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6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
An excuse for assembling its all-star cast, 28 November 1999
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Author:
Varlaam from Toronto, Canada
The occasion was Chinese flood relief, we are told in the introduction, and
so this was put together even more quickly than the average Hong Kong
film.
The movie is very light entertainment, but it's quite funny in spots and
amiable the rest of the time. I mean, canto-pop singer George Lam as an Arab
prince. It's like watching old friends clowning around in amateur
theatricals. By this point, 1991, is George married to Sally Yip/Yeh, one of
the film's other star cameos, or does that happen later? This is an Arab
prince who speaks Cantonese, of course. Is George putting on an amusing
accent? I'm guessing he is.
Some of the cameos are pretty slight. I lost track of how many lines Gong Li
had. Was it two, or was it three? But she does get to look more glamorous
than she does in most of her (later) Zhang Yimou pictures, where she always
ends up with the entire weight of modern Chinese history on her shoulders.
Sheesh.
Eric Tsang plays the main character, the tycoon who has forgotten his humble
origins. Class-ridden Hong Kong society certainly is, and we get a good
taste of that here, as the Rolls Royce rolls along what looks like Connaught
Road in Central, and throughout the rest of the story.
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