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Emerging in an era when producers largely demanded formulaic dollops of action, melodramatic romance or sex, Pang’s first two directorial efforts cut through the commercial noise, signalling the arrival of a distinctly irreverent mind.
To satisfy these commercial constraints without sacrificing his satirical voice, the first-time director set his witty and original black comedy You Shoot, I Shoot in the world of a hitman – a high-stakes scenario that guaranteed the required action elements while effortlessly securing financial backing.
The result was the second funniest comedy of 2001 – Stephen Chow Sing-chi’s Shaolin Soccer was number one – and one of the best comic outings of the entire decade.
You Shoot, I Shoot (2001) 買兇拍人 - Movie Trailer - Far East Films
“Forget about such bloated summer films as Para Para Sakura, The Legend of Zu, Love on a Diet and Fulltime Killer,” wrote South China Morning Post critic Paul Fonoroff that year. “A low-budget black comedy, shot on a shoestring budget, has beaten them all for freshness and originality. You Shoot, I Shoot ranks close to Shaolin Soccer as the season’s most entertaining picture.”
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