Misplaced Pages

Liang Po Po: The Movie

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 182.19.141.1 (talk) at 18:21, 22 December 2024 (Production). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 18:21, 22 December 2024 by 182.19.141.1 (talk) (Production)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

1999 Singaporean film
Liang Po Po: The Movie
Directed byTeng Bee Lian
Screenplay byJack Neo
Produced byEric Khoo
StarringJack Neo
Mark Lee
Henry Thia
CinematographyYoke Weng Ho
Edited byLawrence Ang
Production
companies
Mediacorp Raintree Pictures
Zhao Wei Film
Distributed byUnited International Pictures
Release date
  • 11 February 1999 (1999-02-11)
Running time100 minutes
CountrySingapore
LanguagesChinese (Mandarin, Hokkien, Cantonese)
BudgetS$800,000

Liang Po Po: The Movie (梁婆婆重出江湖) is a Singaporean crime-comedy film directed by Teng Bee Lian in 1999. It starred director Jack Neo himself, who cross-dresses as the titular character, whose name in English is translated as "Granny Neo" or "Grandma Neo".

Plot

Liang Po Po (Jack Neo), an 85 years old elderly lady, ran away from her retirement home in search of a new life, with a belief that she can still contribute to society.

On her first day, Liang Po Po was robbed by female gangster named Ah Lian (Patricia Mok) and her gang known as Lotus Gang (莲花党), and when Liang Po Po attempted to work as a filling station attendant at a filling station, chaos ensued when she wasn't able to perform her job properly by inserting the gasoline pump in the car engine. Liang Po Po then met and befriended a couple of gangsters named Ah Beng (Mark Lee) and Ah Seng (Henry Thia), and got involved in a secret society that is involved in crimes, which is known as Brothers Gang (兄弟党). Taking advantage of Liang Po Po's unsuspecting nature, the society used her to sell pirated VCDs, as well as debt collection. As a loan shark runner, she resorted to stalking, housebreaking and other harassment tactics by disguising as a taxi driver on the borrower, thus evoking great fear in her victims into repaying their loans. Her feats exceeded the loan shark's expectations but the borrower deliberately underpaid her.

As Liang Po Po develops a genuine friendship with Ah Beng and Ah Seng, Big Boss (John Cheng), the crime boss, loan shark and debt collector who runs Brothers Gang (兄弟党), decided that his gang should be respected, and enlisted the service of Brother Wei (Eric Tsang) and Sister Wen (Sheren Tang), both of which are Hong Kong Triad Consultants, in an effort to improve the image and profile of the gang. Brother Wei and Sister Wen criticises the gang for engaging in petty crimes and squabbles, and trained them to commit bigger crimes like arms trafficking, mass murder and robbery. The gang members, included a still clueless Liang Po Po, began a serial slaughter of enemies on random nights in order to put fear in the hearts of their rivals. Brother Wei and Sister Wen also insisted that the gang members should be dressed in suits and sunglasses to reflect their new image. The gang's new aggressive actions caught the Singaporean authorities off-guard, who struggled to react to the sudden rise in violent crimes, but still failed to pinpoint Big Boss as the leader of Brothers Gang (兄弟党).

With Brother Wei and Sister Wen's encouragements for the gang to exert greater influence on civil society, Big Boss declared an election campaign as an independent politician. His declaration was well-received by most of the people with the exception of a few, notably Liang Xi Mei (also portrayed by Jack Neo) and her younger son Albert (Marcus Ng Yi Loong) (Both of them reprised their roles from Comedy Night/Comedy Nite 1996 to 1999), where both mother and younger son apparently knew Big Boss's criminal background. To raise money for the upcoming election campaign, Brother Wei and Sister Wen persuaded Big Boss to orchestrate a bank robbery. Being impressed by Liang Po Po's achievements so far, Big Boss pressed the bank robbery job onto her, feeling that she's the most ideal person because no one would suspect an elderly person for the bank robbery, and if she really got arrested by police officers, she is expected to gain sympathy from the authorities. The plan was discovered by Ah Beng and Ah Seng, who then tried to send Liang Po Po away. Liang Po Po, however, refused to leave Ah Beng and Ah Seng behind, and that she was determined to follow through with the mission, unaware of what it actually entails.

Totally oblivious that Liang Po Po was carrying a real, loaded pistol, she brandished it before firing it off, unexpectedly horrifying the then-complacent bank staff into giving her the money. Even though an escaped Liang Po Po disputes the amount in private, the bank reported a much bigger amount of money missing, sparking a nationwide hunt for her. Meanwhile, Big Boss, Brother Wei, Sister Wen and even the authorities race against each other to find Liang Po Po and recover the money first. As she goes on the run, Liang Po Po realized that she was used by Big Boss, Brother Wei and Sister Wen. Deciding that she had nothing to lose due to her old age, she takes the pistol and geared up for one final confrontation with Brother Wei and Sister Wen, whereas Big Boss was arrested by the police officers first and was not involved in the confrontation and Mexican standoff with Liang Po Po, Brother Wei and Sister Wen. A Mexican standoff occurred between Liang Po Po and Brother Wen, in which it ended with Brother Wei feeling extremely astonished when he realized that he was actually firing a water gun towards Liang Po Po - which he intended to give to Liang Po Po for the bank robbery. Police officers then arrested both Brother Wei and Sister Wen thereafter.

In the aftermath of the confrontation, Ah Beng and Ah Seng are the only gang members other than Liang Po Po who avoided the police arrest. The three friends decided to go straight, and realizing that they can make more money posing as an elderly and selling goods and products, Ah Beng and Ah Seng dressed up as look-alikes of Liang Po Po and began their new lives anew and dumping Liang Po Po behind once again.

Cast

In addition, Zoe Tay, Chen Liping, Evelyn Tan, Kym Ng, Robin Leong, and Chris Ho have cameos in the film.

Production

In an interview, Neo claimed that he was inspired by western black comedy films like Beetlejuice and Death Becomes Her to make a Singaporean equivalent. This film was the first produced by Mediacorp Raintree Pictures, and was based on a popular character created and popularized by a Television Corporation of Singapore (now MediaCorp) television series known as Comedy Night/Comedy Nite from 1992 to 1995 where the titular character first made her appearance there and performed many different skits and sketches which resulted in her jokes becoming extremely hilarious and popular.Later, she would reprise her role in the comedy variety series known as The Return of Liang Po Po (2001) and also in Comedy Night/Comedy Nite 2003. After almost a decade, she also reprised her role in the variety programme known as The Channel 8 45th Anniversary Gala 2008 (45载光芒8方贺台庆) (2008), in which she received the most iconic and popular award, comedy skits with Mark Lee as 'Use Me' Dustbin ("请用我" 垃圾桶) in Star Awards 2015 (2015), and in the Singaporean Blockbuster Drama known as Hero (2016) in which she made a cameo appearance, and also in the dialect variety series known as Happy Can Already! 4 (2018).

Utilizing a crew of 50, this was the first Singaporean film to feature high-speed chases, as well as choreographed fight scenes involving hundreds of extras.

In an effort to broaden the film's appeal, well-known Hong Kong celebrities Eric Tsang and Sheren Tang, as well as Malaysian singer Ah Niu were cast in supporting and cameo roles respectively.

References

  1. ^ "Liang Po Po: The Movie". MediaCorp Raintree Pictures. Archived from the original on 25 February 2011. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  2. ^ "Production Notes - Liang Po Po: The Movie". MediaCorp Raintree Pictures. Archived from the original on 3 June 2011. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  3. Tong, Kelvin (8 August 1998). "Got a story? Climb on-board Raintree". The Straits Times. p. 3. Retrieved 2 February 2024 – via NewspaperSG.

External links

Films by Jack Neo
Categories: