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YesAsia Editorial Description
Possibly the most realistic portrayal of everyday life in Hong Kong ever put to the silver screen, The Way We Are steps seamlessly into the world of Hong Kong's lower working class amid the city's ubiquitous housing estates. The film unobtrusively follows the lives of kindhearted working mother Mrs. Cheung (veteran actress Paw Hee Ching), her blank but agreeable teenage son Ka On (newcomer Juno Leung), and their lonely elderly neighbor who works at the same supermarket as Mrs. Cheung. Through the seemingly uneventful cycle of work, grocery shopping, reluctant fellowship meetings, humorously mundane conversations, and the same old dinner, Ann Hui captures a remarkably realistic slice of Hong Kong life that is eye-opening and genuinely enjoyable.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | The Way We Are (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) 天水圍的日與夜 (DVD) (香港版) 天水围的日与夜 (DVD) (香港版) 生きていく日々 (天水圍的日與夜) (香港版) The Way We Are (DVD) (Hong Kong Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Idy Chan (Actor) | Paw Hee Ching (Actor) | Clifton Ko (Actor) | Leung Juno | Chan Lai Wun (Actor) 陳玉蓮 (Actor) | 鮑起靜 (Actor) | 高志森 (Actor) | 梁 進龍 | 陳 麗雲 (Actor) 陈玉莲 (Actor) | 鲍起静 (Actor) | 高志森 (Actor) | Leung Juno | Chan Lai Wun (Actor) 陳玉蓮(チャン・ヨクリン) (Actor) | 鮑起靜 (パウ・ヘイチン) (Actor) | 高志森 (クリフトン・コー) (Actor) | Leung Juno | Chan Lai Wun (Actor) Idy Chan (Actor) | Paw Hee Ching (Actor) | Ko Chi Sum (Actor) | Leung Juno | Chan Lai Wun (Actor) |
| Director: | Ann Hui 許鞍華 许鞍华 許鞍華(アン・ホイ) Ann Hui |
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| Release Date: | 2008-10-21 |
| 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 |
| Sound Information: | Dolby Digital |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
| Rating: | I |
| Duration: | 91 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Kam & Ronson Enterprises Co Ltd |
| Package Weight: | 110 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1011452470 |
Product Information
This is a nonchalant story of decent folks living in an isolated “new” town distanced by poverty.
Onn is a high school graduate, the only child of widowed Kwai, who lives and studies in Tin Shui Wai, a new town bordering China and remote by Hong Kong standard. He is no wise kid with flying colors but he grew up with keen awareness of what his mother has been up against in defense of their family of two.
Kwai is the kind who throws her despair behind and never dodges what it takes to move on in work and life. She works in a supermarket, actually a neighborhood grocery, at very limited salary, and that keeps her from the costly family gatherings which she could barely afford. But behind their infrequent encounters Kwai has a pair of caring brothers who owe their education to a sister who truncated her schooling to make money for the family's future.
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Awards
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Hong Kong Films Awards 2009
- Best Film Nomination
- Best Director Winner, Ann Hui
- Best Screenplay Winner
- Best Actress Winner, Paw Hee Ching
- Best Supporting Actress Winner, Chan Lai Wun
- Best New Performer Nomination, Leung Juno
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "The Way We Are (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"
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Tin Shui Wai is a place where bad things happen - or so the Hong Kong media has been quick to tell us. A northwestern New Territories town, the Tin Shui Wai New Town emerged in the 1990s thanks to land reclamation and financial help from the Hong Kong Government. Unfortunately, the town currently suffers from widespread unemployment, leading to domestic violence, suicide, triad activity, and plenty of bad stuff that, again, the Hong Kong media has been quick to tell us about. Exacerbating that was the unfortunate October 2007 incident when a mother and her two children reportedly leapt to their deaths from one of the area's high-rise housing estates. The negative media attention and public perception of the town as a "City of Sadness" are reasons that Lawrence Lau's Besieged City, a 2007 drama taking place in Tin Shui Wai, has been chided for sensationalizing the city's woes. However, there is another side to Tin Shui Wai, namely the side where people get up in the morning, live their lives, and contribute the best they can to their communities. Ann Hui's HD-video docudrama, The Way We Are gives voice to these other, less sensational residents of Tin Shui Wai, and manages to give their lives weight and depth, while also not glorifying their working-class honesty. Despite the title and presumed intentions, The Way We Are is not didactic or moralizing - it's just real, in all its serene, mundane, everyday glory. The more cinematically inclined could knock the film for its lack of action and its snail's pace, but Hui seems unconcerned with telling anything resembling a true narrative with a beginning, middle, or end. The Way We Are picks up the threads in people's lives, follows them, and reveals nothing more than unglamourous reality. Bau Hei-Jing (Lost in Time) stars as Mrs. Cheung, who lives with teenage son Ka-On (Juno Leung). Mrs. Cheung works part-time in the local Wellcome supermarket, while Ka-On lazes about their home and occasionally attends church fellowship meetings, where he may or may not admire one of his church mentors. Life occurs when the two befriend a new neighbor, an elderly woman who lives alone, and soon joins Mrs. Cheung at her workplace. Meanwhile, Mrs. Cheung's mother enters the hospital, and Mrs. Cheung is too busy to visit right away, but Ka-On visits from time to time, bringing soup with him. Meanwhile, their neighbor needs a light bulb changed, but she's too old and unwilling to do it. Will Ka-On help her change her light bulb? And will Mrs. Cheung ever visit her mom in the hospital? It may sound like I'm mocking The Way We Are, but I'm just trying to poke fun at standard moviegoing expectations. Oftentimes we expect active narratives and characters in our movies, and indeed, some films could be called to task for not delivering those effectively. The Way We Are, however, is not one of those films, and its aims can plainly be seen in the Chinese title: Tin Shui Wai Dik Yat Yue Ye, meaning "Tin Shui Wai At Day and Night". This is a simple story about regular people, and Ann Hui breathes credibility and affection into her characters and their lives by choosing not to overdo the film. Her approach is decidedly quiet, utilizing sparing amounts of music or manipulative technique, and making no attempt to cajole the audience into the role of active participant. The viewer's role here is passive, much like the characters themselves, who react naturally and without forced emotion or incident. The result is not action-packed, and The Way We Are proves so unexciting as to soporific. Yes, this movie can put a person to sleep, and if you've had a glass of wine and only 3-4 hours sleep the previous evening, expect a nap attack. Again, however, that's not cause to deride the film. The Way We Are is not a classic, as it never surpasses its humble aims, but Hui's hand is assured enough to make this a worthy visit. The director displays extraordinary confidence and control in that she resists the temptation to make the film more than what it truly is. The characters lives never threaten to become the stuff of melodrama, and though details are revealed about the history of the characters and the town, little qualifies as an outright dramatic revelation. The emotions here are simple and respectful ones, and show us that the people of Tin Shui Wai have a heart and soul. Living there is like living anywhere else; it's full of ups and downs, small successes and setbacks, and people who are worth getting to know if you just give them a chance. The Way We Are makes Tin Shui Wai seem like home. by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com |
Editor's Pick of "The Way We Are (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)"
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October 29, 2008
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If Hong Kong newspapers are to be believed, Tin Shui Wai is not a good place to be. This New Territories town in northern Hong Kong has become the poster child for urban tragedy with stories of suicides, poverty, unemployment, broken families, wayward youth, and mothers throwing their children out the window. For more on why living in Tin Shui Wai completely bites, you can refer to Lawrence Lau's sensationally dismal teen-gone-wrong tale Besieged City, but that's not the only side to life in Tin Shui Wai. There are also all the people who just have normal lives, and it's their humble experiences that take center stage in Ann Hui's remarkable docudrama The Way We Are. The Way We Are is just about the perfect cinematic microcosm of daily life in Hong Kong in all its endearingly uneventful goodness. Can-do working mother Mrs. Cheung, played by veteran television actress Pao Hei Ching, lives in a simple public housing apartment with her aimlessly amenable teenage son Ka On (newcomer Juno Leung). Their lives are as normal, predictable, and "Hong Kong" as the jigsaw foam padding that covers their apartment floor. Mrs. Cheung works at the local supermarket, cooks dinner, reads the newspaper, sees her relatives once in a blue moon, and helps out her neighbors whenever she can. Drama-free, temper-free, and possibly personality-free high school student Ka On has no special ambitions, hobbies, or vices. He gets along with everyone fine, hangs out with friends, occasionally attends youth group meetings, and makes sure to get home in time for dinner. An elderly new neighbor whom Mrs. Cheung takes under her wings lives alone and counts her pennies, only to splurge on gifts for the grandchild she never gets to see. The Way We Are gives such an accurate portrait of Hong Kong life and people, it almost feels like an RTHK documentary. Amid the cavernous public housing estates which serve as home for a large portion of the city's working class, the film unassumingly follows Mrs. Cheung and company's daily bustle and familiar banal banter, providing an amusing and uplifting mirror for the audience. (Juno Leung's staple blank look and non-response to everything is especially funny.) The resultant depiction of Tin Shui Wai is one in which life is life, and the people are not too different from those anywhere in Hong Kong, or indeed anywhere in the world. Maybe Lawrence Lau's Besieged City is closer to what audiences expect from a film set in the "City of Sadness", but The Way We Are is closer to reality, and a lot more enjoyable to watch. |











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