Rubbers (film)

Rubbers is a 2014 Singaporean sex comedy film written and directed by Han Yew Kwang. It stars Marcus Chin, Julian Hee, Lee Chau Min, Oon Shu An, Catherine Sng, Alaric Tay, and Yeo Yann Yann as Singaporeans who are faced with various problems in their sex lives related to condoms. The film is split into three shorts whose scenes are interwoven. It premiered at the Singapore International Film Festival on December 12, 2014. Golden Village released it theatrically on April 30, 2015, in Singapore, where it grossed $82,510.

Rubbers
Film poster
Directed byHan Yew Kwang
Produced byLau Chee Nien
Written byHan Yew Kwang
Starring
Music byAugust Lum
CinematographyLiu Long Fei
Edited byJack Shuo
Production
company
18g Pictures
Distributed byGolden Village
Release date
  • December 12, 2014 (2014-12-12) (SGIFF)
Running time
83 minutes
CountrySingapore
LanguageMandarin
BudgetS$500,000[1]
Box officeUS$82,510 (Singapore)[2]

Plot

On Valentine's Day, various Singaporeans face issues in their sex lives that are related to condoms: a man who refuses to wear condoms fantasises about a Japanese pornographic film star, a woman who has been single for several years takes advice from a talking condom who tells her to seduce her younger plumber, and an elderly couple try to save their marriage through.

Cast

Production

Han had previously made several romantic comedy films and was looking for a new topic. He settled on a sex comedy as more realistic logistically than an action comedy or horror comedy.[1] Han said his intention was to make a film that would encourage people to use condoms.[3] The film cost S$500,000 to make and included a crowdfunding campaign for $9,000.[1] The original goal was US$25,000, but they still considered the funding a success, as it raised awareness for the film.[4]

Oon watched pornographic films to prepare for her role as a Japanese pornographic actress. Oon was initially reluctant to take the role, but her boyfriend encouraged her, saying that the role is funny.[5] Yeo also was reluctant to join the film, as she had recently given birth and cited tiredness.[6] Yeo called the role "one of my most daring roles to date".[7] Sng said her character's story is partly based on a real-life experience in which a friend tricked her into thinking a colored condom was a balloon.[8]

Han said the film's content caused them to miss out on some locations they wanted, but the cast and crew were willing to work with him. Shooting was tricky, because Han wanted to avoid explicit nudity as much as possible. To facilitate camera angles, Han requested two crew members who were in a relationship act as stand-ins.[3]

Release

Rubbers premiered at the Singapore International Film Festival on December 12, 2014.[1] Golden Village released it theatrically on April 30, 2015, in Singapore, where it grossed $82,510.[2] Han did not contest the film's R21 rating despite its effect on sales. Though it is one of Han's highest-grossing films, it did not recoup its budget. Han said that filmmaking has become a hobby for him, as it is impossible to make money from his films.[9]

Reception

Jocelyn Lee of The New Paper rated it 3/5 stars and recommended it "for some light-hearted fun".[10] Benita Lee of Time Out Singapore rated it 3/5 stars and wrote, "At times, it feels like a flimsy disguise for a condom or safe sex ad, but it admittedly has its moments."[11] Derek Elley of Film Business Asia rated it 5/10 stars and wrote that it "develops a typically Southeast Asian sweetness in its second half that goes a long way to excusing some of the movie's more juvenile moments".[12] Clarence Tsui of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "With a few strokes of superb social satire ... Rubbers offers raucous, base and unwieldy entertainment."[13] Tsui describes how the film "offers a timely illustration" of Singaporean culture, as its inhibited scenes are still seen as subversive.[13]

gollark: Full lockdowns are maybe not great, but charizard was advocating distancing + masks.
gollark: Apparently vaccine trials have a 1/3 success rate in general, which is pretty high, and there's relevant information from SARS to use, and tons of vaccine trials running, so I figure *some* should be available fairly soon.
gollark: No, but there's a decent chance one will at some point.
gollark: And spreading out infections a lot does mean the health system will be better able to deal with it.
gollark: If most people avoid infection until a vaccine is widely available, that would work.

References

  1. Fratini, Lisa (2014-11-28). "Raunchy fun with condoms in a fine city". Business Times. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
  2. "Rubbers". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  3. Lee, Benita (2015-04-28). "Interview: Han Yew Kwang". Time Out Singapore. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  4. Lui, John (2014-07-16). "Film-makers raise money for movie projects on crowdfunding sites". The Straits Times. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  5. Chan, Boon (2015-05-07). "Singapore star Oon Shu An on watching porn for her R21-rated film". Her World.
  6. Yi, Hon Jing (2015-04-07). "Yeo Yann Yann initially reluctant to star in sex comedy". Today Online. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  7. Lee, Joceyln (2014-03-09). "Clothes so tight, I could hardly breathe". The New Paper. Retrieved 2016-03-29 via AsiaOne.
  8. Chan, Boon (2015-04-06). "Golden Horse winner Yeo Yann Yann says her new role in local comedy Rubbers has 'depth'". The Straits Times. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  9. Tan, Dylan (2015-05-22). "Taking an alternate route". Business Times. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  10. Lee, Jocelyn (2015-04-29). "Movie Review: Rubbers (R21)". The New Paper. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  11. Lee, Benita. "Rubbers". Time Out Singapore. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  12. Elley, Derek (2015-03-12). "Rubbers". Film Business Asia. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  13. Tsui, Clarence (2015-03-26). "'Rubbers' ('Tao'): Filmart Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
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