Dancing Lion (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Francis Ng is Gai, nominally a manager and practically a slacker in office. He often hangs out with his colleague Gau (Lam Chi Chung, Kung Fu Hustle), who is just as redundant in the company. When the two buddies lose their jobs, they take up lion dancing under the guidance of Gai's grand uncle (Anthony Wong). With some clever marketing, they unexpectedly set off a lion dancing craze in Hong Kong.
The film demonstrates some breathtaking lion-dancing performances, offering as much amusement as the satires that articulate Hong Kong's changes in the new millennium. Francis Ng also invited comedian Ronald Cheng, DJ Sammy, singer Yan Ng, Rosanne Wong from 2R, and Chin Ka Lok among others to guest star in the movie, promising more fun for Hong Kong movie fans.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Dancing Lion (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) 醒獅 (DVD) (香港版) 醒狮 (DVD) (香港版) 醒獅 (DVD) (香港版) Dancing Lion (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Anthony Wong (Actor) | Francis Ng (Actor) | Teresa Mo (Actor) | Lam Tze Chung (Actor) | Lam Chiu Wing | Hins Cheung | Gia Lin 黃秋生 (Actor) | 吳鎮宇 (Actor) | 毛舜筠 (Actor) | 林子聰 (Actor) | 林超榮 | 張敬軒 | 林苑 黄秋生 (Actor) | 吴镇宇 (Actor) | 毛舜筠 (Actor) | 林子聪 (Actor) | 林超荣 | 张敬轩 | 林苑 黄秋生 (アンソニー・ウォン) (Actor) | 呉鎮宇 (フランシス・ン) (Actor) | 毛舜筠 (テレサ・モウ) (Actor) | 林子聰(ラム・ジーチョン) (Actor) | Lam Chiu Wing | 張敬軒(ヒンズ・チャン) | 林苑 (ジア・リン) Anthony Wong (Actor) | Francis Ng (Actor) | Teresa Mo (Actor) | Lam Tze Chung (Actor) | Lam Chiu Wing | Hins Cheung | Gia Lin |
| Director: | Francis Ng | Marco Mak 吳鎮宇 | 麥子善 吴镇宇 | 麦子善 呉鎮宇 (フランシス・ン) | 麥子善 (マルコ・マック) Francis Ng | Marco Mak |
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| Release Date: | 2007-06-29 |
| Language: | Cantonese, Mandarin |
| Subtitles: | English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese |
| Country of Origin: | Hong Kong |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Aspect Ratio: | 1.78 : 1 |
| Widescreen Anamorphic: | Yes |
| Sound Information: | DTS Digital Surround, Dolby Digital |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD-9, DVD |
| Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
| Rating: | IIB |
| Publisher: | Mei Ah (HK) |
| Package Weight: | 120 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004799935 |
Product Information
* Sound Mix: DTS, Dolby Digital
* DVD Type: DVD-9
導演︰吳鎮宇、麥子善
Director: Francis Ng, Marco Mak
阿雞為人好食懶飛,但勝在反應快,滿腦主意,在大企業的雜務部當個掛名經理,但其實是打雜一名,與砂煲兄弟阿九終日渾渾噩噩,是冗員中的冗員。一日,阿雞公司?釀大裁員,人事部兒戲地提出舉行才藝表演,得到高層歡心者即可留任。阿雞阿九自知大難臨頭,但卻發現自己全無專長可言。舅公見二人愁眉不展,遂提議阿雞表演醒獅,醒獅二字深深打入阿雞腦中,有如當頭棒喝。原來阿雞一家本為舞獅世家,惜港人對傳統的舞獅興趣日減,舅公只好無奈結束獅團,家傳的醒獅亦只有藏在家中的灶底。阿雞與阿九見時間緊迫,即時發奮苦練。
阿雞與阿九成竹在胸地來到比賽場地,卻發現公司已經關門大吉,才藝表演只是高層的權宜之計,老闆已經逃之夭夭。阿雞與阿九辛苦練習卻無用武之地,二人一念及此即決定來一個街頭表演...
Uncle Jiang (Anthony Wong) taught Fai (Francis Ng) and Nine (Lam Tze Chung) the Chinese traditional - Dancing Lion in order to win the contest that held by their company, which aimed to fire incompetent employees. But their company was shut down, Fai and Nine played Dancing Lion on the street, this video got million hits on the Internet. Sister (Teresa Mo) used this trend to open various courses e.g. "Dancing Lion for Kids" and "Weight Losing Dancing Lion" etc to make easy money. Dancing Lion became a new industry, competitors from everywhere emerged and price war took place. Their business dropped, and incurred a huge debt. This drove the rising power of Northern Lions. They committed suicide but failed. This braced up their spirit and they decided to versus Northern Lions in the fiery contest....
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Dancing Lion (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"
This professional review refers to Dancing Lion (DVD) (US Version)
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Local satire reigns with Dancing Lion, a funny but chaotic comedy that puts the "Hong Kong" back into Hong Kong film. Francis Ng stars and co-directs (along with Marco Mak) this bizarre charmer about a wacked out family and their wacked out antics, which exist thanks to the pursuit of a singular goal: money. The film's central family (consisting of Ng, Anthony Wong, Teresa Mo, and Gia Lin) is out to make some quick dough, and somehow it's lion dancing that becomes their calling. Fortysomething loser Fai (Ng) and pal Gau (portly Lam Chi-Chung) become the toast of the town thanks to their lion dancing skills, though the actual development of such fame is barely there. Here's how it happens: the pals are slackers who are threatened with layoff, and must win a talent contest to keep their jobs. They plan to perform a lion dance, but fail, only to get urged on by onlookers while they're sitting on the sidewalk looking depressed and dejected. They perform, the coins shower in, and presto: they're local heroes! What the heck? Coherence, thy name is not Dancing Lion - though to be fair, it's not tried-and-true storytelling that the filmmakers are aiming for. Writer Lam Chiu-Wing has crafted a screenplay without a supported narrative. The barebones outline of the film is this: down-on-their-luck pals become successful lion dance practitioners, whereupon they participate in a bunch of get-rich-quick schemes, fail at them, then get back up in time to win the big lion dance competition. That sounds like a familiar, Rocky-like premise, and the film's trailer - which features the stars marching to the big lion dancing showdown like extras in a Once Upon a Time in China movie - only supports that perception. Well, if that's your perceived idea of Dancing Lion, better change those expectations right quick. That plotline does show up in the film, but the stuff that connects it hardly supports it. The lead characters go through the motions of a normal storyline, but it's not where they're going that matters, but what they're doing at every single instance. Dancing Lion is not in the journey, it's in the details. So what are the details? Well, Francis Ng's character is an annoying wannabe who acts like he's in a hip-hop video despite being over forty years of age. His family has opened a speakeasy (a cafe in an apartment) to make some dough, and his sister (Teresa Mo) and niece (Gia Lin) sometimes badger the guests for hot stock tips. Once the family hits it big with lion dancing, they start to spin off their success to death, opening a lion dance school for tykes, and even selling it as a fitness alternative for pudgy women looking to slim down. Meanwhile, Great Uncle (Anthony Wong) gets disenchanted and heads north, where he runs into Mainlanders looking to head to Hong Kong to make some beaucoup lion dancing bucks. Lion dancing becomes all the rage in Hong Kong thanks to Fai and Gau's newfound celebrity, but the downside is rampant lion dancing gangs and even turf wars. Characters drop famous names and engage in copious Cantonese wordplay. Meta-references abound; Anthony Wong pointedly uses a product that he endorses in real life, and the characters talk about how great Mandarin Films is, name dropping executive producer Raymond Wong, and even claiming Mandarin as a hot stock tip. There's also an extended sequence where the actors basically talk about how they're in an outtake. Screw the story! These guys appear to be having fun, and that's probably all that matters to them. The audience? They could be baffled or alienated. Unless you're expecting a satire freight train, Dancing Lion can be one puzzling movie. The early going is especially tough, as the actors overact mercilessly. Francis Ng's hip-hop posing is especially annoying, and some jokes pop up out of nowhere only to skulk off without gaining a laugh. Events occur with little build up or even logic, and the characters don't seem to exist beyond their basic types. It's not until perhaps halfway that the satire starts to sink in. The film offers numerous details that - once they're filtered through current events or local culture - reveal themselves as funny and informed. The film lampoons common Hong Kong culture and customs, above all the omnipresent desire to make money, money, and more money. It's a cynical way to look at Hong Kong locals, and yet it's so familiar that it feels true. Dancing Lion is at its best when it's mercilessly making fun of Hong Kong people; once the satire starts to take hold, the film hits amusement overdrive. There are some attempts at pollyannaish point-making; the script espouses the value of hard work, and gives props to the strength of family, the importance of teamwork, and probably the elastic band on Lam Chi-Chung's pants. Quite often, the film repeats the mantra that a person should work hard to develop a good foundation, rather than trying for the quick financial fix. That's an obvious and even hackneyed lesson, and the message might feel a little forced - that is, if the film weren't so intent on making a mockery of all things Hong Kong. Didactic lessons are easy to take in a satire because they're usually handled blithely and with a knowing wink. Dancing Lion is one long knowing wink. If that's your boat, then this film will float it. What the film pobably won't do is convert mass audiences into Dancing Lion believers. Despite being well-informed, the film's satire is not as sharp or as entertaining as Herman Yau's Shark Busters or Edmond Pang's You Shoot, I Shoot. Those films managed to balance story, character, and satire, while Dancing Lion merely seems to throw everything into one big satire stirring pot, hoping that the audience will dive in and not drown. That's a pretty tough sell, especially since the film has character types instead of actual characters. It also delivers a couple of rather trite messages, and even resorts to a climax filled with chintzy CGI. Given that these commercial elements are given large focus towards the end of the picture, one might accuse the filmmakers of trying to have their cake and eat it too. However, the film is co-directed by Francis Ng, who probably could care less what people think. Ng has always been a bit of an oddball, in both his acting and filmmaking choices, and popular appeal has never seemed to be a factor in his previous directorial efforts. Ng and co-director Mak manage to make Dancing Lion fun and even smart, and neatly sidestep any issues of narrative deficiency by simply ignoring them. In the end, this is one for the local cinema fans - and by that, we mean the people who like the actors, love the city, and can actually speak the language. Besides being exceptionally referential to local culture, Dancing Lion possesses absolutely atrocious English subtitles, which hopefully will be fixed for the DVD release, though who knows if we'll get that lucky. This isn't Dragon Tiger Gate, where the DVD publishers actually shell out extra dough to subtitle the extras. This is Dancing Lion, a movie that will likely not play to the international masses even though it features three of the guys from Exiled. Those who check out the film for precisely that reason will probably be disappointed with Dancing Lion. However, those who come in prepared may be surprised, and even entertained. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |












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