Directed by the prolific Wong Jing and starring the reliable Andy Chi-On Hui, this film dives headfirst into the neon-lit, rain-slicked streets of the city in its final days as a British colony. Unlike the grand, epic-scale triad movies of the era (such as Young and Dangerous ), Hong Kong Episode 1 feels grittier, more claustrophobic—a B-movie with an A-movie sense of urgency.
Hong Kong Episode 1 (tt0125784) is not a masterpiece. It’s messy, melodramatic, and occasionally confusing. But for fans of Hong Kong cinema’s transitional period, it is essential viewing. It captures the paranoia and hope of a city reinvented overnight—a raw, unpolished gem that asks the question no one dared answer in 1997: In the new Hong Kong, who really wins? -movie hong kong- hong kong episode 1 tt0125784-
In the annals of Hong Kong cinema, 1997 stands as a monumental year—not just for the real-life handover of the city from British to Chinese rule, but for the films that tried to capture its anxious, electric soul. Among these, the low-budget crime thriller Hong Kong (often listed as Hong Kong: Episode 1 ), bearing the IMDb ID tt0125784 , remains a fascinating, if obscure, time capsule. Directed by the prolific Wong Jing and starring