The First 7th Night (2009) Poster

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7/10
HK Neo Reviews: The First 7th Night
webmaster-301712 August 2009
Tagline: Herman Yau goes cheap and efficient…

Review by Neo: The First 7th Night is exactly the type of movie which you can be safe to call it cheap and efficient. In other words, it is something that works without lighting a fire or two. Director Herman Yau is one of the last remaining HK Horror/Thriller/Cat 3 genre directors who still attempts to deliver the HK favour. This film is by no means great, but with some above average acting, an adequate premise and Yau's ability to maintain suspense throughout the flick, the film somehow works and that can only be a good thing.

The movie goes like this: Gordon Lam plays a taxi driver who is at loggerhead with his life and when a mysterious truck driver (Julian Cheung) offers him a thousand dollars for taking him to an abandoned village. Lam promptly agrees and then the closer they get to the village the more about his past is revealed.

Not a bad premise at all, considering that the opening sequence of events seemed like a horror/thriller, the film turned for the better and churned into the thriller and suspense genre. Why this film worked is the fact that Yau is able to use the "shows not tell" principle well enough to maintain a level of suspense for the audience to follow. The point is that it is rare for a thriller nowadays to have the ability to keep someone guessing and in the process capturing their attention, even if it is not the most interesting of flicks.

It must be noted that Michelle Ye plays her best and most juicy movie role yet. It is a shame that Michelle Ye have never gotten the opportunity to display her potential, with roles after roles as someone either screaming or getting struck in crappy written roles within B-grade movies. Finally, Michelle Ye is given something to work with and the way and manner she oozes on screen is just a pleasant to watch. The most memorable scene is probably the seducing in the kitchen as well as the final few sequences (not to disclose any spoilers). This is most likely her most captivating display, since her TVB days. Gordon Lam handles the leading man baton quite well and there are moments in his performance that allows the movie and his character to connect to the audience. As usual, Julian Cheung is a real talent and I have always endorsed this and here he is efficient without standing out, but in retrospective, his performance is crucial as to why the film worked out effectively. Other supporting turns (including Eddie Cheung, Fung Hak On and Tony Ho) are all able to add something to the film rather than ruin it.

All in all, it is probably not an understatement to claim that The First 7th Night is a mini success. Given the fact that almost nobody noticed its cinematic journey to DVD, there is no doubt that expectations are minor and even minimal. Still, the dependable Herman Yau is able to step up his mark with some good film-making as well as depicting some fine acting turns. It can only be good news for HK Cinema, when a film works, especially in a rather tough and slow year for the tiny territory. While this film qualifies as a minor cheer, it is still something worth cheering about … (Neo 2009)

I rate it 7/10

  • www.thehkneo.com
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5/10
Write Love in Horror - Review of The First 7th Night
kampolam-7581327 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
In the Hong Kong film industry, Herman Yau Lai-To, who is well-known for being "quick, beautiful and upright", is the director who has been working silently. Among them, the bloody gangster movie "The Eight Immortals Restaurant: The Untold Story" (1993) adapted from a real case, and the low-budget horror film series "Troublesome Night" (1997-2001) has attract much attention. He has worked closely with famous actors such as Anthony Wong Chau-Sang, Francis Ng Chun-Yu. He started with social themes, with realistic colors "Whispers and Moans" (2007) and "True Women for Sale" (2008) are impressive, it is one of the few directors in Hong Kong who insist on making film with "Hong Kong characteristics" at medium and low budget.

"The First 7th Night" (2009) maintains the characteristics of Herman Yau's works from "Troublesome Night" to "Walk In" (1997), and tells the story of human nature in a terrifying pattern. This time it is the love of mother and son. The taxi driver played by Lam Ka-Tung meets the mysterious guest Julian Cheung Chi-Lam and asks him to lead the way, delivery to a remote village. Lam Ka-Tung tells the story of the four thieves who took refuge in a local hotel 30 years ago and finally died here. However, Julian Cheung later retells this true story that was "adapted" by Lam Ka-Tung. It turned out that Lam Ka-Tung's mother was the hotel owner, Michelle Ye Xuan and one of the thieves, Eddie Cheung Siu-Fai, killed the other three, took the gold bars and cash from the robbery, and then left her son to escape, but was finally arrested and imprisoned. Lam Ka-Tung was tortured by his uncle since childhood, and finally became a taxi driver who traveled all over the country. Julian Cheung "caught" Lam Ka-Tung back to the hotel. It turned out that that night was "the first seventh night" (refer to the evening of the sixth day to the morning of the seventh day after death, the souls of the dead will return home) of Michelle Ye who died of illness in prison. In the end, Lam Ka-Tung and his mother unraveled the death knot that had been held for many years, and he also turned his back on the evil.

Herman Yau did not show off scary scenes like the horror films in the past in "The First 7th Night", but only the first half created some horror atmosphere, but the film's storytelling skills and rhythm are lively and accurate. The exposure of Lam Ka-Tung and Julian Cheung's identities is clear, and the life and death relationship between Lam Ka-Tung and Michelle Ye is also full of drama. The performances of many of the actors are invaluable, Herman Yau once again demonstrated the communication and understanding between the director and the actors, as well as how to play the actors' individual potentials, all of which are outstanding, especially Michelle Ye has to play the same role with two completely different personalities, a widowed wife who was bullied by a thief, and vicious woman who colluded with the thief, all added a lot of splendor to the movie. The film uses the funeral of the first 7th night as the theme to create a terrifying atmosphere, and finally uses it to create a touching mother-son complex, it is one of the few films by Herman Yau with such a thought.

By Kam Po LAM (original in Chinese)
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9/10
Great horror movie, or is it?
mllyou19 January 2013
Warning: Spoilers
While i don't think this review is a "spoiler", I do warn that if you read my comments before you see the movie, you may see the movie differently.

I do not view this as a horror movie, but one exploring the soul searching of a young man with a hidden past. He is struggling with two versions of this memory, one idealized and one the ugly truth, which he denies. He eventually finds peace after visiting his home town again, a place he dares not visit for 30 years. To me (and you need not agree), the movie is full of metaphors (like the changing pay he was promised to take the trip is moral value more than monetary; the flat tires and near accident are excuses to continue the trip).
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10/10
this movie blew me away
marymorrissey30 November 2012
by turns blandly realistic, just strange, atmospheric/Gothic and dramatically expressionistic it winds up with this really deep universal theme kinda thing... I was awestruck.

Maybe I'm just a little hypersensitive at this moment in time, but don't think so.

A wee powerhouse of a movie!

Oh brother I have to say more to submit this review. OK, it uses this weird editing technique that we've seen in Asian horror films in a new way, OK?

The performances were de-lovely, is that enough!?
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