This City Never Sleeps
Sunday, July 22, 2007 @ My Date With Royston
Yesterday was the 3rd time i am seeing Royston Tan in person. And frankly speaking, i am feeling some kind of unspeakable happiness after the 15min conversation with him.


The 3rd time? Reminds me of the Chinese classic folktale The Three Smiles. When The Three words appears on my mind, this is the image pictured in my brain: it was the classic made into a movie by Shaw Brothers in the 60's, with Ivy Ling Po who plays Tang Bo Hu, the talented scholar who was attracted to a maid named Qiu Xiang, potrayed by Li Ching. Qiu Xiang smiles at Tang Bo Hu three times when they bump each other on the streets, and Tang Bo Hu decided to woo Qiu Xiang by becoming a male servant in the household Qiu Xiang works for.

The 1st smile:
China (centuries ago) : Tang Bo Hu met Qiu Xiang at a fair, and she smiles at him.
Singapore (Oct 2006) : Royston and i met at his seminar with Kelvin Tong and Lawrence, when Lawrence and i were in the seminar at National Library.

The 2nd smile:
China (centuries ago) : Qiu Xiang smiles at Tang Bo Hu at a temple.
Singapore (____ 2007) : Royston was in Bedok Camp with his crew doing a filming of a short film, and he step out of the camp while i was on the phone in the guardroom.

The 3rd smile:
China (centuries ago) : Qiu Xiang smiles at Tang Bo Hu at a fair again.
Singapore (21st Jul 2007) : Royston smiles at me and i smile back at me when i was in the seminar on his upcming movie, 881.




Back to reality, the attandance for the seminar was above average. Nevertheless, there are always a group of supporters who appreciates his film.


Kate Hudson teaches a woman to lose a guy in 10 days in reel life, and Royston takes 22 days to made a movie in real life.


Not too sure what is 881 about? Simple. The movie is a tribute to the late Hokkien getai singer, Chen Jin Lang, who passed away in Jul 2006. Getai, or stage of songs, is a unique culture which can only be seen in Malaysia and Singapore during the 7th Lunar month, also known as Hungry Ghosts Festival. The singers would perform songs for the dead, where it was believed that during this month, the gates at Hell will open, and ghosts will wonder around for 30 days. As for the story, it is about 2 sisters who aspires to be a getai singer. The sisters, named themselves the Papaya sisters (note: 881 in Mandarin was pronounced as ba ba yiao, which sounds like papaya. Seems that Royston has the penchant of naming his full length feature using numbers.), performs in the getai during the 7th month, and the difficulties they are facing.


After watching the trailer, i am amazed, and really looking forward to the arrival of 881 on Aug 9 aka National Day. Though Royston is facing the fierce competition of Jackie Chan and his ang moh monkeyshow aka Rush Hour 3 and Jay Chou's directorial debut Secret with Anthony Wong, 881 is definitely worth the wait. My two cents worth of comment on the trailer: a true blue Singapore movie that truly reflects Singapore after Singapore Dreaming and Money No Enough.


And now, Ladies and Gentlemen...



That's me and the cutie! :P

Want to know what is our conversation?

Ask me. Haha.

Now playing: La Nage Indienne - Etienne Daho

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