Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuMichelle Yeung Ling is ultra-wealthy heiress that has grown bored with the everyday humdrum. To break the monotony, she plans elaborate heists and hires crew from all over the world to accom... Alles lesenMichelle Yeung Ling is ultra-wealthy heiress that has grown bored with the everyday humdrum. To break the monotony, she plans elaborate heists and hires crew from all over the world to accomplish the job.Michelle Yeung Ling is ultra-wealthy heiress that has grown bored with the everyday humdrum. To break the monotony, she plans elaborate heists and hires crew from all over the world to accomplish the job.
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This is not a typical Michelle Yeoh vehicle: no martial arts!
It is, in fact, a low budget remake of the original "Thomas Crown Affair" with a Michelle Yeoh playing that role. It is also an excellent film. The chemistry between the insurance investigator (extremely well played by George Lam) and the thrill seeking millionairess (played with quiet nuance by Michelle Yeoh) is as fine as anything I've seen on film.
Yeoh starred in four films before she married Poon, an owner of the studio. Three of them were actions films in which she played a short-haired, sweet tomboy -- generally wearing print shirts and jeans. This film was a distinct departure. She plays a long-haired, sophisticated beauty -- who knows exactly how many bottles of 1960 Petrus there are in Paris. My hunch is that Poon had his eyes on her and wanted to "upgrade" her image in preparation for marriage. I may be wrong. The result is certainly unique.
Yeoh's is an interesting performance. We never really know her character. She is always something of an enigma -- but this is the idea, I think. One senses the tomboy lurking beneath the svelte sophistication. And the trade mark little girl giggle (hand over mouth, head bowed) is always ready to burst out. And that sweet, taunting smile is there too, just before she totally humiliates the adversary male. And that self-contained strength she brings to all her performances underlies it all. It is a convincing portrait of a disturbed young woman looking for something she does not know how to enjoy.
For an example of the range in the role, watch the chase scene through Paris. She is the excited little girl stealing a police car. A daredevilish stunt woman leading the police on a mad chase through the streets. But then, as she hears the police beating the poor insurance investigator (whom she has left stuck in the stolen car), a profound melancholy wells up on her face. It is not fun anymore. The real world has intruded on her fantasy.
In all her post-retirement films I have sensed an underlying sadness in Yeoh. A kind of isolation -- sometimes verging on desolation. It is even used as a subplot in several of those films: Wing Chun, Butterfly and Sword, Supercop 2, Tai Chi Master. Something of this mood also emerges for the first time in Easy Money.
A very well done film. And Yeoh is a much more interesting Thomas Crown than was Brosnan in his remake.
It is, in fact, a low budget remake of the original "Thomas Crown Affair" with a Michelle Yeoh playing that role. It is also an excellent film. The chemistry between the insurance investigator (extremely well played by George Lam) and the thrill seeking millionairess (played with quiet nuance by Michelle Yeoh) is as fine as anything I've seen on film.
Yeoh starred in four films before she married Poon, an owner of the studio. Three of them were actions films in which she played a short-haired, sweet tomboy -- generally wearing print shirts and jeans. This film was a distinct departure. She plays a long-haired, sophisticated beauty -- who knows exactly how many bottles of 1960 Petrus there are in Paris. My hunch is that Poon had his eyes on her and wanted to "upgrade" her image in preparation for marriage. I may be wrong. The result is certainly unique.
Yeoh's is an interesting performance. We never really know her character. She is always something of an enigma -- but this is the idea, I think. One senses the tomboy lurking beneath the svelte sophistication. And the trade mark little girl giggle (hand over mouth, head bowed) is always ready to burst out. And that sweet, taunting smile is there too, just before she totally humiliates the adversary male. And that self-contained strength she brings to all her performances underlies it all. It is a convincing portrait of a disturbed young woman looking for something she does not know how to enjoy.
For an example of the range in the role, watch the chase scene through Paris. She is the excited little girl stealing a police car. A daredevilish stunt woman leading the police on a mad chase through the streets. But then, as she hears the police beating the poor insurance investigator (whom she has left stuck in the stolen car), a profound melancholy wells up on her face. It is not fun anymore. The real world has intruded on her fantasy.
In all her post-retirement films I have sensed an underlying sadness in Yeoh. A kind of isolation -- sometimes verging on desolation. It is even used as a subplot in several of those films: Wing Chun, Butterfly and Sword, Supercop 2, Tai Chi Master. Something of this mood also emerges for the first time in Easy Money.
A very well done film. And Yeoh is a much more interesting Thomas Crown than was Brosnan in his remake.
Despite a variety of international locations (including Hong Kong, London, Paris, Switzerland and Greece), and an equal variety of slick outfits and hairstyles for Michelle Yeoh, who truly looks VERY attractive here, "Easy Money" is a dud. And I'm not saying that because it has very little action; Yeoh's 1996 drama "The Stunt Woman" also has very little action, but it is an interesting film nonetheless - this one isn't. It is disjointed, pointless, and not as smart as it thinks it is (George Lam decides that Michelle is the mastermind behind a robbery based on a hunch and the viewing of heist movies). If you are a Yeoh fan, you might want to check this out for completion's sake, since it is her least-known film (and it's easy to see why). (*1/2)
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- WissenswertesAfter this movie, Michelle Yeoh and Dickson Poon (executive producer) was a married couple and eventually retired from cinema but divorced in 1992.
- VerbindungenFeatures Nur 48 Stunden (1982)
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By what name was Tong tian da dao (1987) officially released in Canada in English?
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