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Shui shuo wo bu zai hu

  • 2001
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
219
YOUR RATING
Shui shuo wo bu zai hu (2001)
ComedyDrama

Xie Yuting tears home apart looking for marriage certificate in order to get the Model Couple prize. She quarrels and forces her husband to look for certificate together. Their daughter Xiao... Read allXie Yuting tears home apart looking for marriage certificate in order to get the Model Couple prize. She quarrels and forces her husband to look for certificate together. Their daughter Xiaowen pools money from schoolmates to make a fake certificate but makes more trouble because... Read allXie Yuting tears home apart looking for marriage certificate in order to get the Model Couple prize. She quarrels and forces her husband to look for certificate together. Their daughter Xiaowen pools money from schoolmates to make a fake certificate but makes more trouble because she misses the revision of true certificate. Xiaowen runs away from home to avoid the esc... Read all

  • Director
    • Jianxin Huang
  • Writers
    • Yi Fan
    • Jianxin Huang
    • Wei Li
  • Stars
    • Xiaomeng Li
    • Liping Lü
    • Gong Feng
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    219
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jianxin Huang
    • Writers
      • Yi Fan
      • Jianxin Huang
      • Wei Li
    • Stars
      • Xiaomeng Li
      • Liping Lü
      • Gong Feng
    • 2User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 8 nominations total

    Photos24

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    Top cast19

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    Xiaomeng Li
    • Gu Xiaowen (daughter)
    Liping Lü
    Liping Lü
    • Xie Yuting (mother)
    Gong Feng
    • Gu Ming (father)
    Xiangjin Luo
    • Xiao An
    Zhiwen Wang
    Zhiwen Wang
    • Lao Cao
    Qianmei Cui
    • Ballet patient
    Zhenhua Niu
    Zhenhua Niu
    • Patient Lao Wang
    Jiaying Qiu
    • Wang's wife
    Jinghua Gong
    • Aunt Qi
    Chongyang Zhu
    • Xiao Ding
    Jinsong Wang
    Jinsong Wang
    • Slingshot patient
    • (as Qi Ke)
    Xiaogang Feng
    Xiaogang Feng
    • Document forger
    Shan Jiang
    Shan Jiang
    • Civil Administration Bureau Clerk
    Biao Fu
    Biao Fu
    • Teacher
    Tao Zhou
    • Radio host Meng Meng
    Xiangbo Fu
    • Police officer (Chief Zhang)
    Changyu He
    • Dr. Wang Leader of Ming's work Unit
    Kwok-Wah Lau
    • Director
      • Jianxin Huang
    • Writers
      • Yi Fan
      • Jianxin Huang
      • Wei Li
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews2

    6.4219
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    Featured reviews

    9npsturman

    The Marriage Certificate is a Biting and Hilarious Satire of Chinese Life Today

    This film reminded me very much of Mel Brookes' rendition of Ilf and Petrov's satirical novel "The Twelve Chairs", which lampooned the bureaucracy and hypocrisy of early Soviet Russia during the "NEP" period. Yes, Generation Gap is one sub theme...the teen-aged daughter breaks under the stress the family feels in their mad confrontation with the "Catch 22" bureaucracy, and runs away...and is miraculously found by her parents. The name of the film has a double meaning in Chinese: it sounds like "who says I'm not in a family register" Problem is, the wife of a prominent psychiatrist can't find her marriage certificate one day. This "jiehunzheng" is all important. Without it, the family officially has never existed, including the daughter. The couple go on a wild goose chase through the Chinese bureaucracy, meeting catch-22 all the way....they need a certificate to get a new one, etc. They even journey back to the People's Commune where they met, now the site of modern private enterprises where nobody even recalls the former occupants. An brief animated scene conveys the daughter's fantasy of what her parents' life on the commune, where she was born, was like, an idyllic dream of primitive communism and romance. The funniest parts of the movie are set in the mental hospital that the father runs. It is a metaphor of China today. A woman dressed in the Bermuda shorts-and-knee socks uniform of the "Red Detachment of Women" dances atop tables in the therapy rooms with a butcher knife until a psychiatric nurse gets her back to reality with a tape of an aria from the ballet. A sexually obsessed man can't stop vocalizing his fantasies, to the delighted embarrassment of the nurses and doctors on their morning rounds. A seedy pharmaceutical salesman gives the psychiatrist-father a free sample of an aphrodisiac drug for his suddenly cold wife and nearly ruins his already stressed marriage when she explodes with "do you consider me a little dog"?. A fine old gentleman patient is cured of obsessive-compulsive psychosis and sent home with much ceremony, but after a tea-time visit from the certificate-less wife of the director he suddenly begins searching wildly for his OWN certificate and is brought back by men in white coats in an emergency ambulance. The scene of the hospital director-father-husband tearing up the report of his successful cure and tossing the shreds to the wind from his office balcony is priceless. The stress of it all causes the runaway episode, but all ends well when, well, I won't say...slowly, time heals the wounded in the clinic...the tropical military uniform is replaced by a ballet dress, the model opera's arias by Swan Lake. This film is funny even for viewers who know nothing of China, if in the same version as I saw it in China (on TV over the Chinese New Year 2002 holidays as a holiday special) and if properly and honestly translated. It really addresses many issues in China today, especially the baggage from the past that the society is carrying, the legacy of Confucian prudery, Stalin and Mao. Some US viewers will recall the day when a man and woman couldn't get a room in a US hotel without a marriage certificate, ironically.
    zzmale

    Realistic reflection of generational gap

    The literal translation of the title of this movie is: Who said that I do not care?

    This movie is a good example of realism, for Chinese movie, of course. It accurately depicted the generational gap between the older generations and their children, such as issues like marriage. The older generation still prefer the old standard of finding a spouse whom you can depend on, or at least, not to depending on you, while the younger generation would put more emphasis on personal feelings such as how much love one has for one another.

    It is very difficult to say whether the result depicted in the movie is typical, and hence we cannot say whether it represents most cases, but the part about generational gap is indeed.

    Storyline

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 7, 2001 (China)
    • Country of origin
      • China
    • Language
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • The Marriage Certificate
    • Production companies
      • Beijing Forbidden City Film
      • Xi'an Film Studio
      • Xian Ginwa Film Co.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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