All this reminiscing did remind me of something though: there was one film at the IFFR which I hadn't reviewed yet: Andrew Fung's Hong Kong thriller A Witness Out of the Blue, starring Louis Cheung and Louis Koo.
When used well, Louis Koo can be one hell of a charismatic presence, and director Andrew Fung leans heavily on him. A good thing that is too, as the film has few other highlights. It is a competently made "whodunnit", the outrageous parrot "McGuffin" is actually used a lot more sensibly and believably than I anticipated (or feared), and while melodrama is there, it doesn't sink the ship, so to speak. This is a film which will not be known for its action scenes, plot twists, or outrageous style. Everything we see here we've seen done before, just in different measures and with different people. The only thing setting A Witness Out of the Blue is a particular flavor, and a willingness to have both good and bad guys painted in as grey a shade as the Chinese market currently allows for. Louis Cheung's cop is comically bungling but without treading into Jacky Chan territory, is unapologetically lazy, and owes money to shady loansharks. Louis Koo's robber discovers that his humanity still exists, but also that his code of honor cannot absolve him from all crimes. Nothing too controversial, but a nicely added layer nonetheless.
In the end, A Witness Out of the Blue provides entertainment, nothing more, nothing less. It's a solid seven with a few stand-outs. Audiences in Rotterdam liked it even more, awarding the film a 4.0 out of 5.