Floating City

For other uses, see Floating city.
Floating City

China poster
Directed by Yim Ho
Produced by Carl Change
Yim Ho
Written by Marco Pong
Yim Ho
Starring Aaron Kwok
Charlie Young
Josie Ho
Cinematography Ardy Tam
Edited by Stanley Tam
Release dates
  • 18 May 2012 (2012-05-18) (China)
  • 19 May 2012 (2012-05-19) (Hong Kong)
Country China
Hong Kong
Language Cantonese

Floating City (Chinese: 浮城; Jyutping: fau4 seng4) is a 2012 Chinese-Hong Kong drama film directed by Yim Ho.[1]

Plot

The story of a self-made man in a rapidly changing Hong Kong at the end of British Colonial rule.

Reception

Exclaim! writer Robert Bell said "...the subject matter of Floating City doesn't come as a surprise, mirroring the life of a self-made man with the rapid change of Hong Kong from small fishing village to booming metropolis over latter half of the 20th Century. But what does surprise is just how amateurish and sloppy it all is, which is of substantial concern with such an epic and ambitious project."[2]

DVD Talk reviewer Thomas Spurlin said "As a whole, the impression I took away from Floating City is that of an overwrought and disjointed meditation on the value of life and the injustice of misfortune, a melodrama that confuses its soapbox-worthy communication of social issues and generational shifts in China for an enriching tale of cohabiting with them."[3]

PopMatters journalist J.C. Maçek III wrote "First and foremost, Floating City is an incredibly beautiful movie. Director Yim Ho uses his camera lens to drink in the scenery of Hong Kong over a decades-long story that is as beautiful as the scenery itself."[4]

References

  1. Frater, Patrick (25 September 2012). "HK-China film withdrawn from Tokyo festival". Film Business Asia. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  2. Bell, Robert (5 November 2012). "Floating City". Exclaim!.
  3. Spurlin, Thomas (13 August 2013). "Floating City". DVD Talk.
  4. Maçek III, J.C. (23 August 2013). "Aspiration, Honor, Loyalty and Culture Clashes from the 'Floating City' to the Throne". PopMatters.

External links

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