Run and Kill (1993) Poster

(1993)

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7/10
Decent Cat III Crime/Action/Drama
EVOL66610 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
RUN AND KILL is a pretty good HK action/drama with some notable scenes and performances. Basic story: All is well for "Fatty" until one day he catches his wife boning some other guy. Fatty goes to the local bar and gets all tore-up, where he meets a hooker who offers to set him up with someone who will "take-care" of Fatty's problem. Fatty unknowingly agrees ("unknowingly" because at this point he's too f'ed up to know what he's talking about...) and some guys murder Fatty's wife and her lover. Everything goes down-hill for Fatty at this point - and this is where RUN AND KILL starts to take off.

All-in-all a good film with excellent performances by Simon Yam and Kent Cheng especially. Plenty of action and a decent story to keep the film going, but not quite as violent as I had expected. Other than 1 or 2 "rough" scenes, RUN AND KILL plays out as a pretty straight-faced crime/action drama, that to me almost doesn't deserve it's "notorious" Cat III status. The one scene that some will have issue with is the murder of Fatty's daughter, but anyone familiar with this genre of HK films will no doubt have seen worse in the past (notably THE UNTOLD STORY, EBOLA SYNDROME, etc...- there seems to be a lot of child murder in these off-the-wall HK films...). A good action film that's definitely worth a look - if you're looking for a blood-bath or horror film, this isn't it. 7/10
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8/10
Gritty,savage and violent HK thriller.
HumanoidOfFlesh23 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Propane gas shop owner Cheung(Kent Cheng)lives a happy life until the day he finds his wife(Lily Lee)having sex with one of his workers. He simply walks away and goes out to get drunk at a city bar. In his drunken state he accidentally enlists a Vietnamese gang to murder his wife,an event that is just the beginning of a downward spiral into hell. Without enough money to pay for the fulfilled task,he takes refuge to the Mainland where he hopes a gang will help him solve the conflict between him and the Vietnamese. Amongst that Mainland gang is Ching Fung(Simon Yam from "Dr. Lamb")who is about to make Cheung's life an even bigger living hell..."Run and Kill" is one hell of a dark and violent film. The execution of a small daughter of Fatty,which involves lots of rope and gasoline is among the most sadistic child murders I have ever seen on screen. Simon Yam is simply amazing as a merciless psychopath as is Kent Cheng. Overall,"Run and Kill" is a classic of HK Cat. III cinema. You can't go wrong with this brutal and evil film.8 out of 10.
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7/10
Bad luck for Fatty the gas man.
ElijahCSkuggs11 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
"Fight! Fight! Between the heavy and the light! The light don't win, we all jump in!" I'll never forget that chant. When I was young and whenever there was a height/weight disadvantage someone would begin chanting this. It was never really a serious threat, since the chant would make the bigger person almost always not try as hard, and usually making the fight into a tie. Why did I think of this? Because in this movie, you're rooting for the fat guy! Sure I've rooted for a fat guy before...maybe in a WWF or MMA match, but not in a flick I don't think. Upp, I did want Lardass in Stand By Me to get revenge. But in a violent, gritty, next-move-could-be-fatal type of way, never. Until now! Go Fatty!

Run and Kill starts off with a guy named "Fatty" accidentally putting a "hit" on his wife. His wife cheated on him, so he went to the club got really drunk and started slurring around the wrong people. Well, what follows is a some of the worst luck a guy can go through. Run and Kill started off well with good character development, but then strayed off a little bit during the middle when Fatty was getting into more heat. Which is weird, you'd think it'd get more interesting. Not really. More characters were introduced at a fast rate, including the villain of the movie, but it all felt kinda jumbled and rushed. Truthfully, one moment I was watching Fatty do something with the cops, then suddenly I was watching a warehouse scene where guys were shooting at each other. Im still a tad confused if it was either Cops vs. Bad Guys or two warring groups. Anyways, that doesn't matter. What matters is what went on during the final 20 minutes.

Run and Kill is another CATIII goodie from the director Billy Tang. Now seeing three of his movies, I can now easily pick his style from a group. That upward camera view close up on the bad guy. Nice stuff when looking for a menacing, insane look. The actors were all pretty good as well, especially Fatty and the Villain. Overall, Run and Kill was a pretty fun watch. It delivered the goods with acting, violence and camera work, but was kinda average with the story-telling. I enjoyed the story of revenge, the beginning and the end, but the middle not so much. Though I do recommend it to CATIII lovers out there.
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6/10
Go to Hell, you bastard!
lastliberal9 May 2009
Fatty (Kent Cheng) catches his wife (Lily Li) with another man; on their anniversary, no less. He gets drunk and hires a hit man to take care of her; only there is a slight miscommunication over what he wants.

Now, the gang leader (Lung Wei Wang) wants $800,000 for the job they did. Lots of chop socky and blood is spilled in the attempt to collect. Rival gangs get involved and the blood flows freely.

When Ching Fung's (Simon Yam) brother Wah (Sui Wah Fok) dies, he vows revenge on Fatty and his family. Fung tortures Fatty in the worst possible way and even kills his own partners as he goes psychotic after Fatty escapes.

He and fatty have a fight to the death. It was magnificent.
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7/10
Classic Hong Kong CAT III thriller
lee_hkfan28 August 2014
RUN AND KILL (1993) - When returning home from work one day, Cheung (Kent Cheng) finds his wife having sex with the local grocer. In a state of shock, Cheung walks out and ends up at a sleazy bar to drown his sorrows. Having one too many, he unintentionally hires a local gangster to kill his wife. When he comes home the following day, men attack and kill his wife and her lover, leaving him in the frame for the murders. Cheung doesn't remember hiring the men but is soon reminded when they come calling for the rest of the money.

Fleeing his apartment, Cheung hides out at the old family home in china, only to find his old neighbour and a group of professional killers held up there. The neighbour agrees to help Cheung with his trouble back home but proves to be a fatal mistake, leading to events that are far worse than he could imagine.

Run and Kill is a bleak and gloomy CAT III classic from the 90's starring Kent Cheng as the extremely unlucky fatty Cheung who inadvertently runs into Simon Yam's psychopathic ex war veteran character, played here with his usual great charm. I did find Kent Cheng kind of annoying at first, and Danny Lee barely even has a role in the movie but still, Run and Kill deserves it's place as one of the CAT 3 classics from this period in HK cinema. Not wanting to spoil it for anyone who hasn't seen it but ending is worth watching the film for that scene alone, even if the dummy corpse looks more like a statue of a monkey!
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9/10
Run and Kill comments
Stigdu10 March 1999
Run and Kill is an excellent example of what the Chinese do so well - a violent revenge thriller, in the vein of MAN WANTED and RETURN ENGAGEMENT (both also starring SIMON YAM). Kent Cheung plays a mild-mannered man who accidentally involves himself in the murder of his wife when drunk at a nightclub one evening. When he sobers up and realizes what has happened, he goes to the police, headed by DANNY LEE, who find his tale somewhat hard to believe! He soon goes home to find the gang leader who wants his payment for the murder of his wife, and when he can't pay, gets beaten up for his troubles. The plot thickens from here on, but I wouldn't want to spoil it for you. Suffice to say there are a few nasty moments involving a lead pipe, and a burning child....you find yourself really rooting for the hero (?) of the piece as he comes up against the lunatic Simon Yam. This film is based on a true story, which makes it all the more gripping if you can stand the gore and violence on display. Unfortunately, this movie isn't available in the UK, but if you get the chance, it comes highly recommended.
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Brutally violent HK crime thriller
dave13-17 February 2011
A misunderstanding in a bar puts propane salesman Kent 'Fatty' Cheng smack in the middle of a gang war between Vietnamese blackmailers and Chinese mercenaries. Mercenary Simon Yam, in one of his trademark crazy-eyed psycho roles, blames Cheng for starting the events that lead to his brother's death. His revenge against Cheng's family fills the second half of the film. This film is not for the queasy. Unlike most HK thrillers with their stylized fighting, the violence here comes suddenly and with shocking brutality. The fact that most of the film takes place at night in dark labyrinthine places - warehouses, construction sites - gives the film an effective nightmarish atmosphere as Cheng tries to flee from the demonic Yam.

Also present in this movie is a darkly absurdist comedic sensibility that lets the violent action and the characters go way too far and keep on going, until the effect is almost sickening and yet still entertaining.
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7/10
Impactful Category III thriller
Leofwine_draca12 March 2023
A strange little Category III and one of the more notorious of its kind. Watch it and you'll soon see why. Kent Cheng is cast against type as a likeable petrol station owner and family man who discovers his wife cheating on him. Before you can say STRANGER ON A TRAIN, he's up to his neck in vengeful gang members and sadistic violence, captured unremarkably by director Billy Tang. The first hour feels cheap and cheerful, enlivened slightly by tough guy actors like Danny Lee, Melvin Wong and Johnny Wang Lung Wei, although Simon Yam deserves mention as a truly crazy character. However, in the last half an hour, this really heats up (!) with some extremely disturbing scenes and frenetic moments you'd never find in Hollywood. It makes an impact, that's for sure.
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10/10
Extreme cinema
Bogey Man22 August 2002
Hin Sing 'Billy' Tang has directed many noteworthy pieces of cinema in Hong Kong. His work include Red to Kill (1994) and Dr. Lamb (1992, co-directed with Danny Lee), but I think Run and Kill (1993) is perhaps his masterpiece, at least from films he's directed completely himself. Run and Kill stars the "fatty" Kent Cheng as Cheung, a business man who has a beautiful wife and little girl. He lives peaceful life with his family and goes to work in his company everyday and is a good family father. One day after coming from work he learns his wife is cheating on him with another man, and he gets shocked very badly. He goes to the nearby bar and gets drunk big time. Soon he meets one mysterious character who starts to ask things from Cheung and recommend some things which his wife deserved.. Cheung is very drunken and he says something he'd never mean and once he gets to home after waking up in the street, he learns what's happened and what's going to happen. The incredible and frightening trip to Hell has begun and the worst is yet to come.

Run and Kill is totally powerful experience and even more harrowing after the second viewing. The film begins as some usual Hong Kong "slapstick comedy" as Cheung plays with his daughter and does silly things as they are getting ready to go to work and school on that fateful morning. It may feel very irritating as Cheung acts so childishly as he tries to entertain his child. That's okay, since fathers play with their children and try to amuse them. The tone of the film, however, won't stay that way once the first 15 or so minutes have rolled. The film changes from light family film/comedy into a shocking cheating tragedy into a hellish quest for life after the real nature of the happenings is revealed. The beginning and ending of this extraordinary film are as different with each other as possible. The beginning is comedy, the ending is nightmare.

The usual dark colors and cinematography of director Tang is again powerful element, and really creates the infernal mood of the film. Once the horror begins, there's hardly any sunny scenes or happy colors, but menacing dark and blue smoke and empty rooms with nothing but despair. This film is perhaps as dark as they come, even from Hong Kong. The greatest power of Run and Kill among these cinematic elements is the structure how it changes its nature so wildly and becomes such a trip to the heart of darkness after beginning very differently and lightly.

Meet Simon Yam, the most frightening, sadistic and dangerous screen psychopath ever in any film:

Simon Yam's character in Run and Kill is totally incredible. He plays a traumatic Vietnam veteran who is undescribably evil and wicked inside and that we unfortunately learn very soon. I'd like to tell more about how this character becomes to the film, but Run and Kill belongs to the movies that you should know as little before viewing as possible. Yam's character is equally bad and dangerous with Anthony Wong's character in Herman Yau's The Untold Story. Yam's character in Run and Kill shows its most evil sides during the film's most infamous and sadistic scene which involves the death of one young character. That scene is so harrowingly powerful and disturbing act of violence that it is hard to imagine being even more powerful on any level. It gets worse. The way how Yam acts in that scene is as frightening as the act committed itself. Yam seems not to act anymore, he seems to BE like he'd be normally, it is that realistic and convincing. His face expression and other movements during that scene are totally unimaginable and made me cringe during that scene as I fully noticed them now during second viewing. Imagine Anthony Wong's face expression during the credits of The Untold Story (as he's in the police photographs) and you have the idea how powerful Yam's acting in the scene is. The scene in Run and Kill is definitely among the most gruesome and disturbing scenes ever in any film. Is it there in vain and only to exploit? No, because it is an important element in the story and finally makes Cheung's character to become what he becomes.

After that scene, the film has still approximately 15-20 minutes of running time and as it should be clear by now, it is total Hell and despair whole thing. The point and theme of the film is how seemingly normal and peace loving human mind may become greater evil and more wicked than he'd ever dare to think. Cheung becomes as evil as Yam at the end, and so the inner demon and wickedness in Cheung's soul has been released and is no more un-active hiding in the background of his mind. Run and Kill is extremely depressing and dark film which hasn't got too much (if any) positivism in it, and perhaps the only positive characters (who stay alive) are the police officers, led again by Danny Lee, the actor in many other police roles and the co-director of Dr. Lamb. The violence is very strong, too, and rarely have I felt so much pain to watch the mayhem on screen as every act of killing and stabbing hurts badly as it is realistic and never glorified or distorted to look harmless and an noteworthy tool to solve things. Run and Kill is very honest in this department and that's why it is so effective and challenging film experience.

Run and Kill was almost too much and too powerful experience for me, and so this is definitely not for any casual viewer. I think many/some viewers would without a doubt simply faint during the most infamous killing scene, especially if seen in the theatre on big screen. The power of Run and Kill is so great, it can affect people so effectively as people have actually fainted during the most powerful films and run out of theatres. Especially people who have own children will definitely feel very bad during that scene as I did, too, without being a father. Run and Kill is very likely as dark and pessimistic a film as possible and the power of this film is not likely going to be beaten or even equalled and I think those who manage to do so, are also made in Hong Kong or Japan, whose film makers have freedom to do their art without following some restrictions and commercial aims.

Run and Kill gets the full 10 rating from me as I find this so remarkable piece of the dark cinema and its message is close to me, too. This really shows how noteworthy films some of the CAT 3 films are, despite the fact that some/most (?) of them were made simply because of money and fact that these were so popular in Hong Kong back then in the early 90's. Run and Kill among The Untold Story is the greatest achievements of these CAT 3 films and they have many important things to tell and discuss, but only for the adventurous.
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7/10
A solid example of Category III excess from 'Bloody' Billy Tang.
BA_Harrison4 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I'll never complain about having a bad day again! Sure, work can get me down sometimes and having to do D.I.Y. on my weekend is never fun, but this is nothing compared to the dreadful time poor 'Fatty' Cheung has in Run and Kill.

Firstly, he discovers his wife is having an affair. Then, after a quite understandable drinking binge, he accidentally gets his adulterous wife murdered by gangsters. Before long, he finds himself fighting for his life after having witnessed the deaths of both his mother and his young daughter at the hands of a psychotic killer.

Director 'Bloody' Billy Tang's tale of an ordinary Joe plunged into an unfamiliar nightmarish world of violence is a typical slice of Category III nastiness: taboos are broken, the innocent die, and there is definitely no happy ending. Whilst Run and Kill isn't the most extreme example of the genre (the first half of the film is rather subdued for a Cat III film), there are still plenty of moments which should satisfy fans.

Kent Cheng gives a reasonable performance as the unfortunate 'Fatty', but it is Simon Yam who excels as Ching Fung, the loony who pushes our tubby good guy over the edge. Yam is no stranger to playing the bad guy, but in Run and Kill he gives us a truly scary villain. Ching Fung is so evil, he thinks nothing of setting fire to Fatty's daughter, and then tormenting the poor man by parading his girl's charred corpse in front of him. And then shooting the crispy remains for good measure.

Yes, Run and Kill is extremely excessive in places, but then this is what makes Cat III films so compelling. Seeing exactly how far the makers will go in the name of entertainment is all part of the fun.
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5/10
Not Billy Tang's best.
RossLikesMovies30 April 2005
You go into cat 3 films with certain expectations. You shouldn't really expect a decent storyline or any great characterisation. Basically, if you've taken the time to find one of these films, you want gore and cheesy fun! In short bursts, run and kill delivers this. Though it try's to hard to be a real film and really just ends up embarrassing itself. The story is just about Fatty (Kent Cheng) Getting drunk and accidentally recruiting somebody to have his wife killed. (she gets caught having sex with another man). As you can imagine, things go to plan. Cue lots of running around and pointless, boring scenes of woodenly acted mush of Fatty trying to hide from the mean gangsters that killed his family. The film really isn't gory enough like the untold story. I don't know about you, but I go into a cat 3 movies hoping to be grossed out and shocked. This failed miserably. Their isn't any humour either. Such as any Anthony Wong flick. It can't even be passed off as a straight up exercise in nihilism. As the actor who plays Fatty just isn't a good enough actor and isn't really able to convey strong emotions. To conclude I have to say that cat 3 films simply shouldn't try and do story and character as this just isn't what they are know for. If you want fun, gore and a generally entertaining movie just go and see Ebola Syndrome or even Dr Lamb.
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9/10
Depravity At Its Finest
DavyDissonance26 February 2019
Yes, I applauded the TV. That is how impressed I was with this movie. This is definitely no cliche HK movie as it is spontaneous and unpredictable throughout. It is very violent as well. Not gory per say, but bloody and violent like hell. Plus, the acting was superb. Simon Yam is just detestable and I love it and Kent Cheng is the quintessential of sympathetic because, my god, none has suffered more than he. And on a final note, when I say unpredictable, I mean unpredictable as this movie does push beyond its boundaries. Maybe not to the level of, let's say, The Untold Story but good enough for me. Run And Kill is sombre and depraved throughout but it's excellent story, action, violence, acting and unpredictability makes it a must watch for HK fans.
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5/10
better than Dr. Lamb but still low on everything
trashgang31 May 2012
Just after directing Dr. Lamb, Hin Sing 'Billy' Tang, made this action flick. I didn't like Dr. lamb but what I did like was the performance of Simon Yam who played Dr. Lamb. Here he is again as Ching Fung.

Again for a CAT III flick it is low on everything. Okay, they do fight and slash and blood is sputtering around but again, scriptwise it sucked a lot for me. Again some situations looked ridiculous just like Dr. lamb. The most disturbing scene must be the one were a kid is being burned alive while the father is watching, but he ran away with the burned corpse and loses it's head, again, it looks ridiculous.

I had so many expectations for a CAT III flick, sadly they weren't fulfilled.

Gore 2/5 Nudity 0/5 Effects 2/5 story 2/5 Comedy 0/5
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Excellent little shocker
fertilecelluloid8 January 2004
This Billy Tang vehicle is relentlessly grim and relentlessly entertaining. I love that.

Fatty (Kent Chang) accidentally orders a hit on his wife and creates a huge debt for himself that must be repaid. Since Fatty can not repay it, others repay it instead -- with their lives.

Watching a fat guy stress and sweat and fall in a blubbering heap is a highly entertaining experience that must be seen to be believed. The torching of a little girl by super-villain Simon Yam (in a superbly over-the-top performance) pushes the boundaries of on-screen depictions and the gloriously violent finale, where Fatty becomes an unstoppable monster, really delivers the chills.

Danny Lee makes an appearance as -- what else? -- a cop, but he's as useful as pockets on a singlet and never manages to put so much as a dent in the gory proceedings.

Director Tang was on a roll with this, RED TO KILL and DR. LAMB.

This is mostly an action pic, but it also falls into the horror category simply because it doesn't know when to quit being grotesque. Love that, too.
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9/10
Category III Cinema: Run and Kill.
Captain_Couth23 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Run and Kill (1993) has to be one of the most disturbing and twisted films that was ever made (and that's saying something about category III films). A police procedural film that like most of the films based in this genre was taken from a true life crime. This is tied with Billy Tang's other rough rides RED TO KILL and Dr. Lamb as one of the grimmest films of the category III films.

Fatty is a happy family man's (Kent Cheung) who's life is ruined one day when he discover's his wife sleeping with one of his co-workers. Instead of being a man about it, he get's plastered and meets a bar girl (Esther Kwan). He tells her his problem and asks him if he wants to meet someone who'll take care of it. Not in the soberest of moods, he makes a deal to have his wife murdered. The next morning, Fatty wakes up in an alley with a nasty hangover. Staggering home, he sees his wife and lover being murdered in their bed. The murderers want their money. But he can't pay them, so they burn down his business and threaten his family.

Desperate to rectify his current situation, he calls on his mainland friend for help. He finds out that the murderers are Vietnamese refugees and their camp is located in the outskirts of the New Territories. Fatty and his mainland friends storm the camp and demand to speak to the leader. The kid asks them to forget the debt. They reply by killing the kid's friends and torturing him. The refugees turn him into a living tap and one of the goons drinks his blood. Outside the camp, the kid's crazy brother Fung (Simon Yam) and his crew raid the camp and slaughter everyone. He rescues his brother, Fatty and the bar girl. But Fung sees the condition that his young sibling is in and vows to make Fatty's life a living hell if he dies. During the escape, the kid brother dies. Enraged, Fung promises to keep his word.

With nowhere to turn to, Fatty turns to Inspector Lee (Danny Lee) for help. Fung is in Hong Kong and on the prowl. It doesn't take him long to find Fatty's mother's house. Inside is his daughter and mother. Fung without hesitation tosses Fatty's mother out the window and takes Fatty and his daughter as hostages. Hours later, Fung, Fatty and the little girl are inside a warehouse. Fung has tied up the girl and douses her in gasoline. Fatty has a front row seat. No longer having a sane thought in his head, Fung turns the little girl into a bonfire. After the fire dies out, he grabs the girl's corpse and mimics her voice. Fung places the burnt husk in front of Fatty who also loses his mind.

Fung's crew is becoming tired of his psychotic behavior. The boss Melvin (Melvin Wong) tries to put him in his place. Too late for that, Fung in a state of rage kills his fellow gang members and wants to make Fatty suffer even more. He calls him out and Fatty answers. The two psychos begin to have the best one-on-one fight scene I have ever witnessed. Fatty and Fung beat, burn and bust each other senseless. Fatty blows up, shoots and stabs Fung several times until he doesn't move anymore. The police finally arrive, the bar girl tries to comfort Fatty but he's left in a gibbering catatonic state. Inspector Lee looks at the mess. Just another case for the files.

Highly recommended.
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8/10
Savage and unrelenting (spoilers)
contronatura31 March 2000
Warning: Spoilers
Believe it or not, this film was intended as a dark comedy. And comedies don't get much darker than this. Hong Kong's master of depravity, Billy Tang, has made an exploitation film so far over the top that it's funny. The plot is fairly complex, actually, and ingenious in how it arrives at where it does. Fatty (Kent Cheng), tired of his cheating wife, mistakenly hires a triad to kill her. Upon her demise, he is presented with the bill, which he cannot pay. He seeks refuge with a band of former Vietcong mercenaries. When the one who has taken him in is killed by the triads, the dead man's crazed cousin (Simon Yam) seeks revenge on not only the triads but Fatty as well, whom he blames for his cousin's death. This all culminates in one moment so startling that it's shocking and funny at the same time. Let's just say it involves Fatty's 12 year old daughter and a lot of gasoline. I'm not sure anyone but Billy Tang could have gotten away with this film (for an even more depraved exercise, seek out his serial-killer-run-amok flick Red to Kill). A must for fans of twisted cinema.
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9/10
Good action-thriller
Viva_Chiba9 October 2010
Run and Kill is another movie rated Category III (CAT III) by the Hong Kong film censors, so it must contains excessive sexual content or extreme violence, the only CAT III element in Run and kill is the violence, nothing more.

Run and Kill is directed by Billy Tang, director of some memorable CAT III's like: Dr.Lamb and Red To Kill.

Plot: Cheng (nicknamed as Fatty) is having a good life, married, with a daughter and a job. But his life is going to get destroyed, when is returning home he finds his wife having sex with another man. Fatty get's depressed and he goes in a bar getting drunk, he "accidentaly" hires a hit-man for kill his wife. Now Fatty is in trouble, not because of his wife murder, but he also don't have the money for pay the hit-man ! Now Fatty is going to start a violent trip in hell......

The first time i saw Run and Kill i thought that it was just "okay", but then, i watched the Austrian DVD by Illusions UNLTD films i liked it more. The DVD from Illusions UNLTD films contains a far better transfer and according to some reviews this version contains far more violence, that was previously trimmed, but i can't really make a quick comparsion, i don't remember of major differences.

The highlights of the cast goes to: Simon Yam (playing a sadistic war veteran) and Danny Lee (playing a police inspector).

Run and Kill is a good CAT III, maybe not with many CAT III elements, but it's still recommended
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