Leofwine_draca
MIDDLE MAN is the fifth instalment of the IN THE LINE OF DUTY series, a Hong Kong action franchise about ass-kicking female cops. The first four films in the series were absolutely fantastic, but this one's a bit of a comedown and the reason is obvious: the budget's lower, which affects the staging of the action a little as well as other technical elements.Cynthia Khan is the sole performer to return from the previous instalments, and as before she never fails to entertain the viewer. The opening fight set-piece is particularly enjoyable, featuring high-speed pursuit and crazy stunts. After this bit, the storyline gets bogged down a bit with a particularly convoluted tale of thievery, smuggling, and the like, which'll have you long for the straight forward villainy of the earlier films.However, as with the other films in this series, MIDDLE MAN is all about the action, and it rarely disappoints. Khan is tasked with going up against plenty of skilled opponents here, most of them westerners. A climactic bout with the blonde Kim Penn is particularly energetic, recalling the glory days of old, and Billy Chow is another welcome bad guy, although sadly his screen time is too limited. Fans of old kung fu flicks from 1970s may spot Lo Lieh in support, but sadly he doesn't have much to do.On the negative side, Khan's partner in the film, David Wu, is a bit of a wet blanket, and I was annoyed at the way a couple of the fights take place in near-darkness so you can't enjoy the choreography - a clear result of budget constraints. Nonetheless, MIDDLE MAN still packs more action and excitement into its running time than a dozen Hollywood thrillers, and I look forward to seeing part six of the franchise, SEA WOLVES.
rettercritical
I go into this review with a bias because this film converted me to a genre I had ignored up until that point. "In The Line Of Duty: 5 Middle Man" gets started strait away with a fly kick through the windshield of a moving vehicle, a walking up the walls of an ally way kickboxing confrontation and a fight on the back of a moving truck within the first few minutes of the film! This intro grabs your attention if you are an action lover or even better action purest. This is the fifth in the series of films that are pretty much the same and almost indistinguishable but have varying qualities and standards. The films were made by D And B films in Hong Kong and are aimed at both a local and international market. There is quite a bit of English language used in the series and they have international cast.Cynthia Khan was quite popular at this time and she stars as a cop with David Wu as her cousin who has just come home from the army. Another interesting member of the cast is Kim Maree Penn who is a blond Australian woman very capable of the quick martial arts choreography in Hong Kong cinema. The plot does not matter but it involves espionage and the selling of military secrets. Forget stories because story serves only the purpose to set up exciting sequences.This film delivers quite well in martial arts action. This is of a time with no CGI and there is little use of wire work or camera tricks. The fight scenes are high impact, occasionally clever and improvisational. Cynthia Khan gets to show off her gymnastic/dancing background on some fortunately placed parallel beams and cuts loose some shipping cargo to smash a speed boat to pieces. To me this is the peak of the series, not including the first entry "Yes Madam" which is a classic and one of the standouts of the fighting female films. I like number five because when I compare it to four it has better action, which is strange when you consider four has direction by Yuen Wo Ping and co-stars Donnie Yen. Four has fight scenes that are way too sped-up also known as "under cranked" were the martial arts is very obviously in fast forward and looks too unrealistic looking like a silent film. Five does not suffer from this quite so excessively and is therefore easier to enjoy. It really surprises me how many people hold four as such a great film. Four has had a Hong Kong Legends DVD release as "In The Line Of Duty" in the west and perhaps the availability contributes to the amount of people who like it.The Climax of ITLOD-5 is a beautifully shot and paced fight between Cynthia Khan and Kim Maree Penn that turns into swordplay. I like one still moment where they stand silent and snow begins to fall before they start hacking steel blades into each other again. Perhaps this is an inspiration for a moment in Tarantino's "Kill Bill" during a battle between Uma Thurman and Lucy Liu were there is a similar moment. The choice of climactic villain is excellent and is one of the reasons Kim Maree Penn has had cult following. Penn gives a great performance in this sequence as a real deadly princess. Yes the film is kind of dodgy but there is plenty of entertainment in the film where I think they got the formula of the series just right. I believe this is a good example of Hong Kong action cinema where the budget is big enough to make a nice to look at film but small enough requiring the choreography to be tight, action quite demanding for the cast and stunt work rather than camera trickery or computer generated images. For me stunt work is at its best when what takes place on the screen actually impresses and surprises. This film does that to some extent. The fight scenes are not overly edited and you can watch free flowing martial arts for a dozen blows before a change of angle. Cynthia takes many knocks and tumbles to the ground. This film is really of another era now. Although it was only made in 1990 action cinema is radically different now because of CGI and the use of rapid editing. We no longer demand the physical daring or skill that HK delivered in this era of 1970's to early 1990's. Other good examples of this modern day cop martial arts genre are the "Police Story" and "Tiger Cage" series but the difference with the "In The Line Of Duty" films is that the protagonist has always bean a female. Ultimately this series is like ballet or Peking opera. This is a very visual entertainment that Hong Kong created partly because Cantonese is not widely spoken in Asia. Action made HK cinema competitive, widely appealing and became the third most successful film producing territory after Hollywood and Bollywood.I was converted to this genre after seeing this film late one night on SBS television in Australia. I could not believe the first five minutes with the hardcore kung fu involving the fly kick through the windscreen of that car. The following sequences kept me watching something I Had not seen done before in the west. I have seen all the real classic Hong Kong 1980's action flicks since but I believe this to be still an above average film of its type. The film is silly (no sh*t!) but a kind of trash entertainment that becomes something wonderful and beautiful to watch. Choreography with artistry, impact and rhythm baptised me into the genre I spent years following. If you enjoy this genre you should see this fifth entry of the popular ITLOD series. ITLOD-5 is actually quite an underrated film and they don't make pictures quite like this anymore!
gridoon2018
This film opens with a bang: Cynthia Khan chases a car driver on foot in a garage, jumps and kicks him through the windshield (!), they start fighting, he runs, she chases him, they continue fighting in a very narrow alley, and they conclude their fight on not one but TWO moving vehicles, with a third one coming into play at the end. It's a sequence that lesser movies might have used as the climax, but here it's just the opener. The action and fight scenes are generally first-rate, and the notable stunts include a man crashing onto a car from a certain height (if the stuntman wasn't injured during that one, an angel must have been protecting him!), and Cynthia dangling from the edge of a skyscraper's roof (you can see the streets far below her). However, good as the action is, there is nothing in "ITLOD V" that can fully match the Dick Wei & Michiko Nishiwaki vs. Cynthia Khan or the Donnie Yen vs. Michael Woods climactic fights of parts "III" and "IV", respectively. And the plot is unnecessarily convoluted with multiple characters and never quite grabs you the way it should. Still, Cynthia in action is always worth seeing. Michelle Yeoh was largely unknown to Western audiences until her role in Jackie Chan's "Police Story III" - I wonder what might have happened if Jackie had picked Cynthia as his partner in one film. She's just as good and quick in action as Michelle, and prettier too (IMO). (**1/2) (Note: as the other reviewer said, THIS is the fifth part of the ITLOD series, though if you search the title on IMDb it will lead you on a wrong page - just check the plot summary - with the right cover! Quite a mix-up)
Brian Camp
IN THE LINE OF DUTY V: MIDDLE MAN (1990) is a lesser entry in the renowned series of policewomen-guns-and-kung fu films of 1985-90. It's got only one major fighting star (Cynthia Khan), not the two or three that the other films had (most notably YES MADAM, aka IN THE LINE OF DUTY 2, which starred a young Michelle Yeoh and Cynthia Rothrock) and the villains aren't terribly formidable. The plot is even less consequential than those in the earlier films and has to do with someone stealing U.S. military secrets and selling them to foreign buyers. The male lead is David (David Wu), a Chinese-American serviceman who gets implicated in the plot. He turns for help to his cousin, Inspector Yang (Cynthia Khan) of the Hong Kong Police. The CIA is involved at various points. For some reason the action shifts to Korea late in the film where a Hong Kong crime boss involved in the plot, "Godfather" (Lo Lieh), is residing.There are lots of Caucasians in the film including blonde Australian fighting femme Kim Maree Penn, who works for the bad guys and fights Cynthia in the film's final battle in a room filled with cases made of easily breakable glass. In the Cantonese-language version, viewed for this review, lots of English is spoken, although David, ostensibly an American soldier, rarely speaks it. Amazingly, Cynthia and David encounter enough Cantonese speakers in Korea to find their way around the place.The good news is there are lots of fights in all kinds of interesting urban spaces and locations and Cynthia gets to engage in a lot of stunt-filled action--from kung fu to shootouts to foot chases to leaps onto speeding vehicles and from rooftop to rooftop. There's never a dull moment for her and she delivers the goods. Still, the fight choreography is never as inspired as in the four earlier IN THE LINE OF DUTY films (which had directors like Corey Yuen and Yuen Wo Ping). And there's a lack of recognizable villains. The one fighting villain familiar to HK fans is Billy Chow, who has one major house-wrecking fight with Cynthia. Kung fu vet Lo Lieh is also on hand but plays an old man and hardly fights. Another action film with Cynthia Khan, QUEEN'S HIGH (1991), is sometimes misidentified as IN THE LINE OF DUTY 5.