अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंLuna Ng (Kelly Chen) is a columnist who gave her first boyfriend a vinyl record as a gift. She later discovers that same vinyl record in a second hand store so she attempts to buy it back. H... सभी पढ़ेंLuna Ng (Kelly Chen) is a columnist who gave her first boyfriend a vinyl record as a gift. She later discovers that same vinyl record in a second hand store so she attempts to buy it back. However, another person ends up buying it before her. She finds out that the new owner of t... सभी पढ़ेंLuna Ng (Kelly Chen) is a columnist who gave her first boyfriend a vinyl record as a gift. She later discovers that same vinyl record in a second hand store so she attempts to buy it back. However, another person ends up buying it before her. She finds out that the new owner of the record is Cheung Yung (Aaron Kwok), a radio host. Luna ends up both loving and detestin... सभी पढ़ें
- पुरस्कार
- 2 कुल नामांकन
- Cat
- (as Teresa Mo)
- Cheung Yung's Producer
- (as Jessica Hester)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Both actors do a credible job, but I couldn't get to like the character Aaron Kwok's was playing. He was pretty mean in this movie. Kelly Chen's character was only marginally better. The romance between Eric and Mo on the sideline was silly and it didn't match the mood of the two serious main characters. There were other romantic comedy with two leads antagonizing each other like Pillow Talk between Doris Day, and Rock Hudson. At least those guys had some charm even when they were going at each other. This is not the case with these two.
Plot was pretty good, so the movie was okay to watch. It's an unlikely story of romance happening to two such characters.
The story is pretty good, especially the dialogue between Aaron and Kelly and both actors seem to have good chemistry. Overall, I would recommend this movie.
Pretentious, self-obsessed newspaper columnist Luna (Chen) finds an old LP in a junk shop, that turns out to be the one she gave to her first true love as a gift years before. She tries to buy it but it's reserved for Cheung (Kwok), an arrogant radio host who dispenses his rather dubious wisdom between playing classic tracks on vinyl. He refuses to let her have the record, and mentions the incident on his show. Incensed by this, she responds by attacking him in her column, resulting in a tit-for-tat battle that soon gets out of hand.
That their hate turns to love at some point in the movie is a given. In fact, the only surprise on offer here is that the film flits between this pair and another, only tenuously linked to Luna and Cheung. Theresa Mo plays Cat, the lady who owns the junk shop. Feeling lonely, she buys a pet dog, and unwittingly finds her soulmate when she runs into the dog's original owner, Mo (Eric Tsang). This second story is amusing, but mostly only succeeds in highlighting how lightweight the main story is.
My main problem with this film is how unlikeable the leads are. Chen's bug-eyed gurning gets old fast, and Kwok doesn't put in much effort. Their characters seem shallow and it's hard to muster the enthusiasm to care what happens to them.
Still, it's a nice enough movie, and if you're after a pleasant little time-waster you could do a lot worse.
The storyline told in "Siu Chan Chan" was pretty generic for a romantic comedy, and it felt like Ivy Ho was following the Romantic-Comedies-For-Dummies book page by page. So if you enjoy these sappy and predictable romantic comedies, then you are in for a treat here.
I will say that the story was okay. I mean, you know what you are in for here and director Chung-Man Yee doesn't veer off course to throw a single surprise at the audience, for better or worse.
The movie does have some of Hong Kong cinema's more established names on the cast list, with Aaron Kwok and Kelly Chen in the two leading roles. However, the movie also have Teresa Mo and Eric Tsang on the cast list to spruce things up a bit.
While I managed to sit through the entire movie, I was only mildly entertained. And this is definitely not a movie that I will be returning to watch a second time.
My rating of "Siu Chan Chan" lands on a five out of ten stars.