Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuNamson Lau is a ballroom dancing instructor. On stage, he is a refined and suave gentleman, but in reality, he is cunning and greedy, and dancing has become a mean to strike fortune for him,... Alles lesenNamson Lau is a ballroom dancing instructor. On stage, he is a refined and suave gentleman, but in reality, he is cunning and greedy, and dancing has become a mean to strike fortune for him, without any other levels of significance.Namson Lau is a ballroom dancing instructor. On stage, he is a refined and suave gentleman, but in reality, he is cunning and greedy, and dancing has become a mean to strike fortune for him, without any other levels of significance.
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Ka-Tung Lam
- Faye Wong
- (as Lam Ka Tung)
Cherrie Ying
- June
- (as Cherrie Yin)
Tze-Chung Lam
- Fatty
- (as Lam Tze Chung)
Ray Pang
- Man at ATM
- (as Pang Wai Lap)
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Another romantic materials starring Hongkong super star Andy Lau. Such a pity that the co-female stars are Anita Mui and Sandra Ng, who are definitely not knockouts, unlike other romantic Andy Lau's movies which usually use beautiful female actresses. It would've been better if the actresses are funny & cute-face or innocent types, such as Anita Yuen, Maggie Cheung, or maybe Vicki Zhao. Alas, although the leading female casts are poor, the supporting actresses(the dance class students and co-worker) are quite gorgeous! The script is OK enough, though, just to spend time relaxing, at best. Otherwise it's just a waste of time. 2/5
This film is an excellent example of latter-day Hong Kong cinema. Emulating and expanding upon Western methods of cinematography and pace,'Dance of a Dream' really shows off what filmmakers can do in Hong Kong. The cast is stellar: Andy Lau is magnificent and charming, able to command the audience's breathless attention. The comedic/dramatic dynamo that is Anita Mui shines as she pursues a seemingly unattainable dream beset with obstacles at every turn, alternately compelling laughter and hot tears with accomplished skill. Sandra Ng serves as a foil to Anita's character, exemplifying the ethical dilemma brought to Andy's dance instructor. There's no fighting, no guns or explosions, just a lot of dancing in the form of highly imaginative dance sequences and hot-blooded competition.
A lowly waitress at a fancy restaurant, Anita Mui's as Tina is inflamed with desire to learn the high art of ballroom dancing, especially after seeing Andy Lau's Namson perform at a fancy dinner. Poor but proud, she finds a way to attend Namson's tutelage and befriends the ragtag class practicing with her. Kam (Sandra Ng) is an ivory tower princess who merely wants to learn to dance so she may better impress her high society acquaintances. Kam gains a sense of humor through contact with Tina and their interplay is truly charming - Wai Keung Lau shows a temperate, confident hand at directing during one of the funniest scenes in the movie, as Kam and Tina privately discuss their respective "endowments". Anyone else could've made this mawkish and cheap, but it plays itself out with control and grace and is funnier for it. Finally, Namson is faced with the dilemma of keeping his low-scale dance studio and sliding-scale clientele versus gaining a more elite downtown studio in a beautiful building, sure to attract wealthy new patrons but rendering it inaccessible to the students he's come to care for.
For all the occasional slapstick and simplified plot dichotomy, 'Dance of a Dream' is still a passionate, engaging, mature body of work, on par with 'Mack the Knife', 'La Brassiere', and 'Sausalito'. This is to HK cinema what 'Ghost in the Shell' was to anime - a direct-line descendent, the latest evolution, and a new standard.
A lowly waitress at a fancy restaurant, Anita Mui's as Tina is inflamed with desire to learn the high art of ballroom dancing, especially after seeing Andy Lau's Namson perform at a fancy dinner. Poor but proud, she finds a way to attend Namson's tutelage and befriends the ragtag class practicing with her. Kam (Sandra Ng) is an ivory tower princess who merely wants to learn to dance so she may better impress her high society acquaintances. Kam gains a sense of humor through contact with Tina and their interplay is truly charming - Wai Keung Lau shows a temperate, confident hand at directing during one of the funniest scenes in the movie, as Kam and Tina privately discuss their respective "endowments". Anyone else could've made this mawkish and cheap, but it plays itself out with control and grace and is funnier for it. Finally, Namson is faced with the dilemma of keeping his low-scale dance studio and sliding-scale clientele versus gaining a more elite downtown studio in a beautiful building, sure to attract wealthy new patrons but rendering it inaccessible to the students he's come to care for.
For all the occasional slapstick and simplified plot dichotomy, 'Dance of a Dream' is still a passionate, engaging, mature body of work, on par with 'Mack the Knife', 'La Brassiere', and 'Sausalito'. This is to HK cinema what 'Ghost in the Shell' was to anime - a direct-line descendent, the latest evolution, and a new standard.
This is a sweet story about Kam, played by the always good Sandra Ng, a waitress who lives with two roommates, who serves at a dance recital and is enthralled. She decides she wants to learn how to dance. Andy Lau is the instructor and Anita Mui, in her penultimate role, plays Tina, a non-smiling businesswoman who manages hotels. Sandra Ng has been goofy, wacky, brutal & even vicious in films, but here is one where she is always smiling. She's sweet, adorable and looks great, pretty and happy. Anita Mui looks great also, and both she and Sandra get to dance in the film. They both dance very well. Granted, this is a formula film, but its great because of the actors. Its a feel good film, and the little asides, the false starts, the fun they have is infectious. Its a great date movie, nothing offensive. See it for the stars. Andy Lau is fine, Anita Mui is great and looks beautiful, but Sandra Ng is a revelation. I wish there were more films like this, to show off her sweet side. At least we have this. I liked it a lot.
I thought the movie was funny but I feel that maybe it is more for Hongkong viewers based on the jokes cracked in the show...i loved the cast...andy lau, anita mui and sandra ng...quite good acting...but of course i m bias because i m an anita mui fan and i do like to see her acting with andy lau...overall a good christmas movie (it was released at christmas) apparently the dvd has special features as it gives two different endings to the film.
10ktfleur
I have watched most of Andy Lau's movies and must say, this is a break from gang triad movies and sad love stories and such. A breath of fresh air with a dash of tango! Can Andy dance or what! Okay, so he can act and sing, hey but dance... Give him the all around award for doing it all. Anita mui and sandra Ng are not to be overlooked either. Anita can play the cold ice queen or loving partner whatever the script calls for, and she delivers. As for Sandra Ng, what else can one say but superb. You love sandra from the moment you see her longingly staring at andy with moon eyes till the last joyful smile in the final scene! Note: Anita and Sandra are a hoot in the cha cha dance skit scene. They can play comical men as good as any man could with great voices to boot.Not to leave out that Andy has a great pair of legs in the drag number he does. Personally I watched this movie right away after viewing it just to watch the cha cha scenes and tango scene with Andy and Sandra once more! Put this on your must see list and buy the sound track ,you won't regret it. Now go tango!
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- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 34 Minuten
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By what name was Oi gwan yue mung (2001) officially released in Canada in English?
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