阿郎的故事

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主演:周润发,张艾嘉,黄坤玄,吴孟达,王天林

类型:电影地区:中国香港语言:粤语年份:1989

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 剧照

阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.1阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.2阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.3阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.4阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.5阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.6阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.13阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.14阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.15阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.16阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.17阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.18阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.19阿郎的故事 剧照 NO.20

 剧情介绍

阿郎的故事电影免费高清在线观看全集。
  阿郎(周润发 饰)年轻时作为出色的赛车手很是放荡不羁,却不妨碍富家女波波(张艾嘉 饰)对其一往情深。波波不顾家人反对,同他结婚并怀下身孕后,发现阿郎背着她还有其它女人,于是愤然离去。波波临盆之际,阿郎参加非法赛车撞死警察入狱。波波被母亲和医生欺骗婴儿夭折,后去了美国生活。出狱后,阿郎为以前行为愧疚,从孤儿院找回儿子取名“波仔”(黄坤玄 饰)。父子二人开始相依为命过日子。  十年后,已有未婚夫的波波回港又遇阿郎,得知波仔是自己的儿子后,想将其带去美国。内心仍深爱波波的阿郎为了证明自己已有彻底改变,决定不顾年纪和身体状况再战赛场。刑警与检察官,有时是法官。聪明生活经济学为全人类第二季最后的前线一本漫画闯天涯II妙想天开 粤语铠甲勇士拿瓦秦王李世民人设亚瑟赛看好你的车生存家族(国语版)诱惑法则灵探摇曳露营2的士大佬陌生的海岸安娜的迷宫等待黎明粤语版卡夫卡2024我奇怪的17岁2022绿茶2003章鱼烧之歌永远22!2024bilibili毕业歌会星星的房子国语誓言营救野猪队零零零把妹大作战第三季罗马浴场海盗埃里克内特的梦想剧院浓情录音带反物质危机闽江桔子红面包王金卓求国语

 长篇影评

 1 ) 我听到远处传来你的声音

   “我听到传来的谁的声音,像那梦里呜咽中的小河。”一首被唱烂了的歌,一首煽情到极致的歌,电影结束,有多少人仍不愿离场,有多少人仍呆在屏幕前,发呆抑或是等待,等待阿郎的复活,还是在等待什么呢?
    很早就知道这部电影,却一直没有看,或许知道是经典,或许似乎都可以猜出很多的情节,或许什么都不是,不是那么多的电影都会看的,总有些会错过,今夜,初秋的NJ夜色很好,今天是满月了吧,再拾起这部电影的时候,我没有免俗地和许多人一样被感动.
    那是1989年的香港,一个男人带着自己的孩子,在清晨,忙碌杂乱地收拾东西上班,上课.
    那是1989年的香港,工地上尘土飞扬,他有没有想念那个他年少轻狂伤害过的女子.
    那是1989年的香港,一个平凡的不能再平凡的故事,年幼无知的少女,年少轻狂的浪子,年轻时不懂事的伤害,再加上一个叫波仔的小孩,却哭掉了无数的男男女女,很多人都知道这个结局,在我没看电影的时候,我看见阿郎骑上摩托车我就知道他一定会挂,只是看后才了然,还是那样的悲壮,忍不住骂杜琪锋,明明都可以大团圆,最后还是要安排阿郎死,他明明可以看见这一生他最爱的两个人向他跑来,而他却只能闭上双眼,然后离的那么远,很煽情的结尾,很俗套的故事,可是我们依然流泪,依然感动,是为了这结局,还是为了那些莫名其妙的坚持和梦想,这是一个以理想和坚持为耻的时代,或许那些一个人带着孩子生活得并不那么惬意的人们更能体会那个工地上干活的男人,那个带走孩子他就一无所有的男人,那个为了比赛丢掉自己生命的男人.无论是哪里触动了你的神经,你心底最柔软的地方都被触碰.又或许仅仅只是青春的躁动,命运的不安.
    "强极则辱,情深不寿,谦谦君子,温润如玉",而罗大佑只是在唱"我听到传来的谁的声音,象那梦里呜咽中的小河,我看到远去的谁的步伐,遮住告别时哀伤的眼神".我看见阿郎在十年后的中环夜色里载着波波在时光的轨道里穿梭,那些年少轻狂的日子,那些简单明亮的快乐,我看见波仔拿着阿郎买的一枝玫瑰花,送给他们都爱的女人的时候,说的那句“生日快乐,真土”那样像极了他的老爸,我看见波波那样温柔地颔首,把自己埋在花中。每一个人看电影,更多的都是在这样的光和影里想着自己的故事,是谁说我们以为拥有的是未来,其实留下的只有记忆。
    或许明日太阳西下倦鸟已归时,你将已经踏上旧时的归途。倦鸟已归,可是归途早已是不归路,有人说这是一部属于70年代生人的电影,我不知道,现在早已开始提到90年代,不是我们不明白,是社会变化太快。那是1989年,搁到明年就已20年的光阴,那个时候打打闹闹,抱着阿郎的腿不放,哭着闹着“老爸,你不要离开”的波仔都已接近三十,可这又有什么关系呢?还是有那么多人,依然热爱,依然激情,依然渴望所有的幸福和爱。


     

 2 ) 总有一个深爱你的男人曾经划过你的心坎

   阿郎的故事里,要说最触动我的一点,那应该就是摩托车了。周润发斜身跨上车的时候,我想起麦克阿瑟将军的话:老兵不死,只是渐渐隐退。阿郎不是勇敢的战士,他只是一个浪子,但是浪子和战士一样的是,他们都曾经为了某个东西而奋不顾身,浴血冲锋。
   阿郎曾经那么狂傲不羁地藐视过他所能见到的一切,规则、秩序、安分守己,还有他自己的女人。就好像他骑上奔驰在城市夜色中的摩托车一样,他像一道注定要撕裂云层的闪电,把视野所及的东西都淹没在自己的狂笑里。他改变不了世界,世界也不会因此损失分毫,但是他的女人,却再也不可能再骑上他的机车后座了。我有时候禁不住要怀疑,波波是怀着怎么样的心情离开香港的,杜琪峰聪明,他把波波滚下楼梯之后的所有情节都变成暗场,而且要一笔带过,那些呼天抢地喷涌而出的眼泪和痛苦,都被轻轻略过,我们看到的只是探监时阿郎已经剪得规规矩矩的发型和木然的脸,只听到波波的妈妈抱着孩子对他说,波波已经远走异国。于是我们看到的是,十年后那个颓然的阿郎和招人喜爱的波仔。一切的艰涩、一切的不甘、一切的悔意,都掩盖在父子俩的笑闹嬉戏里,我们看不见,却切肤之深。
   阿郎的故事讲的不是父子,不是爱情,也不是家庭。他讲的是一个曾经狂傲的浪子在年华凋尽之后,懂得了自己的错误,却没有失去自己的激情。我老是觉得,一个男人如果真正深爱一个女人,一定会近乎赌气地去搏击一次,去证明自己灵魂里永远燃烧着的火种——即便他已为人父,已然苍老,已然需要帮持。但是每一个男人,不管他是二十岁的痞子少年,还是八十暮年的垂垂老朽,他的心里都一定燃烧着几十年不灭的桀骜的烈焰,在这一生中,总有一次,哪怕就一次,他要跨上赛车,在一圈一圈的风驰电掣中去证明:我能做到。就算任谁都明白,波波不再可能像童话故事里那样回来他的身边,海滩上那一吻只能是一个旧情的标本。但是阿郎还是会选择去博一次,要咬紧牙关去证明一次,证明自己爱过的,恨过的,遗憾过的,坚守过的,所有这些,就算输给了命运,就算只能苦笑,可是对自己仍然重如泰山。他的肩膀,就算扛不起命运的嘲笑,他仍然要毫不皱眉地把他们全都扛起来,并且还要骄傲地微笑。
   要说起来,波波原谅不原谅阿郎并不重要,因为毕竟十年过去,毕竟波仔已经如此乖巧懂事,旧爱永远成了删改不得的回忆。当年那个长发飘飘,抽烟喝酒,骑摩托跳恰恰的浪子,那些他给自己心上造成的伤疤,在时间的流逝下都开始结痂,失去了痛感。当在跑道上抱住波仔的时候,面对眼前熊熊燃烧的火焰,面对怀里这个前十年没有母亲,后半生没有父亲的孩子,面对也许第二天就要返回美国的班机,她还有什么不可以饶恕的,还有什么能够去责怪的。就像李太白的一句:“但见泪痕湿,不知心恨谁”
   在野草遍地的时间荒野里,我们本来就没有什么可以相信,只是当罗大佑的歌声响起,那些历经岁月涤荡的伤害,那些弥漫着酒气的夜晚,都淡淡地消失了,只留下摩托车的空洞的轰鸣声还在城市里回荡。


 3 ) 又见阿郎—2003

1989年,周润发34岁,张艾嘉36岁;
2003年,周润发48岁,张艾嘉50岁了。
真是岁月如飞刀他刀刀催人老啊。

我今天说的又见阿郎,可不是前些年杜琪峰导演的〈再见阿郎〉,我是说我又见到了阿郎——还不明白?就是说我今天又看了一遍〈阿郎的故事〉,这回明白了吧。

这电影不知看了多少遍,录像机里、录像厅里、电影院里、电视里、电脑里、VCD的、SVCD的、DVD的、D5的、D9的......,可今天还是不争气,波仔哭的时候、阿朗哭的时候、阿郎死的时候,我还是差点几度落泪。

同样的电影,每次看都有不同的感受。这次我体会到了配角,是一部电影中多么重要的因素啊。吴孟达这个老戏精,实在没想到在上世纪80年代末就已经炉火纯青了。还记得都市情缘吗?老家伙让我掉眼泪了,那是我第一次开始尊敬他。

电影音乐也同样的重要,罗大佑的两首歌和影片配合得天衣无缝、恰如其分,杜大炮煽情本事也真是不小,阿郎死在〈你的样子〉里,先是鲜血灌满了头盔,然后阿郎加速、夺冠、休克、失控、摔倒、爆炸、慢镜、哭喊、拉扯、奔跑、拥抱、字幕......听到歌声,听到了心撕裂的声音,让人久久不能离去,电影散场了还会呆坐在椅子上,是等待阿郎的复活还是想听完那首动人的歌曲?

我其实是个感情丰富的人,但看电影总想忍住不掉眼泪,可是一次又一次的使我不相信自己不容易被打动。而电影里最普通的镜头、最平凡的瞬间也最能打动我。
阿郎和波仔在大街上走,阿郎玩失踪,波仔找不到他,阿郎突然从身后出现当街脱他儿子的裤子,然后父子俩互相追逐打闹渐渐远去。
还有阿郎赶儿子跟他妈妈回美国,儿子不肯,郎大怒,一顿毒打,儿子把妈妈买的衣服全扔出了窗外,最后非常懂事的边抽噎着边收拾东西走人,临走还倔倔的要二十块钱车钱。儿子走了,阿朗蜷缩在椅子里,无声的哭泣。
脸上的鼻子酸了又酸,眼眶有东西转了又转,心头为之一震,刺痛。

这使我想起了我爸跟我曾经说过他小时候最受不了的电影桥段:
老人:石头!!!
小孩:爷爷!!!
镜头拉开,祖孙俩从远处相向奔跑,越来越近越来越近,镜头一切,爷儿俩砰的一声撞在一起相拥而泣......我爸这时拉回记忆,对我说:"这是我最受不了的,想起来都要掉眼泪!"
遗传这东西也真让人受不了!

再说说导演杜琪峰杜大炮,此君着实NB到家,如果只看过枪火暗战孤男寡女瘦身男女等影片才说他强的朋友真应该进行一下电影普及教育,像〈阿郎的故事〉、〈天若有情〉什么的。他把此片的温情一段一段展现给你,然后在一个马上就要大团圆的时候给这些温情找了个极其悲壮的爆发点,让你不知所措,只好以泪洗面喽。

再说发哥,其实以他的岁数叫他发叔也未尝不可。发哥的阿郎是演技最棒的经典形象之一,他凭此片勇夺1990年香港金像奖最佳男主角,那几年也是发哥如日中天的时候。之前发哥得奖如家常便饭,随便列举一些:1987年主演《英雄本色》和《秋天的童话》(台湾名《流氓大亨》),分别获香港电影金像奖和第二十四届金马奖最佳男主角奖。1988年因主演《龙虎风云》,获第七届香港电影金像奖最佳男主角奖和美国电影协会颁发的亚洲杰出演员奖。90年是他最后一次在香港得奖,他也就此半隐退状态N年,这是后话,按下不表。

还有那个童星,凭此片也得了个亚太地区最佳新人奖和金马奖最佳男配角————————的提名!他叫黄坤玄,地道的童星,饰演波仔,把他的顽皮、聪明及善解人意表现得淋漓尽致,现在在好莱坞谋求发展。当然给他配音的演员同样功不可没,两个字,传神!

说了这么多没用的,感触最深的还是电影本身——当你被一个电影感动时,你的心已经慢慢靠近了天堂。。。。。。
                                                 2003。4。

 4 ) 年轻也曾风光过

黄坤玄在《阿郎的故事》里的表演是童星的范本。很多童星只是自持靓和可爱,完全谈不上什么表演。加之成年人写的剧本,行为举止皆是成年角度,让小孩装大人,不是智商欠奉就是非常油条。这部戏里若没有黄坤玄的波仔,周润发的父亲形象也得打一半折扣。波仔正是有点懂,又有点贪玩,又嫌老土又对母亲有向往,还不明白父母的感情多么复杂,写得好也演得好。

吴孟达饰演的角色很重要,波波刚开始以为波仔是他的儿子,吴孟达的表情埋了个伏笔,让后面办公室一场的尴尬水到渠成。而波波的未婚夫的角色就很工具化。

每场戏几乎都有情绪的起伏和反复。波波对阿郎的冷淡,怨恨,但两人一说起儿子又有联结的亲密,阿郎说告诉儿子妈妈已经死了,张艾嘉垂下捻动吸管的手胜过所有语言,对这个男人又气又失望又没办法又可怜他处境。

阿郎是一个曾经挥霍青春的小混混,人到中年陷入一无所有得过且过的窘境,教导儿子上强词夺理,儿子长大之后难保不会看他不起。但若不是周润发怕是演不出这么丰富的层次——骂着脏话,要借钱给烂赌的同事,自己又自由散漫,打儿子又要说对不起,但不懂如何好好道歉,在无力受挫之后靠暴力宣泄。现在莫说找不到周润发这样的演员,剧本都写不出这么层次分明自圆其说的角色,经常是一个扁平的角色靠消耗演员昔日的形象来强行完成角色。

父子情有时更夺人热泪,我们的社会默认男性不具备照顾子女的能力,以及这不是他“分内”的事,所以“特别不容易”。类似题材还有《带子洪郎》,父爱的诠释都是搏命赚钱,也代表无产者突围的一种生勇。而《爱的世界》里的父子是从中产堕入困顿,父亲被不断践踏,最终走向毁灭,更像是恐怖片。

小混混和富家女的故事也是老港片的套路了,婚姻是女性阶级跃升的手段,小混混终究走向毁灭。阿郎的故事可算是天若有情的后续。主流价值观总是希望男女主能破镜重圆,而现实世界却往往过去之心不可得,因此人到中年的阿郎还是要再毁灭一次。多少是受困于中国人太热衷于团圆的形式,希望将来有真正“一国两制”“高度自治”的亲密关系。

时代大不同。现在多半不会信服一个飙车坐牢的小混混能和职业的赛车手同台竞技。《飞驰人生》都得是有污点的前赛车手逆袭,不会是裸露的古典人性对抗高科技车队。韩寒曾写过一篇文章说不要拿自己的业余爱好试图去挑战以此为生的职业人士(虽然他拍电影的这份爱好一上来已经超出不少职人,可见此行业混乱),而在本片所描绘的那个年代,是不少业余爱好者靠勇在往专业化转型的黄金时代,电影电视行业也是如此——规则尚未明确,大批新人涌入,边做边学,时代处在上升阶段,阶层的流动也是可能——地盘工人攒攒钱也有是机会买楼的。

说起这个就不得不提两部根据hk网文改编的短片,一是《公屋·居屋·私楼》,一是其后续《世伯后传》,后传里世伯自陈是给《阿郎的故事》周润发做翻车替身从此落下残疾的那代人,恰恰可以看做是阿郎如果活下去,晚年的境况——沉默的男人。

 5 ) 《阿朗的故事》音乐诠释了所有

        阿郎的故事是一部70年代经典、煽情、催人泪下的电影,讲实了一个平凡的不能再平凡的故事。
阿郎年轻时作为出色的赛车手很放荡不羁,却不妨碍富家女波波对其一往情深,波波不顾家人反对同他结婚并怀下身孕后,发现阿郎背着她还有其它女人,愤然离去。在她临盆之际,阿郎参加非法赛车撞死警察入狱,她也因被母亲和医生告知婴儿夭折而去了美国。出狱后,阿郎很为以前行为愧疚,从孤儿院找回自己儿子,从此父子二人开始相依为命过日子。十年后,已有未婚夫的波波回港又遇阿郎,得知波仔是自己的儿子后想将其带去美国。内心仍深爱波波的阿郎为了证明自己已有彻底改变,决定不顾年纪和身体状况再战赛场。在赛车过程中出了意外,他在死前看见这一生他最爱的两个人向他跑来,而他却只能闭上双眼。
       整部电影情节有点俗,故事平常,但导演给了阿朗一个悲壮的结局,使人深深地留下了印象。其次是音乐搭配得天衣无缝,给整部电影起到推波助澜之绝佳效果。在阿郎血流满面仍冲过终点的时候,此时歌曲响起 。“从远处听见叹息的诗,在呼唤着旧日名字,从远处看见某个影子,在挂念着落日情义,挥不去抑郁别离乱绪,力掩饰当中伤心的故事,思忆中仿佛早已失去,昨天的爱孤单一生又在开始,尘世里至爱没法相依,就算活着亦没意义,人远去破碎是她的心,静俏地在滴着情泪,驱不散空虚是谁后悔,但急风早吹干她的眼泪,心飞絮今天虽再相见,但往日情,随着落日已消失去,哭泣洒泪,洗不去当天忘情的罪,抱着儿子,又再想起悲痛心事,空虚失落,出我一生情和义,撕破的前事,也许修补恐怕不易…… ” 多么的让人揪心,催人泪下呀!此时很多的感觉无法用语言表达,可是音乐却诠释了所有 !

 6 ) Sean Gilman: All About Ah-Long

//theendofcinema.net/2016/02/01/running-out-of-karma-all-about-ah-long/

Chow’s fate is determined as much by chance as by any action of his own. There’s always a sense of randomness in To’s tragedies, a kind of contingency that denies any simple moral reading.

After an auspicious, if commercially unsuccessful, debut with the New Wave wuxiaThe Enigmatic Case in 1980, To spent the early 80s working in Hong Kong television. In 1986 he returned to film working under Raymond Wong Bak-ming at the Cinema City studio, he he made the popular, if not especially distinguished comediesHappy Ghost 3 andSeven Years Itch. These were followed in 1988 by a pair of films, the smash hit farceThe Eighth Happiness and the contemporary crime pictureThe Big Heat. He followed that up in 1989 withAll About Ah-Long,a domestic melodrama that becamethe number one film of the year at the Hong Kong box office, the second year in a row a To film had accomplished that feat.The film reunited To withEighth Happiness star Chow Yun-fat andSeven Years Itchstar Sylvia Chang. Like all of To’s previous four films it was produced by Raymond Wong for Cinema City, but it is a much more dramatically ambitious work. Cinema City at their best was a freewheeling, anarchic studio where anything was possible. The loose atmosphere was responsible for some of the greatest films of the decade (in Hong Kong or otherwise), but also a whole lot of just bizarrely silly nonsense (the Yuen-Woo-ping directedMismatched Couples, for example, in which Yuen tried to make Donnie Yen a star with a breakdancing comedy).The Eighth Happinessexemplified the lunatic side of the studio, an improvisational, tasteless and often hilarious comedy that helped establish the template for a certain type of all-star Lunar New Year comedy (a tradition that continues to this day).

All About Ah-Long, though, is a real movie. Written by stars Chow and Chang (an unusual credit for Chow (his only other story credit is on the 1995 Wai Ka-fai film Peace Hotel), while Chang had already begun the move from movie and pop star to accomplished writer/director), it takes Oscar winnerKramer vs. Kramer as a starting point. Chow plays a construction worker raising his ten year old son, Porky. A former motorcycle racer and drunk, Chow is loud and crude but cares deeply for his kid. When his friend Ng Man-tat (in one of his early dramatic roles, before he became Stephen Chow’s favorite comic foil) gets Porky an audition for a kids’ fashion commercial, they discover that the commercial’s director is Chang, the boy’s mother, returned from America for the first time in a decade. Brief flashbacks fill out the story (Chow was philanderingand abusive and ended up briefly in jail after a motorcycle accident; Chang’s mother hated him and told Chang her son had died after she moved with her to the US), while Chang tries to build a relationship with her son and Chow tries to rekindle his romance with Chang.

It’s an against-type performance from Chow, as arguably the coolest man in cinema in the late-80s dresses down with patched-together clothes and a hideous mop of hair. He’s a deeply flawed man who is completely aware of his faults. Chang is the class opposite: intelligent and reserved, she is the wealth of America, trying to win Porky’s affection with all the things and opportunities she can muster. This is one of the things that distinguishesAh-Long from its American progenitor: whileKramer vs. Kramer paints a complicated picture of 1970s feminism (the breakdown of the home as the wife seeks a life in the workforce),Ah-Longis moreof a class allegory. There’s no expectation that Chang should abandoned her career to be Chow’s housewife, such a thing is unthinkable. However there’s a deep undercurrent of unease with Chang’s cosmopolitan wealth. Both parents want Porky to have all the advantages wealth can confer (education, nutrition, culture, adventure), but there’s an inauthenticity to her world. The film opens with shots of Hong Kong streets, notably not the skyscrapers and businessmen and other conspicuous symbols of the capitalist paradise that was the colony in the late 1980s, but rather of narrow, crowded alleys, packed with shops and debris. It isn’t the gangland slum of the Kowloon Walled City that Johnnie To grew up in, instead it’s a less hyperbolic, more imaginable kind of everyday poverty. Throughout, To will contrast realist images of working class Hong Kong with the glossier sheen of its upper class, mixing aclass-conscious New Wave aesthetic with the pop song montages ofcommercial cinema. When Porky first visits his mother in her hotel (the “Oriental”) he gazes in wonder at the shiny white surfaces, and especially the glass elevator rising infinitely upward at the lobby’s core. Elevators will become a recurring image and location throughout To’s career, a symbol of fear, of entrapment, of the unknown. The image is built upon in a later section ofAh-Long, when Porky and Chang goes to an amusement park and she can’t handle the vertiginous ups and downs of the rides. Porky loves it of course, ping-ponging between highs and lows, but Chang needs to stay on one level: she can’t go back down.

In many ways, Johnnie To’s most recent film is a kind of spiritual sequel toAll About Ah-Long. Reunited with Chow and Chang for the first time in over 20 years, and adapting a play written by Chang,Office is about a pair of young office workers who learn that life at the top of the corporate elevator is more corrupt than they could imagine. Chow and Chang play the oldest couple, the company’s CEO and Owner, long engaged in an amoral struggle for power over each other. A middle couple forms the heart of the film, played by Tang Wei and Eason Chan: Chan is already corrupted, Tang is on her way there. The two share a duet (the film is a musical, with songs by Lo Ta-yu, who also did the music forAll About Ah-Long) where they sing of their hometowns, paradises where there was no ambition. All the corruption of the corporate world is the result of aspiration, of the drive to rise up, to bend and break the rules of conscience in the name of things. Chan is haunted by a recurring nightmare of an elevator: not of falling down an empty shaft, but pointedly being crushed on the ground floor. Porky inAh-Long watches with hope as an elevator rises, Chan cowers in fear as one falls.

I can’t write aboutAll About Ah-Long without addressing it’s ending, so here’s where you can check out if you haven’t seen the film and care about spoilers. Unless I can track down a copy of his two-part TV movieThe Iron Butterfly, the next film in the series with be a New Years comedy reunion with Chow and Chang,The Fun, The Luck and the Tycoon, to be followed by To’s first collaboration with screenwriter Wai-Ka-fai,TheStory of My Son.

Like many a Hong Kong film,All About Ah-Long has a doubleending. David Bordwell writes about the end of the 1987 Chow Yun-fat melodramaAn Autumn’s Tale (directed by Mabel Cheung), where the romantic couple separates at the end, with Chow’s deadbeat failing to win the more upwardly-mobile woman. This is followed by a brief epilogue, set sometime in the future, where the lovers meet again with Chow having miraculously cleaned up his act and become a financial success. Bordwell notes that the multiple, tonally opposite endings work to give the audience a range of ways to react to the film: they get both the happy and tragic endings and therefore a more total experience of melodrama.All About Ah-Long takes the experience to another, emotionally pummeling, level. After a long decline into sadness, where Porky leaves with Chang (with Chow delivering a heart-breakingHarry and the Hendersonsdriving-the-boy-away scene),and then changes his mind and returns to his dad. Chow then decides to race again and gets a haircut and a motorcycle. Father and son head to the Macao Grand Prix, where Chang shows up just as the race is about to start: the family at last will be reunited, with a newly cleaned-up Chow finally worthy of being a husband and father. He races, he’s about to win, and then he crashes. But he gets back on his bike (because that’s what we do), despitea significant head injury (a chance blow from another motorcycle). Summoning all his strength, with intercut shots of his wildly supportivefamily, Chow comes back and wins the race. Porky and Chang leap with joy as Chow, in excruciating slow motion, loses control of his bike and crashes into a wall. He watches his family rush toward him as the motorcycle explodes and he is engulfed in flames. The credits roll over documentary-style slo-mo footage of the wreckage, the horror in the crowd, the anguished faces of mother and son. It’s an astonishing, flabbergasting ending. Such a finale would be unthinkable in a Hollywood movie (can you imagine a film with equivalent-level stars, say Leonardo DiCaprio and Charlize Theron, where the family is just about to get back together but instead Leo dies right at the end? There would be riots in the streets.)

This ending is vital for To’s idea of the film, the sharp, unexpected swerve into tragedy is something he’ll return to again and again in his career. In his interview with Stephen Teo, he says thatAll About Ah-Long was “the first film in which I could line everything up in one go; as the film that was made really from my own thoughts. I am grateful to Chow Yun-fat, who gave me many of his own insights, and also to Sylvia Chang, who actually wrote the treatment and was involved in the production, She disagreed with my ending but I told her I was making the film because of the ending. It may be flawed but I insisted upon it.” The ending is crushing not so much because of its shockingness, although that is certainly a factor, but also because the happier ending that preceded it made so much sense: everything about the surface of the film tells us that this is the kind of movie that will end happily, the two beautiful stars will get back together and their family will be whole. But the ending brings out the darkness, the fear and paranoia that underlies so many of the preceding images, the class contrasts, the vertiginous heights and grimy lows of pre-Handover Hong Kong.The Big Heat too is motivated by an apocalyptic fear of the Handover, as Britain and China agreed that the colony would be handed back to the Mainland, the child’s fate determined by the whims of its parent nations. This strain of paranoia is so present in the Hong Kong cinema of the period that it’s become a critical cliche to remark upon it, like the Cold War dread of 1950s American sci-fi films. Butthere’s an even deeper,more universal fearinAll About Ah-Long, where the paranoia is motivated by diaspora, the promise of wonder in life outside China, but is rooted in a more basic class anxiety: the fear that moving up means becoming inauthentic.

For To and Chow, who grew up relatively impoverished and were now at the pinnacle of their professions, that must have been a very real concern. Chang had a different childhood, born in Taiwan she also spent time in Hong Kong and New York growing up, before dropping out of school to pursue singing and acting at age 16. The film is thus a recreation of the real-life dynamics between the two male auteurs and the female one. It has been pointed out that contrary to expectations in this melodrama the male character is far more emotionally expressive than the female one, with Chow giving a loud, dynamic performance where Chang is cool and internalized (there is a lifelong relationship in a nutshell in a simple eyeroll Chang gives as she sits on the back of Chow’s moped). This is less agender matter though than a class one I think: Chow’s manners are boorish where Chang is refined. The tension between the three artists is vital to the push-pull nature of the melodrama: neither parent is demonized or lionized as the film goes on, both characters are warm and loving to their son, both are full of regrets for their actions a decade earlier (though Chow has more to regret), both want to be forgiving to each other, both know that that is impossible. But ultimately it’s To’s vision that wins out, and it’s a deeply pessimistic one: Ah-Long, a poor but happy man for the first time in his life aspiring to greatness, seeing his dream within reach and then literally exploding. It isn’t a tragic ending, in the sense that it is totally unpredictable: Chow’s fate is determined as much by chance as by any action of his own. There’s always a sense of randomness in To’s tragedies, a kind of contingency that denies any simplemoral reading. Just as inOffice,aspiration ultimately leads to self-destruction, but that destruction can manifest itself in wildly unexpected ways. This black strain, the doom of a universe governed by fate that operates through chance, will surface again and again through To’s career, mixed as it is with farces and romances and stories of brotherhood, moments of liberation and freedom and darkest despair.All About Ah-Long, his first truly great film,is the first to fully express this multiplicity of moods.

 短评

黄坤玄的戏自然的很,恰到好处的好。剧作上写父子情,写浪子回头金不换都非常好,发哥的演绎真棒。

6分钟前
  • Morning
  • 力荐

这部电影,最后一幕,当发哥饰演的阿郎,骑着赛车最终冲向终点,却终究因伤势太重,事故爆炸的时候,在场所有人所表现的那种情感张力,那种悲伤,至今仍旧记忆犹新。或许杯具总让人难以忘怀。浪子回头金不换,但有时却付出了生命的代价

8分钟前
  • 吃瓜小能手
  • 力荐

《恋曲1990》、《你的样子》……

12分钟前
  • 想不明白
  • 力荐

杜琪峰34岁拍了这个电影,那一年,是1989。今晚,竟然,我是第一次看。不哭,几乎不可能。罗大佑的歌,是最催泪的子弹,最治愈的药。那个时候的香港电影,真是窝心温柔又浪漫逍遥,不怪那时的少年人,都看着港片学做男人。看这种电影的时候,你会觉得自己也是个好人。你以为这很容易,这种好转眼就没。

15分钟前
  • 老晃
  • 推荐

不记得是多少年前,我看这个电影,大结局的时候,我哭得不成人形

20分钟前
  • 我来我征服
  • 力荐

张艾嘉巅峰时期的好作品。内容俗套但看到最后你会发现自己早已热泪盈眶。

24分钟前
  • 半城风月
  • 力荐

乌溜溜的黑眼珠和你的笑脸,怎么也难忘记你容颜的转变。ps,认识"你的样子"就是因为小学时候看过无数次阿郎的片尾曲,那个烈火中的眼神印象太深了。

25分钟前
  • 安蓝·怪伯爵𓆝𓆟𓆜
  • 力荐

孤独的孩子,提着易碎的灯笼。

30分钟前
  • Enjoy_時光機。
  • 推荐

当年感动得不行.

33分钟前
  • 能工巧匠沙门哥
  • 力荐

我不知道如果没有这个令人潸然泪下的结尾,我会给这部电影打几分。但是它有,我也确实被感动了泪流满面,那就五星奉上。

37分钟前
  • 有心打扰
  • 力荐

张艾嘉坐在周润发的小摩托后面,《恋曲1990》响起来的时候,太让人泪飚了。

40分钟前
  • mumudancing
  • 推荐

最后5分钟的感动

45分钟前
  • 影志
  • 推荐

爱上浪子就像爱上大海,汹涌澎湃一望无际痛快并存。

50分钟前
  • 一只虎耳草
  • 力荐

都说浪子回头金不换,那么能拿来交换的只能是性命。

53分钟前
  • 高冷的鸡蛋仔
  • 力荐

周润发塑造的这个浪子让人看了就无法忘记,年轻时的放纵疯狂、出祸后的沉默和悔改都被表演的淋漓尽致。

55分钟前
  • 顾俏乜
  • 推荐

很俗套的故事,但是不讨厌

60分钟前
  • 大宸
  • 还行

结尾比较突兀,人物都很理想化。就是浪子回头金不换嘛。还是值得一看的,不过一直觉得那个时候讲的故事都好简单

1小时前
  • 九尾黑猫
  • 还行

当《你的样子》渐渐响起,眼泪就止不住了~~

1小时前
  • 战国客
  • 推荐

话说徐娇真的是星爷按着黄坤玄的样子选出来的?

1小时前
  • KeneL裤头
  • 推荐

当放荡不羁的飚车浪子变成了久经生活沧桑的父亲,周润发对底层小人物的深谙,使《阿郎的故事》既有着年少的青春爱情,也有着支离破碎后的亲情羁绊, 那令人意外的悲情渲染,诚然稍显突兀,但一曲浪子悲歌,确也道尽了世间的悲欢离合。

1小时前
  • 梦里诗书
  • 力荐