Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAh Tim (Michael Hui) is a handy man and Li (Samuel Hui) is a nurse in the Hang Seng Sanitarium. Together thez engage in dubious plots and exploits.Ah Tim (Michael Hui) is a handy man and Li (Samuel Hui) is a nurse in the Hang Seng Sanitarium. Together thez engage in dubious plots and exploits.Ah Tim (Michael Hui) is a handy man and Li (Samuel Hui) is a nurse in the Hang Seng Sanitarium. Together thez engage in dubious plots and exploits.
Yat Fan Lau
- Police Chief
- (as Liu Yi-Fang)
Chiang Nan
- Antique Dealer
- (as Nan Chiang)
Ho Li-Jen
- Mental Patient
- (as Li-Jen Ho)
Gam Lau
- Tim's Mother
- (as Lau Gam)
Kam Siu
- Arab Bodyguard
- (as Siu Gam)
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The Last Message (1975) was the second of the Hui Brothers films and like the first one it was highly successful. This time around the brothers play two workers inside a mental institution who are constantly looking for ways to slack off, cut corners or ways to make a quick buck or two. Michael stars as a lazy orderly whilst Samuel co-stars as a medical assistant. One day a big burly man with crude mannerism (Roy Chiao) is admitted into the hospital. He's always clutching a small white canvas bag to his chest. Inside it are pieces of rubbish but a couple of fragments of fine China dating back to the Ming Dynasty are amongst the trash. This peaks the interest of Michael who's always swiping gold crowns, caps and bridges from dead patients. So one day he convinces Sam to help him find out where Roy got the vase fragments. Who knows they could find a fortune. Will Sam and Michael make it big from antiques? Check out The Last Message!
The second film from the highly successful Hui Brothers. Ricky has a small part as a roller skating waiter, Dean Shek cameos as a hotel desk clerk and James Tien has a bit part as a traffic cop. The movie is highly entertaining and loads of fun. If you liked the first film then you'll get more than a few chucks from this one.
Highly recommended!
The second film from the highly successful Hui Brothers. Ricky has a small part as a roller skating waiter, Dean Shek cameos as a hotel desk clerk and James Tien has a bit part as a traffic cop. The movie is highly entertaining and loads of fun. If you liked the first film then you'll get more than a few chucks from this one.
Highly recommended!
This movie is one of the earlier films from the Hui Brothers, where they play two workers inside a mental institution who are constantly looking for ways to slack off or search for a quick way to find fast money. When Chiang Wo (Roy Chiao) is admitted into the hospital, the brothers, Tim (Michael Hui) and Lee (Sam Hui) eye his small white, which they think contains fragments of fine China from the Ming Dynasty. This leads to some comedic acts in from the brothers to get their hands on the fragments and leads to an interesting plot of where they could find such fortune.
The Hui Brothers brought new approach to comedy in Hong Kong back in the day and it's a type of comedy that is sorely missing in today's films that Hong Kong dishes out. While this film is more of the solemn ones from the Hui Brothers and does not contain as much comedy or humor as other entries, it's still a classic film worth watching.
Grade B
The Hui Brothers brought new approach to comedy in Hong Kong back in the day and it's a type of comedy that is sorely missing in today's films that Hong Kong dishes out. While this film is more of the solemn ones from the Hui Brothers and does not contain as much comedy or humor as other entries, it's still a classic film worth watching.
Grade B
This and Ban jin ba liang both made by Hui brothers really brought in new approach to Hong Kong cinema. Hong Kong was fortunate in that it had fertile ground for movie making because of early efforts by the Shaw Brothers, and later the Golden Harvest. Golden Harvest's contribution in modernizing Hong Kong cinema can't be overlooked, but as independents, Hui brothers did almost as much in changing the direction of Hong Kong cinema.
Interesting plot combined with comedy, set in modern Hong Kong that didn't involve love romance was a fresh new approach for Hong Kong cinema of its day. If we look at the proliferation of this type of movies in the '80s in Hong Kong, it's clear that Hui brothers were way ahead of the game.
Sam Hui also wrote the music for this movie. His talent is indisputable, as is his contribution to the Hong Kong's pop culture.
This is one of the seminal movie of its kind, and is recommended for viewing by all Asian movie fans.
Interesting plot combined with comedy, set in modern Hong Kong that didn't involve love romance was a fresh new approach for Hong Kong cinema of its day. If we look at the proliferation of this type of movies in the '80s in Hong Kong, it's clear that Hui brothers were way ahead of the game.
Sam Hui also wrote the music for this movie. His talent is indisputable, as is his contribution to the Hong Kong's pop culture.
This is one of the seminal movie of its kind, and is recommended for viewing by all Asian movie fans.
In August of 1975, Michael HUI Kwoon Man and Sam HUI Kwoon Kit returned to the big screen with The Last Message (aka Tin Choy Yu Baak Chi, literally 'Geniuses and Idiots'). This sophomore effort by the Hui brothers had a lot riding on it; that is, the movie had to prove that their debut feature-1974's Games Gamblers Play (aka Gwai Ma Seung Sing)-was no fluke.
The Huis needn't have worried because The Last Message was the highest grossing film of 1975 at the Hong Kong box office. Their blend of slapstick comedy combined with humorous wordplay specifically aimed at the Cantonese-speaking locals was a winning formula that would continue the Hui brothers' domination of Hong Kong cinematic comedy through their next three films: 1976's The Private Eyes (aka Boon Gun Baat Leung), 1978's The Contract (aka Maai Sun Kaai), and 1981's Security Unlimited (aka Moh Dung Bo Biao). (Sam Hui parted ways with older brother Michael and went on to star in the Aces Go Places series (aka Jeui Gaai Paak Dong), the first three films of which would be the top grossers of 1982-84.)
Unlike the other Hui collaborations, Sam is the in-charge character in The Last Message, playing Lee, a nurse at a psychiatric hospital. He partners with Tim (Michael Hui), a janitor at the same facility who isn't above stealing gold teeth from the deceased to make some extra pocket change. The two conniving hospital workers believe they have a line on priceless artifacts when CHENG Ming (Roy Chiao) checks in carrying a bag of knickknacks which include pieces of Ming Dynasty ceramics. Hoping to get their hands on valuable antiquities, Lee and Tim tirelessly follow the hints that Cheng drops, leading to one misadventure after another.
Having cut their teeth on TVB's The Hui Brothers Show (1971-72), Michael and Sam were very familiar with sketch comedy. This approach is very apparent in The Last Message where individual scenes can be lifted out of the film and play as standalone skits. The opening where Lee leads a motorcycle cop (James Tien aka TIN Jeun) on a chase and the cameo by Ricky HUI Kwoon Ying delivering a pack of cigarettes are but two examples of complete sketches, beginning with a setup and ending with a punchline.
The plot is essentially a loose link between the skits, some of which have no bearing on the story at all. Sharp-eyed fans will spot composer/conductor Joseph KOO Ka Fai in a minute-long appearance, playing an equipment specialist on the police force. His scene will get a laugh from fans unfamiliar with the tried-and-true joke that punctuates Koo's cameo, but the movie stops dead to give him the spotlight, stalling the plot for the sake of a gag.
Along the same lines are the film's musical numbers. The 98-minute running is padded with sequences where either Sam Hui, his band (The Lotus), or a combination of the two perform songs on camera almost in their entirety. Director Michael Hui doesn't bother with setups, simply cutting to a party at the hospital or a live performance for hotel guests and letting the musicians do their thing. Fans of The Hui Brothers Show wouldn't have minded these interludes as they would've been familiar with the variety show format that the brothers employed. Younger viewers who aren't aware of the Huis' television background might find it odd that the film suddenly drops in musical numbers for no reason.
True to its English title, The Last Message features a character's final words which drive the plot in the movie's latter half. The revelation of what the message is might surprise some audience members because it's moving rather comedic, giving the film emotional weight that was largely missing from the Huis' first feature.
Despite the importance of the titular message, the film doesn't end on it. The main arc of the movie belongs to the leading men, so it's the completion of their journey that concludes the story. Whether or not you'll be satisfied with the fates of Lee and Tim will depend on how much you empathize with the two schemers.
While The Last Message was a huge hit back in '75, it does show its age with its fashion, music, and attitudes. Most of the gags can be translated (unlike the puns in Stephen CHOW Sing Chi's pre-millennium movies), but a few jokes won't land with viewers who don't speak Cantonese. Overall, though, the comedy in this second Hui brothers offering will still resonate with today's audiences, even if they weren't brought up in Hong Kong. The Last Message might not be a box office titan if it were released today, but it's undeniably entertaining.
The Huis needn't have worried because The Last Message was the highest grossing film of 1975 at the Hong Kong box office. Their blend of slapstick comedy combined with humorous wordplay specifically aimed at the Cantonese-speaking locals was a winning formula that would continue the Hui brothers' domination of Hong Kong cinematic comedy through their next three films: 1976's The Private Eyes (aka Boon Gun Baat Leung), 1978's The Contract (aka Maai Sun Kaai), and 1981's Security Unlimited (aka Moh Dung Bo Biao). (Sam Hui parted ways with older brother Michael and went on to star in the Aces Go Places series (aka Jeui Gaai Paak Dong), the first three films of which would be the top grossers of 1982-84.)
Unlike the other Hui collaborations, Sam is the in-charge character in The Last Message, playing Lee, a nurse at a psychiatric hospital. He partners with Tim (Michael Hui), a janitor at the same facility who isn't above stealing gold teeth from the deceased to make some extra pocket change. The two conniving hospital workers believe they have a line on priceless artifacts when CHENG Ming (Roy Chiao) checks in carrying a bag of knickknacks which include pieces of Ming Dynasty ceramics. Hoping to get their hands on valuable antiquities, Lee and Tim tirelessly follow the hints that Cheng drops, leading to one misadventure after another.
Having cut their teeth on TVB's The Hui Brothers Show (1971-72), Michael and Sam were very familiar with sketch comedy. This approach is very apparent in The Last Message where individual scenes can be lifted out of the film and play as standalone skits. The opening where Lee leads a motorcycle cop (James Tien aka TIN Jeun) on a chase and the cameo by Ricky HUI Kwoon Ying delivering a pack of cigarettes are but two examples of complete sketches, beginning with a setup and ending with a punchline.
The plot is essentially a loose link between the skits, some of which have no bearing on the story at all. Sharp-eyed fans will spot composer/conductor Joseph KOO Ka Fai in a minute-long appearance, playing an equipment specialist on the police force. His scene will get a laugh from fans unfamiliar with the tried-and-true joke that punctuates Koo's cameo, but the movie stops dead to give him the spotlight, stalling the plot for the sake of a gag.
Along the same lines are the film's musical numbers. The 98-minute running is padded with sequences where either Sam Hui, his band (The Lotus), or a combination of the two perform songs on camera almost in their entirety. Director Michael Hui doesn't bother with setups, simply cutting to a party at the hospital or a live performance for hotel guests and letting the musicians do their thing. Fans of The Hui Brothers Show wouldn't have minded these interludes as they would've been familiar with the variety show format that the brothers employed. Younger viewers who aren't aware of the Huis' television background might find it odd that the film suddenly drops in musical numbers for no reason.
True to its English title, The Last Message features a character's final words which drive the plot in the movie's latter half. The revelation of what the message is might surprise some audience members because it's moving rather comedic, giving the film emotional weight that was largely missing from the Huis' first feature.
Despite the importance of the titular message, the film doesn't end on it. The main arc of the movie belongs to the leading men, so it's the completion of their journey that concludes the story. Whether or not you'll be satisfied with the fates of Lee and Tim will depend on how much you empathize with the two schemers.
While The Last Message was a huge hit back in '75, it does show its age with its fashion, music, and attitudes. Most of the gags can be translated (unlike the puns in Stephen CHOW Sing Chi's pre-millennium movies), but a few jokes won't land with viewers who don't speak Cantonese. Overall, though, the comedy in this second Hui brothers offering will still resonate with today's audiences, even if they weren't brought up in Hong Kong. The Last Message might not be a box office titan if it were released today, but it's undeniably entertaining.
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By what name was Tian cai yu bai chi (1975) officially released in Canada in English?
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