The Girl from the Naked Eye (FILM REVIEW)
The Girl from the Naked Eye
Film Review by Kam Williams
Gambler Goes Vigilante after Girlfriend’s Murder in Grisly Revenge Flick
Jake (Jason Yee) is a guy who let his gambling debts
spiral out of control. Consequently, he considered himself lucky that
his bookie was willing to let himself work off his debt by serving as a
chauffeur and bodyguard for a mob-owned escort service run by a pimp
named Simon (Ron Yuan) out of a whorehouse called the Naked Eye.
Over the course of his brief tenure there, Jake develops
feelings for a sweet, 16 year-old runaway (Samantha Streets), the
proverbial hooker with a heart of gold. However, before their
relationship has a chance to blossom, Sandy turns up dead.
In the wake of the grim discovery, it becomes clear that
nobody’s interested in solving the gruesome murder. So, Jake decides to
take the law into his own hands, and proceeds to leave a bloody trail in
his quest for the truth.
That is the basic plotline of The Girl from the Naked
Eye, an ambitious neo-noir by 25 year-old David Ren, a wunderkind who
shot his directorial debut while still a teenager with the romantic
comedy Shanghai Kiss (2007). Here, he makes the most of a modest budget
via a visually-captivating whodunit laced with highly-stylized martial
arts action.
The movie’s play-by-play is narrated pulp fiction-style
by the picture’s revenge-minded protagonist played by Jason Yee. The
former World Kick-Boxing Champ also orchestrated the acrobatic fight
sequences, and proves himself far more adapt at delivering punches than
delivering dialogue.
A compelling chopsocky made in America, featuring a
homegrown matinee idol who might very well blossom into the next Bruce
Lee.
Very Good (3 stars)
Rated R for violence, sexuality, ethnic slurs and pervasive profanity.
Running time: 84 minutes
Distributor: Naedomi Media
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