Running on Karma
There’s an old screenwriting adage that goes, “You can break every rule except one: Don’t be boring! ” And no one takes that advice to heart more than the Hong Kong film industry. Any random sampling of films produced since 1980 will turn up bizarre genre mash-ups, wildly eccentric action franchises and melodramatic love stories that take big swings with absolutely no fear of striking out. And 2003’s Running on Karma , a Johnnie To / Wai Ka-fai joint, wastes no time throwing ideas into the cinematic blender to serve up another offbeat dish. Biggie (Andy Lau) is a Buddhist monk turned go-go dancing body-builder (give that a minute to sink in) who is also gifted with the ability to see karmic visions of a person’s past life. This all comes into play when he helps Lee Fung Yee (Cecilia Cheung), an ambitious cop, solve a murder involving two men with no previous relationship with each other. Biggie’s sixth sense and martial arts skill help ...