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https://scmp.com/lifestyle/entertainment/article/3185366/hong-kong-film-awards-2022-preview-who-will-win-and-who
Lifestyle/ Entertainment

Hong Kong Film Awards 2022 preview: who will win, and who should win, the best film, director, actor and actress prizes

  • The Hong Kong Film Awards ceremony returns on July 17 to recognise the best locally produced films released in 2020 and 2021, after skipping last year
  • Musical biopic Anita is a front runner for best film, while Benny Chan is likely to get best director for Raging Fire – which was in post-production when he died
Louise Wong (left) and Fish Liew in a still from Anita.

After a one-year postponement because of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Hong Kong Film Awards (HKFA) ceremony is back on July 17 for its 40th edition to recognise the best locally produced films released both in 2020 and 2021.

The winners in the awards’ 19 categories will be announced in a star-studded ceremony at the Kowloon Bay International Trade & Exhibition Centre in Kowloon Bay. It will be broadcast live on ViuTV from 7.30pm.

Post film editor Edmund Lee picks the likely winners in the awards’ top four categories.

Best film

Nominees: Raging Fire, Anita, Limbo, Zero to Hero, Drifting

While probably not the best film on this list, Anita, a musical biopic of the late Canto-pop superstar Anita Mui Yim-fong, is perhaps the slight front runner in the category as the runaway local box office champion of the past two years.

With an abundance of goodwill behind it, Longman Leung Lok-man’s nostalgic film, set in 1980s and ’90s Hong Kong, grossed more than HK$61 million (US$7.8 million) in less than two months in cinemas towards the end of 2021, before receiving a high-profile streaming release on Disney+ earlier this year.

By comparison, another pair of box office hits, the explosive action movie Raging Fire and the wholesome sports biopic Zero to Hero (Hong Kong’s submission for best international feature film for the 2022 Oscars), may find it harder to compete.

Limbo and Drifting, both modest performers at the box office, nevertheless mark artistic breakthroughs.

Despite earning acclaim both at overseas festivals and in regional awards (including best picture at the Hong Kong Film Critics Society awards, traditionally a poor indicator for HKFA winners), it is hard to see Soi Cheang Pou-soi’s Limbo winning the top prize.

The relentlessly bleak, black-and-white noir thriller set in a completely rotten Hong Kong struggled to draw local cinema-goers.

Writer-director Jun Li Jun-shuo’s Drifting – a minor masterpiece about poverty, ageing, gentrification and social injustice – is the best film on the list in this critic’s opinion.

Francis Ng (left) and Loletta Lee in a still from Drifting.
Francis Ng (left) and Loletta Lee in a still from Drifting.

It may well stand an outside chance if the more socially conscious voters are in an especially feisty mood (see the best picture wins for Ten Years and Trivisa, both political fables punching above their weight). But the fact that Drifting was somehow left out of the best director category doesn’t really bode well for the young filmmaker.

Will win: Anita

Should win: Drifting

Best director

Nominees: Man Lim-chung (Keep Rolling), Benny Chan (Raging Fire), Longman Leung (Anita), Soi Cheang (Limbo), Peter Chan (Leap)

There is a strong argument to be made that Man Lim-chung’s Keep Rolling, a surprisingly engaging documentary on the life and work of Hong Kong film icon Ann Hui On-wah, is the best film on this list – but when was the last time you saw a documentary feature win anything big at the HKFA?

Nicholas Tse (front) and Yo Yang in a still from Raging Fire.
Nicholas Tse (front) and Yo Yang in a still from Raging Fire.

This could be an open race in any other year, but the fact Benny Chan Muk-sing, the beloved master of action filmmaking, directed Raging Fire while he was fighting cancer is likely to persuade voters to go with their heart. Chan died in August 2020 while his film was in post-production.

Any winner in this category other than Chan may be considered an upset.

Will win: Benny Chan

Should win: Benny Chan

Best actor

Nominees: Lam Ka-tung (Hand Rolled Cigarette), Patrick Tse (Time), Lam Ka-tung (Limbo), Leung Chung-hang (Zero to Hero), Francis Ng (Drifting)

Nicholas Tse Ting-fung memorably apologised to his father, the 1960s film star Patrick Tse Yin, for his impiety after he was named best actor at the 2011 HKFA ceremony.

Little could the son have expected that Tse Sr would have a realistic chance of following in his footsteps 11 years later for his role in the heart-warming drama Time at the grand old age of 85.

Patrick Tse in a still from Time.
Patrick Tse in a still from Time.

A case of finding the perfect script for just the right performer, Tse’s role as a retired contract killer looking to build new family ties resonated with audiences and helped make Time an unlikely hit last summer.

It may well give him the edge over the younger (although not necessarily young) fellow nominees. That could be bad news for Francis Ng Chun-yu, the veteran actor who has previously been nominated for best actor five times but has yet to win the HKFA prize.

Ng is absolutely fantastic in the poverty drama Drifting, although his wait is likely to go on.

Theatre actor Leung Chung-hang, of Zero to Hero, should count himself lucky to be in this company. While his portrayal of the former Paralympic champion sprinter So Wa-wai is impressive, the fact that the character is played by three actors throughout the film may count against him.

Lam Ka-tung in a still from Limbo.
Lam Ka-tung in a still from Limbo.

Finally, Lam Ka-tung has been nominated for his starring roles in two films, Hand Rolled Cigarette and Limbo, and like predecessors in his situation (see Sammi Cheng Sau-man in 2020) he may well have split his own votes and made victory significantly less likely.

As a (really big) consolation, however, Lam may have a better chance of winning in the best screenplay category with his story for Time, which he produced and co-scripted (with Ho Ching-yi). Should that happen, it would be Lam’s third HKFA triumph, having previously won for Gallants (as producer) in 2011 and for Trivisa (as lead actor) in 2017.

Will win: Patrick Tse

Should win: Francis Ng

Best actress

Nominees: Chrissie Chau (Madalena), Louise Wong (Anita), Cya Liu (Limbo), Sandra Ng (Zero to Hero), Gong Li (Leap)

It may be a coincidence, but the curious recent history of the HKFA bestowing the best actress honour on little-known mainland Chinese actresses playing sexually exploited characters – think Jessie Li for Port of Call and Chloe Maayan for Three Husbands – looks likely to repeat itself with the probable win for Limbo star Cya Liu Ya-se.

Cya Liu in a still from Limbo.
Cya Liu in a still from Limbo.

You could argue all you want that Liu’s part feels more like a supporting one than a lead, but there’s no denying the intensity she brings to her role as an ex-convict cruelly set up to become the latest prey of a serial killer on the loose.

Louise Wong Dan-nei, a fashion model making her acting debut, may be the only challenger to Liu – if only because Anita has been such an immensely popular movie. In any case, Wong should have the best new performer award safely in her bag by the end of the night.

Will win: Cya Liu

Should win: Cya Liu

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