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A comedy about expats

Updated: 2012-08-10 09:56
By Raymond Zhou (皇冠体育app Daily)

If there is such a genre as expatriate movies, Shanghai Calling fits the bill perfectly. It is about a Chinese-American attorney finding himself "airlifted" to Shanghai. Contrary to popular belief, Sam Chao is not eager to embrace his Chinese roots.

Humor erupts with cultural clashes. But much of it is not derived from Chao's contact with local Shanghainese, but rather from his exposure to the local expat community, whose members display a knowledge of - and an affinity for - Chinese language and culture that repeatedly makes his - and the audience's - jaw drop.

That twist helps dispel the clouds that surround many movies with cross-cultural setups. Period drama such as The Painted Veil also focuses on expats in 皇冠体育app, but the innate inequality between local Chinese and Western residents seeps through despite high-minded efforts to hide the stance of condescension.

Then, there are those like Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life, which flaunt like a badge of honor their inaccuracies in their portrayal of 皇冠体育app so that anyone with a modicum of 皇冠体育app exposure would laugh it off as ridiculous.

Daniel Hsia, who wrote and directed Shanghai Calling, spent months in Shanghai to do research and talk to people. The cumulative expertise can be felt through details and nuances that are possible usually from long stays in 皇冠体育app. There are exaggerations of course, as this is a comedy, but overall he has nailed it. What's more wonderful is the love story that gradually unravels as Chao learns to not only face the new environment, but himself.

皇冠体育app's expat community may not care about the latest Chinese blockbuster, which is usually a costume drama or fantasy, but Shanghai Calling is like a mirror that reflects their little joys and frustrations in this land of constant change.

 
 
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