A Hero Never Dies

1998
7| 1h38m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 30 September 1998 Released
Producted By: Milkyway Image
Country: Hong Kong
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Jack and Martin are gunmen who work for two rival kingpins. Jack and Martin have been fighting on their bosses behalf for close to a year. When a truce is made both Jack and Martin are cut loose. The two men then decide to join forces and take on the gangsters who used them.

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Director

Johnnie To

Production Companies

Milkyway Image

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A Hero Never Dies Audience Reviews

Ceticultsot Beautiful, moving film.
Brainsbell The story-telling is good with flashbacks.The film is both funny and heartbreaking. You smile in a scene and get a soulcrushing revelation in the next.
Kamila Bell This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Darin One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
zv300 I'm really surprised there are not more reviews for this very good movie, but I think the depressing content is what did it. As usual, another Asian movie has not ceased to surprise me, and positively at that. This movie starts off pretty slow and really corny, making it's actual content all the more surprising. In a nut-shell 2 opposing bodyguards of warring gangs are betrayed by their own bosses after serving them and risking their lives (and limbs) protecting them. After the Bosses make a truce, they try and forget about the old "guard" who protected them. Both bodyguards loose everything, one looses both legs and his girlfriend is killed protecting his honor, and the other is reduced to working menial jobs while taking care of his girlfriend, who also risked her life for her man and was horribly burned in the process. Very heavy stuff, and completely un-expected after seeing the goofy beginning. Both bodyguards vow revenge, which is only partially realized. The respect they had for each other was touching, as for the tenacity of their girlfriends who took the brunt of the outcome of their revenge. The performance of the crippled Bodyguard was excellent, first time I've seen the "Hero" to be physically impaired. I rank this movie right up there with the best action films, AND some of the best Drama's at the same time. I don't think people were ready for a crippled Hero, which is a shame because this movie gave some credibility to the fact that you can achieve anything you want REGARDLESS of your handicap. Most copies of this DVD are not that great in quality, so that has hurt this film also, but do yourself a favor and see this EXCELLENT movie.
Bogey Man A Hero Never Dies (1998) is a film by veteran HK film maker Johnnie To and his Milky Way Image filming company that has produced some of the darkest and grittiest of the recent HK action dramas like The Longest Nite and Expect the Unexpected, both 1998. A Hero Never Dies (1998) is another of these films and stars again the Milky Way face Lau Ching-Wan and Leon Lai Ming. They are both very great and make the little too shallow characters as interesting as possible.A ruthless gangster boss kills and abuses his friends and never thanks anyone who has helped him. Lau's character is among the ones who helped him become what he is now. Lai is Lau's friend and they both have sweet girlfriends (Fiona Leung and Yo Yo Mung) that start to take care of the two when violence erupts and their history looks dark. But no one dies, only the hope for a peaceful life and forgetting and forgiving the wrongs of the past. Lau decides to avenge his fate to the boss but all this kind of thing results is more violence, and since this is an honest and un-commercial gangster drama, violence is never shown in a glorifying, positive or entertaining light.A Hero Never Dies is written by Yau Nai-Hoi (The Longest Nite, Expect the Unexpected, Barefooted Kid (1993)) and Szeto Kam-Yuen (Nite and Unexpected, too). Unfortunately the film's problems lie in the screenplay and the characters, too. None of the male characters gets to develop too interestingly or realistically and their acts seem not to be too greatly motivated. Silence is a good thing in cinema, but what there is in the characters' minds must be expressed some way, with the tools of the art, no matter how silent the film is. Lau's and Lai's relationship is a little weird and the very long "wine glass" sequence at the beginning works surprisingly fine and kind of depicts how they respect each other but also have some disagreements, too. Mostly I find it irritating that their love for their girls seems not too warm or real and only the females are the ones that get things moving in this film. They care for their loved ones and cure them while they're almost dead but also sadly end up dead themselves very easily. But it is great to see females depicted as this strong in a HK film, but still Hero would have been much stronger a film if the emotions of the characters (for example the great idea of the damaged face of the loved one after an accident) were better written and thought about.The theme of ruthless violence living inside To's films' characters is always very strong especially in this and the great Expect the Unexpected which has one of the most depressing, unexpected and cold endings for very long time on any film, HK or other. Hero's characters kill and slaughter each other mindlessly but always pay the price, whether you're "good" or "bad". No one wins anything by using violence in these dark and honest thrillers and so the violence is depicted as a brutal and harrowing act commited by man towards another man for some selfish and weak reason. The violence at the ending of Unexpected is pretty close to Japanese Takeshi Kitano in its intensity and wordless impact.The visual look of Hero is again pretty stunning but not quite as in The Longest Nite which has completely awesome blue photography and menacingly dark settings in the middle of the bloody triad gangster war. Cinematographer Cheng Siu-Keung does great job in Hero and especially the ending in its bright red colors is again something very unique to HK cinema. The grittiness of the cities and places is very strong in these films. Also the music by Raymond Wong Ying-Wah is pretty effective and never gets too underlining or exaggeratedly "dramatic" but just makes the images more powerful and almost nearly hypnotic at places. A Hero Never Dies is a good example of what HK is capable of, but still it is not as great as they have done. The mentioned Milky Way films are more noteworthy in my opinion as well as Alfred Cheung's On the Run (1988) starring Yuen Biao and Pat Ha to name just a very few of these films. A Hero would have needed better and deeper characters as well as some gaps and incredibilities of the plot filled and changed to something more noteworthy. Still A Hero is 7/10 class and, like the others, requires much more than just one viewing.
waynehec Yup, that's right, "John Woo meets Sam Peckinpah" is what came to mind when I saw this movie. Take the brotherhood theme of John Woo movies in the 80's and mix that with Sam Peckinpah's "Wild Bunch" and you get Lau Ching Wan and Leon Lai kicking ass in "A Hero Never Dies".True to Woo's and Peckinpah's classics, the heroes in this movie are not heroes of the Dudley Do-right mold but flawed people who manage to get themselves together for one truly heroic deed.I highly recommend this movie for fans of westerns and HK triad movies. Also recommend "The Mission" and "Running Out of Time" by Johnnie To.
Hugo Freire Leon Lai teams up with Lau Chin-Wan to defeat two triad lords. This film made me remember the "old" heroic bloodshed´s - like "The Killer", "Hard Boiled" or the genesis of it all, "A Better Tomorrow". There´s still hope for Hong Kong cinema lovers... A superb movie. A true masterpiece. A fantastic mise-en-scene - stylised and romantic - from Hong Kong craftman Johnnie To. Where primitive cinema meets barroquian style and women nature becomes truly fundamental...