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A Stroke of Romance for Mr. Wong: Wong Hok-Sing: Sun-Ma Sze-Tsang, Fung Wong-Nui, Suet Yim-Mui, Tam Lan-Hing, To Sam-Ku, Hui Ying-Ying: Comedy [1] The Adventure of the 13th Sister: Li Han Hsiang: Air Hostess: Evan Yang [2] All in the Family: Wong Tin Lam: Appointment with Death: Yan Jun: Battle of the Sexes: A Beancurd Shih Sze: Bu Wancang: The ...
James Lee Wong, known simply as Mr. Wong, is a fictional Chinese-American detective created by Hugh Wiley (1884–1968). [1] Mr. Wong appeared in twenty magazine stories and a film series of six, the first five of which starred English actor Boris Karloff as Wong, the last with Chinese-American actor Keye Luke in the role, the first Asian lead.
The Movie follows Mrs. Wong (), a middle-aged housewife living in a Hong Kong public housing estate, as she cares for her autistic and mentally handicapped son, Kwong (Ling Man-lung), whose self-harming outbursts strain her marriage to Mr. Wong (Ray Lui Leung-wai), a driving instructor.
Chungking Express is a 1994 Hong Kong anthology [5] crime [6] dramedy film written and directed by Wong Kar-wai. [7] [8] The film consists of two stories told in sequence, each about a lovesick Hong Kong policeman mulling over his relationship with a woman.
For those who instantly associate Taoist movie priests with the hopping vampires and hungry ghosts of Hong Kong’s goeng-sin horror-comedy heyday of the 1980s (like “Mr. Vampire” and “Kung ...
Goodbye Mr. Cool (Chinese: 古惑仔之九龍冰室) (2001) Goodbye Mr. Cool is the successor of the Young and Dangerous film series. Ekin Cheng and Karen Mok are starred in the film as "Dragon" and "Queen of the Underworld". The plot follows a retired triad leader (Cheng) whose life of crime has been traded for a waiter's apron at the Kowloon ...
Michael Hui Koon-man (born Chinese: 許冠文; 3 September 1942; also known as Mr Boo! ) is a Hong Kong actor, comedian , scriptwriter and director . He is the eldest of the four Hui brothers (together with Ricky , Sam , and Stanley) who were prominent figures in the Hong Kong entertainment industry during the 1970s and the 1980s.
Wong's production company, Mandarin Films, served as a producer and distributor in Hong Kong. The film was shot with a HK$4million (RM1.86mil) budget. On 12 May 2008, a press conference was held in a Tsuen Wan shopping mall, where Wong had announced that a HK$4 million investment would be put into making the 2009 version of All's Well, Ends Well.