Fantasia 2010

Overheard (Felix Chong and Alan Mak, 2009)

Thanks to Love in a Puff, I’m looking forward to Overheard. Since it is a Hong Kong film from Alan Mak, one of the directors of Infernal Affairs, I don’t bother to read the synopsis online before buying my ticket. By the pictures in the Fantasia program, I surmise that it’s a star-studded cat-and-mouse psychological thriller, in the vein of Infernal Affairs.

Tasked with the surveillance of CEOs rumoured to be manipulating the price of their stock for money, three police officers get in over their heads when they overhear inside information and decide to invest in the company for their own benefit. As a fable on greed and corruption, Overheard starts out well enough. It’s possible at every moment for the three officers to stop their unethical actions, but they never do. Plus, we don’t deal here with corrupt cops but tortured men pressed by circumstances and motivated by good intentions. But, as it’s usually the case with corruption, an act leads to another and can overwhelm in the end. What is unrealistic here in Mak and Chong’s fable is the high degree to which the police officers get punished by their circumstance. It is morally simplistic to map out the characters vertiginous descent as abruptly as it’s done in the film. Close to its end, every plot point feels forced, every emotion manufactured.

Overheard, which started as a worthy addition to the genre, with magnificent performances from its lead actors, ends on a melodramatic cop-out in which the filmmakers forgo the story’s more thrilling aspects for their unsatisfying, fabricated morality. A shame, really.

More info on IMDB

Follow him
Head Honcho at Red Brand Studios
Eric Lafalaise mostly communicates by writing and telling stories. He is a contributing writer to the Kinoreal film blog, a producer for Red Brand Studios, an artist, a photographer, a tech freak, and an all-around (left-right) brain nut.
Follow him
Latest posts by Eric Lafalaise (see all)
Eric Lafalaise

Eric Lafalaise mostly communicates by writing and telling stories. He is a contributing writer to the Kinoreal film blog, a producer for Red Brand Studios, an artist, a photographer, a tech freak, and an all-around (left-right) brain nut.

Recent Posts

Black Panther: A Perspective

I haven’t been motivated enough by any of the recent movies to add to the…

7 years ago

On the dopeness of Black Panther

I’ve been excited about Black Panther from the moment I heard about it. Anything that…

7 years ago

Spectre (Sam Mendes, 2015)

After the tragic death of M and to honour her memory, James Bond uncovers a…

9 years ago

Seven Pounds (Gabriele Muccino, 2008)

Seven Pounds is a great concept but executed with poor vision. The supporting cast is…

10 years ago

Honeymoon (Leigh Janiak, 2014)

Honeymoon is like the edge of a blade, which could turn out quite dull or…

10 years ago

Live (Noboru Iguchi, 2014)

What is most impressive with Live is its infectious energy.Every death, every plot point is…

10 years ago