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    • Source: In-Laws, Out-Laws
    • In-Laws, Out-Laws ļ¼ˆChinese: ꈑēš„大åšæēˆ¶ęƍļ¼‰is a Lunar New Year comedy film directed by Clifton Ko, and it is also the first Lunar New Year film in the south. Because the film is adapted from the Cantonese TV series "Kang's Family", the filming and themes are mainly based on Guangdong. In addition, the Chinese name does not allow the use of dialects, so it is only called the film version of "Kang's Family".


      Shooting background


      As early as January 2002, because the TV series "Kang's Family" was broadcast in Guangdong, the highest peak was 41.39 points Audience measurement, Guangdong Radio and Television intended to make the drama into movie in order to give the audience a TV short drama. Feeling. Guangdong TV also commissioned the Guangzhou Municipal Bureau of Statistics to do market research, and found that only Guangzhou, more than 40% of the people expressed their expectations for the film.ļ¼Œ30% of the people will come to watch it with their families after the movie version of "The Foreign Daughter-in-law" is , Guangdong TV, Yingyang Communication Co., Ltd. and City TV reached an agreement on February 28, 2003, to start filming.ļ¼ŒOfficially signed on April 25 of the same year and released it during the Spring Festival in 2004. At that time, the director of Oriental Film Huang Baiming, who signed the contract on behalf of Oriental Film, said at the signing ceremony, "I believe that with my 20-year experience in making Hong Kong New Year's films and the hot ratings of the TV series "Foreign Daughter-in-law Local Lang", the movie version of 'Foreign Daughter- He laughed and said, "It will be more wonderful to do than TV series." He also said, "Successful in the south is more satisfying than Hong Kong (successful in Hong Kong)."怂The producer used this film to break the situation of Feng Xiaogang's New Year's movie monopoly, and occupied a place for the Southern New Year's movie. According to the report of Guangdong TVļ¼ŒThe original plan was for Huang Baiming to play the role of "Kangbo" in the film, while Azu's girlfriend was starred by South Koreastar, and even joined by Blackie Ko.
      It turned on in Guangzhou on September 13, 2003. The movie's Xiguan House is taken from No.2, Yunxianfang, Huagui Xiheng Street, Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong.


      Synopsis


      Kang's ancestral home in Xiguan, Guangzhou is suspected to have found ancient cultural relics, and the Kang family is overjoyed. Mrs. Kang (played by Shen Dianxia) announced that she would divide the found property into four parts. She and her three sons, A Guang (played by Su Zhidan), A Zong (played by Guo Chang) and A Yao (played by Peng Xinzhi), but the part that has not yet been familyed or divorced is temporarily kept by her. Kang Bo (played by Zeng Zhiwei), who took his young son Azu (played by Yu Wenle) to Hong Kong to search for gold in Hong Kong twenty years ago, read the news and also returned to Guangzhou to get a piece of the pie. In order to realize the "dream of making a fortune", a series of funny things happened...


      Cast list




      Box office


      The film was released in Hong Kong in January 2004. It has been released for less than two weeks and grossed 250,000 yuan at the box office.


      References




      External links


      怊ꈑēš„大åšæēˆ¶ęÆć€‹å®˜ę–¹ē½‘ē«™ Archived 2010-08-08 at the Wayback Machine
      In-Laws, Out-Laws at the Hong Kong Movie DataBase
      å¤–ę„åŖ³å¦‡ęœ¬åœ°éƒŽ at Mtime.com (archived) (in Chinese)
      å¤–ę„åŖ³å¦‡ęœ¬åœ°éƒŽ at Douban (in Chinese)
      In-Laws, Out-Laws at IMDb

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