
Paul Sze
- Title: Paul Sze
- Popularity: 0.3912
- Known For: Directing
- Birthday:
- Place of Birth:
- Homepage:
- Also Known As: 施柏林, Paul Sze Pak-Lam , Sze Pak-Lam , 文濤


Movies1 2013 HD
A homeless man works as a bounty hunter of pets and missing persons on the side. Sleeping rough on the streets for eight years and counting, he is by no means a do-gooder bent on saving the helpless but is simply eking out a meagre existence in a society that turns a blind eye to individuals like him and renders them invisible. One day, the sighting of one such misper turns into a debacle, and the man hunter finds himself the unlikely saviour of the runaway. Yet beggars can’t be choosers and survivors should never be apologetic for putting their own well-being first. Still, it begs the question: As a society we are judged by how we treat the most vulnerable. And what does that make us, having failed so miserably collectively?
Movies6.2 2019 HD
The film centers around a juror on a high-profile case who is blackmailed into fixing the verdict after his daughter is kidnapped.
Movies6.2 2019 HD
The film centers around a juror on a high-profile case who is blackmailed into fixing the verdict after his daughter is kidnapped.
Movies2 2018 HD
Movies1 1970 HD
Cai Fan, the leader of the escort team of a bank, encountered a bank robbery after one day of work, with police outside the door and hostages inside the door, and he and his team members were forced to get involved in the trouble of "robbing the bank".
Movies1 2013 HD
A homeless man works as a bounty hunter of pets and missing persons on the side. Sleeping rough on the streets for eight years and counting, he is by no means a do-gooder bent on saving the helpless but is simply eking out a meagre existence in a society that turns a blind eye to individuals like him and renders them invisible. One day, the sighting of one such misper turns into a debacle, and the man hunter finds himself the unlikely saviour of the runaway. Yet beggars can’t be choosers and survivors should never be apologetic for putting their own well-being first. Still, it begs the question: As a society we are judged by how we treat the most vulnerable. And what does that make us, having failed so miserably collectively?