Dangerous Encounters: 1st Kind   RE-2010 

Notorious raised middle finger of the Hong Kong New Wave, about three stupid young men who accidentally run over and kill a pedestrian and then, blackmailed by the crazy female witness, use violence to save their skins in the urban jungle.

Thanks to the rapid development of television, young directors in the late 1970s in Hong Kong had an opportunity to make their names quickly and then head into the film world. Tsui Hark - who was born sixty years ago as Tsui Man-Kong in French Indochina, and had learnt the craft of film in his twenties in the United States and then made a successful series for a Hong Kong TV station - presented with Dangerous Encounters: 1st Kind (1980) one of the first examples of punk rock cinema. It is both a carefree flinging and also a venomous kick in the shins for the established order. A group of kids tries to stay on its feet through all kinds of violent adventures in the urban jungle, while they show the most nihilistic side of their characters.
In the 1990s, Tsui Hark also emerged as a producer and broke through with a mass Western audience with the Once Upon a Time in China films and two Jean-Claude van Damme vehicles.

Comments
There are no reviews for this film yet.
Write review 
Hong Kong 1980
DirectorTsui Hark
ScenarioSzeto Chuek-Hon, Tsui Hark
CastLo Lieh
 Lin Chen Chi
 Albert Au
 Lung Tin Sang
 Che Biu Law
 Ray Lui
PhotographyDavid Chung
EditorChow Cheung Kan, Tsi Wai Wu
Production designTony Au
MusicTang Siu-Lam, Yu Leun
Length96'