Ah Long Pte Ltd

Ah Long Pte Ltd (Chinese: 老师嫁老大; pinyin: Lǎoshī Jià Lǎodà; Wade–Giles: Lao3 Shih1 Chia1 Lao3 Ta4; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lāu-sai-kè-láu-tōa) is a 2008 action comedy film directed by Singaporean film director Jack Neo, starring Fann Wong and Mark Lee. Co-produced by Mediacorp Raintree Pictures, Scorpio East Pictures and Double Vision (Malaysia), the film was mostly shot in Malaysia, in the city of Kuala Lumpur, with a budget of S$1.2 million.[3] This film is also the seventh collaboration between Mediacorp Raintree Pictures and Jack Neo.[4]

Ah Long Pte Ltd
Directed byJack Neo
Written byJack Neo
Produced bySampson Yuen
Chan Pui Yin
StarringFann Wong
Mark Lee
Richard Low
Jack Lim
CinematographyWai Yin Chiu
Edited byYim Mun Chong
Music by
  • Mo Ju Li
  • Benny Wong
Production
companies
Double Vision
Mediacorp Raintree Pictures
Scorpio East Pictures
Distributed byGolden Village Pictures
Double Vision
Release dates
  • 7 February 2008 (2008-02-07)
(Singapore)
  • 12 March 2008 (2008-03-12)
(Malaysia)
CountriesSingapore
Malaysia
LanguagesMandarin
Cantonese
Dialects
BudgetS$1.2 million.[1]
Box officeS$2,115,640[2]

Ah Long Pte Ltd was released in Singapore on 7 February 2008, and in Malaysia on 13 March. Its languages consist of Mandarin (in a heavily Johor-accented version as spoken by Mark Lee), Hokkien and Cantonese.

Plot

Chen Jun is the leader of Shao He Triad, which has a number of illegal businesses operating in Malaysia and Singapore. He is retiring from the Triad and money-lending business. He is succeeded by a young lady, Wang Lihua, who tries to restructure the "Ah Long (loan shark) system" with as little use of violence as possible while making debtors pay back.

Lihua and several of her subordinates start implementing a series of creative methods to attract people to borrow money. They also practice hilarious methods to pressure debtors to repay in a way that is anti-violent. However, this restructuring is met with opposition from the majority of the "elders" in both her own and rival triad (the Qinglongs).

Lihua is pressured by her mother to get married. Lihua decides to force Mr Fang, an effeminate dance instructor, to marry her. Mr Fang agrees to the proposal, wanting to prove his masculinity. Subsequently, Mr Fang offers to help Lihua out by introducing creative ways to reduce violent methods of debt collection.

Chen Jun is opposed to these less-violent ways of debt collection, but appears to have a change of heart. However, Lihua and her gang members get embroiled with a fight with a rival triad, whose head, it is later revealed, is acting under Chen Jun's instigation. Lihua and Fang go on the run with the Malaysian police and three gang members on their heels. Chen Jun, Lihua and Fang get caught by a number of street urchins, who turn out to be children of debtors who were killed after failing to pay back Chen Jun's gang their loan money.

Finally, the Malaysian police nab Chen Jun, Lihua and her company for their illegal dealings. They are sentenced to jail terms (except Chen Jun, who was executed). Mr Fang fetches Lihua on the day of her release, and surprises her by bringing her to an office dealing in legal business, run by former members of the Shao He Triad (whom some of them once had terms of 8–10 years). Lihua finds the drive to lead again after being in jail for 10 years.

Cast

  • Fann Wong as Wang Lihua 王立华
  • Mark Lee as Jojo Fang 方佐佐
  • Richard Low as Chen Jun 陈军
  • KK Wong as Bingtou 兵头
  • Daniel Tan as Huangdi 皇帝
  • Jack Lim as Hong Qinglong 洪青龙
  • Lai Meng as Lihua's Mother

Production

Jack Neo feels that most people think that loan sharks are "heartless and evil", however after research, he has found out that there are "kind and caring" loan sharks as well. He was sure that the film would be well received by Singaporeans. The scriptwriting took 6 months to complete, while the film is shot in 35 days.[5] Neo went against the social norm by using a woman as a loan shark (ah-longs were generally male gangsters) and having her propose marriage (which is against traditional Chinese custom).

Reception

A series of roadshows were held at Ang Mo Kio Hub on 19 January 2008.[6]

Ah Long Pte Ltd's commercial success was evident despite mixed reviews from the press. The Straits Times reported on 13 February that over the Chinese New Year weekend, the film reaped a box-office takings of S$1.47 million, coming in second behind Stephen Chow's CJ7 ($2 million), while beating Jay Chou's Kung Fu Dunk ($1.41 million). All three films were released in Singapore on 7 February 2008.[7] Ah Long Lte Ltd broke the previous record for biggest opening weekend for local productions, a record it held until it was broken in 2012 by another Jack Neo film Ah Boys to Men, which earned S$1.509 million on its opening weekend.[8]

The ranking remained the same as of 19 February, when the box-office earnings of CJ7 was almost S$3 million ($2,840,282), Ah Long S$2.4m and Kungfu Dunk at S$1.96m.[9]

Reviews from local magazine 8 Days were largely negative. The film was rated as half a star out of five.[10]

Criticism

Various film reviews indicated that this film had "copied ideas" from Cho Jin-gyu's My Wife Is a Gangster 3. There was also a scene in which Lihua performed soccer tricks, and was pointed out by critics for copying Stephen Chow's Shaolin Soccer.[11]

References

  1. "Jack Neo, Fann and Mark 'lelong' Ah Long Pte Ltd". Youth.SG. 22 January 2008. Archived from the original on 29 June 2007.
  2. "2008 Singapore Yearly Box Office". Box Office Mojo. IMDB. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
  3. "Jack Neo, Fann and Mark 'lelong' Ah Long Pte Ltd". Youth.SG. 22 January 2008. Archived from the original on 29 June 2007.
  4. "Jack Neo's latest movie deals with illegal moneylending business". Channel News Asia. 30 January 2008. Archived from the original on 31 January 2008. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  5. "You'll Want to be with Ah Long this New Year". movieXclusive.com.
  6. "MediaCorp Raintree Pictures "Ah Long Pte Ltd" to hit cinemas on Feb 7". Channel News Asia. 19 January 2008.
  7. "Ah Long triumphs despite bad notices". The Straits Times. 13 February 2008.
  8. Loh, Genevieve (7 November 2012). "Ah Boys tops box office". Today. Archived from the original on 5 January 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
  9. "Huat ah, Ah Long Pte Ltd!". MediaCorp Pte Ltd. 20 February 2008. Archived from the original on 25 February 2008.
  10. "Lifestyle" 梁智强:《长江7号》抄我的戏 (in Chinese). omy.sg. 19 February 2008.
  11. "Review by John Li". movieXclusive.com.
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