Theme songs, end credits and all interludes that appeared in the movie "Hero's Duty"?

The theme song, end credits, and interludes involved in the movie "Heroic Colors" are:

1. Love in the Years: "Love in the Years" is the theme song of the movie "Heroic Colors", sung by Leslie Cheung, with lyrics by Wong Chim in Cantonese, lyrics by Zhan De Mao in Mandarin, and music by Koo Ka Fai. It was included in Leslie Cheung's October 1986 album "Fire of Love". The Mandarin version was released on November 26, 1986 in the album "Heroes of the Year".

2. Freedom from losing one's mind: Chen Xiaoyun sings the song, a popular southern Fujian song in the nineties, included in the 1990 release of the album "Fujian Shochu Golden Song", originally released in the "Jima Great Duet" company. The song was originally released in the Jima Da Duet Company. It was used as the background music of the bar when Heroic Pony Chow Yun Fat was at the Maplewood Court Restaurant. The song was also performed by Eva Cheuk.

3. Tomorrow will be better:Wang Qiao sang the song in June 2015 in the CCTV "waiting for you to grow up" musical "love the world".

Synopsis of Movie Star True Colors:

Synopsis: An action movie directed by John Woo and starring Dillon, Leslie Cheung and Chow Yun Fat. The movie tells the story of Sung Tse Ho, Mark and Sung Tse Kit, who bring together the contradictions of jungle brotherhood and biological brotherhood, embodying their different frustrations, failures, confessions and revenge. The film was released on August 2, 1986 in Hong Kong, China, and on November 17, 2017, a restored, 4K version was released in mainland China.

Characters:

(1) Chow Yun-Fat as Mark: He is unruly, formidable and dashing, and goes through fire and death for his brothers. He is the main general of a counterfeit money group in Hong Kong, is the mob loud and clear, and Song Zihao is born into the death of many years of brotherhood, love than hand and foot. After the arrest of Sung Tse Ho, Siu Ma gave up his position as the boss of the triad to Ah Shing and lived on the streets to scrub cars for a living. Three years later, Song Zihao was released from prison, and Mark was determined to make a comeback because of Song Zihao's release from prison. In the end, he died in a bloody battle in the harbor.

(2) Leslie Cheung as Sung Tze Kit: He is a young police officer with a sense of justice and dedication in his heart. He is the younger brother of Sung Tze Ho, and many times his actions reflect the heroism of both Siu Ma and Sung Tze Ho. Eventually, the bloody battle in the harbor and the death of Brother Pony make him realize that being a brother is supposed to be about love, and a new hero grows out of it.

(3) Dillon as Sung Tze Ho: Calm and collected, he is not afraid of danger. He is the main general of a counterfeit banknote syndicate in Hong Kong. In order to protect Shing and stay away from the triads, he turns himself in and is arrested and imprisoned. Three years later, he was released from prison after completing his sentence. When his younger brother, Sung Tse Kit, realizes that he is working for the triads and has killed his father, he hates him and the conflict between the two brothers arises. After a bloody battle in the harbor, Song Zihao shoots Tan Cheng, takes the handcuffs off his brother Song Zijie and turns himself in to the police. The two brothers are finally reconciled.

Film Review: "A Hero's Duty" plays on John Woo's labeled cinematic vocabulary of "aesthetics of violence," "brotherhood," and "two guns," and reveals the human nature as it oscillates between good and evil. The movie is not an exposure of the inner workings of the gangs of Hong Kong and Taiwan, nor is it a reflection of social reality, but a reinvention of the myth of the living hero, which is entirely the subjective desire of the creators and a projection of their feelings. The movie was an unprecedented hit after its release, creating a trend of gangster hero movies. The Hong Kong movie thus appeared "hero movie" boom. In the Hong Kong film critics selection of Hong Kong's 100 best films, "Heroic Colors" ranked first, which shows its far-reaching impact on Hong Kong films.