Collete Koo Movies

2002  
 
Add Let's Love Hong Kong to QueueAdd Let's Love Hong Kong to top of Queue 
Directed by Yau Chingmy, Ho Yuk (Let's Love Hong Kong) is an ultra-low-budget video drama chronicling the connections between life, lesbian love affairs, real estate, and Internet pornography. Set amongst a startlingly crowded industrial city, the film primarily concerns Zero (Erica Lam), who unwittingly becomes a key member of a girl-on-girl love triangle involving the photographer for a smutty website and one if its models. More so than the affair itself, however, the young women struggle with their roles within their class and the modern city-state in which they reside. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi

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Starring:
Wong Chung ChingErica Lam, (more)
 
1991  
 
Asian-American filmmaker Wayne Wang returns to the city of his birth for this surreal, violent, and darkly comic look at the seamy underside of life in Hong Kong. A young man of Chinese/Japanese heritage (Spencer Nakasako) working at a racetrack in San Francisco is hired by gangsters to deliver a briefcase to the Big Boss (Lo Wai), a notorious leader of Hong Kong's organized crime syndicate. Dressed in western clothes and proclaiming himself "The Man with No Name," the courier arrives in Hong Kong with the briefcase chained to his wrist, but this doesn't stop a group of enterprising young hoodlums from stealing it from him. As he searches for his precious cargo, the man tries desperately to rendezvous with the Big Boss, only to hear a dizzying variety of excuses from his second-in-command (Lam Chung) as to why the Boss can't or won't see him. The courier also has to deal with his elderly Uncle Cheng (Cheng Kwan Ming), who would rather show off his latest dance routines than help his nephew save his own neck. The man also witnesses all sorts of bizarre and bewildering behavior, from a restaurant that serves feces to a prostitute who announces she doesn't mind being abused, though she's tired of not being paid for it. Directed by Wayne Wang in collaboration with actor Spencer Nakasako, Life Is Cheap...But Toilet Paper Is Expensive was released by Wang with a self-imposed "A" rating (for "Adult") after being threatened with an "X" by the MPAA ratings board; the film contains no explicit sex, but the MPAA was troubled by the film's gangland violence and pervasive bad taste. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Spencer NakasakoCora Miao, (more)