Two shopkeepers are set up on a blind date by well-meaning relatives, despite the fact that they both have somebody else on their minds.Two shopkeepers are set up on a blind date by well-meaning relatives, despite the fact that they both have somebody else on their minds.Two shopkeepers are set up on a blind date by well-meaning relatives, despite the fact that they both have somebody else on their minds.
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- 3 wins & 11 nominations
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Storyline
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferences Monsters vs. Aliens (2009)
- SoundtracksBu Zhi You Yuan (Lucky In Love)
Written by Roxanne Seeman and Daniel Nitt
Chinese lyrics by Kenny So (Qiao Xing)
Performed by Jacky Cheung
Featured review
Mundane Plot Upstaged by its Subplots
With "Crossing Hennessy", writer-director Ivy Ho apparently aims at accomplishing two things: tell the love story between two people on opposite sides of Hennessy Road in a 'realistic light'; and provide a touch of nostalgia to the colourful Wan Chai area of Hong Kong which is to be 'dismantled' for an 'Urban Renewal' project.
She is only partly successful on both counts. What I felt at a morning media screening of this film was mostly boredom, alleviated by a few moments of delightful comedy provided by its secondary cast. A predictable tale with an abrupt ending.
Loy (Jacky Cheung) is a 40-something bachelor who still lives with his mother (Paw Hee Ching) and works at her electrical appliance retail shop on one side of Hennessy Road of Hong Kong island. On the other side, Oi Lin (Tang Wei) works at her uncle's shop selling sanitary hardware. Loy and Oi Lin are being matched for marriage by their elders and are forced to go on a date. They do so reluctantly, as each already has someone on the side.
Oi Lin is in love with Xu (Andy On), a hot-head convicted for assaulting someone; and Loy is being wooed by his ex-girlfriend (Maggie Cheung Ho Hee) who has just divorced her husband. Are the two really meant for each other - or just two folks passing by the same road? In trying to present the love story in its 'realistic' and genuine light, we get mundane scenes of everyday life - inside shops, homes and rooms - with nothing inventive or creative to grab our wandering attention. And believe me, after so many of such 'nothing happens' scenes, your mind will start to wander. Jacky Cheung's performance is up to par, portraying a sleepy-head with low self-esteem and no passion for romance. Tang Wei, however, appears wooden here, quite unlike her sexy seductress role in her last film, Lust, Caution. The two leads are not only devoid of screen chemistry, they are upstaged by the supporting cast and subplots.
Indeed, veterans Danny Lee, Paw Hee Ching (pictured) and Zhu Mimi provide laughs and lots of local humour with a romantic triangle subplot while Gill Mohindepaul Singh and Lowell Lo are involved in supernatural and dream sequences as a mysterious waiter and Loy's late father respectively. Ekin Cheng also makes a brief appearance, ostensibly to excite the audience.
As a swan song of sorts to Wan Chai district, "Crossing Hennessy" does little to evoke the history or provide insights to the famous district. Ivy Ho has written many commendable films (the 2002 "July Rhapsody" and 2005 "Divergence" spring to mind) but displays nothing outstanding or memorable as director of this sophomore effort (after "Claustrophobia" of 2008). - By LIM CHANG MOH (limchangmoh.blogspot.com)
She is only partly successful on both counts. What I felt at a morning media screening of this film was mostly boredom, alleviated by a few moments of delightful comedy provided by its secondary cast. A predictable tale with an abrupt ending.
Loy (Jacky Cheung) is a 40-something bachelor who still lives with his mother (Paw Hee Ching) and works at her electrical appliance retail shop on one side of Hennessy Road of Hong Kong island. On the other side, Oi Lin (Tang Wei) works at her uncle's shop selling sanitary hardware. Loy and Oi Lin are being matched for marriage by their elders and are forced to go on a date. They do so reluctantly, as each already has someone on the side.
Oi Lin is in love with Xu (Andy On), a hot-head convicted for assaulting someone; and Loy is being wooed by his ex-girlfriend (Maggie Cheung Ho Hee) who has just divorced her husband. Are the two really meant for each other - or just two folks passing by the same road? In trying to present the love story in its 'realistic' and genuine light, we get mundane scenes of everyday life - inside shops, homes and rooms - with nothing inventive or creative to grab our wandering attention. And believe me, after so many of such 'nothing happens' scenes, your mind will start to wander. Jacky Cheung's performance is up to par, portraying a sleepy-head with low self-esteem and no passion for romance. Tang Wei, however, appears wooden here, quite unlike her sexy seductress role in her last film, Lust, Caution. The two leads are not only devoid of screen chemistry, they are upstaged by the supporting cast and subplots.
Indeed, veterans Danny Lee, Paw Hee Ching (pictured) and Zhu Mimi provide laughs and lots of local humour with a romantic triangle subplot while Gill Mohindepaul Singh and Lowell Lo are involved in supernatural and dream sequences as a mysterious waiter and Loy's late father respectively. Ekin Cheng also makes a brief appearance, ostensibly to excite the audience.
As a swan song of sorts to Wan Chai district, "Crossing Hennessy" does little to evoke the history or provide insights to the famous district. Ivy Ho has written many commendable films (the 2002 "July Rhapsody" and 2005 "Divergence" spring to mind) but displays nothing outstanding or memorable as director of this sophomore effort (after "Claustrophobia" of 2008). - By LIM CHANG MOH (limchangmoh.blogspot.com)
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $440,650
- Runtime1 hour 45 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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