We follow the aging hitman Chau. A team with his partners Chung and Mrs. Fung, they were a trio to be feared and reckoned with, removing obstacles for the Hong Kong underworld for many a decade. These days though, the jobs are mostly assisted suicides of the sick and elderly, something which takes its toll on Chau's motivation. His tipping point arrives when the latest assist-needing suicidee turns out to be a lovesick teenager. Furious, Chau refuses the hit and when the teen is persistent, he reluctantly decides to teach her a few of life's lessons. But when his team-mates get involved, everyone has to take a few hard looks in the mirror, and see what they have done with their lives.
For the most part, Time plays it straight, even granting the ageing criminals if not respectability, then at least some romantic nobility for their talents and strict rules. As such it stands apart from, say, Takeshi Kitano's Ryuzo and the Seven Henchmen, which cynically vomits on any notion of nobility for gangsters, old or young (see my review here). When compared, Ricky Ko's film comes across as naive. But Time is also an easy crowdpleaser, as its Rotterdam audience score of 4.4 out of 5 proves. It is a film which plays as sympathetic towards its leads and the audience, and it has one of Lam Suet's best recent performances in it. And sometimes, that's enough.
Time is touring festivals worldwide, including the New York Asian Film Festival, ongoing till the 22nd of August.