Los Angeles Times

Today’s economy is a sort of action film

- By Dennis Lim

The ongoing economic crisis already has inspired its share of cinematic forays: the documentar­y indictment “Inside Job,” for instance, and the dramas “Margin Call” and “The Company Men,” which consider the meltdown from the perspectiv­es, respective­ly, of the perpetrato­rs and the downsized.

But no movie on the subject has combined populist outrage, social critique and entertainm­ent value with as much flair as Hong Kong director Johnnie To’s “Life Without Principle” (2011), new to DVD and Blu-ray from Indomina Releasing.

It’s no surprise that To, one of the most prolific director-producers in Hong Kong genre cinema, would be up to the task of tackling the crisis head on. The quick pace of Hong Kong production allows for a certain upto-the-minute responsive­ness (details of the 2010 Greek debt crisis and European Union bailout flicker past on television screens in “Life Without Principle”).

Even in his action films about the criminal underworld (“Election” and “Election 2” being perhaps the best known), To often had a sharp eye for the motivating forces of greed and materialis­m. And Hong Kong, as a former British colony and longtime business capital of Asia now locked in a complicate­d relationsh­ip with an ever more capitalist mainland China, makes for an interestin­g vantage point from which to observe the ripple effects of internatio­nal financial markets on day-to-

day life.

To is no stranger to intricate tales — he tends to arrange his characters in chess-piece configurat­ions, and his most memorable plots resemble deadly efficient contraptio­ns. “Life Without Principle” represents perhaps his most sophistica­ted use of puzzlelike storytelli­ng.

(The Rube Goldberg tendency is even more apparent in the excellent Toproduced “Accident,” a 2009 film directed by Soi Cheang, just out on DVD and Blu-ray from Shout Factory. Full of precisely choreograp­hed set pieces, it concerns a contract killer who stages his murders as elaborate deathtrap accidents — a kind of reverse-angle “Final Destinatio­n.”)

Set over a hectic threeday period, “Life Without Principle” connects three characters — all in need of money and all in some way affected by a global market collapse.

Teresa (Denise Ho), an investment adviser at a bank, is struggling to meet her quotas. Panther (To regular Lau Ching-wan), a low-level gang member scrounging for bail money, falls into a black-market stock trading scheme. Cheung (Richie Jen), a stoic policeman, investigat­es several murders while fighting with his wife, who’s badgering him to buy an apartment.

Loosely divided into thirds, “Life Without Principle” begins with Teresa’s story — a slow-burning moral thriller confined to highpressu­re office spaces — which comes to a head as she stumbles on a client beaten to death in her building’s undergroun­d parking lot. The film loops back to recount Panther’s involvemen­t in a more freewheeli­ng and absurdist segment. In its final third the film moves forward from the murder that connects the strands — intercutti­ng between Teresa’s and Panther’s respective quandaries and weaving in Cheung’s story.

To is a gifted formalist, a deft orchestrat­or of motion and space, and especially in the Panther section, “Life Without Principle” is a quintessen­tial portrait of Hong Kong’s bustling urban environmen­t, all mirrored reflection­s and chrome-andneon sleekness. But with a couple of striking exceptions, the film also makes do without To’s signature eruptions of violence.

Instead it builds tension through stock tickers, PowerPoint screens and finance jargon; the most harrowing sequence is a drawnout exchange between Teresa and an elderly woman she persuades to invest in a high-risk fund.

“Life Without Principle” bears an outward resemblanc­e to the voguish genre of the panoramic ensemble movie in which plots convenient­ly converge and characters repeatedly and unwittingl­y cross paths with one another. But To’s film is both more playful and more purposeful than such grandiose contrivanc­es as “Babel” and “Crash.”

The goal here is not to reveal our cosmic interconne­ctedness but to show the parallel — and linked — workings of legal and illegal capitalist systems. From the punning title (borrowed from a classic Thoreau essay on right livelihood) to the equation of bankers with gangsters, and stock-market speculatio­n with backroom gambling, To’s sardonic point of view is never in doubt.

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 ??  ?? FINANCIAL CRISES drive “Life Without Principle.” Lau Ching-wan costars.
FINANCIAL CRISES drive “Life Without Principle.” Lau Ching-wan costars.
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DENISE HO leads a story line in which director Johnnie To finds ample tension.
Indomina Releasing DENISE HO leads a story line in which director Johnnie To finds ample tension.

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