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hosenhaus
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The Kid (1999) HK
08. May 2005 at 07:21
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The Kid
1999 film from Hong Kong

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A woman abandons her baby on a luxury yacht, hoping to give him a better life.  Little does she know that the owner of the yacht has just lost everything in the market crash.

So the man (Wing), who is now reduced to odd jobs and living on a rooftop, raises the kid (Ming).

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I cannot identify the actor who plays Ming, since I do not read Chinese.  Two possibilities from the cast list are:
  Shaun Tam
  Erickson Ip
A web site where Ming is identified as Qi Qi is (I am pretty sure) wrong.
  
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Re: The Kid (1999) HK
Reply #1 - 08. May 2005 at 09:10
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Thanks for this alert...

I love the original 1921 Chaplin version.

I'd not heard of this version of 'The Kid' before now, I was only aware of the Hollywood remake which I haven't watched.

This HK one looks interesting and I'm surprised it's one we've missed.

The name of the kid is 'Erickson Yip Tuen-Lam'. I suspect the IMBd data minions may have decided to skip it, dumping it into the too hard basket.

______________________________________________

A review of the movie:

from -YTSL
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In writing about this 1999 Jacob Cheung work, this interested reader of others' movies reviews -- as well as avid viewer of movies -- is trying hard to do what she does not like critics to do: That is, let their ideological disagreements with the film maker(s) get in the way of her fair assessment of a particular cinematic offering. This is not least because even while I was thoroughly dissatisfied with the choice of conclusion for this drama, I very much appreciated the method of -- and very -- presentation of many of the social dilemmas and personal choices in the rest of the production.
THE KID takes its inspiration from the 1921 Charlie Chaplin-Jackie Coogan silent classic of the same name. While this is indeed so, there are many things about the effort that stars the still boyish-looking Leslie Cheung -- as a fund manager named Wing who lost his fortune (and that of many of his clients) in a single day during the last Asian Financial Crisis -- and a little tyke named Erickson Yip Tuen-Lam -- as the abandoned child named Ming who became his companion in that same twenty-four hour cycle -- which make it very recognizably a Hong Kong movie. In fact, one could go so far as to state that this film is as much a love letter to the territory and its "common folk" as "Lost and Found" and "C'est la Vie, Mon Cherie": Sentimental works which touchingly reveal to us many of the less glamorous, older looking, working-class -- yet not necessarily triad- and vice-filled -- sections of the former British crown colony.

After showing us the circumstances by which Wing and Ming made their acquaintance, THE KID fast-forwards four years or so into the future. There, Wing has become a scruffy oddjob man who subsists on temporary and other jobs that he finds here, there and everywhere around Hong Kong while Ming is alternately his shadow, help, play-mate and beloved adopted son. Among those that this duo have as their neighbors and count as their friends are a middle-aged beat-cop whose love for a woman who everyone calls Elder Sister Lan is obvious to all except her (Veteran actor Ti Lung and an amazingly haggard as well as plain-looking Carrie Ng deserve the Best Supporting Actor and Actress Awards they have garnered for their sensitive portrayals of these two surprisingly charming individuals).

Into their not necessarily carefree but still not unhappy lives comes a rich and beautiful do-gooder whose phobia of children stems from her regret at having abandoned her child a few years ago. Although I found the debut-making Qi Qi (an internationally famous model and Mrs. Simon Yam in real life) rather sweet as well as immensely pleasing to the eye, the bulk of my problems with THE KID emanate from her character and what she is given to represent. Specifically, while I certainly can grant that rich people are not necessarily evil nor uncaring folk, I have to say that I seem to be much less convinced than director Jacob Cheung (and this movie's scriptwriter) that money can buy and guarantee happiness for the young, old and those in between. As such, while I am happy that the Communist Chinese rulers of the formally designated Special Administrative Region continue to allow the making of films with this kind of message (and point of view), I also can't help but think that this is definitely one of those Hong Kong movies that plays best in that territory and is unlikely to find an appreciative audience outside of it and a few (other) highly capitalist plus "traditional" family-oriented societies (e.g., those of Singapore and Taiwan).

This is all the more frustrating because there really are some very nice moments and scenes in this not at all badly made film. Among those that ought to be cherished are that which well illustrate the care that the policeman has for the people whose welfare he considers his duty to look after as well as his long-time acquaintance, Elder Sister's Lan good treatment of the elderly folk who share her home plus Wing and Ming's devotion to each other. What a pity that I absolutely can't feel the same way about the eventual fates of Wing and Ming, and the woman who we last see leaving the scene in her Rolls Royce.
  
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Re: The Kid (1999) HK
Reply #2 - 08. May 2005 at 14:59
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Erickson Ip it is.  Chinese name Yip Tuen-Lam, for Western purposes (like English credits on a movie) you adopt a Western name, like Erickson.  Ip vs Yip is just two different systems of transliteration.

  
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Re: The Kid (1999) HK
Reply #3 - 08. May 2005 at 15:57
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Thanks for bringing this one to our attention, Hosenhaus. Have you seen the film?
The few Hong Kong movies I've seen are very heavy on pathos and I wonder if this one is as well.
  
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Re: The Kid (1999) HK
Reply #4 - 20. Apr 2006 at 04:27
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london residents can see the chaplin version for free this sunday.
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Celebrate some of the remarkable contributions that England has made to the arts and culture of the world at the St George's Day events organised by the Mayor of London...This year for the first time, Charlie Chaplin will be celebrated with a series of film showings on Leicester Square.

Sunday 23 April, 12.00 - 6.00pm

Experience the magic and genius of Charlie Chaplin, the world’s first film superstar. Born in London in 1889, Chaplin was an acclaimed actor, director, composer, writer and producer and his portrayal of ‘the Tramp’ continues to have universal appeal to this day.

In addition to screenings of classic films including The Kid, The Gold Rush and Modern Times, there will be children’s activities and entertainment, Chaplin style. Admission is FREE.

Programme
12.30pm The Kid (1921)
Chaplin’s first full-length film. Co-starring five-year-old Jackie Coogan.

2pm Three shorts: Kid Auto Races, A Film Johnnie and Mabel at the Wheel (1914.) BFI restored Keystone Film Company shorts with live piano accompaniment

3.00pm The Gold Rush (1925, 1942)
Chaplin's irrepressible Little Tramp seeks riches in the Yukon in this all time classic. 1942 version with soundtrack and narration.

4.30pm Modern Times (1936)
Man v Machine! in one of the happiest and most light hearted of the Chaplin pictures. Co-starring Paulette Goddard.

Arranged with assistance from Association Chaplin, Roy Export Limited, MK2 and BFI


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Re: The Kid (1999) HK
Reply #5 - 20. Apr 2006 at 05:03
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85 years later, and this story is being re-made all across the world.

Disney messed it up with Bruce Willis and Spencer Breslin, but this one really looks good!
  
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