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Happy Funeral (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region All

Elanne Kwong (Actor) | Tian Yuan (Actor) | I Love You Boyz (Actor) | Fama (Actor)
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Happy Funeral (DVD) (US Version)

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YesAsia Editorial Description

Back in 2003, filmmaker Barbara Wong (Wonder Women) directed the sleeper hit Truth or Dare - 6th Floor Rear Flat, about six Hong Kong roommates who begin the painful - and often painfully funny - process of growing up while living in the same small flat. Not one to leave success alone, Wong returns with Happy Funeral, a sequel to her hit film featuring an all-new cast of youngsters occupying the same "6th Floor Rear Flat" as in the original. Instead of Karena Lam, Lawrence Chou, Candy Lo, and Sammy (all of whom appear here in a cameo), the film headlines rising star Elanne Kwong and promising actress Tian Yuan (Best New Artist award-winner for Butterfly). Comedic pop duo I Love U Boyz and rising hip-hop duo Fama play the two girls' roommates. Rounding out the cast is Him Law (See You in You Tube), singer Stephanie Cheng (Trivial Matters), veteran actor Eric Tsang, and hot Taiwan idol group Lollipop in a special cameo.

Young women Ji (Elanne Kwong) and Kay (Tian Yuan) live with four guys (played by Siu Yeah Jim and Donald Tong of I Love U Boyz, and 6 Wing and C Kwan of Fama) in a single flat, where they hold parties and avoid responsibility like youth usually do. The six have a dream to run their own business - and the chance arrives when they concoct the idea to start a "happy funeral" service to celebrate life instead of mourning death. But their plans stall when their investor (Eric Tsang) finds their business proposal immature, and things get worse when the six are threatened with eviction from their flat. Love is in the air too; Ji finds an attraction to a debt-collecting triad (Him Law), and Kay begins to fall for one of her male roommates. When the unexpected occurs yet again, the youth find that a happy funeral may be necessary - if not for their future business, then simply to mark their passage into adulthood.

© 2008-2012 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Technical Information

Product Title: Happy Funeral (DVD) (US Version) 六樓后座 2 家屬謝禮 (DVD) (美國版) 六楼后座 2 家属谢礼 (DVD) (美国版) 六樓后座 2 家屬謝禮 (DVD) (US版) Happy Funeral (DVD) (US Version)
Artist Name(s): Elanne Kwong (Actor) | Tian Yuan (Actor) | I Love You Boyz (Actor) | Fama (Actor) | Eric Tsang | Stephanie Cheng | Lollipop F 江若琳 (Actor) | 田原 (Actor) | I Love You Boyz (Actor) | Fama 農夫 (Actor) | 羅仲謙 (Actor) | 曾志偉 | 鄭融 | 棒棒堂 江若琳 (Actor) | 田原 (Actor) | I Love You Boyz (Actor) | Fama 农夫 (Actor) | 罗仲谦 (Actor) | 曾志伟 | 郑融 | 棒棒堂 江若琳(エレイン・コン) (Actor) | 田原(ティエン・ユエン) (Actor) | I Love You Boyz (Actor) | 農夫(Fama/ファーマ) (Actor) | 曾志偉 (エリック・ツァン) | 鄭融 (ステファニー・チェン) | 棒棒堂(Lollipop/Lollipop F) Elanne Kwong (Actor) | Tian Yuan (Actor) | I Love You Boyz (Actor) | Fama (Actor) | Eric Tsang | Stephanie Cheng | Lollipop F
Director: Barbara Wong 黃真真 黄真真 黄真真(バーバラ・ウォン) Barbara Wong
Release Date: 2008-07-04
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
Closed Captioning: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD-5, DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Rating: IIB
Duration: 101 (mins)
Publisher: Tai Seng Video (US)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1011070323

Product Information

* Screen Format: 16:9 Anamorphic Widescreen
* Sound Mix: Dolby Digital 5.1
* DVD Type: DVD-5

導演︰黃真真
Director: Wong Chen Chen

五年前,后座玩 Truth or Dare 玩到通街都係。五年後,誠實大膽巳經 OUT,虛擬 Online 先叫潮;愛情已經 Out,搵錢先係 Yeah;

今日后座除了包租婆 Suzy 仍有夢想、妄想、理想之外,剩下就是一班喪想搵錢的無夢青年:

藝術乞丐 Kay(田原)、無腦記者阿之(江若琳)、走精面之王彭爺(阿占)、電視台傻仔 Bon Bon(Donald)、未紅先衰的 hip hop 組合「農夫」(農夫)及戇直古惑仔羅仲謙。搵錢最緊要係橋。眾人以錢為首,千橋我有。大無畏!無所謂!我們有的是青春與百無禁忌!賣屎賣命賣生賣死賣友求榮,年青人,賺了一屁股傷痕!

最後…殯儀館一哥萬生 (曾志偉) 與 Susy 出場夾手夾腳教大家點樣賺大錢…

Generation Y's infatuaion with romance, growing pains, and Facebook are explored in this delightful sequ el to the sleeper hit TRUTH OR DARE: 6TH FLOOR REAR FLAT. This time, the rental unit at 6th floor rear flat is occupied by six new youngsters, who want to start a business together. The death of one of their roommates' elder friend inspired them to start a "Happy Funeral" business, so that the deceased' life is celebrated instead of mourned. As they go about their plans, the six of them will also learn valuable lesons about life, love, and being responsible for your own actions.
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Happy Funeral (DVD) (US Version)"

June 16, 2008

Given that her last movie was the unfortunate Wonder Women, director Barbara Wong can only improve - and she does just that with her new film Happy Funeral. A sequel to the 2003 sleeper hit Truth or Dare - 6th Floor Rear Flat, Happy Funeral is a youth film exploring your usual youth issues, e.g. love, responsibility, maturation, and the ever-growing fascination with Facebook. The film has plenty of problems, but also some genuine humor, and Wong manages to offset the obvious themes and overbearing montages with decent emotions and performances. Happy Funeral isn't earth-shaking, and wheezes to a finish thanks to a protracted and overly-sentimental finale. Still, Wong's intentions and execution are agreeable, and the film itself is a vast improvement from the crass clumsiness of Wonder Women.

Rising idol Elanne Kong stars as Ji, one of six youngsters who occupy the eponymous 6th Floor Rear Flat, the very same flat that housed the now moved-on youngsters from the original Truth or Dare. Her roommates include wannabe singer Kay (Tian Yuan of Butterfly) plus four guys, each played by one half of a singing duo. There's Bonbon (Donald Tong of I Love U Boyz), Pang (Siu Yeah-Jim, also of I Love U Boyz), 6 Wing (played by 6 Wing, of the Edison Chen-backed hip hop group Fama), and finally C Kwan (played by, duh, C Kwan, also of Fama). Together, the six hold flat parties and lounge around, all the while pursuing unrealistic dreams or phoning in their jobs. The six do express the desire to open a business together, but a suitable idea eludes them.

That is, until the grandmother of Kay's boyfriend passes on. Kay is required to attend the funeral, which is handled in typical Hong Kong-style, i.e., it's exceptionally long and somber, and features performances by Taoist priests. The other five friends attend to support Kay, but become bored, and take to chatting on Facebook via their mobile phones. That's when the idea hits them: why not start a "happy funeral business" where people can celebrate the departed person's life rather than mourn their death? Sadly, the group doesn't have the capital to start up such a biz, but they fortuitously run into the owner of a prosperous funeral business, played by Eric Tsang. He agrees to front them $10 million HK dollars if they can draw up a feasible business plan, complete with expenses, projected revenue, and probably helpful pie charts. Can these youngsters get their act together, learn the mysteries of Microsoft Office, and get the $10 million to fund their start-up?

Actually, whether or not they can succeed at the happy funeral business is not the issue. The completion of their little school project is the driving force of the film, but it's all the things lost and found along the way that truly matter. Each youngster has issues, some more pronounced than others, and this minor period in their life brings them answers or solutions. Or maybe not. Actually, it's hard to tell if each character really learns more than the basic minimum of afterschool special lessons, i.e. be nice to your elders, handle your jobs responsibly, and stop screwing around endlessly. Oh, yes, and please appreciate life because hey, that's what a happy funeral is meant to celebrate!

There are obvious lessons in Happy Funeral, and sometimes Barbara Wong and company choose to lay them on thick. No stranger to overbearing montage, Wong serves up a few in Happy Funeral that are nearly cringe worthy. At the same time, the film doesn't completely capitalize on its ideas. The notion of a happy funeral - especially when compared to the standard Chinese-style funeral - would be good for some extended humor, but the concept isn't taken far enough to wring any real laughs. It also doesn't wring any real tears either, as the film's version of the successful happy funeral is just standard inspirational fluff that one can also find at a church fellowship meeting or perhaps even summer camp. When the film gets soggy it does so exceptionally - which would be okay if Wong and company managed to completely convince along the way.

The problem: they don't entirely convince, as a lot of the warm fuzzies and tears seem assumed rather than earned. Some situations are solved too easily and some antagonistic characters come around far too quickly to be believable. However, the local references and offhand humor work surprisingly well. Happy Funeral is decent for a youth film because it does manage to capture a certain segment of local Hong Kong youth, simultaneously poking fun at and sympathizing with this current generation of kids who play Nintendo DS endlessly, mess up their jobs, and sit around stewing in their own self-absorbed juices. There's some surprise and some wit in the jokes, and most of the performers are agreeable, if not charismatic. Tian Yuan is better than her role allows, and Candy Hau Woon-Ling, who plays the elderly landlady from the original film, steals most of her scenes handily. Oddly, it's a cameo from four of the original cast members that feels a little uncomfortable, as one likely won't remember what they did in the previous film. Yeah, we remember that they were in Truth or Dare, but were their characters so memorable that their appearance actually means something?

Likely not, which leads us to the biggest problem for Happy Funeral and indeed most Hong Kong youth comedies: these are films that mix safe observations on youth and romance with obvious and trite themes on life and maturation, and the result is that they're largely forgettable. At the same time, these films are so inoffensive that taking a sledge hammer to them for perceived self-importance would be too mean - like swatting a fly with a bulldozer. Happy Funeral is more pretentious than the fluffy and slick Love is Elsewhere, but it does manage to affect slightly more because its occasional crassness gives it more edge. As such, it possesses lower lows, but also higher highs than Elsewhere - though neither film is really that great, and Magic Boy is easily better than both, as it managed to serve up its youth-targeted pearls of wisdom with far more style and genuine-seeming affection. Happy Funeral is not new, but not bad, and that's already a step up for Barbara Wong. We hand out silver stars for improvement.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

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