Dream Lovers

Dream Lovers is a 1986 Hong Kong romantic fantasy film directed by Tony Au. The film stars Chow Yun-fat as Song Yu, a famous orchestra conductor who recently has visions of a beautiful woman and a Qin dynasty era terracotta statue. When Song visits the statues, he meets Cheung Yuet-heung (Brigitte Lin), who also has dreams of a long lost lover. but with her visions being more violent. The two meet with a medium who tells them that they are the reincarnations of a pair of lovers who were murdered hundreds of years earlier.[1][2][3]

Dream Lovers
Film poster
Traditional夢中人
Simplified梦中人
MandarinMèng Zhōng Rén
CantoneseMung6 Zung1 Jan4
Directed byTony Au
Produced byVicky Lee Leung
Screenplay by
Story byChiu Kang-chien
Starring
Music byLaw Wing-fai
CinematographyBill Wong
Edited byYu Ma-chiu
Production
company
Release date
  • 25 April 1986 (1986-04-25) (Hong Kong)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeHK$7,289,958

Dream Lovers was Au's second film following 1983's Last Affair where he again worked with Chow. The film grossed over HK$7 million on its release and was nominated for four awards at the 6th Hong Kong Film Awards, where Law Wing-fai won the award for Best Original Film Score.

Plot

Cast

[2]

Production

The film was a production of D&B Films.[4] The film starred Chow Yun-fat and Brigitte Lin, the only film where the two star together.[2] Chow had previously worked with director Tony Au on the 1982 film, Last Affair.[5] Dream Lovers was one of the first Hong Kong films to utilize the popular Terracotta Warrior figures that were excavated from Qin Shi Huangs tomb in 1974.[6]

Release

Dream Warriors was released in Hong Kong on 25 April 1986 and grossed a total of HK$7,289,958 during its theatrical run.[4] The film was released on VHS by Tai Seng Entertainment, on Laserdisc by Mei Ah Entertainment and on VCD and DVD by Mega Star Video.[2]

Reception

At the 6th Hong Kong Film Awards, Law Wing-fai won the award for Best Original Film Score.[7] Cher Yeung was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Wah-lei.[2][7] Bill Wong was nominated for Best Cinematography and William Chang was nominated for Best Art Direction.[7]

In his book The Hong Kong Filmography, 1977-1997, author Charles Strong gave the film a nine out of ten rating stating that "aside from fine work by Chow and Lin, and Au's artful compositions, the main asset here is Law Wing-fai's award-winning score".[3] Jonathan Crow for the online film database Allmovie gave the film a four out of five star rating.[1]

gollark: ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆ this markdown editor ships *all of codemirror* and has a 3000-line JS file.
gollark: Some sort of agent-based thing in a 2D/3D world.
gollark: This could be an excellent esolang.
gollark: But not "does not depart much from an ellipse".
gollark: Well, "differentiable" is rigorosoussayoioyly defined™.

See also

Notes

  1. Crow, Jonathan. "Dream Lovers (1986)". Allmovie. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  2. Charles, 2000. p.83
  3. Charles, 2000. p.84
  4. "Dream lovers". Hong Kong Film Archive. Hong Kong. Archived from the original on 3 July 2013. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  5. Charles, 2000. p.177
  6. O'Brien, 2003. p.89
  7. 第6屆香港電影金像獎得獎名單. Hong Kong Film Awards (in Chinese). Retrieved 3 July 2013.

References

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