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Review | I Did It My Way movie review: Andy Lau-led crime thriller about drugs on Asia’s dark web is ruined by bad writing and a silly depiction of e-commerce
- After being overshadowed by Tony Leung Chiu-wai in recent film The Goldfinger, this movie should have been Andy Lau’s chance to shine, but it isn’t
- An illogical screenplay renders Lau’s crime boss unreasonable to the point of comedy, and the visualisation of the dark web on which drugs are sold looks foolish
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2/5 stars
The drug-trafficking business meets the internet’s live-stream shopping craze in this most bizarrely conceived crime thriller, which sees producer and lead actor Andy Lau Tak-wah play a drug lord so foolhardy and unreasonable that it would take his biggest fan to feel any sympathy for his character.
I Did It My Way marks the second solo directing effort of veteran cinematographer Jason Kwan Chi-yiu (A Nail Clipper Romance), who last worked with Lau when he co-directed the 2017 crime epic Chasing the Dragon with Wong Jing.
Kwan’s film begins with an engaging first act that positions Chan Chiu-sang (Philip Keung Ho-man) as an enigmatic drug dealer nicknamed The Boss – the “founder of Asia’s dark web” – and barrister George Lam (Lau) and assassin Sau Ho (Lam Ka-tung) as his chief accomplices.
On their case are Eddie Fong (Eddie Peng Yu-yan), police superintendent of the cybercrime investigation unit, and his superior, Chung Kam-ming (Simon Yam Tat-wah), who believe that The Boss is set to do one last drug transaction in person before moving his entire business model online.
By the time the film has raced through a thrilling series of plot twists and reached the half-hour mark, we’ve already seen Chan kill himself while in police custody, Sau reveal himself to be a conflicted undercover policeman, and Lam confirmed as The Boss himself.
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