Celia illegally enters Hong Kong from mainland China and works as a prostitute in order to earn money to save her younger brother from prison. While working for the first time, Celia witnesses the murder of a triad leader and gets framed for the murder. As triad members are chasing her, she is rescued by Frank, a member of a biker gang. Frank came from a wealthy but broken family and always feels depressed. However, he later becomes inspired by Celia's upbeat personality and the two of them fall in love. Celia and Frank encounter obstacles to their love due to their backgrounds. * This is the second installment of the “A Moment of Romance” trilogy, but the plots are unrelated. Edit Translation
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Norsk
- Native Title: 天若有情II之天長地久
- Also Known As: A Moment of Romance II , Tian Ruo You Qing Er Zhi Tian Chang Di Jiu
- Director: Hsiu Lan Hu, Benny Chan
- Genres: Action, Romance, Crime
Cast & Credits
- Aaron Kwok Main Role
- Jacklyn WuSiu SinMain Role
- Roger KwokJackSupport Role
- Herman KwanBillSupport Role
- Anthony Wong"Dinosaur"Support Role
- Lee Siu Kei[Loan shark]Support Role
Reviews
Disappointingly unfocused
Right out of the starting gate, it's hard not to be disappointed and perhaps even slightly insulted by A Moment of Romance II. It's horribly unfocused, sharing very little of the original film's excitement or romance along with contrived plotting that doesn't add up to more than manufactured pathos. While the first film at least had some thematic and dramatic justification for its tragic resolution, this one seems to follow a similar pattern to get a rise out of this audience. It doesn't work; you have to care about the characters first. Johnnie To certainly didn't ghost-direct this one... That being said, this is far from a poorly made film, Benny Chan does a more than decent job in the film's direction. The actors all do a decent job with the material given even if Aaron Kwok isn't a real replacement for Andy Lau, the real highlight is the typically slimy Anthony Wong, and the music by William Wu does evoke some form of emotional resonance. Sadly, A Moment in Romance II spreads itself too thin; one that doesn't work as a romance or a thriller, a tragic case of a film trying to be everything to everybody, and ending up as a bit of nothing to no one.Was this review helpful to you?