A former DEA agent and a former undercover operative revisit their romance during a fateful weekend in Taipei, unaware of the dangerous consequences of their past.A former DEA agent and a former undercover operative revisit their romance during a fateful weekend in Taipei, unaware of the dangerous consequences of their past.A former DEA agent and a former undercover operative revisit their romance during a fateful weekend in Taipei, unaware of the dangerous consequences of their past.
Lun-Mei Gwei
- Joey
- (as Gwei Lun-Mei)
Patrick Pei-hsu Lee
- Bolo
- (as Patrick Lee)
Chung-Hua Tou
- Deputy Liu
- (as Tsun-Hua Tuo)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
The visuals - Colour, Composition, Editing - Were beyond my expectations for a simple action movie. At times the scenes resemble paintings, and the respect for emphasis and symmetry is endearing to see on the big screen.
The audio work was similarly very thrilling, and the soundtrack, while not melodic or memorable, was very accurate and worked well with the tone of the visuals. The textures of certain parts are very lovingly rough and reminiscent of the sound of car engines and tires scraping the floor, which compliments the central theme of driving well.
If there were one thing that could be so repulsive that it shoots down the rating from a Nine or Ten star, it would wholly be the writing. The dialogue is dry and surface-level, almost child-like, and not for any aesthetic purpose. It is childlike because it struggles to enter the minds of the characters that push the story forward. The way events are structured are almost ridiculous, and the motivations for the antagonist are so flimsy I almost caught myself talking out loud, to the two other people in the cinema. As if a kind of Ironic "Divine Joke" from god itself, the only place where the Child-Like writing ability is appropriate is... The child actor himself. Frankly, the only saving grace for this film is if modern technology could remove the dialogue in it's entirety, perhaps it will even earn itself an extra star!
In summary: To enjoy the film in it's entirety requires an extensive lobotomy.
The audio work was similarly very thrilling, and the soundtrack, while not melodic or memorable, was very accurate and worked well with the tone of the visuals. The textures of certain parts are very lovingly rough and reminiscent of the sound of car engines and tires scraping the floor, which compliments the central theme of driving well.
If there were one thing that could be so repulsive that it shoots down the rating from a Nine or Ten star, it would wholly be the writing. The dialogue is dry and surface-level, almost child-like, and not for any aesthetic purpose. It is childlike because it struggles to enter the minds of the characters that push the story forward. The way events are structured are almost ridiculous, and the motivations for the antagonist are so flimsy I almost caught myself talking out loud, to the two other people in the cinema. As if a kind of Ironic "Divine Joke" from god itself, the only place where the Child-Like writing ability is appropriate is... The child actor himself. Frankly, the only saving grace for this film is if modern technology could remove the dialogue in it's entirety, perhaps it will even earn itself an extra star!
In summary: To enjoy the film in it's entirety requires an extensive lobotomy.
- byattwurns
- Nov 6, 2024
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAll entries contain spoilers
- GoofsDuring John's trip to Taipei, an establishing shot depicts a China Airlines aircraft approaching Songshan Airport instead of the main international airport in Taoyuan, Taiwan.
- ConnectionsFeatures House of Flying Daggers (2004)
- SoundtracksPaint It, Black
(Mick Jagger (as Michael Phillip Jagger): Keith Richards)
Performed by Nini Music
Courtesy of ABKCO Music Inc.
Publishings Promopub B.V.; Westminster Music Ltd
Courtesy of BMG Rights Management (France) Europacorp
- How long is Weekend in Taipei?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Misión en Taipei
- Filming locations
- Taiwan, China(province of main events)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $608,034
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $380,057
- Nov 10, 2024
- Gross worldwide
- $2,906,315
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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