• Latest
  • Trending
Small Hours of the Night Review

Small Hours of the Night Review: The Ghosts of Authoritarianism

Gérard Depardieu

Depardieu Gets Suspended Term for On-Set Assault in Paris Court

7 hours ago
Bucking Fastard

First Look: Kate and Rooney Mara Star in Herzog’s New Feature

7 hours ago
Halle Berry

Berry Adapts Cannes Gown After Festival Bans Nudity and Long Trains

7 hours ago
Tom Hardy

Tom Hardy Admits Physical Toll of Action Career Is “Not Going to Get Better”

7 hours ago
The 4 Rascals Review

The 4 Rascals Review: Vietnamese Comedy at Its Best

Kung Fu Rookie Review

Kung Fu Rookie Review: Playful Stunts in Almaty’s Heart

Warden Review

Warden Review: Superhero Ethics in Nova São Paulo

Ride Above Review

Ride Above Review: Twin Souls in Normandy

Once Upon A Puppet

Once Upon A Puppet Review: Puppet Physics Meets Emotional Yarn

Fear Below Review

Fear Below Review: Gold, Gunfire and Jaws in Post-War Australia

Tastefully Yours Season 1 Review

Tastefully Yours Season 1 Review: Corporate Scion Meets Culinary Heart

Michael B. Jordan

Michael B. Jordan Presents Delphi at Amazon Upfront, Introduces Creed Franchise’s First TV Series

13 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Gérard Depardieu

    Depardieu Gets Suspended Term for On-Set Assault in Paris Court

    Bucking Fastard

    First Look: Kate and Rooney Mara Star in Herzog’s New Feature

    Halle Berry

    Berry Adapts Cannes Gown After Festival Bans Nudity and Long Trains

    Tom Hardy

    Tom Hardy Admits Physical Toll of Action Career Is “Not Going to Get Better”

    Mel Gibson

    Mel Gibson and Andrea Iervolino Propose U.S.–Italy Film Co-Production Agreement

    Faisal Baltyour

    Faisal Baltyuor Appointed CEO of Red Sea Film Foundation, Effective June 1

    Blue Moon

    Richard Linklater’s Blue Moon Secures October Release Amid Cannes Spotlight

    Patrick Dempsey

    Fox Orders Memory of a Killer with Patrick Dempsey in Dual-Life Role

    Suits: LA

    NBC Cancels Suits: LA and Four Other Series in Lineup Revision

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The 4 Rascals Review

    The 4 Rascals Review: Vietnamese Comedy at Its Best

    Kung Fu Rookie Review

    Kung Fu Rookie Review: Playful Stunts in Almaty’s Heart

    Warden Review

    Warden Review: Superhero Ethics in Nova São Paulo

    Ride Above Review

    Ride Above Review: Twin Souls in Normandy

    Fear Below Review

    Fear Below Review: Gold, Gunfire and Jaws in Post-War Australia

    Tastefully Yours Season 1 Review

    Tastefully Yours Season 1 Review: Corporate Scion Meets Culinary Heart

    Michael B. Jordan

    Michael B. Jordan Presents Delphi at Amazon Upfront, Introduces Creed Franchise’s First TV Series

    Caper Review

    Caper Review: Friendship Tested in a Digital Age

    I Really Love My Husband Review

    I Really Love My Husband Review: Desire in Paradise

  • Game Reviews
    Once Upon A Puppet

    Once Upon A Puppet Review: Puppet Physics Meets Emotional Yarn

    Tempopo Review

    Tempopo Review: A Serene Dance of Puzzles and Music

    GORN 2 Review

    GORN 2 Review: Physics-Fueled Fury Meets Mythic Style

    Sacre Bleu Review

    Sacre Bleu Review: Cartoons Meet Combat in 18th-Century France

    Pax Augusta Review

    Pax Augusta Review: Solo Dev Ambition Meets Empire

    Inhuman Resources: A Literary Machination Review

    Inhuman Resources: A Literary Machination Review – Tight Narrative, Heavy Consequences

    Empyreal Review

    Empyreal Review: Mastering Combat in the Monolith

    Spirit Of The North 2 Review

    Spirit Of The North 2 Review: Emotive Worlds Marred by Padding

    Doom: The Dark Ages Review

    Doom: The Dark Ages Review – Mastering Parry and Power

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Gérard Depardieu

    Depardieu Gets Suspended Term for On-Set Assault in Paris Court

    Bucking Fastard

    First Look: Kate and Rooney Mara Star in Herzog’s New Feature

    Halle Berry

    Berry Adapts Cannes Gown After Festival Bans Nudity and Long Trains

    Tom Hardy

    Tom Hardy Admits Physical Toll of Action Career Is “Not Going to Get Better”

    Mel Gibson

    Mel Gibson and Andrea Iervolino Propose U.S.–Italy Film Co-Production Agreement

    Faisal Baltyour

    Faisal Baltyuor Appointed CEO of Red Sea Film Foundation, Effective June 1

    Blue Moon

    Richard Linklater’s Blue Moon Secures October Release Amid Cannes Spotlight

    Patrick Dempsey

    Fox Orders Memory of a Killer with Patrick Dempsey in Dual-Life Role

    Suits: LA

    NBC Cancels Suits: LA and Four Other Series in Lineup Revision

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The 4 Rascals Review

    The 4 Rascals Review: Vietnamese Comedy at Its Best

    Kung Fu Rookie Review

    Kung Fu Rookie Review: Playful Stunts in Almaty’s Heart

    Warden Review

    Warden Review: Superhero Ethics in Nova São Paulo

    Ride Above Review

    Ride Above Review: Twin Souls in Normandy

    Fear Below Review

    Fear Below Review: Gold, Gunfire and Jaws in Post-War Australia

    Tastefully Yours Season 1 Review

    Tastefully Yours Season 1 Review: Corporate Scion Meets Culinary Heart

    Michael B. Jordan

    Michael B. Jordan Presents Delphi at Amazon Upfront, Introduces Creed Franchise’s First TV Series

    Caper Review

    Caper Review: Friendship Tested in a Digital Age

    I Really Love My Husband Review

    I Really Love My Husband Review: Desire in Paradise

  • Game Reviews
    Once Upon A Puppet

    Once Upon A Puppet Review: Puppet Physics Meets Emotional Yarn

    Tempopo Review

    Tempopo Review: A Serene Dance of Puzzles and Music

    GORN 2 Review

    GORN 2 Review: Physics-Fueled Fury Meets Mythic Style

    Sacre Bleu Review

    Sacre Bleu Review: Cartoons Meet Combat in 18th-Century France

    Pax Augusta Review

    Pax Augusta Review: Solo Dev Ambition Meets Empire

    Inhuman Resources: A Literary Machination Review

    Inhuman Resources: A Literary Machination Review – Tight Narrative, Heavy Consequences

    Empyreal Review

    Empyreal Review: Mastering Combat in the Monolith

    Spirit Of The North 2 Review

    Spirit Of The North 2 Review: Emotive Worlds Marred by Padding

    Doom: The Dark Ages Review

    Doom: The Dark Ages Review – Mastering Parry and Power

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Small Hours of the Night Review

Fighter Review: Bollywood Action Meets Military Tribute

UNDERDOGS Review - The Next VR Fighting Contender Arrives

Home Entertainment Movies

Small Hours of the Night Review: The Ghosts of Authoritarianism

Peering Into Singapore’s Haunted History: Allegory Meets Atmosphere

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
1 year ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

In his latest experimental drama “Small Hours of the Night”, Daniel Hui offers viewers a provocative glimpse into his home country Singapore’s politically charged past. This psychological thriller centers around an interrogation between a detainment officer and a female prisoner accused of undisclosed crimes against the state. Through their tense back-and-forth filled with cryptic references and temporal mind games, Hui explores the oppression of dissent in Singapore post-independence.

Shot entirely in shadowy black-and-white and spanning multiple decades, the film blurs time periods to create an unsettling sense of displacement. We follow the nameless officer and detainee Vicki through fragmented storytelling as Vicki recounts her political awakening and the systematic injustices she has witnessed. Her stories raise larger questions about the very nature of guilt, innocence and personal freedom.

As both director and writer, Hui continues his examination of Singaporean history through a bold allegorical lens. Having previously dramatized major riots and protests around the country’s contentious formative years, he now tunnels into the darker corners of its authoritarian legal system. Hui leads his audience on a tense yet philosophically rich journey to contemplate the untold stories of those forgotten souls trapped in the machinations of power.

With its stark visuals and implicit social commentary, “Small Hours of the Night” promises to be a haunting meditation on the ghosts of Singapore’s past, one that may prompt difficult but vital conversations about unresolved national traumas. Hui brings impressive technical artistry and psychological insight to excavating this painful history.

An Unsettling Realm of Shadow and Light

Immersed in stark black-and-white, “Small Hours of the Night” pulls viewers into a foreboding world of dramatic shadows, hushed tones and cryptic exchanges between captor and captive. Cinematographer Looi Wan Ping makes chilling use of high-contrast lighting, with faces alternately illuminated then plunged into darkness. Much of the film dwells in a liminal space between the seen and the unseen.

As Vicki recounts fragmented memories under grilling by her unnamed interrogator, both remain shrouded in gloom, with only slivers of light defining their features. When Vicki first appears on screen after 40 minutes, it is during an eerie power outage where she seems to materialize from the shadows. This visually reinforces the sense that personal identity and objective truth are unstable things under an authoritarian regime.

Beyond the actors, the primary visual focal points become objects in the spartan interrogation room – an overflowing ashtray, tapes spinning ominously, moonlight glinting off handcuffs. Even the corners of the set take on an ominous character, with shifting shadows that resemble dark creatures lurking. The barren office conveys the chill of the wider bureaucratic system holding Vicki captive.

Meanwhile, sound designer Akritchalerm Kayalanamitr layers in unnatural echoes and an amplified clock ticking to ratchet up the tension. Combined with Cheryl Ong’s ambient score, these effects create pockets of stillness pierced by bursts of activity that fracture the timeline. The overall result is an environment of creeping dread, confusion and paranoia that echoes the unease of those persecuted for their beliefs.

Through manipulated lighting and strategic use of visual and audio elements, Hui crafts a surreal purgatory. Parts interrogation room, prison cell and theater stage, this liminal setting provides fertile ground for Vicki’s winding personal odyssey to reclaim her voice and identity. Viewers are left struggling to distinguish reality from nightmare in this visually arresting and cerebrally challenging drama.

Untangling the Web of Truth

Rather than following a straightforward plot, “Small Hours of the Night” immerses us in a web of disjointed scenes, repeated motifs and references spanning decades. After opening with a title situating us in the late 1960s, the film proceeds to layer in later historical events out of sequence. Hui employs a fragmented, cyclical structure mirroring the struggle to build personal narratives under authoritarian systems that distort truth.

Small Hours of the Night Review

We continually return to the interrogation room where Vicki is subjected to invasive questioning about her unusual behavior, specifically her belief that there is a new detainee being held nearby. As she provides glimpses of her political past, the line between reality and paranoia blurs. It gradually becomes apparent that Vicki represents an amalgam of multiple real-life prisoners and little she recounts can be taken at face value.

Visual and dialogue cues repeat as we spiral through different versions of the truth. The lights flicker on and off at pivotal moments, Vicki describes the same dream-like vision multiple times, and discussions keep circling back to missing names and forgotten faces that haunt Vicki. These repetitions reinforce how the history of subversive actions against the government have been occluded over time.

Meanwhile, the interrogator’s tactics shift from bureaucratic indifference to violent outbursts to faux sympathy, encapsulating the schizophrenic power complex that envelops Vicki. His fluctuating demeanor highlights the uncertainty faced by dissidents who must navigate ever-changing rules and parameters for “acceptable” behavior.

As these fragmented scenes coalesce, Hui examines the painful transformation of Singapore from colony to independent nation to authoritarian state. The film emerges as an elegy for lost freedoms and a desperate cry to reconstitute forbidden personal narratives before they vanish entirely from collective memory. Amidst such confusion and trauma, where does truth reside? Hui leaves the audience to untangle the puzzle and decide for ourselves.

Shedding Light on Silenced Voices

While “Small Hours of the Night” unfolds in an abstract realm, the story is firmly rooted in Singapore’s complex political history. Hui conducts a muted yet scathing critique of the structures of authoritarian power that have evolved in the country over recent decades. Without directly reenacting specific events, he evokes the paranoia, surveillance and oppression that dissenters have endured.

Small Hours of the Night Review

The interrogator represents the faceless state bureaucracy demanding conformity. His questions about Vicki’s odd behavior after hours allude to the stringent rules and close monitoring that political prisoners face. Meanwhile, Vicki gives voice to a generations-long lineage of activists, communists, lawyers and writers who dared to challenge the ruling party only to be detained without trial or evidence.

When Vicki describes fellow dissidents being charged for providing memorials for a deceased brother or circulating a petition, it references actual court cases where minor infractions drew draconian punishments. Through these personalized stories, Hui highlights the human impact of restrictive laws like the Internal Security Act (ISA) which enables detention without representation.

The most haunting theme becomes the erasure of prisoners’ identities, beliefs and histories in the official state narrative. As Vicki inhabits various aliases and repeatedly asks after missing detainees, the film emphasizes all those forgotten souls, some likely fiction, snuffed out by the system. Their fragmented stories form the emotional backbone of this drama.

In atmospherically conjuring the literal and psychic confinement exerted by Singaporean authoritarianism, Hui gives indignant voice to the voiceless. Small rebellions like pacing one’s cell, whispering through walls or dreaming seditiously represent attempts to preserve one’s sense of self under hovering threats. The film stands as a mournful tribute to those denied such liberties in reality.

Captivating Performances in the Dark

As with the film’s visual landscape, the lead performances by Irfan Kasban and Vicki Yang dwell largely in a world of shadows. Facial expressions, gestures and vocal tones convey as much raw emotion as the sparse dialogue in their hypnotic pas de deux. Both actors prove capable of evincing psychological complexity despite inscrutable characters and hazy motivations.

Small Hours of the Night Review

During the first half set in the interrogation room, we study Kasban’s face for flickers of doubt, cruelty or sympathy as he applies rhetorical pressure on an unseen Vicki. His mercurial shifts between cool authority, violent outrage and faux camaraderie demonstrate the instability forced upon those working for authoritarian systems. By keeping Vicki off screen initially, Hui also implicates the audience as we visualize her based solely on the interrogator’s charged projections.

Once Vicki materializes, Yang takes center stage to deliver an anguished monologue about the recurring dream of being buried alive that haunts her. With widened eyes alternating between anger, confusion and profound sadness, she wordlessly etches deep trauma into her gaze. As she lingers in and out of the shadows, Yang channels the despair of an entire generation of forgotten souls who dared to think differently. Her raw vulnerability coupled with defiant pride gives voice to the voiceless.

Because neither character is afforded a concrete backstory or identity, they take on allegorical weight as stand-ins for the countless real-life players on both sides of this systemic power struggle. Their emotional authenticity and chemistry grant this politically minded thriller its beating heart.

An Ambitious Auteur’s Haunting Vision

As writer, director and co-editor, Daniel Hui demonstrates ambitious and controlled storytelling. He immerses us in a pristine black-and-white nightmare fueled by the power of silence, stillness and fragmentation. While budget limitations sometimes constrain the film’s scope, Hui successfully sustains an ominous tone through impactful creative decisions.

Small Hours of the Night Review

From a visual standpoint, chiaroscuro lighting sculpts emotive faces out of darkness in memorable close-ups. Meanwhile, the convincing partial sets by production designer Eugene Linand highlight environmental textures – peeling paint, dank corners, concrete walls seeming to close in on Vicki. Sparing use of rain, fog machines and practical lights playfully distorts perception.

By avoiding coverage and instead framing characters in isolation even when sharing scenes, Hui and editor Gladys Ng structurally embed profound alienation. Custom audio effects courtesy of designer Akritchalerm Kayalanamitr externalize the dissociation of detainees struggling to retain their grasp of reality behind bars.

These directorial choices demonstrate sophistication, aligning Hui among contemporary Southeast Asian auteurs like Apichatpong Weerasethakul. That said, his cadence of extended takes and hushed line readings may test some viewers’ patience during repetitive middle portions. A few tighter shot sequences cutting between the leads could have enlivened certain dramatic beats.

Regardless, Hui displays admirable ambition and technical mastery in translating historical trauma into cinematic form. He has crafted an immersive psychological puzzle box interrogating the ghosts of authoritarianism’s past. One hopes international acclaim for this compelling indie might enable Hui to further develop his aesthetic vision.

A Mesmerizing Mind-Bender for the Thoughtful Cinephile

While “Small Hours of the Night” makes no concessions to casual viewers, patient audiences will find a mesmerizing feast for the senses. Hui’s intricate tale embedded in Singapore’s fraught history rewards interpretation and analysis rather than passive spectatorship. Multiple viewings may be required to unravel both the literal storyline and embedded sociopolitical commentary.

Small Hours of the Night Review

The avant-garde style prioritizes mood over accessibility, with extended sequences that indulge in abstraction. Striking as the high-contrast visuals are, those accustomed to mainstream fare could grow restless with the gradual pacing. Additionally, without sufficient context about Singapore’s political climate, the allegorical critique lacks some resonance.

Nonetheless, Hui has constructed an entrancing cinematic puzzle for thoughtful cinephiles to decipher. The technical creativity on display is tremendously impressive considering the project’s indie scale and limitations. For audiences who appreciate films as opportunities for intellectual sparring versus mindless entertainment, “Small Hours of the Night” delivers a penetrating and lacerating drama exploring state power’s crushing of dissent.

It seems unlikely such an unapologetically artsy effort will draw wide attention. But the film should enjoy respect on the festival circuit for those excited by bold stylistic maneuvers in service of sociopolitical themes rarely dissected so radically in contemporary Asian cinema. Here’s hoping adventurous arthouse audiences seek out this sterling sample of Singaporean vision and resilience.

The Review

Small Hours of the Night

8 Score

Through sheer force of technical artistry and defiant spirit, Daniel Hui has created an indelible tone poem interrogating profound questions of truth and power. "Small Hours of the Night" makes no compromises in its cerebral approach, but offers deep rewards for those attuned to its dark wavelength. Amid some uneven pacing and potentially impenetrable references, Hui has etched a starkly beautiful psychological thriller grappling with government authoritarianism's legacy of trauma. For bold vision and thematically ambitious storytelling, the film earns an 8 out of 10 rating. While not an instantly accessible work, patient viewers willing to untangle its intricate narrative and emotional layers will discover one of the most haunting interrogations of state oppression committed to celluloid.

PROS

  • Striking visual style and cinematography
  • Creates an unsettling, ominous atmosphere
  • Complex, nonlinear storytelling
  • Allegorical critique of authoritarian regimes
  • Emphasis on forgotten histories
  • Strong lead performances

CONS

  • Slow pace may test viewers' patience
  • References are sometimes too oblique
  • Monotonous line delivery at times
  • May require multiple viewings to fully unpack

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Daniel HuiDramaFeaturedSmall Hours of the Night
Previous Post

Fighter Review: Bollywood Action Meets Military Tribute

Next Post

UNDERDOGS Review – The Next VR Fighting Contender Arrives

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • richest football club owners in the world

    Top 40 Richest Football Club Owners in the World

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Independent Film Coalition Challenges U.S. Tariff Threats on Foreign Shoots

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • We Bury the Dead Review: EMP Outbreak Reimagined

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • I, Jack Wright Review: A Dynasty in Decay

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Bad Thoughts Season 1 Review: When Shock Comedy Meets Streamlined Sketches

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Good Boy Review: Fear Through Canine Eyes

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • MobLand Season 1 Review: Family Ties and Underworld Intrigues

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Doom: The Dark Ages Review
Reviews Games

Doom: The Dark Ages Review – Mastering Parry and Power

3 days ago
Juliet & Romeo Review
Movies

Juliet & Romeo Review: When Swordplay and Song Collide

3 days ago
The Midnight Walk Review
Games

The Midnight Walk Review: A Claymation Nightmare Worth Lighting

4 days ago
Shadow Force Review
Entertainment

Shadow Force Review: A Family on the Run

4 days ago
Summer of 69 Review
Movies

Summer of 69 Review: Jillian Bell’s Bold Directorial Debut

6 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version