Overview
The film tells the story of two brothers, Hong Da (洪达) and Hong Yu (洪宇), who both serve in a secret anti-drug squad of the Kaniya military. During a drug sweep operation on the Southeast Asian border, they are ambushed by the cunning drug lord Gong Tai (贡泰). Hong Da, who is about to become a father, sacrifices himself to protect his younger brother Hong Yu.
Reviews
Owl Hunt Storm arrives on iQIYI as a competent if unremarkable entry in China's booming network action film market. Director Jiang Kaiyang, returning to the crime-action genre after 2018's The Blizzard, demonstrates solid technical proficiency in staging military operations and combat sequences. The film's 86-minute runtime keeps the pacing tight, following Hong Yu's transformation from traumatised soldier to vengeful operative after his brother's death during a botched anti-drug raid. The Southeast Asian border setting provides an appropriately lawless backdrop for the gunfights and tactical manoeuvres, while the "Lone Wolf Squad" concept taps into familiar elite-unit tropes that genre fans will recognise.
The emotional core of the film rests on the fraternal bond between Hong Yu (played by Lu Nuo) and his fallen brother Hong Da (Xu Jia), with the former's guilt and grief supposedly driving his return to the battlefield.
However, this narrative foundation receives only surface-level exploration—Hong Yu's psychological struggle is quickly eclipsed by action set pieces, and his sister-in-law and nephew serve more as plot devices than fully realised characters. The villain Gong Tai, orchestrating the ambush from the shadows, never develops beyond a standard drug lord archetype, missing the opportunity for the kind of complex antagonist that could have elevated the material. The supporting cast, including veterans like Shi Zhaoqi as General Cha Man, provides professional performances but limited screen time for character development.
Ultimately, Owl Hunt Storm functions as exactly what it was designed to be: a mid-budget streaming actioner that delivers adequate thrills without demanding much from its audience. The film's 7.1 rating on iQIYI and modest 6.0 scores elsewhere suggest viewers recognise its limitations while appreciating its straightforward approach. For Jiang Kaiyang, this represents a safe, workmanlike addition to his filmography rather than an artistic leap forward. It serves as passable entertainment for subscribers browsing the platform's action catalogue, though it offers little that distinguishes it from the steady stream of similar military-themed content flooding China's online video market.
