Archive for 七月 4th, 2026

《恨女的逆襲》短評

應否向成人世界妥協?

台灣導演李宜珊一向關注邊緣人物的生存狀態,這次亦不例外,《恨女的逆襲》描寫陳家玲(林怡婷飾)在20歲輟學,對自己的家庭看不過眼,表面上父母和諧,背底裡父親有外遇,與母親的婚姻名存實亡。家玲剛剛踏進成人世界,對此世界的林林總總一竅不通,唯有透過拳擊發洩自己苦悶不安的情緒,殊不知拳擊世界有自己的方程式,她需要知道何時要贏,何時要輸,只用盡自己的實力不斷獲勝,雖然能帶來個人的滿足感和榮譽感,但不願意在適當的時候輸,卻會破壞拳擊比賽的潛藏法則,這反而會使她在這行業內繼續生存倍感艱難。《恨》寫實地敘述她的成長過程,她在生活中跌跌撞撞,讓自己洞悉成長時遇上挫折,繼而勇於克服困難,在必要時需要妥協的竅門,這才可令自己的事業得以持續地發光發亮。因此,她進入成人世界時懵懂的學習過程是影片故事情節的核心。

《恨》內家玲的恨,沒有呼天搶地的叫喊,亦沒有大肆破壞的憤怒,只有心底裡的鬱悶,以及一拳一拳打出去的發洩。或許影片由女性執導,較注重她細緻的內心描寫,讓《恨》別樹一格,有一種不需要以行為表達出來的內在壓抑,只以她細膩的身體語言表達,即使並非每一場表演皆完全到位,時有表達欠清晰之弊,特別是她在父親帶「女朋友」返家時,卻被迫面對他的複雜情緒,就欠缺了多層次的演繹。但整體來說,她仍能表達角色所需,把角色含蓄而經常收藏的憤怒表達出來,在略顯木訥的臉容上流露絲毫對世態不滿的痕跡,並適度地表達複雜的內心世界。這對演出經驗尚淺的演員來說,其實她已交足功課。因此,她的演出是影片是否具吸引力的關鍵,如今她恰如其分的表演,確實使影片能以她的演出為賣點,並吸引部分對台灣家庭及體育事業有興趣的觀眾入場。

在現實社會內,部分兒童及青少年說自己不願意成長,因為成長為他們帶來痛苦。《恨》內家玲的苦,在於她需要從簡單直接的年輕人世界過渡至複雜取巧的成年人世界,或許她經歷的痛,對部分過來人來說,會覺得感同身受。因為年輕人經常空有一腔熱血,以為自己能在喜愛的運動領域內一展所長,但在資本主義的社會內,任何一種體育事業都是一門生意,必定有投機取巧的成分,足球如是,籃球如是,拳擊亦不例外。因此,她在適應成人世界的過程中舉步維艱,弄致「傷痕累累」,這實屬正常。

曉龍

《火遮眼》再評之多謝江老闆將Keji San送到荷里活

早前已評遲來的十年港片《火遮眼》,正如筆者所說倒不如投資《捍衛任務》,多謝江老闆將Keji San送到荷里活,谷垣健治導演下部作品《The Reckoner》真的將由《捍衛任務》編劇團隊創作,百份之一千比《火遮眼》更勝一籌。

筆者也是銀河映像員工,都知道《樹大招風》是杜琪峰導演捉住手拍完的作品,就三份之一部作品都能成為《火》的監製和編劇,確實奇蹟!觀後大家都感到老舊殘,又是筆者那句:拍時辛苦、看時難受,有槍唔用,打條毛。期待《捍衛任務》編劇團隊創作如何搖搖領先,值得借鑒。

KEPA

4
七月

《恨女的逆襲》

   Posted by: admin    in 香港影評人協會

A Dance With Rainbows: A Debut That Packs a Punch

Lee Yi-shan’s feature debut, A Dance With Rainbows, arrives with the grounded authenticity of a documentary filmmaker and the emotional heft of a veteran storyteller. Premiering at the Hong Kong International Film Festival and earning Yu An-shun a Best Actor accolade, the film uses the boxing ring as a microcosm for broader societal struggles, particularly those faced by women navigating a patriarchal East Asian society .

The narrative centres on Ling, a twenty-year-old amateur boxer played with compelling restraint by Lin Yi-ting. She is mired in a losing streak, yet her battles outside the ring prove far more punishing. Ling shoulders the burden of supporting her mother’s flagging lunchbox business while her family’s fragile illusion of harmony shatters when her father introduces a new girlfriend. Her younger brother, meanwhile, endures harsh training from a coach, mirroring the generational expectations their father—a former table tennis athlete—places upon them . The pressure intensifies when Ling defies her own coach’s orders to throw underground matches, setting off a chain of consequences that threaten to consume her .

Lee’s direction is perceptive and unsentimental. Drawing from personal experience and a deep engagement with boxing culture, she treats the sport not as mere spectacle but as a lens through which to examine exploitation, commodification, and moral compromise . The “boxing babes” sequences and the inclusion of underground bouts are particularly incisive, exposing how spectacle and commerce often reduce athletes to mere assets . The film subtly critiques the older generation’s contradictions while the youth’s search for authenticity becomes the emotional core.

Performances are uniformly strong. Lin Yi-ting anchors the film with a delicate balance of vulnerability and resilience, her six months of intensive training evident in every convincing punch . Yu An-shun’s supporting turn is a standout—bringing gravitas, nuance, and unexpected levity—while Tsai Chen-nan’s coach embodies a man who acts more as a parent to his athletes than their actual families. Lotus Wang, as Ling’s conflicted mother, adds further depth to a quietly devastating portrait of familial collapse .

Cinematographer Chang Chih-teng adopts a restrained, documentary-like approach, particularly during matches, using handheld camera work to create intimacy and immediacy . The action choreography, recognised at the Golden Horse Awards, is exceptional. Composer Tsai Yi-chun’s hybrid score, underscored by a recurring tango motif, subtly reinforces the film’s themes of family and longing .

A Dance With Rainbows is a grounded and emotionally resonant debut that prioritises realism over melodrama. It offers a promising first statement from a director unafraid to tackle complex social commentary within the framework of an accessible, human story.

Elven Ho