Connected (film)

Connected (film)
For the 2011 Tiffany Shlain film, see Connected: An Autoblogography About Love, Death, & Technology.
Connected

Promotional poster
Traditional 保持通話
Simplified 保持通话
Directed by Benny Chan
Produced by Benny Chan
Albert Lee
Jiang Tao
Kevin Yung
Written by Screenplay:
Alan Yuen
Benny Chan
Xu Bing
Original Screenplay:
Chris Morgan
Original Story:
Larry Cohen
Starring Louis Koo
Barbie Hsu
Nick Cheung
Liu Ye
Music by Nicolas Errèra
Cinematography Anthony Pun
Editing by Yau Chi-Wai
Studio China Film Group
Armor Entertainment
Sirius Pictures International
Distributed by Hong Kong:
Emperor Motion Pictures
China:
Warner China Film HG Corporation
Polybona Films
Singapore:
MediaCorp Raintree Pictures
Shaw Organisation
Release date(s) 25 September 2008 (Hong Kong and Malaysia)
26 September 2008 (Taiwan)
28 September 2008 (China)
1 October 2008 (Singapore)
20 November 2008 (South Korea)
1 August 2009 (Japan)
Running time 110 minutes
Country Hong Kong
Language Cantonese
Mandarin
English
Budget HK$45 million
Gross revenue HK$ 13.64 million

Connected (traditional Chinese: 保持通話; simplified Chinese: 保持通话; pinyin: Bao chi tong hua; Cantonese Yale: Bo chi tung wah; Literal title: Maintain the telephone conversation) is a 2008 action-crime thriller film co-written and directed by Benny Chan. A co-production between Hong Kong and China, the film is a remake of the 2004 film Cellular. Connected stars Louis Koo as a man who receives a distressing phone call on his cellular phone from a young woman who has been kidnapped by a gang of corrupt Interpol agents who have a hidden agenda.

Producers of the film felt that a remake of Cellular would reach out to Hong Kong's cell phone user population, and decided to hire Benny Chan to develop a screenplay for the film. Chan and his screenwriters spent two years working on the script. For Connected, Chan wanted to improve on the previous film by making the characters and the situations seem more believable. Principal photography took place in Hong Kong. For the film, lead actors Louis Koo and Barbie Hsu shot their scenes separately, only sharing one scene together. After filming, Chan described Connected as one of the most difficult films in his career.

Connected was released in Hong Kong on 25 September 2008.

Contents

Plot

After Grace Wong sends her daughter to school, her car is knocked down by another vehicle and she is abducted from the scene. The kidnappers, led by Fok Tak-Nang, return to Grace's house, where they kill her maid, and start searching the place. Grace is then taken to an abandoned house, where she manages to repair a destroyed telephone. With the phone, she manages to contact Bob, a single father and debt collector who has promised his son, Kit-Kit, and his sister, Jeannie, that he will meet them at an airport, before Kit-Kit boards a flight to Australia.

While talking to Grace on his cellular phone, Bob agrees to help Grace and hands his phone to patrol officer Fai, who believes that the distressing phone call is a prank, due to Bob's reckless driving. Grace is interrupted from the call when Fok and his men enter the room, having abducted her brother's friend, Joe. Fok forces Grace to contact her brother, Roy. After listening to Roy's answering machine, Fok kills Joe and leaves with his men, now planning to go after Grace's daughter, Tinker. Grace persuades Bob to head to the school and find her daughter before Fok's men do. When Bob arrives, he is distracted by the school's headmaster, and minutes before the school's class dismissal, he finds Tinker too late, as she is abducted by Fok's men. Bob goes after the abductors, but winds up losing sight of them in the struggle. After crashing through a truck, Bob later finds a handgun left in his car by a fellow debt collector.

Realizing that his phone has a low battery, Bob heads to a phone store to buy a cell phone charger. After losing his patience with the flirty service clerk, he holds the store at gunpoint and pays for the charger. After Bob is caught on camera at both the school and the phone store, Detective Fai heads to Grace Wong's residence. He is still convinced that the kidnapping situation is a prank, having talked to Michelle, a woman impersonating Grace. Fok decides to go after Grace's brother, Roy, who is in a hospital.

Fai decides to call Grace's house, after realizing the real Grace Wong is a Mandarin-language speaker, while the impersonator he met speaks Cantonese. At the hospital, Bob manages to distract Grace's abductors, who are revealed by police to be Interpol agents. The agents, however, manage to successfully kidnap Roy and take him to a hill where he has hidden a camcorder. Bob intervenes, grabbing a hold of the camera and fleeing from the agents; unfortunately, he loses connections with Grace.

Fai heads to Grace's house, where he confronts and kills Michelle, realizing she was also an Interpol agent working for Senior Inspector Fok. As Grace tries to contact Bob, she is caught by one Fok's henchmen. Grace kills the henchman and manages to find her daughter. However, while planning to escape, Grace and Tinker are caught by Inspector Fok. Bob looks at the evidence on the camcorder. The footage, captured by Roy, reveals Fok brutally executing several American drug dealers and stealing the drugs. Bob calls Fok, and tells them to meet him at the airport in an exchange for the evidence and the hostages, while attempting to keep his promise to his son.

At the airport, Bob's plans to meet his sister and son are foiled as Fok is conveniently between them and Bob's hiding place. After telling Fok to go towards the parking lot, he demands that Grace, Roy and Tinker be released. They flee to a patrol car that is also in the lot. Unfortunately, Bob is caught by Fok and his men, and fights against them until Fai catches up to them. Fok and his men are arrested by Detective Cheung and his Serious Crimes Unit. After Bob hands the videotaped evidence over to Detective Cheung, Fok and Tong, one of Fok's henchman, appear, and Cheung reveals that he was working with Inspector Fok. Fok deletes the footage on the videotape, and a violent confrontation ensues in a loading dock in the airport where Fai and Bob take on Fok, Cheung and the corrupt Interpol agents. Detective Cheung is shot to death by Fai after attacking him with a forklift truck.

Bob confronts Fok on a scaffolding. After Bob reveals he still has videotaped evidence on his cell phone and threatens to send it to the police, Fok kicks Bob off the scaffolding. A net manages to save Bob's fall, but sends Fok falling to his death. While this was going on, a member of Fok's team rekidnaps Grace and her family and prepares to kill them, but Grace manages to defend her family long enough for the police to arrive. When Bob returns, Fai talks to him, feeling the glory he once had as a police officer, and wishing that they never meet again after their ordeal. Bob then meets Grace for the first time in person. Grace thanks him, and Bob concludes their meeting by saying, "If you're gonna call for help, no thanks! If you want dinner, then I'll consider." Bob is then reunited with his son, who is happy that his father kept his promise.

Cast and characters

  • Louis Koo (古天樂) plays Bob, a debt collector, and single father whose life has fallen apart after his wife leaves him and her son behind. After a successful, previous collaboration with the 2006 film Rob-B-Hood, Koo was director Benny Chan’s first choice to play the role of Bob, a role the actor described as the most difficult in the film.[1]
  • Barbie Hsu (徐熙媛) plays Grace Wong, the female protagonist who is kidnapped. Grace is a widowed single mother, who owns a successful toy designing company. Hsu, a Taiwanese actress who appears in her first Hong Kong film, expressed her interest on her character overcoming her vulnerability: “The character I play is a victim throughout. After being kidnapped and imprisoned, she even has to witness someone being killed. It’s all very frightening. Yet, I like this character a lot because she manages to piece together a shattered phone to make a call, under such difficult circumstances.”[2]
  • Liu Ye (劉燁) plays Senior Inspector Fok Tak-Nang, the main antagonist who is a corrupt Interpol agent with a hidden agenda.
  • Flora Chan (陳慧珊) plays Jeannie, Bob's sister, who is looking after Bob's son before he boards a flight to Australia.[3]
  • Carlos Chan (陳家樂) plays Roy Wong, Grace's brother, who mysteriously catches Senior Inspector Fok robbing the drug dealers on video.
  • Fan Siu-Wong (樊少皇) plays Tong, another Interpol agent who serves as one of Fok's henchman.

Other players include Ken Hung as Joe, Roy's classmate, who is murdered by Fok; Vincent Kok as a man whose convertible is taken by Bob; Mainland Chinese actress Gong Beibi cameos as Jen, Fai wife; German-born Asian actress Ankie Beilke plays Michelle, an Interpol agent pretending to be Grace Wong as a cover-up for the kidnapping; Wong Cho-Lam appears as a salesman; Raymond Wong Ho-Yin cameos as a police officer; child actress Chan Sze-Wai plays Tinker Wong, Grace's daughter; child actor Presley Tam, who appeared as a school bus child in Benny Chan's Invisible Target plays Kit-Kit, Bob's son; American actors Robbin Harris, David Rock, and Daniel Whyte play Interpol agents working for Inspector Fok.

Production

Connected is a remake of the 2004 American thriller Cellular, which starred Kim Basinger and Chris Evans.[4] It is also the first film to be produced by Sirius XM Radio's production arm Sirius Pictures International. Connected is a Chinese-Hong Kong co-production. It was produced by Hong Kong's Emperor Motion Pictures, China Film Group and Warner China Film HG, the Chinese production arm of Warner Bros.

The film was produced and directed by Benny Chan, and stars Louis Koo in the lead role. Both the director and actor reunite after collaborating on the 2006 film, Rob-B-Hood. Chan also reunites with stunt coordinator Nicky Li, a former leader of the Jackie Chan Stunt Team, who has worked on several of Chan's films including Rob-B-Hood, Divergence and Invisible Target. The screenplay was co-written by Alan Yuen, who has frequently collaborated with Chan on films such as Rob-B-Hood and New Police Story.

Development

Connected was greenlit by Warner China Film HG, who hoped that the film would appeal to the Hong Kong's cell phone user population. The studio approached director Benny Chan, one of the most sought-after film directors of Hong Kong action cinema. Chan and his screenwriters spent two years working on the script. It went through various rewrites, before the writers finally created a scenario closely similar to the film Cellular.[5][6] When comparing his film to Cellular, Chan wanted to make the characters more real and believable than the Hollywood original, even questioning the plausibility of the films' scenario.

Filming

The film was shot entirely in Hong Kong under a budget of HK$45 million[7] (US$5.8 million),[8] a conservative figure among growing Chinese movie budgets. Chan described the film as the most demanding film in his career, as he and co-screenwriters Alan Yuen and Xu Bing tried to make the film appeal to Chinese audiences. The director first filmed Barbie Hsu’s scenes before filming Louis Koo’s portion. Both actors, however, share one scene together.[9] During filming, the Hong Kong Government refused to grant a permit to film a flying car scene in a busy city district, thus the filmmakers could only shift filming to the outskirts of Hong Kong, proving that they could do the same without the government’s help.[9]

Stunts

Louis Koo performed his own stunts, stating, "Whether it’s a car chase, rolling down a hill or jumping out of a falling car, I’m fine with the stunts as long as the outcome gives the effect we want."[2] He later revealed that he suffered from external injuries. For the film's car chase sequence, Koo persuaded Chan to let him perform the stunt himself, feeling that the “result of which would be more believable.”[1]

Reception

Box office

On opening weekend in Hong Kong, Connected topped the box office, grossing HK$3.61 million, with HK$1.08 million from 42 screens on a four-day weekend.[10] At the end of its box-office run in Hong Kong, the film had grossed a total of HK$13.64 million.[11]

Awards and nominations

Awards
Award Category Name Outcome
45th Golden Horse Film Awards Best Film Editing Yau Chi-Wai Won
Best Action Choreography Nicky Li Won
28th Hong Kong Film Awards Best Director Benny Chan Nominated
Best Actress Barbie Hsu Nominated
Best Film Editing Yau Chi-Wai Won
Best Action Choreography Nicky Li Nominated
Best Sound Effects Chris Goodes, Sam Wong Nominated

References

External links


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