Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

A Simple Life: Film Review

Satisfactory Essays
718 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
A Simple Life: Film Review
A Simple Life: Film Review

The director of the soft-hearted Hong Kong story, A Simple Life which is about love, reputation and respect, stood with his cast during a sustained standing ovation at the Asian premiere, Golden Horse Awards, in September, 2011.

It was two years after her narrative film “The way we are” was produced. Now, Ann Hui returns to her own filming style, focusing on the details of drama, rather the expression of scenario, in telling a simple and ordinary, but touched family love story. Only this time, Ann changed the relationship to a servant and a master.

A Simple Life, based on real story, script by Susan Chan and Roger Lee centres on a warm-hearted story between a signorino and a servant, Master Roger (Andy Lau) and Ah Tao (Deannie Yip), who get big break when Ah Tao left Roger’s family because of having stroke.

Although Roger works as a movie producer, he was still living alone and taken care by Ah Tao for over 50 years. To Roger, Ah Tao has taken an importance place in his heart, and he was willing to did his best to take the responsibility of looking after Ah Tao when she was sick, even she urged to live in Retirement home. During the period that Roger takes care of Ah Tao, the relationship between them has exceeded master and servant, more likely, a family.

“Because I feel like heroes are too special or extraordinary, you should the word. I don’t really like to focus on those characters.” Ann Hui says.

Hui prefers filming ordinary people and ordinary stories. Like the family love of mother and son from “The Way We Are” and the relationship between master and servant in “A Simple Life”. Hui thinks that ordinary characters can touch audiences the most for the reason that these characters come from the lives we have experienced. Ah Tao is a character like any of us, so that audiences can feel, truly and practically, the deep emotion in characters through a film.

“ Ann Hui is one of good directors in Hong Kong films, she is good at filming, especially using documentary techniques to film. When you saw her films, everything seems so usual, but also real,” Freelance films review writer Kevin Cheung says.

Though Hui’s films continue to rely on narrative storytelling, she did not devote particular care to either commercial film or arthouse picture. Hui emphasizes on expressing the emotion in films via the documentary techniques of filming, expression of drama and acting of performers. Many audiences were deeply moved or shed tears after seeing A Simple Life.

“ I think its really nice and realistic film which is not a melodramatic, it’s about everyday life and it doesn't try to make you cry, it’s not over sentimental,” Mike Walsh, Flinders University Screen Studies Senior Lecturer, says.

Yes it is, A Simple Life is not a sensationalist film, there are no affection, no overstatement and no emotional hiding in it, all expressions of emotion are natural and from characters’ lives. In Hui’s film, she does not try to attract audiences’ attention deliberately by utilizing any magnificent film techniques; moreover, she uses a documentary techniques to delivered many details of one’s life, even a gesture or behave, in a film, in order to make the story alive. Like Andy Lau says that it was a film which was full of emotions of one’s life.

Relevant transcript:

Mike Walsh
Contact: mike.walsh@flinders.edu.au

Q: How do you think of the characters or directors of A Simple Life?

A: I think its really nice and realistic film which is not a melodramatic, it’s about everyday life and it doesn't try to make you cry, it’s not over sentimental.

Kiefer Cheung
Contact: hitchkiefer@hotmail.com

Q: What do you think of Ann Hui, the director of A Simple Life?

A: Ann Hui is one of good directors in Hong Kong films, she is good at filming, especially using documentary techniques to film. When you saw her films, everything seems so usual, but also real.

Hyperlink reference:
Interview of Ann Hui and Any Lau http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJQ4aRbBKmA&list=FLB6Hez8VauLCAlGnKvKHEnQ&index=1&feature=plpp_video Photographs:
http://danielyunhx.wordpress.com/2012/03/19/a-simple-life/

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The very compelling documentary, Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry by Alison Klayman, demonstrates a very ambitious contemporary artist trying to change the system in his homeland, China, Beijing. The film captures Ai Weiwei in his moments of capturing international attention through his pieces of inspiring and controversial art. Ai Weiwei expresses himself through his artistic style and social activism pertaining to China’s government.…

    • 463 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Soul Food flim analysis

    • 1656 Words
    • 3 Pages

    film learning life lessons and how significant it is to cherish family is important. This is a…

    • 1656 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The respondents came from various walks of life and different places in China, and the result is a book that goes into the lives and experiences of Chinese people ranging from artists to businesspeople, former Red Guards to rural migrants, prostitutes to Olympic athletes. However, for this assignment, it was asked to only read the interviews of a wealthy business man, a worker, and a Red Guard. I have heard about China Candid before and that’s why I know a lot about it. Sang Ye shows great interest in the personal experiences of his informants and they were presented not as representative of their occupation or class, but as interesting individuals with rich stories to tell. But with the context being modern China, political considerations affected the lives of all three people with whom he had conversations with. How the political expression was managed differed with every person. Some went along with the party line such as the Red Guard, while others distanced themselves from the authorities or make local officials a part of their schemes. Together, the personal stories told in this collection open a window onto what life is really like for both the Mao and post-Mao generations of…

    • 350 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the short film, the director Michael Weisler shows how a connection to a place provides emotional support to a young orphaned boy and contrasts it when that place is taken away, to show how the perception of belonging changes. Henry is a young rural Thai boy who is orphaned after the death of his mother and consequently adopted by a couple from Melbourne, Australian. The stars provide Henry with the sense of belonging through his natural mother, who is ‘watching him from the stars’. After he moves to the busy city, his emotional support and perception of belonging is lost. He finds that he cannot see the stars like he could in his rural hometown and therefore loses this essential connection. This contrast between his hometown and the busy Melbourne city shows the audience how important connections to places are in establishing and maintaining perceptions of…

    • 728 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The use of shifting perspectives throughout the film allows the barriers that exist between the two generations’ cultural values to be explored; while the mothers are deeply rooted in their Chinese heritage and the values, norms, expectations, etc. of that culture, their daughters have more westernized worldviews. However, although conflict does unfold due to the differences that exist between each mother/daughter pair, a strong bond is present in each relationship. This undeniable bond is seen through loving actions…

    • 539 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    John Franks once said, “Hope, as it pertains to love, is a good thing because by hoping for certain things such as an extended future with the one you love is made possible.” In the movie “Life Is Beautiful," Guido is an Italian Jew who is married to a gentile named Dora. He protected his son during the war by making him believe that they playing a game while in the concentration camp. He did this to keep the harsh reality unknown to his son, Giosue. The book Maus’ main character is Vladek, a Polish Jew who went through ghettos and concentration camp while doing his best to protect his wife, Anja, and their son, Richeu. He strived to give his family the best that he can get since the persecutions are overwhelming everyone. Both stories are warfare related, and…

    • 486 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the movie, Ordinary People, the Jarrett family face quite intense conflicts throughout their everyday lives after a son, and brother, of the family dies in a boating incident. The family’s overall dysfunction results from each person’s unhealthy way of grieving and not letting out their emotions and sorrow. Instances in which the family’s dysfunction was shown include: at the breakfast table, in the family’s backyard, when putting up the Christmas tree, at the mall, and when the mother, Beth, and the dad, Calvin, were on vacation. Beth Jarrett, especially, does not practice supplying Conrad, her son, with needs, such as those of Maslow’s Hierarchy of human needs, like love and belonging. She does this by examples like refusing to have a conversation about the death of Buck, the one who drowned in a boating incident. The father, Calvin, is quite distant and tries to reconnect with his depressed and suicidal son, but struggles to do so. Conrad, himself, copes with the help of his psychiatrist, Dr. Berger. The ways each member of the family uses fight and/or flight mode are a myriad, and this, along with possible conflict management strategies, which they could have utilized and have helped the Jarretts, will be expounded upon.…

    • 885 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The thought of a hero is ordinarily thought of as a person who has exceptional abilities…

    • 745 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Hero's Journey

    • 1765 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Often the heroes are considered odd by those in the ordinary world and possess some ability or…

    • 1765 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    I was able to watch the movie A Better Life a movie showing the struggles immigrants have to face on a day to day and it takes place in California. The movie features a struggling father (Carlos) who is a immigrant and that is trying his best to raise his fourteen year old son (Luis). Carlos works as a landscaper with a friend named Blasco who is now planning to head back to Mexico but intends to sell his truck to anyone to keep his small business going. Blasco offers the truck and tools to Carlos to continue working since he would be without a job if someone else was to buy the truck. Luis in the other hand is dealing with going to highschool and his girlfriend Ruthie whose family is involved in a gang pushing Luis to consider being in one.…

    • 1165 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The movie is filled with dark humor about a modern middle-class family that is about to encounter financial catastrophe but in the midst of their struggles they still find the beauty in life.…

    • 1325 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Alright Love

    • 866 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The classical Hollywood style is all about the art of invisible storytelling and the ability to make the viewer feel part of the movie by enabling them to relate with the central character. This is achieved through the use of a seamless narrative which is accomplished by not just the script or story itself, but includes every aspect of what goes into making a successful movie. The short 2004 film Alright Love, directed by Samuli Valkama, does indeed share the characteristics of classical Hollywood cinema. Even without dialogue, the director was able to portray a sweet love story that followed a specific unspoken path of storytelling in movies.…

    • 866 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It is based on two Mo Yan’s novels, and it’s the first of a trilogy in which the director focuses on the analysis of the woman’s figure.…

    • 396 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Life as a House

    • 378 Words
    • 2 Pages

    George Monroe is a lonely and sad man. Divorced for ten years, he lives alone on the Southern California coast with his pet dog in the same run down shack he has lived in for twenty-five years, the shack which his father passed down to him. In the intervening years, ostentatious houses have sprung up around him. He's been at the same architectural firm for twenty years in a job he hates, which primarily consists of building scale models. On the day that he is fired from his job, he is diagnosed with an advanced case of terminal cancer, which he chooses not to disclose to his family. In many ways, this day is the happiest of his recent life in that he decides to spend what little time he has left doing what he really wants to do, namely build a house he can call his own to replace the shack. He also wants his rebellious sixteen year old son, Sam Monroe, to live with him for the summer, hopefully not only to help in the house construction, but for the two to reconnect as a family. Getting Sam to do any of it will not be an easy task as Sam, who has embarked on some self-destructive behavior, would rather do anything than spend time with his family, which also includes his mother Robin Kimball, her wealthy but emotionally unaffectionate husband Peter Kimball, and their adolescent children. In Sam, George sees an unhappy person in every aspect of his life, much like George was himself before that fateful day. What Sam decides to do for the summer may consider Alyssa Beck, his pretty classmate and George's next door neighbor. Through the process, George also reconnects with Robin, who admits that she's made some pretty bad decisions in her life. He may not want that reconnection to go too far considering his health. Ultimately George has much to do to complete all he wants before he dies. "Life as a House" offers audiences a chance to cry, laugh, and - at times - cringe at its harsh portrayal of a fractured family.…

    • 378 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The film, Life Is Beautiful, is about a Jewish Italian man, Guido, that falls in love with a woman, Dora, he meets on the road while repairing his car. Guido’s destination is his Uncle Eliseo’s home, where he will be staying. When in Italy, Guido and Dora continue running into each other, soon making Dora begin to like him. After some time, Dora and Guido get married and have a son, Giosue (Joshua). Throughout the first half of the movie, we are exposed to the political changes occurring in Italy, such as discrimination against Jews and the public exclusions made towards them. One day, Guido, Uncle Eliseo, and Giosue are taken on Giosue’s birthday by the Nazi’s and are forced to get on a crowded train to get to the concentration camp. Dora,…

    • 658 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays