The Stool Pigeon (2010 film) explained

The Stool Pigeon
Director:Dante Lam
Producer:Albert Lee
Wang Zhonglei
Cheung Hong-tat
Story:Dante Lam
Starring:Nicholas Tse
Nick Cheung
Gwei Lun-mei
Liu Kai-chi
Miao Pu
Lu Yi
Music:Henry Lai Wan-man
Cinematography:Kenny Tse
Editing:Chan Ki-hop
Matthew Hui
Studio:Emperor Motion Pictures
Huayi Brothers
Sil-Metropole Organisation
Distributor:Emperor Motion Pictures
Runtime:112 minutes
Country:Hong Kong
China
Language:Cantonese
Gross:[1]

The Stool Pigeon is a 2010 Hong Kong-Chinese action thriller film directed by Dante Lam and starring Nicholas Tse, Nick Cheung and Gwei Lun-mei. The film is about police detective, Don Lee (Cheung), who uses informants to gain information about gangsters. Lee begins to feel guilty when his informants are caught, but sends out a street racer named Ghost (Tse) as an informant to gain information about a gangster name Barbarian (Lu Yi).

The film was released in China on August 24 and two days later in Hong Kong. The film performed well in the Hong Kong box office, though it has received mixed reviews.

Plot

Don Lee (Nick Cheung), a police detective in Kowloon whose reliance on informants leaves him struggling with a guilty conscience. Lee's previous stool pigeon's cover was blown and was attacked, leading him paranoid and driven from his wife and home. Lee begins to doubt his own methods. Lee recruits a street racer named Ghost (Nicholas Tse) as his latest stool pigeon who is assigned to infiltrate a gang led by the notorious armed robber Barbarian (Lu Yi). Ghost accepts Lee's offer so he can rescue his sister from a life of prostitution as well as help his father's one-million dollar debt. Ghost joins an illegal street race to gain acceptance into Barbarian's gang. Lee also has personal problems of his own, as wife Cher (Miao Pu) who he is separated with tried to commit suicide a few months previously and has since had amnesia. Lee begins to realize how wrong he is by exploiting his informants and desperately tries to right his wrongs before Ghost is in serious trouble.[2] [3] [4]

Cast

Production

Production on The Stool Pigeon began on November 2, 2009.[5] Early during the production of the film, the Chinese film conglomerate Huayi Brothers signed on to take an equity stake and a production credit for the film.[6] Despite having much of the same cast of his previous hit film Beast Stalker, Dante Lam said The Stool Pigeon is not a sequel.[7] Dante stated that he "felt the pressure when I was working on the new movie because The Beast Stalker did so well and received a lot of positive feedback. I did not want the new film to live in its shadow because it is an entirely different movie, except with the same cast." Dante Lam chose the theme of an informant in the film, stating that there is "Hong Kong shoot-out film on this theme yet. It's a good subject for exploring human nature and I have done research with involved people in real life".[8]

Actor Nick Cheung stated that he felt much more relaxed working on Stool Pigeon than he did previously on The Beast Stalker as he had worked with the cast before. Some reports noted that Cheung was unhappy that his screen time is shorter, Cheung denied this saying he was misquoted off his Twitter by the Hong Kong media and paparazzi.[9]

Release

The Stool Pigeon was released in China on August 24, 2010, and in Hong Kong on August 26. The film was shown in Japan at the Tokyo Filmex festival.[10] The film premiered at number two in the Hong Kong box office where on its opening week. It was beaten by The Expendables.[11] The next week it placed at number one on the chart. It has grossed a total of US$1,598,123.[12]

Reception

The China Post gave the film three stars out of five stating praising a car race scenes set to the song "White Christmas" while stating that the action scenes are thin. The China Post also noted that there were "a few unnecessary subplots" and that overall "the story is gripping and entertaining throughout." Film Business Asia gave the film a rating of eight out of ten also praised the "White Christmas" race scene. They compared the film to Beast Stalker, stating it was "less dark and claustrophobic than Stalker...But it's more deeply characterised from top to bottom, with much better chemistry between Tse and Cheung than between Leon Lai and Richie Ren in [''[[Fire of Conscience]]]. Only the subplot of the detective's private life seems pasted into the overall drama." The Hollywood Reporter compared the film negatively to The Beast Stalker, stating that The Stool Pigeon "falls short in tension and stylistic brio if judged as a sister film...The narrative could benefit from more tautness. As if worried about the audience's attention span for drama, action scenes are intermittently inserted throughout but they don't build to one big momentum."[13] Time Out Hong Kong gave the film three stars out of six, finding the film far too similar to Dante Lam's other works.[14]

Accolades

Awards
CeremonyCategoryNameOutcome
5th Asian Film Awards[15]
Best CinematographyKenny Tse
30th Hong Kong Film Awards[16]
Best FilmThe Stool Pigeon
Best DirectorDante Lam
Best Screenplay Jack Ng
Best Actor
Best ActorNick Cheung
Best Supporting Actor
Best Film EditingMatthew Hui, Chan Ki-hop
Best SoundKinson Tsang
17th Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards[17]
Film of MeritThe Stool Pigeon

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Stool Pigeon (2010). Boxofficemojo.com. 16 July 2018.
  2. Web site: The Stool Pigeon (線人). Film Business Asia. Elley, Derek. September 24, 2010. September 22, 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20101115025824/http://www.filmbiz.asia/reviews/the-stool-pigeon. November 15, 2010.
  3. Web site: The Stool Pigeon (線人). The China Post. Topley, James. September 24, 2010. September 13, 2010. 1.
  4. Web site: The Stool Pigeon (線人). The China Post. Topley, James. September 24, 2010. September 13, 2010. 2.
  5. Web site: 'Stool Pigeon' starts filming in HK. The Hollywood Reporter. Frater, Patrick. November 2, 2009. July 29, 2011.
  6. Web site: Huayi is game for 'Pigeon'. Hollywood Reporter. Frater, Patrick. September 24, 2010. November 19, 2009.
  7. Web site: Dante's dramas. The Straits Times. August 24, 2010. September 24, 2010.
  8. Web site: The Stool Pigeon to hit cinemas August 26. China.org.cn. July 21, 2010. September 27, 2010.
  9. Web site: Flight to fame. Wah, Chan Soo. August 27, 2010. September 24, 2010. The Sun Daily.
  10. Web site: Tokyo Filmex unveils lineup. September 16, 2010. September 24, 2010. Schilling, Mark. Variety.
  11. Web site: Hong Kong Box Office: August 26–29, 2010. Box Office Mojo.
  12. Web site: The Stool Pigeon. Box Office Mojo. September 24, 2010.
  13. Web site: The Stool Pigeon -- Film Review. The Hollywood Reporter. Lee, Maggie. September 3, 2010. July 29, 2011.
  14. Web site: The Stool Pigeon. Time Out Hong Kong. August 25, 2010. September 24, 2010. Lee, Edmund. https://web.archive.org/web/20100925040306/http://www.timeout.com.hk/film/features/36294/the-stool-pigeon.html. September 25, 2010. dead.
  15. Web site: 5th AFA Nominees & Winners by Nominees. Asian Film Awards. November 18, 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130122054044/http://www.asianfilmawards.asia/2011/5th-nominees-and-winners/5th-afa-nominees-winners-by-nom/. January 22, 2013.
  16. Web site: 第三十屆香港電影金像獎得獎名單. Hong Kong Film Awards. November 18, 2011.
  17. Web site: 第十七屆香港電影評論學會大獎. Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards. November 18, 2011. January 10, 2011.