CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.2/10
11 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Shan es una sirena que ha sido enviada a asesinar a Xuan, el promotor inmobiliario que amenaza su ecosistema, pero se enamora de él.Shan es una sirena que ha sido enviada a asesinar a Xuan, el promotor inmobiliario que amenaza su ecosistema, pero se enamora de él.Shan es una sirena que ha sido enviada a asesinar a Xuan, el promotor inmobiliario que amenaza su ecosistema, pero se enamora de él.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 8 premios ganados y 13 nominaciones en total
Hark Tsui
- Uncle Rich
- (as Ke Xu)
Kris Wu
- Long Jianfei
- (as Yifan Wu)
Sheung-ching Lee
- Constable Mr. Shi
- (as Shangzheng Li)
Linah Matsuoka
- George's Assistant
- (as Rina Matsuoka)
Xu Zhen-zhen
- George's Assistant
- (as Zhen Zhen Xu)
White-K
- Museum Visitor
- (as White-k)
Kong Lianshun
- Museum Visitor
- (as Lianshun Kong)
Wilson Chin
- Mermaid Fat
- (as Wilson Chin Kwok Wai)
Tze-Chung Lam
- Technician
- (as Lam Tze Chung)
Opiniones destacadas
Stephen Chow is one of my favorite directors in China, I have seen many wonderful films directed by him like KongFu Hustle, ShaoLin soccer.
An outstanding characteristic of Chow's film is tricking of comedy ( I don't know how to describe that style accurately).
However, this film, The Mermaid, is very different compared to the other two mentioned above. To conclude it in a sentence, that is a wonderful mixture of comedy, love, science fiction and environment.
Environmental protection is heavy point of this film, but unlike many other directors, Stephen Chow shows it in another way, which is love and comedy.
This film inherit many characteristics in Chow's old films, like 'XiaoQiang' and 'WangCai' and so on. Though Language comedy has intrinsically regional difference, many tricks can be conveyed from the simple actuation.
Stunts seem to be an fatal drawback of Chinese films, may be investment is the major problem. But stunts in this film is very nice, e.g. the tail of octopus and arresting of the mermaid under water.
Overall, this is a wonderful movie which will catch heart of a very general range of audience. I strongly recommend it.
An outstanding characteristic of Chow's film is tricking of comedy ( I don't know how to describe that style accurately).
However, this film, The Mermaid, is very different compared to the other two mentioned above. To conclude it in a sentence, that is a wonderful mixture of comedy, love, science fiction and environment.
Environmental protection is heavy point of this film, but unlike many other directors, Stephen Chow shows it in another way, which is love and comedy.
This film inherit many characteristics in Chow's old films, like 'XiaoQiang' and 'WangCai' and so on. Though Language comedy has intrinsically regional difference, many tricks can be conveyed from the simple actuation.
Stunts seem to be an fatal drawback of Chinese films, may be investment is the major problem. But stunts in this film is very nice, e.g. the tail of octopus and arresting of the mermaid under water.
Overall, this is a wonderful movie which will catch heart of a very general range of audience. I strongly recommend it.
In this environmental activist comedy from Stephen Chow, mermaids whose environment is being destroyed by an evil developer plot to kill him, using a pretty mermaid as bait. The complications are unsurprising.
While lacking any comical martial arts, the movie still has Chow's usual slapstick humor and weirdness. This includes a very funny scene of a series of hapless assassination attempts, a goofy singing duet, and a cool special-effects driven scene involving splashing water into objects. Some scenes are a bit too dumb, but overall this is a reasonably amusing movie, although nowhere near as funny as Chow's masterpiece, Shaolin Soccer.
The plotting doesn't make much sense. The developer unconvincingly shifts from fairly cartoony awfulness to general sincerity, and the mermaids are, weirdly, more concerned with vengeance than with fixing their problems. But within its silly, slapsticky world, this isn't a huge problem.
What is a huge problem is the shift into violence towards the end. It's both upsetting and nonsensical; a classic example of a movie that makes its villains evil to the point where they do terrible things that not only don't benefit them, but that would seemingly work against their interests. This whole part of the movie is pretty terrible, and to some extent ruined it for me.
One last note. I had a dual audio version of this, and started off watching the English dub. I'm not someone who automatically rejects dubbed movies, but I strongly suggest that you do not, under any circumstances, watch the English dub of this, because it is horrendously bad. I think it's a shame that a successful director's biggest hit of all time doesn't rate competent English actors. If I were rating this based on the dub, I would take another star off. It's an embarrassment.
While lacking any comical martial arts, the movie still has Chow's usual slapstick humor and weirdness. This includes a very funny scene of a series of hapless assassination attempts, a goofy singing duet, and a cool special-effects driven scene involving splashing water into objects. Some scenes are a bit too dumb, but overall this is a reasonably amusing movie, although nowhere near as funny as Chow's masterpiece, Shaolin Soccer.
The plotting doesn't make much sense. The developer unconvincingly shifts from fairly cartoony awfulness to general sincerity, and the mermaids are, weirdly, more concerned with vengeance than with fixing their problems. But within its silly, slapsticky world, this isn't a huge problem.
What is a huge problem is the shift into violence towards the end. It's both upsetting and nonsensical; a classic example of a movie that makes its villains evil to the point where they do terrible things that not only don't benefit them, but that would seemingly work against their interests. This whole part of the movie is pretty terrible, and to some extent ruined it for me.
One last note. I had a dual audio version of this, and started off watching the English dub. I'm not someone who automatically rejects dubbed movies, but I strongly suggest that you do not, under any circumstances, watch the English dub of this, because it is horrendously bad. I think it's a shame that a successful director's biggest hit of all time doesn't rate competent English actors. If I were rating this based on the dub, I would take another star off. It's an embarrassment.
Nice movie, better than I expected. The film's main message is about saving the environment. Scenes can be quite disturbing as they show real life footage of marine animals like dolphins being caught, sea birds covered in oil and the attack on the merpeople... There was lots of comedic moments throughout the film as expected. Special effects were obviously not as realistic as Hollywood films. Movie storyline started off light-hearted then gradually become grim. Shows how greed can destroy our world. Last few scenes made me cry. Love the way they portrayed the relationship between the mermaid and the guy. 7/10 stars. Several inappropriate scenes not suitable for children.
The Mermaid, originally released under the title Mei Ren Yu, is a Chinese and Hong Kong fantasy romance that has broken numerous box office records upon release, including biggest opening day and biggest single-day gross in the history of Chinese cinema. A sequel is reported to have completed filming and the usual forgettable American remake is also being planned as of writing this review.
Two questions are of importance now. Is this movie really worth its hype? No, it isn't since Mei Ren Yu is light years away from being the greatest film coming out of Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China. Is it however a bad movie? No, it's a quite entertaining flick offering ninety-four minutes of quirky popcorn cinema.
This movie tells the story of a superficial property tycoon whose industries pollute the world. He is surrounded by capitalistic business partners and shallow acquaintances interested in his flashy lifestyle. One day, a young mermaid disguised as a beautiful woman tries to seduce him in order to kill him for torturing her race and destroying their realm. However, the charming mermaid and the lonely businessman start developing sincere romantic feelings for one another and must now defy the influence of their capitalistic partners and vengeful friends.
There are quite a few positive elements that deserve to be mentioned to describe this film. First of all, the quirky plot comes around as a contemporary fairy tale dealing with real-life challenges such as environmentalism. Up next, this movie also has a strong Chinese identity since it values communistic and socialistic values over ruthless capitalism and extreme economical competition. This film offers a wonderful combination of genres as elements of comedy, fantasy and romance collide. The balance between light-hearted elements such as the love story between the two protagonists and serious issues such as excessive genetic testing is another strength. The extroverted, intense and quirky acting performances blend in wonderfully to portray intriguing characters such as an aggressive and jealous octopus as well as an obsessed and scheming Western scientist.
As you might have figured out already, this successful movie isn't without a few significant flaws. Despite an entertaining script, the overall plot remains shallow and deals with themes that have been used in cinema from home and abroad time and time again. The exaggerated use of visual special effects is overbearing and gives this movie artificial and lifeless vibes. The use of slapstick comedy isn't as cleverly delivered as in many Western productions and instead has silly, predictable and childish tones. These are also the reasons why this movie might rather appeal to children and young teenagers than to older teenagers and adults.
At the end of the day, The Mermaid, initially released as Mei Ren Yu, is a fast-paced romantic fantasy movie with meaningful themes, intriguing characters and decent acting performances. This film however suffers from its overbearing visual special effects, shallow plot and childish jokes. This film is recommended to children and young teenagers in particular. Curious older teenagers or adults might want to watch this commercially successful film once on streaming devices but certainly shouldn't aim at purchasing that overall rather shallow movie. There are actually numerous better films of many genres coming out of Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China.
Two questions are of importance now. Is this movie really worth its hype? No, it isn't since Mei Ren Yu is light years away from being the greatest film coming out of Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China. Is it however a bad movie? No, it's a quite entertaining flick offering ninety-four minutes of quirky popcorn cinema.
This movie tells the story of a superficial property tycoon whose industries pollute the world. He is surrounded by capitalistic business partners and shallow acquaintances interested in his flashy lifestyle. One day, a young mermaid disguised as a beautiful woman tries to seduce him in order to kill him for torturing her race and destroying their realm. However, the charming mermaid and the lonely businessman start developing sincere romantic feelings for one another and must now defy the influence of their capitalistic partners and vengeful friends.
There are quite a few positive elements that deserve to be mentioned to describe this film. First of all, the quirky plot comes around as a contemporary fairy tale dealing with real-life challenges such as environmentalism. Up next, this movie also has a strong Chinese identity since it values communistic and socialistic values over ruthless capitalism and extreme economical competition. This film offers a wonderful combination of genres as elements of comedy, fantasy and romance collide. The balance between light-hearted elements such as the love story between the two protagonists and serious issues such as excessive genetic testing is another strength. The extroverted, intense and quirky acting performances blend in wonderfully to portray intriguing characters such as an aggressive and jealous octopus as well as an obsessed and scheming Western scientist.
As you might have figured out already, this successful movie isn't without a few significant flaws. Despite an entertaining script, the overall plot remains shallow and deals with themes that have been used in cinema from home and abroad time and time again. The exaggerated use of visual special effects is overbearing and gives this movie artificial and lifeless vibes. The use of slapstick comedy isn't as cleverly delivered as in many Western productions and instead has silly, predictable and childish tones. These are also the reasons why this movie might rather appeal to children and young teenagers than to older teenagers and adults.
At the end of the day, The Mermaid, initially released as Mei Ren Yu, is a fast-paced romantic fantasy movie with meaningful themes, intriguing characters and decent acting performances. This film however suffers from its overbearing visual special effects, shallow plot and childish jokes. This film is recommended to children and young teenagers in particular. Curious older teenagers or adults might want to watch this commercially successful film once on streaming devices but certainly shouldn't aim at purchasing that overall rather shallow movie. There are actually numerous better films of many genres coming out of Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China.
I started to like Stephen Chow's movies since Shaolin Soccer. In order to maximise my enjoyment, I go for this movie without reading any reviews, especially from those who are always quick to write a review like a book. Anyway, I can trust that a Stephen Chow movie needs no reviews and quality is guaranteed. So being impressed with the poster, I set my hopes high. In order not to spoil anyone's fun, I will not describe the story or details. Generally, one can see that Stephen Chow's aim in this movie is to smash all China's box office and he did it successfully, with some good messages as usual; about love, humanity and environmentally friendly here, filled with romance, comedy, action and even a good old song. What else do you need for a movie to sell well ? Nothing else. For China audience who have not seen too much of Stephen Chow and where people do not have too high demand on artistic values, they are sure to enjoy it very much. For me, I don't like this style of "mo-lei-tao" comedy and I find them too much here. Much of the jokes are also old and predictable, although done in a good way. The male and 2 female leads are good. Most of the other supporting casts are poor. The 2nd male lead just cannot act and his face just don't match the role. Using that great classic HK song from the 80s is obviously to please the Chinese but made the movie less creative. This movie don't deserve any awards unless they give it for the same reasons like Titanic. Overall, I find this movie not as good as his last 4 because it doesn't give me much surprises.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis was the highest-grossing movie in China until Zhan lang II (2017) dethroned it in August 2017. It was also the first film to gross CN¥3 billion (equivalent to roughly $431.1 million in U.S. dollars).
- ConexionesFeatured in Half in the Bag: Box Office Number Crunching (2016)
Selecciones populares
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- How long is The Mermaid?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Mermaid
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 60,720,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 3,232,685
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 985,052
- 21 feb 2016
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 553,810,228
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 34 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.90 : 1
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