Crazy Racer

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Crazy Racer
Hanyu Pinyin
fēngkuáng de sàichē
Directed by
China Film Group
Release date
  • 20 January 2009 (2009-01-20)
Running time
110 minutes
CountryChina
Languages
Standard Mandarin, Various Mandarin dialects, Hokkien
Box officeover ¥100 million (US$15.9 million)[1]

Crazy Racer, also known in some countries as Silver Medalist, is a 2009 Chinese black comedy film directed and written by Ning Hao and stars Huang Bo. It was filmed mostly in the southern coastal city of Xiamen.[2]

Plot

The plot follows four seemingly separate stories that intersect and converge at points throughout the movie. It begins with the protagonist Geng Hao losing first place in a cycling race and subsequently being tricked into sponsoring an energy drink containing illegal performance-enhancing substances by corrupt businessman Li Fala, which causes him to forfeit the winnings from his silver medal. Disgraced and outlawed from ever participating again in the sport, Geng's coach suffers from a heart attack, prompting Geng to seek retribution from Li, who he believes is the cause. In the process of obtaining the money for his coach's funeral, Geng crosses the paths of local criminals, perpetually confused policemen and even Taiwanese gangsters.[3]

Cast

Reception

The film garnered mostly positive reviews from the Chinese press although it has remained relatively unknown outside of mainland China.[4]

Perry Lam of Muse praises Ning Hao's direction: 'the movie leaps from scene to scene with such an athletic deftness and comic inevitability that the many unlikely curves and switches in the plot and the same setups feel almost like the machinery of fate.'[5]

References

  1. Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
    . Retrieved 2012-07-07.
  2. ^ Review: ‘Crazy Racer’ - Variety
  3. ^ "Joshua Chaplinsky NYAFF 2010: CRAZY RACER Review". Archived from the original on 2015-01-10. Retrieved 2015-01-10.
  4. ^ http://twitchfilm.com/2010/06/nyaff-2010-crazy-racer-review.html[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Lam, Perry (May 2009). "A rebuke to Hong Kong cinema". Muse Magazine (28): 94.

External links