Year:2007
Director:Benz Kong To-Hoi
Cast:Charlene Choi Cheuk-Yin, Gillian Chung Yun-Tung, Sammo Hung Kam-Bo, Wu Jing, Yuen Wah, Jess Zhang, Steven Cheung Chi-Hung, Sam Lee Chan-Sam, Sek Sau, Qiu Lier, Bat Leung-Gum
Description:
They 
                            won't go away, and most people don't want them to. 
                            Charlene Choi and Gillian Chung, AKA: The Twins, are 
                            now their own institution, having created a complete 
                            minigenre of sloppy motion pictures packaged entirely 
                            around their grinning, uber-cute mugs. In a time when 
                            Hong Kong Entertainment is seriously suffering, these 
                            two girls have managed to capture the hearts and wallets 
                            of numerous preteens  looking for the latest and not-so-greatest 
                            out of Hong Kong. Still, the girls themselves aren't 
                            really that bad, and have shown some talent amidst 
                            the sloppy blockbusters, cheesy music videos, and 
                            shopping mall appearances their EEG indentured service 
                            contracts stipulate. Though they've yet to graduate 
                            to true A-list actor status, the girls have something 
                            going for them beside marketing support. Unfortunately, 
                            Twins Mission doesn't do anything to expand 
                            on whatever potential the Twins possess, and instead 
                            serves up a messy and frankly inane motion picture 
                            that wastes the talents of nearly everyone involved. 
                            At least your kids may enjoy it.
                                 The terrible EEG twosome 
                            play Jade and Pearl, a couple of acrobatic circus 
                            girls who are actually billed as twins, though really 
                            look very little alike. The girls spend their days 
                            performing in the circus, while sparring over their 
                            mutual obsession with David Copperfield. You see, 
                            the girls REALLY like David Copperfield, and will 
                            even engage in mini kung-fu battles in their dressing 
                            room over who gets to be Copperfield's future wife. 
                            They also argue over an autographed photo of Copperfield 
                            during a circus performance, whereupon the photo ends 
                            up in a hungry hippo's maw. This is obviously comedy 
                            gold. Forget the fact that neither girl knows David 
                            Copperfield, what's scary here is that someone actually 
                            wrote this plot point into the film and assumed it 
                            would be interesting enough to carry three or four 
                            scenes in a major motion picture. It obviously isn't 
                            that interesting, but neither is the rest of Twins 
                            Mission, which makes those Twins Effect 
                            movies look like rich narrative masterpieces. Yes, 
                            Twins Mission is that ill-conceived. 
                                 Here's the rundown on 
                            Twins Mission: before they became drooling 
                            David Copperfield groupies, the girls were previously 
                            members of a weird organization known as "The 
                            Twins", where groups of twins were trained into 
                            kung-fu masters in order to perpetrate spiffy feats 
                            of high-tech thievery. A former member of the Twins 
                            is Lau Hay , whose twin brother is deathly 
                            ill with cancer. Lau Hay is traveling with a roving 
                            Buddhist caravan led by Uncle Luck , who's 
                            charged with protecting the "Heaven's Bead", 
                            a cheap-looking MacGuffin that supposedly has mystical 
                            healing powers. However, some evil Twins are after 
                            the Bead, because their boss, Mr. Mok , wants 
                            it to trade it with the beautiful Lilian , 
                            who owns a plot of land that he's after. Mok figures 
                            she'll trade the land for the Bead because her sister 
                            Happy  has cancer. But Mok's shadowy partner-in-crime 
                            apparently wants the Bead for other reasons, though 
                            its never truly explained. What we do know is that 
                            the Bead has somehow ended up with sex shop proprietor 
                            Fred , who hides out in a 
                            shopping mall after the evil Twins force feed rats 
                            to his buddy. Fearing a similar fate, he hides in 
                            his own shop and doesn't run away like a smart guy 
                            would.
                                 Somehow, Uncle Luck and former 
                            Twins leader Chang Chung  convince Pearl, 
                            Jade, and a bunch of good Twins members to join them 
                            to stop Mok from getting the Bead. Or maybe they don't 
                            want Mok to get the land. Or maybe their goal is simply 
                            restoring the estranged relationship between Chang 
                            Chung and his former Twins charges, which soured after 
                            he left them with the circus, removed their Twins-identifying 
                            tattoos by searing them with an iron, and broke his 
                            promise to buy them McDonald's hamburgers. Um...yeah. 
                            We'll stop talking about the plot now because if you 
                            haven't figured it out already, it's pretty much a 
                            mess. As crappy storylines go, Twins Mission 
                            takes the cake, because it doesn't even provide a 
                            logical reason for any of its onscreen excesses to 
                            occur. Is all this hand-wringing occurring because 
                            everyone wants to save the crying girl with cancer? 
                            Or is there a larger value to the Heaven's Bead that 
                            causes people to throw away their lives and enlist 
                            in a completely unnecessary crusade? Why can't Mok 
                            find an easier, less roundabout way to get the land 
                            he's looking for? And is the promise of some kung-fu 
                            action worth this completely inane and incomprehensible 
                            movie?
                                 The answer to that last 
                            question: sometimes. Twins Mission does serve 
                            up the requisite doses of energetic martial arts action, 
                            and it does it frequently enough that one may forgive 
                            the film's other glaring debits. The fights involving 
                            the Twins aren't so hot; they're heavily wire-assisted 
                            and largely edited to hide the fact that the girls 
                            are doubled. Luckily, the lion's share of martial 
                            arts action is performed by Sammo Hung, Yuen Wah, 
                            and Wu Jing - in other words, guys who actually know 
                            their stuff instead of miniature girls who are just 
                            faking it. If you're looking for scenes of the three 
                            martial artists going at it, then you may find some 
                            joy in Twins Mission, provided that you do 
                            two things: lower your expectations and hit the fast-forward 
                            button to skip all the filler. The film's action sequences 
                            are not inventive or especially noteworthy, though 
                            they do provide enough impact and routine flair to 
                            entertain. The filmmakers have the good sense to let 
                            Wu Jing handle the most key martial arts sequences, 
                            relegating the Twins to comic relief duty during the 
                            film's loaded climax. There's also the opportunity 
                            to see a rare Yuen Wah vs. Yuen Wah match, plus the 
                            presumably amusing sight of seeing scads of real-life 
                            twins duking it out. In one of the film's unique achievements, 
                            real twins were cast as the movie's Twins, meaning 
                            these are actors who can fake kung-fu AND have a twin 
                            sibling. Apparently you can find anything in China.
                                 Sadly, the action is 
                            only one portion of Twins Mission, and the 
                            rest is hard to deem as acceptable. Aside from the 
                            criminally uninteresting plot, the film is directed 
                            in a messy and unconvincing manner, and possesses 
                            leaden exposition and a bombastic music score that's 
                            never earned. The actors don't play characters as 
                            much as they play character outlines, and their personal 
                            trials and conflicts are barely developed, if not 
                            completely nonexistent. Also, the CG effects are amateurish 
                            in a manner unbecoming of a film industry wishing 
                            to be taken more seriously. Worst of all, the filmmakers 
                            have the gall to set things up for a sequel, which 
                            is an iffy prospect anyway because Twins Mission 
                            doesn't even generate enough interest to warrant its 
                            own existence, let alone a sequel. The characters 
                            and situations never interest that much, so why should 
                            anyone out there want a sequel? Just so we can get 
                            more crappy visual effects and faked fighting by the 
                            Twins? Have Hong Kong audiences really sunk that low?
                                  Probably yes, 
                            as the current vogue of popstar-fueled everything 
                            in Hong Kong Cinema is as much a reflection of the 
                            public's tastes as it is of EEG's marketing muscles. 
                            Justified or not, people like the Twins, and Twins 
                            Mission is fast and silly enough to charm the 
                            preteen audience that snaps up their CDs, photo albums, 
                            and diet drinks. They may not even mind that the Twins 
                            are just ensemble players here, since the girls do 
                            appear in their most popular variation, i.e. as adorable, 
                            feisty girls whose cuteness is as non-threatening 
                            as it is photogenic. The rest of us will merely have 
                            to contend ourselves with the decent action, plus 
                            another missed opportunity to see the Twins do something 
                            other than smile, pout, and act silly. The Twins have 
                            been around for six years and fans are forever talking 
                            about their potential. They seem to have some, so 
                            wouldn't now be the time to build upon it? They can't 
                            stay this young and charming forever, so building 
                            upon the promise shown in films like Funeral March, 
                            Beyond Our Ken, Diary, or even A 
                            Chinese Tall Story would be a good way to go for 
                            either girl. It would be better for us, too.
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