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The Home Song Stories

  • 2007
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
953
YOUR RATING
The Home Song Stories (2007)
Drama

A man remembers his childhood and his mother, a Chinese night club singer who struggled to survive in Australia with her two children.A man remembers his childhood and his mother, a Chinese night club singer who struggled to survive in Australia with her two children.A man remembers his childhood and his mother, a Chinese night club singer who struggled to survive in Australia with her two children.

  • Director
    • Tony Ayres
  • Writer
    • Tony Ayres
  • Stars
    • Joan Chen
    • Yuwu Qi
    • Joel Lok
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    953
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tony Ayres
    • Writer
      • Tony Ayres
    • Stars
      • Joan Chen
      • Yuwu Qi
      • Joel Lok
    • 9User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 20 wins & 31 nominations total

    Photos3

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Joan Chen
    Joan Chen
    • Rose Hong…
    Yuwu Qi
    Yuwu Qi
    • Joe
    Joel Lok
    Joel Lok
    • Tom
    Irene Chen
    Irene Chen
    • May
    Steven Vidler
    Steven Vidler
    • Bill
    Kerry Walker
    Kerry Walker
    • Norma
    Gabrielle Chan
    Gabrielle Chan
    • Winnie
    Guang Qiao Feng
    • Young May
    Leo Fong
    Leo Fong
    • Wen Xuan
    Ferdinand Hoang
    Ferdinand Hoang
    • Bing Guo
    Philip Lau
    • Chan
    Fred Lee
    • Slick Chinese man
    Jarett Lee
    • Extra
    Mia Lethbridge
    • Amanda
    Yang Li
    • Mr. Sun
    Ivy Mak
    Ivy Mak
    • Kim
    Nicholas Opolski
    • Doctor
    Jamie Oxenbould
    • Adult Tom
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Tony Ayres
    • Writer
      • Tony Ayres
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    7.2953
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    Featured reviews

    5aaronrourke

    Potential Lost

    Despite an impressive performance from Joan Chen, and a confident technical sheen, HOME SONG STORIES fails to deliver as drama due to a weak, underwritten script, which keeps characters and incidents vague and one-note.

    The main problem is that the film doesn't have an act one, deciding to give us character and story foundation in around the same time it takes to boil an egg.

    Because of this, we only get a narrow-minded view of Rose (Joan Chen), never getting to know what kind of person she was in Shanghai, never seeing what kind of person Bill (Steven Vidler) was that convinced Rose to move to another country, and what the circumstances were that made Rose leave Bill a week after they were married.

    Therefore, we see Rose as a completely irresponsible person, a one-sided look at a rather more complex person.

    On the plus side, the film is extremely well-made, and performances by Joel Lok and Irene Chan as the two children are quite believable and natural, while Yuwu Qi also impresses as Joe, one of Rose's many lovers.

    The film, however, belongs to Joan Chen, who manages to find an emotional core to the role of Rose, bringing a loving warmth and fractured insanity to a character that is badly underwritten by writer/director Tony Ayres, who obviously has an intimate knowledge of the subject matter, but fails to give it substance within the framework of a feature film.

    Despite being watchable, HOME SONG STORIES falls short of its ambitions, a missed opportunity at showing an important part of Australia's immigrant past.
    7nmlhats

    If you had a mentally ill mother, watch at your own risk.

    I don't want to go into extravagant detail as the other comments are fairly thorough.

    I want to add to the pool of comments that if you happen to have had to care for a mentally ill, depressed, bipolar, etc, etc mother while you were a young child and adolescent, be forewarned. This is a beautiful and affecting film but hits waaaaaaay too close to home for anyone who had a life like mine, a milder version of the movie. I don't know how I sat through the whole thing. I lost it by the time it was over.

    The description of the movie in the AFI Dallas Fest program made it sound like a civil rights struggle with a romantic triangle thrown in. That doesn't even begin to describe what this film is about.

    Anyway, bring a lot of tissues.
    9Philby-3

    Forgiving Mum

    Tony Ayres has tackled some tough subjects in the past (AIDS and mercy killing in"Walking on Water" for example), but making a film about his relationship with his own mother seems a real challenge. Ayres' mother, fictionalised as Rose in the film and played by Joan Chen, was a beautiful nightclub singer in Hong Kong, who, more or less on a whim, migrates to Melbourne with her two young children and Bill, an Australian sailor (Steven Vidler). Rose and Bill marry, but Rose walks out after a week. Seven years later they get together again, but Bill is soon off on another extended tour of Naval duty and his malicious mother Norma drives Rose and the children, ten year old Tom (Joel Lok) and 14 year old May (Irene Chen) out of the house. Desperate, Rose and the children go to live in squalor with Joe (Yu Wu Qi) a handsome young illegal immigrant from Hong Kong who works in the same restaurant as Rose (who has been reduced to washing dishes there.). Initially Joe is besotted by Rose, but when he starts taking a romantic interest in May, Rose, as she is wont to do, overreacts.

    As the story is told largely through the eyes of a ten-year old, we have to remember that, smart kid that he is, there is much he does not understand. Late in the film, in a conversation between Rose and May, we do get some of Rose's story and why she looks for security from just about any man who offers it. Looking back, the adult Tom can see clearly what at the time was a mystery. And of course he can now forgive Rose for the trauma she caused him.

    This is a sad story, but uplifting rather than depressing. Joan Chen, a world-class actress, is perfectly cast and totally convincing as the beautiful but neurotic Rose. Yu Wu Qi is excellent as her younger lover, but first time actor Joel Lok (who volunteered himself for the role) takes first prize for a truly Zen – like performance as Tom. Kerry Walker was a suitably disapproving Norma and Steven Vidler an eager and naïve Bill.

    For a low budget "art" film, this is very well produced, with a fine original score, professional cinematography and excellent performances, though the script does not allow Kerry Walker and Steve Vidler to do much. Most of us survive our parents, and Tony Ayres and his sister have survived theirs, but I think you can't really pass judgment on them until you have had children yourself. And then it is easier to forgive.
    7mmunier

    From bad to worse

    A terribly sad story told through the memories of the youngest child of a mother and her two children who migrates from Hong Kong where she was somewhat of a cabaret singer, to Melbourne where she really does not find a favourable Fung Sui. I went to see the movie, perhaps with too much expectation. But one expectation I did not have is the down to earth handling of the production. I felt it was not a movie anymore but a tragic event unfolding before my eyes in ordinary Melbourne low key suburb. Lot of things go wrong, and I found myself waiting for a little ray of sunshine, may be you will too. The acting is excellent and the pain is real. The cinematography is just as real, no fancy shot, no "make up" on the images, just the same as you get someone out of bed, nature too was in the raw. I had to accept all this was done in purpose to get a more positive feeling about this film. knowing a fair bit about some aspect of Asian way of life from personal experience, I had a lot of empathy with the characters and their resentment of the an old cow.
    9stabiloboss88

    Brilliant.

    I recently got a job at The Embassy Theatre in Wellington, and to just my luck the Film Festival has recently started. We sometimes get to go in and watch the films for free if we aren't doing much. My boss said I could go in to watch, so I jumped at the opportunity (simply because it was a free film).

    The Home Song stories is a brilliant film.

    The story follows the young Tom at age 10 (i think) as he, his Mother and sister struggle to contain a normal lifestyle, being Chinese immigrants in Australia in the 1970's. A lot of the focus is on his Mother who battles between providing the needs for her children and resenting them, being still quite naive and wanting more freedom.

    Joen Chen is fully compelling in probably her best role to date. Joel Lok is already destined to have a great career, who pulled off the most engaging child performance I have seen. For the most part, he reacts passively, with minimal dialogue: it's his woeful looks that draw you in.

    The cinematography is fantastic. The color tone seems so natural and real, while still being cinematic. The CU's have great engagement with the character's eyes, with little depth of focus, guiding you to exactly what you should be watching. The slow tracks in and sideways draw you to new developments in the story, working perfectly with the actors' performances.

    The story itself is one that is told to its fullest extent that would work for a film, hands up to Tony Ayres! I read some articles and apparently there was a bit more to the story, but would be to much to work structurally.

    I am annoyed that after the film finished, I had to leave to get back to work. Because just a few minutes after Tony Ayre himself came out to answer questions from the audience.

    Overall, this is one film that SHOULD NOT BE MISSED. Find it! Watch it! I feel like I should have paid for my ticket. But I will probably get the DVD anyway.

    I am absolutely sure most people will like this film. It's a beauty. :-)

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Australia's official submission in the Foreign Language Film category for the 80th Academy Awards (2008).
    • Connections
      Featured in 24 City (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Bu Hai Qing
      Written by Ching Tao

      Performed by Ying Xu

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 23, 2007 (Australia)
    • Countries of origin
      • Australia
      • Singapore
    • Official site
      • Adelaide Film Festival Investment Fund (Australia)
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Cantonese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Câu Chuyên Vê Bài Hát Quê Huong
    • Filming locations
      • Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
    • Production companies
      • Film Finance
      • Film Victoria
      • Mediacorp Raintree Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $388,008
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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