阿美(王祖贤 饰)是个美丽的女孩子,永久可是天生脚就有残疾。她的父亲(黄霑 饰)因被堂叔欺骗买下了一间破旧不堪的超级市场,永久花掉了毕生积蓄的父亲变得疯疯癫癫的。阿美既要照顾父亲,又要帮忙打理超级市场,生活的重担落在了她的身上。在一次交通意外中,司机梁少祖(周润发 饰)以为自己 把阿美撞至残疾,十分内疚,便决定要帮助阿美经营超级市场。阿美一开始并不信任梁少祖,到后来他联合朋友来帮助自己的超级市场度过难关,心里满是感动,两人更坠入了爱河。
阿美(王祖贤 饰)是个美丽的女孩子,永久可是天生脚就有残疾。她的父亲(黄霑 饰)因被堂叔欺骗买下了一间破旧不堪的超级市场,永久花掉了毕生积蓄的父亲变得疯疯癫癫的。阿美既要照顾父亲,又要帮忙打理超级市场,生活的重担落在了她的身上。在一次交通意外中,司机梁少祖(周润发 饰)以为自己 把阿美撞至残疾,十分内疚,便决定要帮助阿美经营超级市场。阿美一开始并不信任梁少祖,到后来他联合朋友来帮助自己的超级市场度过难关,心里满是感动,两人更坠入了爱河。
回复 :After his brother dies in a car crash, a disgraced MMA fighter takes over the family nightclub and soon learns his sibling's death wasn't an accident.
回复 :此乃亚洲影后凌波于1972年主演的武侠片。凌以其擅长的女扮男装,演侠士甘素凡,为替师父报仇,与浪侠(凌云)连手对付仗恃“童子功”绝招横行江湖之武林恶魔(鲁平)。导演郭南宏通过惊险,紧张的场面,充分暴露败类的野心及狰狞嘴脸,并颂扬两位青年侠士不畏强暴的精神,让全片充满慑人心魄的魅力。
回复 :Fraught with over obvious symbolism, Hartley's early feature is nonetheless a joy to watch. Hal here shows us his uncanny ability to cast his characters perfectly came early in his career.Adrienne Shelley is a near perfect foil to herself, equal parts annoying teen burgeoning in her sexuality (though using sex for several years); obsessed with doom and inspired by idealism gone wrong she is deceptively – and simultaneously – complex and simple. Her Audrey inspires so many levels of symbolism it is almost embarrassingly rich (e.g., her modeling career beginning with photos of her foot – culminating her doing nude (but unseen) work; Manhattan move; Europe trip; her stealing, then sleeping with the mechanics wrench, etc.)As Josh, Robert Burke gives an absolutely masterful performance. A reformed prisoner/penitent he returns to his home town to face down past demons, accept his lot and begin a new life. Dressed in black, and repeatedly mistaken for a priest, he corrects everyone ("I'm a mechanic"), yet the symbolism is rich: he abstains from alcohol, he practices celibacy (is, in fact a virgin), and seemingly has taken on vows of poverty, and humility as well. The humility seems hardest to swallow seeming, at times, almost false, a pretense. Yet, as we learn more of Josh we see genuineness in his modesty, that his humility is indeed earnest and believable. What seems ironic is the character is fairly forthright in his simplicity, yet so richly drawn it becomes the viewer who wants to make him out as more than what he actually is. A fascinatingly written character, perfectly played.The scene between Josh and Jane (a wonderful, young Edie Falco . . . "You need a woman not a girl") is hilarious . . . real. But Hartley can't leave it as such and his trick, having the actors repeat the dialogue over-and-over becomes frustratingly "arty" and annoying . . . until again it becomes hilarious. What a terrific sense of bizarre reality this lends the film (like kids in a perpetual "am not"/"are too" argument).Hartley's weaves all of a small neighborhood's idiosyncrasies into a tapestry of seeming stereotypes but which delves far beneath the surface, the catalyst being that everyone believes they know what the "unbelievable truth" of the title is, yet no two people can agree (including our hero) on what exactly that truth is. A wonderful little movie with some big ideas.