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God of Gamblers

Hong Kong filmmaker Wong Jing is one of those film industry enigmas, a man who has been involved in making some decidedly unappealing and just plain bad films. Yet somehow, he has made a great deal of money over the years, and people in Hong Kong continue to go see his films, and he is still often able to gather together extremely strong casts, even if the final results have fallen short of expectation. Surely there must be a reason why this man is still able to yield so much clout in Hong Kong, and perhaps that is because on occasion, he is able to hit upon something which truly stands out from the crowd, that captures the imagination and spawns a variety of imitators, even if Wong is himself responsible for most of them. Is God of Gamblers one of these stand-outs?

Where does Chow Yun Fat get off being so darn cool?

Ko Chun (Chow Yun Fat) is the mysterious and infamous God of Gamblers. Incredibly cool and self-assured, Ko Chun possesses an unexplainable and miraculous ability to always win at gambling whether it be cards, betting on horses, Mah-jong, dice, he can never lose. With his impressive abilities, and the fact that few know his identity and appearance, he has amassed a considerable fortune, and lives a privileged but reclusive lifestyle with his best friend and assistant Yee and his girlfriend Janet, and is also a sucker for expensive chocolates. We are given a display of his skills when he is challenged in Japan by a Mr. Wang, whose best efforts (which included using the dice rolling skills of Michiko Nishiwaki who did something similar in My Lucky Stars) are no match for the God of Gamblers. The truth is Mr. Wang knew he would lose and merely wished an audience with Ko Chun so that he might offer him a million US dollars to challenge the “Singapore King” Chan Kam Sing. Chan Kam Sing is notorious and is wanted by the law enforcers of numerous countries, and so must stay in international waters in order to escape arrest. Mr. Wang wants revenge against Chan, who cheated against his father three years previously, and in his shame Wang’s father had killed himself. Due to the friendship between his and Chan’s underground gambling clubs he cannot shoot him, and so instead requests that Ko Chun gamble on his behalf in two months time and beat him. Ko Chun agrees, and Chan assigns him a bodyguard in the form of the imposing Dragon (Charles Heung) who gives him a card and tells him to call any time he is needed.

See?

The near complete polar opposite to the mighty God of Gamblers is Knife (Andy Lau), a small-time hustler who can never get a break, but keeps on trying along with his diminutive sidekick Crawl and his long-suffering girlfriend Jane (Joey Wong, City Hunter). After an encounter with a South-Asian man and his dogs on an alleged ‘private road’, Knife sets a trap for the man on the road which would cause him to fall down an embankment. Meanwhile, Ko Chun gambles with another wealthy man, winning nine million dollars from him and causing him so small amount of embarrassment. After he leaves, a group of thugs are sent to get the money back and he is accosted on a train by the men who had not counted on Dragon being there, who beats the crap out of the lot of them and allows Ko Chun to escape from the train. By pure coincidence, the railway line runs above the road on which Knife set his trap, and in the darkness of night the God of Gamblers falls victim to it, tumbling down the embankment and hitting his head on a rock. Hearing that the trap worked, Knife and co. run to gloat at their victim, only to find it’s the wrong man. Not recognising Ko Chun because of his reclusive nature, they take the unconscious man to Knife’s granny so that she can attend to him. Ko Chun wakes in the middle of the night and frightens the whole household, but something isn’t right, his fall and blows to the head have given him amnesia and his intelligence has been reduced to that of a child. Knife and the others begrudgingly agree to look after him, nicknaming him ‘Chocolate’ because of his continuing love of the expensive chocolate he would frequently eat as the God of Gamblers. Purely by accident, when trying to rip-off a local gambling den owner they discover Chocolate’s inexplicable gambling skills (seemingly left untouched by his accident) and Knife starts taking him around various gambling dens to start making them money. However, Ko Chun’s real life has not gone away - the gambling challenge with Chan Kam Sing draws closer and both Dragon and Yee are looking for him. Somebody, though, has another agenda altogether that puts Ko Chun’s very life in danger unless he can somehow recover from his injury.

That blow to head sent him in the wrong direction, that's not Joey Wong!

As I have suggested in my reviews of Naked Killer and Naked Weapon, both of which were penned by Wong Jing, I don’t have very much faith in his ability as a writer. Indeed, he made City Hunter with Jackie Chan and they fell out numerous times over the content of the film, Chan was never very pleased with the result, that there was far too much silly, goofy humour in it. Yes, a film that was too silly for Jackie Chan! Anyway, once you get past the introductory part of this film and into the real meat the of the film – Ko Chun’s transformation into the child-like ‘Chocolate’ and the things he gets up to with Knife and his friends which at times resembles a series of comedy set-pieces, its gets very, very silly. The idea that the ultra-cool God of Gamblers could become an unpredictable idiot man-child with a near-obsessive taste for chocolate, and played almost entirely for laughs, can be hard to swallow for some. Adding to the silliness is some of the young cast, particularly Andy Lau and his crew. Lets say that perhaps Andy was still ‘perfecting his craft’ at this point, as he’s rather over the top and somewhat forced in his delivery, made more obvious by the very silly nature of the script. Joey Wong is a very pretty actress, but doesn’t get to do much more than the usual – yelling at Lau and looking peeved when his stupid schemes go awry. Perhaps they actually benefit from the silly script however, because in the more serious moments they do struggle somewhat, though that’s partly due to the script as it deals with the comedy much, much better than it does the serious stuff which often comes off a little unconvincing.

'Hey, anybody else find themselves taking guns and just sucking on them for a while? Oh..... that's just me then huh?'

In ordinary circumstances, this film could be doomed to mediocrity like numerous other Wong Jing productions except here we witness the Herculean effort of one man – Chow Yun Fat. There are few actors who can come close to this man’s level of professionalism, depth of talent, and ability to convince. As the suave, almost Sean Connery Bond-like God of Gamblers, Yun Fat looks like he was born to play the role, impossibly cool with his hair slicked back, and the only thing gleaming brighter than his eyes being his smile. He just looked the part so perfectly, had such a great handle on the character, he has you believing everything he did. Then, he hits his head and the damage causes all that cool, self-assurance, and intelligence to fall away, leaving an erratic child-like shell of his former self. He sits bemused like he doesn’t truly understand what’s going on, his hair is now a dull side-part, he sulks when he can’t have his favourite chocolate, and can’t contain his excitement when he gets a winning hand of cards, yelling excitedly. Once again its totally convincing. Chow Yun Fat works wonders and is an absolute joy as ‘Chocolate’, his timing is perfect, his mannerisms even when he’s not directly involved in a scene are superb, and he can even tug the heartstrings in ways that the script could not possibly have achieved on its own. His commanding screen presence is undeniable and the depth of acting he displays is far better than Wong Jing ever deserved, just watch the scene where he is playing ‘Chocolate’ but is attempting to emulate the God of Gamblers, just brilliant. Other members of the cast play their parts too, Andy Lau plays off against Yun Fat surprisingly well, Baau Hon Lam is effectively evil as Chan Kam Sing, and Ng Man Tat makes a great turn as Loanshark Shing. Charles Hung is also very impressive as Dragon, showing some sharp kicks and looking great in some gunplay sequences in the few action scenes the film allows, which themselves are exciting and extremely violent. The gambling scenes are great too, surprisingly tense and well-shot, and showing a great amount of originality when they are used in the climax of the film, rather than just having another violent shoot-out. Not that I have anything against violent shoot outs, mind you.

No comment......

A rarity then, a genuinely good movie from Wong Jing boasting some good action scenes and good-natured anarchic comedy which benefits immensely from having the incomparable talents of Chow Yun Fat. God of Gamblers launched an entire sub-genre of gambling movies and its easy to see why when viewing this greatly entertaining and engaging piece from the golden age of Hong Kong cinema, and yet another highlight in Chow Yun Fat’s impressive career.