Good Times, Bed Times | |
---|---|
Traditional Chinese | 戀上你的床 |
Simplified Chinese | 恋上你的床 |
Hanyu Pinyin | Liàn Shàng Nǐ De Chuáng |
Jyutping | Lyun2 Seong5 Nei2 Dik1 Cong4 |
Directed by | Chan Hing-Ka Patrick Leung |
Written by | Chan Hing-Ka Debbie Lam |
Produced by | Chan Hing-Ka Tiffany Chen Amy Chin Janet Chun |
Starring | Sammi Cheng Louis Koo Sean Lau Charlene Choi Tony Leung Sandra Ng |
Cinematography | Cheung Man Po |
Edited by | Cheung Ka-fai |
Music by | Anthony Chue |
Distributed by | China Star Entertainment Group |
Release date | 25 July 2003 |
Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | Hong Kong |
Language | Cantonese |
Box office | HK$20 million |
Good Times, Bed Times (戀上你的床, Luen seung ngei dik chong) is a 2003 Hong Kong romantic comedy film starring Sammi Cheng, Louis Koo, Sean Lau, Charlene Choi, with guest appearances by Tony Leung and Sandra Ng.
Cast
- Sammi Cheng as Carrie Wat
- Louis Koo as Inspector Paul Ko Chi-keung
- Sean Lau as Magistrate Raymond
- Charlene Choi as Tabby
- Tony Leung Ka-fai as Boss Ike Hung
- Sandra Ng as BoBo Au
- Jim Chim as Uncle Lam
- Tats Lau as Tabby's father
- Lee Lik-chi as Paul's superior
- Lam Suet as Judge Chow
- Pinky Cheung as P
- Raymond Wong Yuk-man as Magazine chief
- Philip Chan as Superintendent
- Chui Tien-you as Basketball interviewee
- Wong You-nam as Basketball interviewee
- Maggie Lau as Policewoman in TV commercial
- Zhuge Boli as Japanese AV muscle man
- Niki Chow as Peggy
- Helen Ma as Female PTU
- Gloria Chan as Female CID
- Angela Au as Female SDU
- Elaine Ho as Female traffic police
- Serena Po as Policewoman
- Six Luk as Tuition teacher
- Yeung Wong-fook as Yakuza's representative
- Leung Kin-chuen as Shooter
- Poon Hang-sang as District Judge
- Vincent Chik as SDU
Reception
Comparing the film to La Brassiere, an earlier creative collaboration by the creative team Hing-Ka Chan, Patrick Leung, and Amy Chin, Variety wrote that Good Times, Bed Times was "less vaudevillian in its humor, but with a stronger pair of distaff thesps this time round", as "the joke comes from casting matinee idol Koo as a sexual non-achiever and Lau, not a prototype romantic lead, as an incurable lothario".[1]
Variety reported that the film "grossed a sturdy HK$20 million ($2.5 million)" from its summer 2003 Hong Kong theatrical release.[1]
The film was initially banned in Malaysia, then reworked and released there under the title In Love With You.[2][3]
References
- 1 2 Derek Elley, "Review: Good Times, Bed Times", Variety, 14 October 2003.
- ↑ Silvia Wong, "Homerun is a non-starter in Malaysia", Screen Daily, 7 November 2003.
- ↑ Sharon Wong, "Good news about `Good Times'", New Straits Times, 28 August 2003, via HighBeam Research.