment of a trilogy. One can feel a more expansive narrative in the negative spaces of the movie and I can’t help but wonder what To might have had in mind for a longer film. The movie seems like it was made on a bet: “Can you make a triad movie without any guns?” The answer is yes, of course. Don’t be deceived by the lack of firepower, though. There’s plenty of violence in this movie.

What we have here is a study in power politics among the underworld, centered around the election of a new triad chairman. The obvious comparison is The Godfather (or The Godfather Part II, given a final scene that recalls the murder of Fredo). Like those movies, Election presents a conflict between the traditional, highly ritualized (and highly self-deceiving) ways of organized crime, and the new, more impersonal, ruthless, corporate style of crime. Beyond that, though, I don’t think the analogy holds up. The Godfather movies don’t necessarily distance themselves from the gangsters they depict. They like them just a little too much. To doesn’t like ANY of his gangsters. A closer analogue would be Kinji Fukasaku’s Battles Without Honor and Humanity films, which Election also resembles.

This is a generally somber movie, filmed in deeply shadowed spaces even during daylight hours, but in spite of that, To’s own playful cinematic anima comes to the fore. There is a long chase at the center of the movie, in which the baton that symbolizes the power of office is sought by both sides of the conflict. During this chase, the allegiances of the players change, then change again. It culminates in one of the director’s drollest set pieces, in which both combatants are interrupted by cell phone calls from their respective controllers. To loves cell phones, and this scene compares favorable with the cell phone scene in PTU. The ending of the film annihilates this (much like the ending of Running on Karma turns THAT movie into something much darker than its playful nature suggests). There is no “play” in the final sequence of the movie. It plays for keeps. To sets up some expectations with Simon Yam’s character, who is exactly the sort of charismatic criminal that might be an anti-hero in another movie. The ending obliterates this notion. This is To at his most black-hearted.

 

 

 

4/5/06