Wong Ching-Po, known for the slick triad film Jiang Hu (2004), brings a surprising arthouse sensibility to this Category III vehicle. The film's palette is drained of color, dominated by washed-out grays, clinical whites, and deep blues. Blood is desaturated to a near-black, making the violence feel less like a comic book and more like a medical record.
Revenge is painted in shades of sickly yellow and oppressive shadow. The film's visual language is arguably its strongest character. Revenge- A Love Story
Released in 2010, (Fuk Sau Che Chi Sei) is a visceral Hong Kong crime thriller that challenges the boundaries of the "Category III" rating. Directed by Wong Ching-Po and based on a story by lead actor Juno Mak, the film is a brutal examination of how systemic corruption can transform an innocent soul into a terrifying monster. Plot Summary: From Romance to Ruin Wong Ching-Po, known for the slick triad film
The trial was a circus. Her father went to prison for twenty years. Her mother’s heart gave out six months later. And Meera? She vanished. Not into thin air, but into the grime. She cut her hair, changed her name to Maya, and took a job as a cleaner in the very police station where Rohan now sat as a celebrated inspector. Revenge is painted in shades of sickly yellow
Rohan, the boy who had taught her to skip stones across the Ganges, the boy whose laugh tasted like honeyed chai, had become a police officer. And her father, Vikram Rathore, was a kingpin. Not of guns or drugs, but of a more silent poison: land. He bought villages for a song, evicted families under cover of darkness, and sold the earth to high-rises.