For the fortieth anniversary of Hong Kong’s Independent
Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) David Lam and his all-star cast celebrated
like it was 2008. Like Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. in The F.B.I., Louis Koo’s William Luk will righteously crusade
against crooked cops and shadowy financial conspiracies, but he will have the
fringe benefit of investigating Dada Chan in Lam’s Z Storm (trailer here), which
releases today on DVD and BluRay from Well Go USA.
Wong Man Bin is such a corrupt cop, he is even
dirtier than some of white collar crooks he covers for, like the rather
compromised accounting firm proprietor, who is quite surprised when Wong makes incriminating
evidence disappear. Evidently, his paymaster, the extravagantly venal attorney
Malcom Wu needs his house’s help to take the Madoff-esque Z Fund public.
However, Wong’s recklessness also attracts the attention of Luk, who starts
connecting the dots.
Since the former government chairman is the Z
Fund’s public front-man, investigating Wu’s operation is a touchy proposition. To
make matters worse, a major public-private charitable account will go all in
with the Z Fund, once it is successfully listed. As a result, Luk is given a hard
six day deadline to take down the Fund before it lists. Past that point, he
must close his investigation rather than risk sparking a crisis of confidence
that might jeopardize the charity funds. Unfortunately, each of his leads meets
a tragic end, accept perhaps the mystery woman associated with Wu, Angel Leung
On Ying.
As Luk, Koo seethes like the old pro he is,
but it is the bad guys that really make Z
Storm work. Michael Wong does his gloriously hammy thing, except even more
so, as the spectacularly villainous Wu. However, Gordon Lam Ka Tung nearly
matches the scenery Wong masticates, stick for stick, as the profoundly underhanded
Wong Man Bin. It is almost like they are facing off in some sort of evil-doers’
Olympics.
Strangely, Dada Chan hardly has any time to establish Leung’s
character, since about ninety-five percent of her screen time comes in the
third act. However, the camera still adores her. It is also favorably inclined
towards Janelle Sing, who inspires confidence as Tammy Tam, the ICAC’s brainy
IT specialist.