On the surface, this latest film from the Infernal Affairs duo of Andrew Lau and Alan Mak may seem to be about two men and their complex duality yet again, but there seems to be a lot more going on beneath the surface. The film opens with the two lead characters, Bong (Takeshi Kaneshiro) and Hei (Tony Leung Chiu-wai), fellow cops and best friends, talking about Bong’s woman trouble.Hei likens a relationship to a homicide case – it takes time to crack it. And that just about sets up everything else in the film.Confession begins with a stake-out during the Christmas of 2003. The cops tail a rapist, who also loves to torture women, from the nightclubs to his apartment, where they manage to stop him just in time. What follows right after that seems obligatory, in the wake of the popularity of Johnnie To’s films. I won’t reveal what it is, but it’s a baffling inclusion that has nothing to do with the rest of the story, except maybe to foreshadow the violence.Bong then returns home to a shocking tragedy that continues to haunt him three years later. While Hei has advanced in his career as a cop and is now married, Bong has quit the force to become a private investigator and taken to the bottle. When Hei’s wife Susan’s wealthy father and his butler are brutally murdered and robbed, and Hei naturally becomes a suspect, she has to turn to Bong to help investigate the crime. When the two perpetrators turn up dead, Bong begins to suspect that there may be a third person involved.A standard policier follows, but midway through, a shocking twist is revealed. And that is only one of a few more surprises to come.
Lord, esta también estuve pensando en hacer un ripeo.
Pues no sé, ¿un solo cd? Poco bitrate le veo, casi mejor esperar un ripeo de 2 cds, pero sea como sea muchas gracias Lord,
estas en forma y tienes buen gusto.
Pues si Jose promete un ripeo, yo prometeré unos subs , q hasta q salga The Restless y mientras se acaba d bajar la d Barefoot Kid tengo tiempo.