Kelly Hu Movie:

Shanghai Kiss



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Kelly Hu Movie:
Shanghai Kiss



Movie
Shanghai Kiss
Shanghai Kiss
List Price: $14.98Label: Starz Home Entertainment

Salesrank: 38644

Released: October 9, 2007
Our Price: $5.91
Used Price: $3.27
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Color
  • DVD
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Kelly Hu
  • James Hong
  • Byron Mann
  • Ken Leung
  • Hayden Panettiere
  • Editorial Review:
    Movie DVD

    Description of Shanghai Kiss:
    Set in two dichotomous worlds, Shanghai Kiss tells the story of a Chinese-American actor who doesn't quite fit in anywhere. In his hometown, he's considered a foreigner even though he's American. And in his family's native China, his mannerisms make him stick out in sea of familiar faces. Ken Leung (The Sopranos) does a wonderful job portraying Liam Liu, a complicated young man whose flirtation with the teenage Adelaide (Hayden Panettiere, Heroes) is reminiscent of Timothy Hutton's cautious infatuation with the Natalie Portman character in 1996's Beautiful Girls. It could've been played a little creepy, but the relationship between the unlikely couple is sweet. When Liam inherits his grandmother's estate in Shanghai, he travels to China thinking he will sell the property and head back home. But "home" becomes a more elusive concept when he realizes that his feelings are torn between two countries and, with the meeting of Micki Yang (Kelly Hu, X2), two women. There are several moments when the film has the feel of an afterschool special (Liam's father blaming him for his mother's death), but overall Shanghai Kiss tells a love story in an honest, if not completely realistic way. Feelings aren't cut and dried, and people aren't interchangeable. --Jae-Ha Kim

    Shanghai Kiss Reviews:
    Shanghai WOW! 5 Star Review
    2009-06-27 - Great movie, At first I didn't know if I should get this, But I'm glad I did. This movie has great scenery and good acting.

    Dateline's How to catch a Predator? 2 Star Review
    2008-09-12 - This movie is about Liam, a late 20ish Chinese-American male who is struggling to become an actor in LA, CA. On a bus ride home, a 16-year-old High School girl, Adelaide, decides to talk to him and eventually sang a song for him. From there on, there relationship builds through out the movie. He drives her to places, school, movies and she considers him her boyfriend. Despite his protest about them being a couple, yet he continues this weird relationship with her.

    Liam receives a call from his father that his grandmother had passed away in Shanghai, China and that she left him her home. Thinking he'll just go there and sell the house and return back to the US. Once he got there, he meets a Chinese girl and falls in love with her. Not alone did he fall in love with her; it's the first time he felt he belongs. He felt normal. Just not another Chinese person but just another person. He thinks about staying after all and returns home to say good-bye to everyone including Adelaide. After awhile, he realize that China is not all its crack up to be and returns back to the states in hope for a shot at getting Adelaide back and find true love.

    Being an Asian American who was born in the old country and raise in America. I can understand where he is coming from....the point of not belonging in either "world". Not Asian enough and not American enough due to the skin of my color and the two cultures that I was raised by my family and by my environment. I can also relate about Asian males portray and stereotyped in Hollywood movies. Asian males can never be a lead actor, the guy who gets the girl....blah, blah, blah. For the life of me, I never could understand how Hollywood thinks Asian males can't find a date or that they are undesirable. I never had a problem dating and never once knew any of my friends having a hard time finding a woman.

    But what I find about this movie is quite disturbing and creepy at the same time. Liam is pretty much a Pedophile. A Child Predator, the ones that you see in NBC's Dateline "How to catch a Predator". How does one find a late 20ish male with a 16-year-old girl as romantic is beyond me. Anyone think that it's a sweet movie needs to have their heads exam. The only thing waiting for a late 20ish male knocking on my door to go on a date with my 16-year-old daughter is going to get a loaded shotgun pointed at his face.

    Yes, finally an Asian male actor finally gets his girl....Ooops....Somehow someone bleeps it up again and makes him a child molester. I don't know about you. But as an Asian male, I rather be stereotyped as an undesirable, sexless guy than a Child molesting Monster.

    I love it! 4 Star Review
    2008-07-13 - It's kinda unrealistic, com on a hot 16 yrs. old blonde girl hit on asian man. But it's all about his sucky life(funny), but all we do just enjoy the movie without complain!

    Still it should be a little bit wild!

    Pleasant and inoffensive but little more. 3 Star Review
    2008-07-10 - As a 'journey of self-discovery' story, "Shanghai Kiss" feels to take a few false turns along the way from its refreshingly different start to its entirely predictable ending. While there is much about this production to like, with some genuinely funny as well as moving moments, it suffers in the end from its own uncertainty--mounting to a total confusion at times--as to whether to be serious or funny, resulting in it failing to be either most of the time. And while the music is well chosen, and the cinematography, especially the city-scapes of Shanghai, visually stunning, the cast mostly comes over as being capable of stronger performances than either the story or the script permit them to give here. I found it hard to fully engage with any of the main characters and it is somehow ironic that the best performances seem to come from the supporting bit-players, especially those with only a line or two to deliver, simply, I suspect, because these characters have not been given the space in which to "develop" the ambiguities which plague the principals. And which ultimately robs this film of the substance it tries so hard to establish.

    Interesting, but not much better than the old Fu Manchu movies... 2 Star Review
    2008-07-02 - Shanghai Kiss weaves the story of a Chinese-American... who feels as though he doesn't fit in, in the US... moves to China (for essentially no real reason - the idea of inheriting his grandmother's house is hard to believe at best)... and then finds out he doesn't fit in there either!

    This is the archetypal 'Asian American Identity' story... which I usually don't have a problem with (being Asian American myself), but well the first strike I have against this movie is that the theme is very very over-done.

    The story pulls in some interesting twists... Ken Leung (who is awesome) picks up some random chick in a bar (something you never see in Hollywood movies)... But for some reason he's a wimp or something and cries everytime he has sex... (this seems like some perverse stereotyping here).

    Then there is the whole 'relationship' between Ken Leung's character and Hayden Panettiere's character. Yes, again it's good that Asian guy can get the girl... but she's a high school kid and he's in his late twenties... but she's the one in control of the relationship (Lolita complex + again with the 'Asian guys are whipped' stereotype)

    Finally, once in China, there appears to be a never ending line of prostitutes as well as having Kelly Hu being in a relationship with an "evil Asian guy" just for the money... You know what I'm getting at here...

    All in all, the movie gets 2 stars (knocking off one star for each of my gripes). Especially for a movie that is proclaiming to be progressive... I am quite disappointed.










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