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THE LION ROARS (M) 2002
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SYNOPSIS:
May contain
spoilers...
Synopsis: Period comedy about a Soong Dynasty poet who meets a beautiful but fierce lady at a poems-reading gathering. They get married, and then he discovers that his wife is a roaring lion who limits him on all his activities and expenses...
Period comedy directed by Joe Ma
Starring Louis Koo & Cecilia Cheung
In Cantonese, with English subtitles
Running time 117 mins
OFFICIAL WEBSITE:
hk.yahoo.com/promotions/chinastar/thelionroars/
[Chinese text]
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HEROIC-CINEMA REVIEW:
Alrighty, let’s get one thing straight. I’m not a big
fan of Cecilia Cheung and quite frankly, I haven’t met anyone who
is. Mind you I gave her plenty of opportunities to prove herself
after her fine turn in Stephen Chow’s King of Comedy. Then
she did Fly Me to Polaris.
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OK, I thought, not entirely her fault as the material was about as wet
as Jacque Costeau’s wetsuit. But then she didn’t redeem herself in
a slew of unmemorable roles: Tokyo Raiders, Legend of Speed, Para
Para Sakura, Mighty Baby. In
fact by this time she was starting to register dangerously close to
Meg Ryan on the annoying-o-meter.
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So you see folks, I had no intention to see Lion Roars at all
but as fate would have it, I did and the verdict is: ……..not as
bad as I expected!
Perhaps the material was marginally, I stress on the word, marginally,
better than some of the watery mess that has been hitting our screens
of late. Lion Roars
follows the story of how a Soong dynasty poet, Seasonal Chan [Louis
Koo] unwittingly managed to tame Moth Liu [Cecilia Cheung], a
beautiful but feisty shrew who makes thumping her suitors to a
bleeding pulp a hobby. Seeing as Moth can’t a suitor who can
withstand her fists, and it seems like she’s the only one who adores
Seasonal’s lame poetry, the Emperor decrees them to be married.
After the marriage Seasonal finds out the hard way just what a tough
piece of work his wife really is.
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If you already had a giggle at their names, then you’re on your way
there. The first half is a silly delight, sprinkled with lots of
amusing jokes, mixing up modern day and traditional pop culture to
great effect – something HK films has always done really well. Glad
to see the tradition still lives. Look out for the canto-poetry
concert, Soong dynasty style!
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The second half turns dramatic, the pivotal juncture arrives with a
screech [literally] when Moth discovers that her husband had a
one-night affair with the emperor’s sister. Herein lies probably the
biggest joke in the whole movie – Seasonal is seduced by the
princess pretending to be a lost spirit who needs to couple with the
poet in order to reincarnate. Uh..huh….
yeah, either Seasonal Chan is stupid to believe it himself or he
thinks his wife is dumb enough to buy that hogwash.
Moth, painfully wounded and betrayed by her husband’s infidelity,
refuses to share her husband with the princess despite the orders of
the emperor and opts instead to forget the whole damn thing by
drinking the “Love Eraser” potion. [Bad relationship, nasty
memories? No worries! Have a “love eraser” potion. Why isn’t
this on the market?!] Will Seasonal be able to win his wife back now
that she has no memory of his existence?
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To Joe Ma’s [Funeral March, Love Undercover] credit, Lion
Roars harks back to the good old days of HK comedy genre –
simple, entertaining and with the right does of silliness.
Again to Joe Ma’s credit, he’s managed to extract the good
performances from the whole cast and kept the whole affair from going
belly flop from too many ideas and subplots. This is easier said than
done as many recent HK flicks have suffered this fate, most notably Mighty
Baby.
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Far from smart or challenging, Lion Roars revels in its silly
“leave brain at door” sentiment and at least provides you with an
amusing 1.5 hours to pass the time.
This lion certainly doesn’t roar but it doesn’t whimper either, it
gives a friendly snarl and goes into my list of HK films this year
that just managed to weigh in on the positive scale.
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Rating: 7 “love eraser” potions outta 10
Reviewed by Ching Yee
OTHER REVIEWS:
Paul
Fox at Canton
Kid
Kevin Lo at Cinema
Online
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H E R O I C * C I N E M A
http://www.heroic-cinema.com
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