High/Low

2014 • 53 minutes
4.0
4 reviews
Eligible
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About this movie

"I beg you Jesus, to save me, from this gambling problem," a preacher says as he holds his hand to the head of a sobbing young girl. The girl repeats his words carefully. She represents a surprisingly large amount of the Chinese population that, as Peter a dedicated gambler tells us, is obsessed with easy money: "They're all dreaming they will be millionaires. So that makes people crazy." According to Michael, a taxi driver whose gambling lost him his family, this is a cultural obsession. "It is Hong Kong's culture to put money first. It's like we're competing with each other." The desire for money and material goods hangs over those who live and work there, and speculating on the stock exchange, backing a horse, or gambling on a roulette table has become a way for ordinary people to try and reach this dream of wealth and fortune. "I want to change my life. Life is about happiness? What about me?" JI, a young man who can only find meaning for his life through the highs and lows of gambling, tells us. For many like him gambling can represent an opportunity to reach happiness, or at least experience some excitement. For others it is a form of escapism. "I believe that people gamble to escape a problem, or when they're unhappy, they want to escape from reality." But for some gamblers, like Auntie, there is no escape; gambling has swallowed up their whole life. "I don't have any close friends now, in this gambling city there are no real friends." Divorced and abandoned by her daughter, she is a lost soul who has disappeared into the casinos of Macau to hide from her problems. This slick and incisive film examines the effect that the pressure of consumer society, and the pull of gambling, is having on the people of Hong Kong and Macau. It is a film about two modern cities, the people trying to make their way in them and the forces of fate, luck and fortune that effect us all.

Ratings and reviews

4.0
4 reviews
Soo Yong Lee
10 July 2014
While the film well depicts the reality of the people struggling from gambling , some of the compositions / technical elements are distracting especially the shallow depth of field which is apparent across the entire film, and the English subtitles disappear way too quickly.
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