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The Pig, the Snake and the Pigeon

周處除三害

  • Status: Released
  • 06-10-2023
  • Runtime: 134 min
  • Score: 7.279
  • Vote count: 240

The arrogant, third most-wanted criminal in Taiwan, decides to get rid of the top two competitors and crowns himself the most-wanted criminal before dying.

Ethan Juan

Chen Kui-lin

Gingle Wang

Cheng Hsiao-mei

Lee Lee-Zen

Chen Hui

Cherry Hsieh

Chang Kuei-ching

Ben Yuen Foo-Wah

Hsu Wei-chiang (Hongkie)

Chen Yi-wen

Lin Lu-ho (Bullhead)

Troy Liu

Goldie

Peggy Tseng

Hsiao Hsiang-hsiang

Yu An-Shun

Fake Lin Lu-ho

Cheng Yu-chieh

Doctor Chao

Chien Sheng

Mr. Tsung-han

Nelson Shen

Funeral Gangster A

Lee Ming-che

Ironhead

Ching-Min Hung

Doctor

Hao-Tse Tseng

Police

Benjamin Tsang

Gangster Boy in Cap

Huang Di-yang

Brother B

Lo Neng-hua

Disciple A

Ark Zheng

Disciple B

Yi-Jung Wu

Chubby kid's Mother

Hsu Li-ting

Hostage Girl

Chia-En Yang

MovieGuys

The rather oddly titled The Pig, The Snake and the Pigeon, is advertised as a black crime comedy but its more than a little hard, to swallow that label. This is essentially an extremely violent revenge crime thriller. Revenge, in this context, finds its motivation, in the perverse pursuit of notoriety, by a main character, who wants to become the first (as opposed to the third), most wanted fugitive, in Taiwan. Counter balancing this gruesome gangster tale is a "be careful what you wish for" lesson. A lesson that underlines the ultimate harm and futility of crime. In so doing, this tale reasserts the role of the Taiwanese state, as the gatekeeper of peace, order and civility. Well acted and directed, this film is inherently watchable but it is also at times, disturbingly violent. Its political message is hard to ignore, not to mention, difficult to accept, at face value, given the states uncivilised solution to serious crime, is the murder of the murderer. In summary, quality acting, decent pacing, an intriguingly original back story off set by violence that I personally felt, could have been toned down. The blatant political message embedded in this tale, feels more than a little hypocritical, too. Murder is still murder, no matter who carries it out.