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Cocktail (US Version) VCD

Candy Lo (Actor) | Race Wong (Actor) | Endy Chow (Actor) | Herman Yau (Director)
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Cocktail (US Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

One cup of Cocktail may be enough for one to tell the whole of his story!

New movie Cocktail stars rising Hong Kong singers Candy Lo, Endy Chow, Race Wong (of 2R), Bobo Chan, etc. Lawrence Cheng, an all-rounder in the entertainment industry, and Eric Kot of former Soft Hard Kids, each take up a role. Cocktail, as the movie title suggests, evolves around a pub where people fall in love and break up with one another. It interweaves six love stories to explore the mixed tastes of people's bittersweet lives, just like cocktail mixing different liquors. Director Herman Yau has made over 70 movies in Hong Kong (such as Master Q 2001, The Untold Story), and in this refreshing title he offers a collage of episodes from urban youngsters' experiences.

Paul (Endy Chow) wants to know more about his alcoholic father (Lawrence Cheng) only after he has passed away. Having hated alcohol for almost twenty years, he surprisingly applies for a bartender job at Candy's pub, for drinking now seems the only way for Paul to connect with his late dad. Pub owner Candy (Candy Lo) is born to a rich family. She resorts to drinking when her father forbids her romance with her cousin (Eric Kot), and decides to run a pub so that she can turn her habit to a business. Paul soon has a crush on a customer, without knowing that his colleague Stella (Race Wong@2R) is deeply in love with him...

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Technical Information

Product Title: Cocktail (US Version) 半醉人間 (美國版) 半醉人间 (美国版) 半酔人間 (US版) Cocktail (US Version)
Artist Name(s): Candy Lo (Actor) | Race Wong (Actor) | Endy Chow (Actor) 盧巧音 (Actor) | 黃 婉佩 (Actor) | 周國賢 (Actor) 卢巧音 (Actor) | 黄 婉佩 (Actor) | 周国贤 (Actor) 盧巧音 (キャンディ・ロー) (Actor) | Race Wong (Actor) | 周國賢(エンディ・チャウ) (Actor) Candy Lo (Actor) | Race Wong (Actor) | Endy Chow (Actor)
Director: Herman Yau | Ching Long 邱禮濤 | 晴朗 邱礼涛 | 晴朗 邱禮濤(ハーマン・ヤウ) | Ching Long Yau Lai To | Ching Long
Release Date: 2006-03-10
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Disc Format(s): VCD
Rating: IIA
Duration: 90 (mins)
Publisher: Tai Seng Video (US)
Other Information: 2VCDs
Package Weight: 110 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004140966

Product Information

導演︰邱禮濤、晴朗
Director: Herman Yau, Chin Long

  六個故事都是環繞著酒而「半人間」是一間現代酒吧;老闆、偏員、還有每日酒吧內所招呼著的不同酒客,每人都有自己的故事,亦望憑杯中物去尋找人生的味道。Paul 一向對酗酒及患肝癌的爸爸很厭惡,有日父子為前途問題打架,父中風死亡。成績奇差的Paul 在父親去世後自力更生,起初,他恨他爸爸,他恨他父親對他有要求卻對自己作為失敗者不負任何責任。但這一晚,他開始想瞭解爸爸多一點。他企圖由唯一線索?「酒」中尋回父親。Paul 走入“半人間”應徵Bar Tender,背景不明的酒吧老闆Candy 竟聘請了他,讓Paul 跟著酒吧內兼職的Stella,開始學習調酒。Paul 與Stella 的感情糾糾纏纏,並在每天的工作中從進進出出的酒客中閱覽及經歷一個又一個的故事。

  "Half Man Zone" - This is a modern pub.

  Inside the pub, there is an afeard, puzzled lady sitting. She is the owner of this pub, her name is Candy. A popular song begins to play, Paul rushes to the bar.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Cocktail (US Version)"

February 24, 2006

This professional review refers to Cocktail (Hong Kong Version)
Director Herman Yau spins gold - or maybe solidly-polished brass - out of dingy old thread in the unheralded drama Cocktail. Co-directed by Longisland So (?), and written by Cheung Pan, Cocktail takes B or C-level stars, an uninspiring premise, and manages to find some semblance of actual emotion. The situations themselves aren't that exciting, and the emotions themselves are so expected as to be hackneyed. Yet somehow, the movie is watchable. Herman Yau, we salute you.

Candy (Candy Lo) is the owner of a pub called "Half-Mortal" in the subtitles, though the actual bar sign reads "Heaven and Hell". Candy runs the pub with two helpers, sweetheart college student Stella (Race Wong) and high-school dropout Paul (singer Endy Chow). Paul is the new recruit to Half-Mortal, and chose the life due to his pop (Lawrence Cheng), who sucked down liquor like there was no tomorrow. Paul thinks that working in a bar will somehow bring him closer to his pop, so he enlists after reading a couple of books, and is soon slinging shots to the bar's regular patrons. Stella teaches him the ropes, and the two soon develop some puppy love for one another. Instead of reading her two lovebird employees the riot act, Candy lets them flirt on the job while she chain-smokes and acts depressed.

Meanwhile, a whole cast of characters wander in and out of the bar, including a "Master of the Universe" car salesman (Johnson Lee) and his personal assistant (Derek Tsang), who neglects his girlfriend (Bobo Chan) to satisfy his boss. An emotionally-afflicted bar groupie (Chloe Chiu) develops an attachment to Paul, sending Stella into a jealous tizzy. Candy's old flame (or is he?) Vincent (Eric Kot) stops by for the occasional drink, and various other characters come and go, some played by the seminal (not) HK band EO2. Paul finds himself the subject of attention thanks to his quickly burgeoning bar skills. Will he come to understand his father? Will he go Tom Cruise and become the bartender/poet toast of the town? Will he and the increasingly adorable Stella get past their youthful pride and get together? Will it be revealed why Candy is such a manic depressive mess? And are the perils of occasionally irresponsible drinking really worth 90 minutes of moviegoing?

The answer: maybe. Cocktail doesn't bring closure to the majority of its subplots, and seems to be mainly concerned with the story of Paul and his dad. To the film's credit, it makes that hackneyed cinema motivation a reasonably affecting one - even though the lessons learned are right out of your standard afterschool special. Newcomer Endy Chow does a decent job as the young, occasionally misguided Paul, while Candy Lo - who now qualifies as a veteran Hong Kong Cinema presence - makes a charismatic unhappy bar owner. 2R's Race Wong is the film's anointed celluloid sweetheart, and brings enough toothy prettiness to the screen to make her puppy love with Endy Chow seem reasonably felt. Herman Yau gets enough from his performers to make their lives interesting, which is great, because the actual material in Cocktail is nothing new or crucial. The bar Half-Mortal is your basic joint where each visitor's issues reveal some barely-developed facet of modern urban life. What it all means is questionable, but these people go about their routine and sometimes self-deluded lives with admirable resilience. People break up and make up, jerks stay jerks, and only one or two people actually move beyond their basic issues. Hey, it's just like life!

Or a jazzy, calculated celluloid version of life. Cocktail is a decent ride of familiar human emotions, and maximizes its major location and familiar material with unobtrusive low-tech cinema panache. Cocktail manages to be watchable for the majority of its running time, though when it's over, it almost seems like an also-ran exercise in faux-independent commercial filmmaking. The low budget look, oddly incongruous soundtrack, and abundance of existentialism makes the film seem substantial, but the routine Cantopop montages, overused conflicts, commercial emotions, and sometimes empty filmmaking flash reveal the film to be little more than your standard youth drama dressed up in grungy clothing. With a lesser director, Cocktail would have been trash, but in the hands of Herman Yau (and Longisland So, too) it's actually okay stuff. Yau's gift seems to be wringing effective emotions out of uneven movies that look worse than they really are. Cocktail fits that complicated definition well. The film will never be a classic, but it's better than its immediate expectations.

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.

Customer Review of "Cocktail (US Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10 (1)

chung
See all my reviews


December 1, 2006

It will unexpectedly charm you Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
I really liked this movie, which came unexpectedly for me. It may not be the most ingenious film but it certainly has its charms. As the film progresses you get to know the characters more and more and their stories really begin to touch you. The ending is also nicely wrapped up so I had a nice feeling inside after watching it instead of the usual 'what the heck was that... good god I didn't pay 10$ to watch it' reaction.

A film worth your time, and a good buy. No regrest for me.
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