A Wedding Invitation

A Wedding Invitation (分手合约 fēnshǒu héyuē, literal translation: breakup agreement) is a 2013 Chinese romantic comedy film directed by Ki Hwan Oh and starring Bai Baihe and Eddie Peng.[1]

A Wedding Invitation
Directed byKi Hwan Oh
Produced bySan Ping Han
Tae Sung Jeong
Jonathan Kim
Written byQin Hai Yan
StarringBai Baihe
Eddie Peng
CinematographyYong Ho Kim
Edited byMin Kyung Shin
Production
company
China Film Group
CJ Entertainment
C2M Media
Release date
  • April 12, 2013 (2013-04-12) (China)
Running time
101 minutes
CountryChina
South Korea
LanguageMandarin
Box officeCN¥192 million (US$31.4 million) (China)
127 million (US$118,000) (South Korea)

Plot

High school sweethearts Qiao Qiao and Li Xing are about to graduate from university when Li Xing surprises Qiao Qiao with a marriage proposal. Qiao Qiao, however, declines the proposal, offering rash arguments as to why she's not ready. Little does he know, Qiao Qiao has a devastating secret. Nonetheless, they write a breakup agreement; if they're both single in five years, they'll get married. They part ways and five years pass. Believing Li Xing is still waiting for her, Qiao Qiao waits patiently for his call. But when Li Xing finally does contact her it's to invite her to his wedding. Qiao Qiao is flabbergasted and is determined to win her former flame back at any cost, even though the secret that forced them apart lingers.

Cast

Release

The movie was released in China on April 12, 2013, in the USA and Canada on May 24 and 31, 2013 for limited screenings, in Hong Kong on June 6, 2013, and in South Korea on June 20, 2013.

Reception

The film grossed CN¥192 million (US$31.4 million) in China and 127 million (US$118,000) in South Korea.[2]

gollark: Hmmm.
gollark: Someone put in `<script>`. It didn't work, of course.
gollark: ... did you really try and XSS-attack it?
gollark: If you have other ideas for what to put in I'll maybe accept them.
gollark: Well, currently I Indexed osmarks.tk and some random person who was testing it, so very few.

References

  1. China Daily (2013-03-20). "All about love". chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2013-03-25.
  2. Kevin Ma (7 October 2013). "Korean cinema, Chinese characteristics". Film Business Asia. Archived from the original on 2013-12-29. Retrieved 15 January 2014.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.