Glamorous Youth (2009) Poster

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2/10
Did the other reviewers watch the same boring & purposeless movie as I did?
supadude200416 January 2011
Boring, protracted and lacking purpose are the movie's positives summed up in a mere handful of words. Characters are presented in casual vignettes, as if the movie's screenplay was a trite footnote to its casual direction & forgettable photography - all of which ultimately bores one senseless within its first twenty minutes. Even one of the doubtlessly "neutral" reviewers above who (quite incredulously) gave it an almost perfect nine out of ten marks, writes "the film can be more well-organized and focused." Well... let that be a warning to you: someone who thought this movie to be near perfect, still criticized its lack of focus!

Although the movie is allegedly set in a particular part of China, it could have just as well been set anywhere in Asia and still be just as banal. Within half an hour of watching it I wondered increasingly why they bothered making it all all? For little, if anything, was of interest. Admittedly the most interesting scene in the movie was the first supposed lovemaking scene, and solely because the Chinese girl in it was most attractive. It's a shame she was not cast as the lead in a better movie, is about the best I can say for "Glamorous Youth" (its misnomer of an English title): not worth the time spent watching it.
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8/10
Move Thee Reviews: Dreams are the Forfeits Hongkongers Pay for Economic Development
ken18484 July 2009
Glamorous Youth is a gloomy and artistic movie about the growth of a Hong Kong boy who becomes a man in one year, Hong Kong people's loneliness and loss of dreams, the glamour of youth, the problematic relationship between typical Hong Kong men and typical Hong Kong ladies and the changing relation between China and Hong Kong.

The film is set in 2006 and ends in 2007. After 10 years since the handover to China, Hong Kong is on the surface a prosperous international city, yet Hong Kong people value too much the importance of money and spend too much time working, so our family members are often neglected. As a result, most of us lack dreams and feel lonely. We don't know what we live for.

Apart from the messages engaging Hong Kong people, I love the cinematography and symbolic images e.g. the lighthouse with the light off and the train linking China and Hong Kong. Local places like Chan Nam Chong Memorial College, Cho Yiu Estate, Kwai Tsing Threatre, Cheung Hang Estate, Kwai Chung Container Terminal, etc, can be seen. There are also lots of beautiful scenes showing the Hong Kong skyline and buildings which are sometimes deliberately made out of focus. They symbolize the characters' emotions, e.g. a clear sky seen while running, and convey a message that Hong Kong is prosperous on the surface, but in fact we get lost in this concrete jungle and cannot see our future clearly. Besides, the dark-yellow / dark-red rooms with a sharp contrast between light and shadow, the black-and-white factory and the dimly-lit wedding ceremony can highlight Hong Kong people's loneliness. Moreover, the mirror in the flat is cleverly used to show the inseparable, but alienated relationship between the father and his son.

The songs used fit the theme and mood of the movie very well, for instance, The Pearl of the Orient. The Cantonese opera also points out the importance of appreciating art.

The cast generally acts naturally and the actor who delivers the most finely nuanced and convincing performance is Tai Bo who stars as the main character's father undergoing middle-age crisis.

Nevertheless, the film can be more well-organized and focused. Moreover, the teacher is a little bit preachy and implying his sexual orientation seems unnecessary; so are the explicit sex scenes.

On the whole, it is a sincerely made melodrama which most Hong Kong movie lovers can identify with. After the screening, the audience may ponder on the gloomy future of Hong Kong where people are only obsessed with money and forget about our dreams, without which we are only walking skeletons without souls.
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9/10
Reflecting HK's reality
taipopeter28 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
A great film that has the in-depth coverage of quite a lot of social issues in Hong Kong in this decade.

The story mainly covered a father and his son's matters and some other people such as their families, friends and teachers. The appearance of the father & son were just like a mirror of each other, but they had different thinking's and beliefs, I was impressed by the presentations of how they struggled in hearts and minds, as well as the changes of them. The director tried hard to present some ideas throughout the film, though that is not obvious, remained room for audience to think after the movie.

Credits should be given to the young actors and actresses, who acted better than expected and very naturally. Recommend to audiences who love to think of your lives.
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