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Review | Raging Fire movie review: Donnie Yen, Nicholas Tse fight to the death in Benny Chan’s action-packed final film

  • Donnie Yen’s incorruptible police officer fights Nicholas Tse’s officer-turned-criminal in a film packed full of shoot-outs, car chases and hand-to-hand combat
  • Despite touching on knotty subjects such as police brutality and corruption, the crude screenplay means Raging Fire is often illogical

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Donnie Yen in a still from Raging Fire (category IIB, Cantonese), directed by Benny Chan. Nicholas Tse co-stars.

3/5 stars

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“The world isn’t all black and white; it has a lot of grey areas too,” declares martial arts superstar Donnie Yen Ji-dan’s police officer character at an internal investigation hearing late in Raging Fire.

The irony is that the course of justice may be perverted at every turn, but there isn’t an ounce of moral ambiguity to be found in the thrilling but clumsily scripted swansong of director Benny Chan Muk-sing (Call of Heroes). The revered director died of cancer in August 2020 while his project was still in post-production.
Reuniting Dragon Tiger Gate (2006) co-stars Yen and Nicholas Tse Ting-fung as nemeses on opposite sides of the law, Raging Fire has enough incendiary shoot-outs, nail-biting car chases and brutal hand-to-hand combat to satisfy even the pickiest of action movie aficionados.

Yen plays incorruptible police senior inspector Bong, who is left out of a major drugs bust after his refusal to collude with the crooked top brass on another case. When Bong belatedly arrives on the scene, he is witness to the massive casualties left behind by a masked group of thieves and murderers.

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The thugs are soon revealed to be five ex-law enforcers led by Ngo (Tse), who was once a rising police star. Bong used to be Ngo’s mentor, until the latter and his squad beat a criminal to death and Bong proved unwilling to lie to spare them time in prison.

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